เข้าสู่ระบบAria’s POV:
I was late. Not fashionably. Not dramatically. Just enough that my heart was pounding when I knocked. Wolfe didn’t answer. Of course he didn’t. That would’ve been too easy. I tried the handle. Unlocked. Inside, his office was empty—except for the envelope waiting on his desk with my name written in black calligraphy. Another envelope. Another game. I didn’t hesitate. Not this time. I opened it with trembling fingers. Go to Room 207. Now. Do not knock. Do not speak. Obey. That was it. One line. No signature. I knew where Room 207 was, my body already moved before my brain could argue. My pulse was a drumbeat in my ears as I climbed the marble steps of the east building. Room 207 was tucked at the end of a silent hallway. The door looked ordinary, wooden and dark. I stared at it for a moment before I twisted the knob. It was dim inside. Curtains drawn. One long table at the center. No chairs. And him—standing at the head of it, hands clasped behind his back. Wolfe. “Close the door,” he said without turning. I obeyed. “Lock it.” The click of the lock felt louder than it should’ve. “Strip.” My heart stopped. “What?” He turned slowly. His eyes dragged down my body, then back up to meet mine. “I said, strip. You’re not here as a student today. You’re here as my subject.” “Subject,” I echoed. My voice barely a whisper. “I told you this would escalate. This is your first test.” I looked at the door, then back at him. Then I obeyed. One button at a time. One layer after another. Until I stood before him in nothing but skin and fear. He said nothing for a moment. Just looked at me. Not like a man staring at a girl. Like a master assessing his canvas. “Come here.” I walked. He didn’t touch me. He just circled. His voice a low hum of control. “Shame doesn’t serve you, Aria. Fear will, for now. But eventually, I’ll take that too.” He reached into a drawer and pulled out a leather collar. “This is not a symbol of ownership,” he said. “It’s a symbol of choice. Yours.” I stared at it. “Put it on,” he said. My fingers shook, but I did. The leather was cool against my throat. The click of the clasp sounded final. “Good girl.” The praise hit harder than the crop. I didn’t expect it to feel like victory. He stepped behind me. “Hands flat on the table.” I obeyed. Then the first strike. Open palm, right on my ass. I gasped, but stayed in place. Another. Harder. Then two fingers between my thighs, just grazing. Just enough to make me gasp again. “I told you,” he murmured. “You don’t get to hide from me anymore.” He leaned in, lips brushing my ear. “Next time, you’ll beg.” He stepped away, leaving me trembling. “Dress. You’re dismissed.” Just like that? The Lesson was over? What kind of psycho was this? I left Room 207 with the collar still around my throat. And I didn’t take it off. I kept the collar on all night. Not out of defiance. Not out of fear. But because taking it off would’ve meant admitting what I was becoming. I barely slept. My body buzzed like a live wire. Every nerve replayed the sound of his voice, the sting of his palm, the heat of his breath on my neck when he said, next time, you’ll beg. I wasn’t sure whether to scream or come. By morning, Jules was eyeing me like I’d grown horns. “You okay?” she asked, sipping her black coffee. “Fine.” “You’ve got that glow. The I’ve-been-dominated-by-a-billionaire glow.” I didn’t respond. She set her cup down. “Just promise me one thing.” “What?” “If he ever crosses a line—really crosses it—you burn him to the ground.” I met her gaze. “That’s the problem, Jules. I don’t think I know where the line is anymore.” --- He has asked me to meet him again in the same room but this time Room 207 was darker. Lit only by a single red bulb that made the shadows crawl. He was waiting, of course. “Strip,” he said, before the door had even closed. I obeyed. No hesitation. “Good girl.” The praise warmed me. Addictive, like a drug. “Climb onto the table.” I did, the cold wood biting into my skin. “Lie back. Arms above your head.” He bound my wrists with soft leather cuffs, anchoring them to the table’s corners. Then he stepped back to admire. “You’re learning,” he murmured. “But now we test how far you’ll go.” He reached into a small black case and pulled out a slim, steel wand. My breath caught. “I won’t hurt you,” he said. “Unless you want me to.” The wand buzzed to life in his hand. Low. Threatening. “Eyes on me.” I obeyed. He slid it down my stomach, making me shiver. “You don’t get to come,” he said. I whimpered. “Not until I say.” He pressed the tip between my thighs and I nearly came undone. Pleasure surged, thick and sharp. But every time I got close, he pulled back. Teasing. Tormenting. Until I was crying. “Please,” I gasped. “Sebastian—please.” He froze. “You’ve never said my name before.” I met his gaze, tears in my eyes. “Then punish me for it.” His control shattered. He undid the cuffs and pulled me upright, dragging me into his lap as he sat back in the leather chair. “Ride me,” he said, unzipping his pants. I didn’t hesitate. He was thick, hard, already leaking. I sank down slowly, moaning as he filled me. “Eyes on me,” he repeated. I moved slowly at first, then faster as his hands gripped my hips, guiding, forcing, bruising. “You feel that?” he growled. “That’s mine.” “Yes,” I gasped. He thrust up harder, punishing, claiming. “I said no coming until I say.” “Then say it!” I cried, unraveling. He grabbed my chin. “Come.” I shattered. My body collapsed into his, shaking, raw, alive. He held me there for a moment. Then whispered, “We don’t need a safe word. Not anymore.”Aria’s POV A dull, white light seeped beneath my eyelids as I began to regain consciousness. The first thing that hit me was the smell of antiseptic. Then, a deep, throbbing ache in my chest. Finally, the blurry sight of a white ceiling swimming into focus above me. I was lying down. But where? The memory of what had happened immediately hit me—the gunshot, the searing pain, the world fading to black. *Oh, God. Was I dead?* Panic surged, and I immediately tried to push myself upright. But the moment I tried, a wave of blinding pain and nausea instantly forced me back down onto the stiff mattress with a low groan. My body felt like one giant bruise. I lifted one hand and that was when I saw the thin tube taped to the back of my palm, following it up to the IV bag hanging from a metal stand. The label was a blur of long, unpronounceable words my foggy brain couldn't decipher. A hospital. I was in a hospital. But I was alone. Where was Kade? Wolfe? My father? Ivy?
