ログインKAI'S POV
My eyes fell immediately from his, unable to hold his gaze as I stumbled backward. A cold, sharp realization pricked at the edges of my heated bliss. I had done something Enormously wrong. My heart was a frantic drum against my ribs, my breath was shaky, ragged thing in the sudden quiet of the office. The afterwarmth of what we’d just done still pulsed through me, a disastrously, delicious heat that belied the panic now closing my throat. His smell was everywhere. Literally Everywhere. His cologne, a sophisticated, woodsy fragrance, mixed perfectly with the clean, sharp scent of mints and something else, something uniquely, essentially him. It was an intoxicating aroma that, under any other circumstance, I would have found myself leaning into, breathing deeper. But now, it was just evidence. The air was thick with it, and with our sin. I’m so fucked. The thought was a cold splash of water, I am in a complete and utter mess. My movements were feverish as I zipped up my trousers with fumbling fingers, the sound obscenely loud, and quickly fastened the buckle with a sharp click, as I leaned on my glassy wooden desk. “What have I done?” I muttered, frustratingly, under my breath, my anger whispering into the stale office air, as I dug my fingers into my thick brown hair, pulling slightly at the roots, as if the pain could erase the memory. “Ethan?” I called out, my voice tighter than I intended. He was still on his knees, His warm blue eyes, those beautifully huge, innocent eyes, were fixed on me, wide with a mixture of awe, adoration, and a flicker of the same panic I felt. He looked like a devotee at an altar, and the sight sent a dark, thrilling current straight through my core. I knew I had being worshiped before, but this seems to be the best of them all. He was all over me. “Just get up,” I added, forcing a glacial calm into my tone, layering it over the riotous, screaming chaos inside my head. But the truth was a screaming echo: I just fucked up. I just came in a student’s mouth. Right here, In my office. “Professor Kai,” he began, his voice a low, husky whisper that felt like a physical caress in the quiet room. It was a calm, melodic sound that wrapped around me, promising things I couldn’t afford to want. “I’m really sorry about this.” He added almost in a whisper. Sorry? My eyes narrowed, my analytical mind, the one that earned me a Ph.D. and this tenured position, kicking into gear, pushing the panic aside. I studied him. Really studied him. The slight tremble in the hands he now clutched together. The way his Adam’s apple bobbed as he swallowed nervously. The blush that still painted his high cheekbones. With a quick, chilling certainty, I knew it. I could manipulate him. Completely. The thrill of that control was a potent, familiar drug. I always found a way to be in control, And now, he had just handed me the ultimate leverage on a silver platter. I pushed off the desk, the picture of composed authority, as I settled into my high-backed leather chair. I steepled my fingers, my gaze boring into him. “Why did you do it?” I saw the tension lock his shoulders. He flinched as if I’d struck him. A secret, dark part of me reveled in it. Yes, Good, Be nervous. “I… I didn’t know what came over me, Professor Kai… It’s just…” he stammered, his words tripping over each other in a helpless, desperate rush. I watched him, like a predator observing its prey circle a trap. There was no doubt in my mind now, He was already in love. Pathetically, wonderfully in love. “But you know it was never supposed to happen, right?” I said, my voice dropping to a soft, dangerous purr. I leaned forward, elbows on the desk, and rubbed my jaw thoughtfully, watching his eyes follow the movement. “I mean, what if I don’t really want this?” His face fell, crumpling with a pain that was almost too genuine to look at. “But… but I like you, Professor Kai, I always did.” His voice gained a sliver of desperate strength. “Since the day you came to this college, I’ve always had this… this admiration for you.” His fingers twisted together, a nervous, telling dance. The admission hung between us, thick and sweet. I let it sit for a moment, let him stew in the vulnerability of it. Then I shattered it. “But I don’t!” I let the words drop like stones, cold and hard and final. “I don’t feel the same way, So, to not drag this out, just see this as a one-night stand.” I infused my tone with an arctic chill, watching each word land on him like a blow. I saw it happen. The light in those beautiful blue eyes flickered and died. His intertwined fingers went limp, falling to his sides as if the bones had been removed. A profound sadness contorted his features, and a very small, very distant part of me twinged with something like regret. But I smothered it, I never cared, Or I never let myself. “But Professor Kai…” he mumbled, taking a hesitant, stumbling step toward the desk. Toward me. I held up a single hand, a clear, imperious command. “You have to leave, Ethan!” The warning in my voice was unmistakable, a blade sheathed in silk. “And all of this,” I added, my tone dropping to a firm, finality, “never happened.” I warned my tone icy. Just as I've expected,he crumbled. He nodded his head slowly like a meak sheep,I watched him bent to pick up his backpack, and like a passing moment, he was out of my office. He was gone. Flee from my office and definitely my life, leaving me with nothing but a guilty memory and the lingering scent of mint and sin.THE ENDSix months laterThe sun rose gently over Silver Bay, painting the sky in soft hues of pink and gold. Waves whispered against the shore in a steady, calming rhythm, as if the ocean itself had decided to grant them peace after everything they had endured.In a small white cottage with faded blue shutters, nestled just steps from the beach, Kai and Ethan had found their sanctuary.Kai stood barefoot in the kitchen, the morning light catching on the silver feather scar that now lay openly on his chest.No more silicone sheets, or heavy concealer. No more hiding. He wore only gray sweatpants, his body still strong but softer around the edges from a life no longer defined by violence. A faint scar from the warehouse fight remained on his side, but it had healed well.He was making coffee — real coffee this time, not the burnt disaster he used to serve. The smell of fresh pancakes and strawberries filled the air.Ethan padded in from the bedroom, hair messy, wearing one of Kai’s old
