LOGINSera POV
The morning light felt like a physical assault. I sat in the back row of Lecture Hall 4, my skin crawling and my stomach tied in knots. I hadn't slept. I hadn't eaten. I just sat there, staring at the empty space on my laptop where three years of my life used to live.
Dominic was three rows ahead of me, laughing with a group of lacrosse players. He looked refreshed, a stark contrast to the monster I’d seen sweating over his sister in the archives. Every time he glanced back at me, his eyes held a smug, lethal triumph. He’d won. He’d erased me.
The heavy oak doors at the front of the hall slammed shut, and the room went dead silent.
Professor Caspian Blackwood didn't walk; he prowled. He was dressed in a charcoal suit that looked like it had been carved onto his frame. He didn't look like a teacher; he looked like the architect of a nightmare. He was only thirty-two, but he carried a gravity that made seasoned deans flinch.
"Architecture is the art of what remains when everything else is stripped away," he began, his voice a low, cold vibration that hummed in my marrow. My heart skipped. That voice. It was deeper than it had been in the garden, more clinical, but the resonance was unmistakable.
He turned to the digital board, pulling up a list of senior projects. My name was at the top, flagged in red. File Not Found.
"Miss St. Claire," he said, not even looking at me. "It seems your thesis has... vanished. A careless mistake for someone from a family known for losing things."
A few people snickered. Dominic’s laugh was the loudest. I felt the heat rise in my cheeks, a mix of shame and a sudden, violent urge to scream.
"I... I’m working on it, Professor," I managed to choke out.
"Don't lie to me," he snapped, finally turning. His eyes were like ice-shards, pinning me to my seat. "In this room, you are either a builder or a ruin. Right now, you look like a ruin. See me in my office after the lecture. The rest of you, open your blueprints."
The next hour was a blur of torture. When the bell finally rang, I moved like a convict to the gallows. His office was at the top of the North Tower, a brutalist space of glass and concrete that overlooked the gray Maine sea.
I knocked.
"Enter."
He was standing by the floor-to-ceiling window, his back to me. The tension in the room was thick enough to choke on.
"Close the door, Seraphina."
I did as I was told. My hands were shaking. "Professor, about my thesis... Dominic, he—"
"I don't care about your boyfriend's pathetic power plays," he said, turning around. He leaned against his desk, crossing his arms. "I care about debt. And right now, you’re drowning in it."
He tossed a folder onto the desk. I opened it. My breath hitched. It wasn't academic records. It was a ledger of every cent my brother, Vane, owed to the O’Shea syndicate. Fifty thousand dollars.
"How do you have this?" I whispered.
"I bought it," Caspian said, his voice devoid of emotion. "The debt, the interest, and the contract on your brother's life. It all belongs to me now. Just like your scholarship, which the Board is prepared to revoke by five o'clock today."
I felt the world tilting. "Why? Why are you doing this?"
He took a step toward me, and the air seemed to vanish from the room. He was so close I could smell the sandalwood and the faint, metallic scent of expensive ink. He reached out, his thumb catching my chin and forcing me to look up.
"Because I want to bang the fight out of you," he whispered, his voice dropping into that raw, unfiltered growl from the garden. "I want the girl in the mask back. But this time, I want her silent."
My knees nearly buckled. It was him.
"I’m offering you a deal," he said, pulling back as if the touch disgusted him. "I will restore your thesis. I will pay off Vane’s debt. In exchange, you will spend thirty days at my studio. You will be my muse. My model."
"Modeling? That’s it?"
"Not just modeling," he said, his eyes darkening. "There are rules. You will wear a silk mask. You will wear a weighted collar. And most importantly, you will never speak. If you utter a single word, a single moan, the contract is void and your brother dies."
He pushed a paper toward me. A contract.
"Thirty days of silence, Seraphina. Thirty days where you belong to me, body and soul. Do we have a deal, or should I call the O’Sheas?"
I looked at the pen. I looked at the man who had ruined me in the dark and was now offering to save me in the light. I had no choice. I picked up the pen and signed my name.
"Good," he said, a ghost of a cruel smile touching his lips. "Report to The Glass Cage at midnight. And Sera?"
"Yes?"
"Bring your pussy. You won't be needing your voice."