Kade’s POV: “ARIAAA!” The scream tore from my throat a half-second after the gunshot. Time fractured. One moment she was a blur of motion, the next, she was falling. A strength I didn’t know I had erupted in me. I wrenched free from the guards' grasp, everything narrowing to the space between her and the ground. I caught her just before she hit, her body a dead weight in my arms. Her eyes were open, but I could tell she was barely a moment away from her vision completely fading away. “Aria?” I choked out, my voice cracking as I cradled her. “Aria, please. Look at me. Stay with me.” I could feel the life seeping out of her, a terrifying warmth spreading across her chest and soaking into my shirt. My vision blurred with tears of pure panic. I looked up, my gaze finding Wolfe. “You killed her!” I roared, my voice raw and broken. “You fucking killed her!” Wolfe stood frozen, a statue of shock. The gun clattered to the pavement, the sound unnaturally loud in the sudden
Aria’s POV: “You’re a delusional bastard if you think there’s a future for you with my daughter!” My father roared, struggling against the guards who held him back. “Wolfe, I—” The words died in my throat. I had nothing. “I wasn’t trying to escape.” His eyes narrowed, a predator seeing through a flimsy lie. “Then explain the bedsheet hanging from the window.” “I… I was only trying to help,” I stammered, my voice trembling and betraying me completely. He closed the final distance between us. His hand rose, and his fingers stroked my cheek with a terrifying gentleness. “Get your hands off her!” my father bellowed from behind us. But I was trapped in the stillness of Wolfe’s touch. My body shook, each breath a shallow, hitched gasp. “You think I’m a monster, don’t you?” he murmured, his thumb tracing a path down my tear-streaked face. “I-I don’t,” I sobbed, the contradiction evident in my trembling. “I just want…” I couldn’t finish. The fear was a physical weight, c
Aria’s POV I had been restless. Restless ever since Wolfe locked me in this..room. Could I even call it a room or a prison? I’d choose the latter cause honestly, that’s what it felt like. I had paced the luxurious rug so much until my feet started aching, collapsed onto the bed until anxiety forced me upright, crying until I was hollow—it was a vicious, exhausting cycle. My mind was a frantic, blank place. I was coming up with nothing. No brilliant plans, no strategies. Just nothing. Nothing clicked. Hope was beginning to feel like a luxury I couldn't afford. It began to seem like I’d never actually get out of here. I began to question myself wondering if I should have just accepted my fate. I finally slid down the side of the bed, sitting on the cold floor. I folded my arms into a makeshift pillow on my knees and let my head drop, the weight of it all crushing me. I had to find a way out, there had to be. And i had to do it before Wolfe returned. Worst part of it
Kade’s POV: We got out of the building just in time to see Lancaster’s men shove a terrified Lucas into the back of their black sedan. Lancaster himself paused, his gaze locking with ours from across the parking lot. It was a cold, warning stare that promised consequences, before he slid into his car, reversed, and sped off. We scrambled into our own vehicle. I twisted the key, the engine snarling to life, and pulled out, as I tried to catch up with him keeping a close distance behind their convoy. ****** About thirty minutes later, Lancaster’s brake lights glowed as his car began to slow, then turned onto a derelict street on the outskirts of Bellmere. We followed, pulling to a stop behind them. We had arrived. In front of us stood a seemingly abandoned bookshop, its windows boarded up and its signboard barely even hanging, almost like it was about to fall. “Are you sure this is the right place?” Ivy’s voice was skeptical from the back seat. “My thoughts exactly,”
Kade’s POV: What the hell was he doing here? *CLAP. CLAP. CLAP.* The slow, mocking applause echoed in the small room. Lancaster stepped inside, his eyes scanning the scene as Keisha struggled to her feet, blood trickling from her nose. “I see you beat us to it,” Lancaster said, a predatory smile playing on his lips as the clapping ceased. “W-what’s going on?” Lucas stammered from behind me. Lancaster’s gaze never left me as he closed the distance. “We never got a proper introduction, did we?” He extended his hand, the gesture dripping with condescension. “I’m Mr. Lancaster. CEO of WLC Real Estate. But you’ll know me better as Aria’s father.” “I know who you are,” I replied, my voice flat and cold as I ignored his hand. “Good.” His smile widened as he tilted his head toward Lucas. “Then I’m sure you know why I’m here.” My mind raced, trying to piece together how he had possible found us. Before I could form a response, he gave a sharp nod to his men. “Get the