AUTHOR'S POVThe warehouse reeked of rust, oil, and fear.Kai stood in the center of the open space, blood already dripping from the graze on his shoulder, eyes locked on Ethan tied to the chair. Cole’s gun pressed firmly against the back of Ethan’s head.Pedro laughed from the raised platform, his voice echoing through the vast room. “Look at you. The mighty Kai, walking in here like a hero for some college boy. Pathetic.”Kai didn’t flinch. His voice was low, lethal. “Let him go, Pedro. This is between us.”Pedro opened his mouth to reply — but the words never came.A sharp crack split the air.Pedro’s head jerked violently as the sniper round punched through his skull. Blood sprayed across the platform. His body collapsed like a puppet with its strings cut.Chaos erupted.Men shouted. Guns swung upward toward the tall building opposite the warehouse where Ghost lay hidden on the roof, rifle steady. Kai moved like lightning.He drew both pistols and opened fire.The warehouse turned
ETHAN'S POVMy eyes were heavy, burning with exhaustion, but when I finally forced them open, everything was wrong.Complete darkness swallowed me. No windows, no light. Just thick, suffocating black. My wrists burned where rough rope cut into my skin, and my ankles were bound so tightly to the chair legs that my feet had gone numb. I tried to move, but the ropes only dug deeper, sending sharp pain shooting up my arms.“W-what’s going on?” My voice came out small and trembling, barely louder than a whisper. “Hello? Somebody help me!”Silence answered. The kind of silence that pressed against your eardrums and made your own heartbeat sound like thunder.Panic clawed up my throat, as many questions ran through my head. Was I kidnapped? Why? I was nobody. I had nothing. Were they going to harvest my organs? Sell me? Kill me?Tears stung my eyes as I struggled harder against the ropes, twisting my wrists until the skin tore. It was useless. The knots were tight, professional. I tried
KAI'S POVThe note burned a hole in my pocket as I stepped out of my office and locked the door behind me. The hallway was quiet, too quiet, the kind of silence that made the back of my neck prickle. I scanned both directions, eyes sharp, searching for anyone who didn’t belong. Nothing. Just the usual afternoon lull — a few students hurrying to their next class, laughter echoing faintly from the stairwell.I moved to the balcony overlooking the quad, gripping the railing until my knuckles turned white. Who the hell had slipped that paper under my door? The female student with the gift box? Unlikely. She looked too innocent, too eager. But innocence could be a mask. Maybe she was just the delivery girl. Someone else pulling the strings.My jaw clenched. If they had access to my office, they had access to this campus. And if they had access to the campus, Ethan was no longer safe here.I couldn’t sit still.I took the stairs instead of the elevator, forcing myself to walk at a normal p
KAI’S POVThe apartment felt like a tomb.I stood in the middle of the living room, arms hanging useless at my sides, staring at the space that only yesterday had been filled with Ethan’s laughter, his bare feet padding across the floor, his soft voice calling my name from the kitchen. Now it was just silence and shadows. The morning light coming through the windows did nothing to warm the place. It only highlighted how empty it had become.At the end of the day, I always end up alone. That’s the one constant in my life. No matter how hard I try, no matter how much I want something different, I always end up here — standing in the wreckage of my own choices.And this time, it was entirely my fault.I dragged a hand down my face, exhaling shakily. Yesterday kept replaying in my head like a broken record. The way Ethan had looked at me when I came out of the shower — his eyes fixed on my chest, even though I’d covered the scar immediately. The way his heart had hammered against mine w
ETHAN’S POVI slipped into the lecture hall twenty minutes early, picked my usual spot, very last row in the tightest corner, and tried to disappear. My hands were still shaking from the morning, from the stranger’s gray eyes that looked too much like Kai’s, from the way my heart kept ricocheting between hope and dread. I pulled my books out slowly, lining them up like armor, my hoodie pulled low over my face.Students started pouring in, laughing, gossiping, alive in a way I hadn’t felt in days. I kept my gaze on my desk, tracing the carved initials of people who didn’t have to wonder if the man they loved was a killer.Then the door opened again, and I felt him before I saw him.That same tall frame from the quad filled the doorway, scanning the room with lazy confidence. His eyes landed on me instantly. A slow smile curved his mouth, friendly, warm, and completely disarming.My stomach flipped, instantly.He started walking straight toward me.No, No no no.I dropped my gaze to m