"The very first painting wasn't actually of you, Sera, it was just the shape of my own regret dressed up in your skin," Caspian said, his voice dropping into that quiet, gravelly register that always made the hairs on my arms stand up.We were standing in the deepest corner of his personal studio, the one hidden behind the false drywall in the brownstone's basement. The air down here didn't smell like the expensive turpentine and lavender oils he used upstairs. It smelled like damp brick, iron water, and decades of old oil paint that had never dried quite right. He had his hand on the hem of a heavy grey canvas drop cloth that was nailed straight into the ceiling joists."What do you mean it wasn't of me?" I asked, shifting the heavy weight of my work bag off my shoulder. "I sat for you for six weeks, Caspian. I remember the way the stool dug into my thighs. I remember the way you told me to look at the window until my eyes watered.""You sat for the details, yes," he said, and with o
"Look at the date on the admission sheet, Sera, because if I'm reading this right, Caspian wasn't even in the country when that girl went into the water," Elias said.He didn't look up from his monitor. We were sitting in the back of an all-night diner three miles past the New Jersey border, the air smelling of burnt chicory and old vinyl. He had his phone propped against a salt shaker, the screen glowing with an image of a faded police report from 2012.Caspian was asleep in the car outside, his head pressed against the cold glass of the passenger window, looking more like a ghost than a man who owned half the real estate on the Eastern Seaboard."What do you mean he wasn't in the country?" I asked, my fingers tightening around a thick manila folder Elias had slid across the table. "The papers in the penthouse said he was the last person seen with her at the dock. Dominic has the logs from the boat.""Dominic has what Helena wanted him to have," Elias said, finally looking up. His ey
"Sit down, Sera, because watching you hover near the door like a stray cat makes my head ache, and we have entirely too much business to settle before the markets open tomorrow morning," Helena Blackwood said.She didn’t look up from her tea. She sat at the head of a lacquered dining table that felt long enough to require a microphone, her spine perfectly straight against the velvet backing of her chair. The townhouse smelled of old money, polished silver, and something faintly chemical, like high-end furniture wax used to cover up the scent of rot.Caspian didn’t sit. He stood right behind my shoulder, his hand heavy on the wood of my chair, his knuckles white. I could feel the heat radiating off him, that tight, vibrating anger he always carried when he was forced back into his mother’s house."I'll stand," I said, my voice firmer than I expected it to be. "I’ve spent the last two weeks on my feet at a diner, Helena. I’m used to people giving me orders while I look at the exit."Hel
"Look at the numbers on the second-to-last page, Vane, and tell me if I’m losing my mind or if these dates match the exact months Dad went into the hospital," I said, my voice barely a whisper over the hum of the motel's faulty air conditioner.I had the ledger spread open on the cigarette-burned bedsheet. The paper felt like dried skin under my fingertips. Vane leaned over, squinting at the cramped, legalistic handwriting of Arthur Calloway."August fourteenth... October seventh..." Vane read out, his finger tracing the ink. "Sera, these are the dates of the 're-licensing' fees. But Dad hadn't painted anything new for months by then. He couldn't even hold a brush without his hands shaking.""He didn't need to paint anything new," I said, a cold, hard knot tightening in my stomach. "They weren't licensing new work. They were quietly re-registering his entire back catalog under a Calloway shell company while he was too drugged up on painkillers to notice what he was signing. Look at th
"Put the keys down, Dominic, because if you think I’m getting into a car with a man who thinks an envelope of cash is a personality replacement, you’ve clearly forgotten who you're talking to," I said, my voice cutting through the humid morning air of the motel parking lot.He was leaning against a black sedan that looked like it cost more than the entire block, his shades pushed up into his perfectly groomed hair. He looked like an advertisement for a life I had finally stopped wanting."I’m not here to kidnap you, Sera. I’m here to give you an exit ramp," Dominic said, flashing that smile that used to make me feel safe but now just made me feel like I was being appraised for auction. "Look at this place. There’s mold on the stucco and the guy in room four definitely has a meth habit. You're better than this.""I'm exactly where I need to be," I told him, adjusting the strap of my heavy work bag. My shoulder ached from a double shift at the diner, and my fingers felt stiff from scrub
"Two coffees, black, and if you touch that sugar caddy one more time, Vane, I’m going to make you pay the tip with your own allowance," I said, sliding into the vinyl booth of a diner that smelled like old grease and new beginnings.Vane looked at me like I’d grown a second head. He’d never seen me like this. Not this sharp. Not this loud. "I don't have an allowance anymore, Sera. We don't have anything. Why are you acting like we’re on a lunch break from a job you don't have?""Because I’m going to have one by three o'clock," I told him, tapping my knuckles against the laminate table. "And you’re going to stay in that library down the street and finish your GED prep. No more 'accidental brides.' No more hiding in penthouses. We’re going to be boring, normal people who pay rent in cash."The waitress came over, her name tag saying Martha. She looked at my cheap gas-station dress and then at the way I was holding myself—shoulders back, chin up, eyes scanning the room like I was looking







