MasukMy father loved parties.
Lavish, glittering, suffocating parties filled with people who pretended they cared about his business when all they really wanted was a slice of the Kingsley empire.
I hated them.
But tonight, I saw an opportunity.
Damon had been colder than ever since his whispered warning outside my bedroom door. He shadowed me like a soldier, silent, unreadable, a fortress of self-control.
So I decided to break that fortress.
⸻
The ballroom was alive with music and champagne. Golden chandeliers sparkled above polished marble floors. Laughter and conversation swirled around me, but all I could feel was Damon’s presence against the wall, his gaze sweeping the crowd with military precision.
I wore red.
Danger red.
Silk that clung to every curve, slit high enough to tease with every step. I’d chosen it for one reason: Damon Cross would notice.
And when I caught his eyes across the room, his jaw clenched. Victory.
But I wanted more.
⸻
He wasn’t the only man watching me. Ethan Harrow, son of my father’s business partner, cut through the crowd with practiced charm. Ethan was handsome in that polished, boring way—perfect hair, perfect smile, expensive cologne. The type of man my father wanted for me.
“Aria,” Ethan drawled, leaning in to kiss my hand. “You look… breathtaking tonight.”
I smiled sweetly, but my eyes flicked past him—to Damon.
And there it was. That flicker. That tightening of his fists at his sides.
Good. Let him burn.
Ethan offered me his arm. “Dance with me?”
Normally, I’d refuse. But tonight wasn’t about Ethan. It was about Damon. So I let Ethan lead me to the dance floor, silk sliding against my skin, my body swaying far too close to Ethan’s as violins swelled around us.
I laughed when Ethan whispered something in my ear. Too loud. Too bright. Fake. But Damon didn’t know that.
From across the room, I felt his stare sharpen into a blade.
⸻
Ethan’s hand slid a little lower on my back.
Too low.
I should’ve stopped him. But I didn’t. I wanted Damon to see.
Because Damon’s silence was killing me. His restraint was torture. I wanted him to break. To lose control. To show me the fire I’d tasted in the backseat of that car.
And for one dangerous moment, I thought I succeeded.
Because Damon moved.
He strode across the ballroom like a storm, his tall frame cutting through dancers and waiters alike. His face was unreadable, but his eyes—God, those eyes—were locked on me, burning like wildfire.
My heart skipped, adrenaline spiking.
This was it.
But then—
He stopped.
Not beside me. Not to rip me away from Ethan’s arms like I expected. No. Damon planted himself near the bar, muscles taut, jaw carved from stone, watching. Controlling. Waiting.
Punishing me with distance.
And somehow, that hurt more than if he’d dragged me out by the wrist.
⸻
Ethan spun me across the floor, oblivious to the silent war happening behind us. “You’re distracted,” he murmured, his hand tightening on my waist.
I forced a smile. “Maybe.”
“Then let me remind you why you shouldn’t be.” His lips brushed against my ear, his breath hot.
I stiffened. Wrong. Too wrong. Damon wasn’t wrong. Damon was danger, sin, fire. Ethan was… nothing.
But Damon didn’t know that.
I let Ethan’s lips linger just long enough. Just long enough for Damon to see—
And then everything snapped.
⸻
In an instant, Damon was there. One second across the room, the next tearing Ethan off me with a grip so brutal Ethan yelped. Gasps erupted across the ballroom, whispers rushing like wildfire.
Damon shoved Ethan back, eyes blazing, voice low and lethal. “Touch her again, and I’ll break your hand.”
Ethan stammered, pale and trembling. “W-What the hell—she—she asked me to—”
“Get out.” Damon’s voice was pure command, a growl that silenced the music, the chatter, everything.
And Ethan did. He bolted, red-faced, humiliated, leaving me breathless in Damon’s grip.
The entire ballroom stared. My father’s allies. His rivals. Everyone.
And in that moment, I realized Damon had crossed a line.
Not just with me.
But with the entire world.
⸻
He dragged me out of the ballroom, his hand crushing mine, his strides long and merciless. I stumbled to keep up, my pulse wild, heat rushing through my veins.
“Damon—” I started.
“Shut up,” he snapped, voice raw with something I’d never heard before.
Rage. Possession. Desire.
He didn’t stop until we were in a deserted hallway, the music fading behind us, shadows swallowing us whole. He slammed me against the wall, his body caging mine, his breath ragged against my ear.
“Do you think this is a game, Aria?” His voice was gravel, sharp and furious. “Do you have any idea what you’re doing?”
I met his eyes, chest heaving, heat sparking between us like wildfire. “Yes,” I whispered. “I know exactly what I’m doing.”
His hand pressed against the wall beside my head, his body so close I could feel the heat radiating from him. For the first time, the mask of control cracked—his pupils blown wide, his lips parted, his restraint unraveling.
And then he leaned closer, his mouth a breath away from mine, his voice breaking into something dangerous, forbidden, inevitable—
“God help me, Aria, if you ever push me like that again…”
He didn’t finish.
Because finishing would mean admitting what we both knew—
That next time, he wouldn’t stop.
Aria’s POVThe silence of a neighborhood group chat is a specific kind of violence.I sat at the kitchen island, the marble countertop cool against my forearms, staring at my phone until the screen timed out. I tapped it awake again. The blue bubbles of my sent messages—bright, hopeful, and containing a digital flyer with two watercolor elephants—remained suspended in a vacuum.“Lyra and Elara are turning Two! Join us for a ‘Two-Wild’ Safari Brunch this Sunday at 10:00 AM. 🎈🦁”Delivered. Read by Sarah at 9:14 AM. Read by Chloe at 9:16 AM. Read by Bianca, the undisputed architect of the cul-de-sac’s social hierarchy, at 9:20 AM.It was now 2:45 PM.In the living room, the twins were engaged in a high-stakes negotiation over a single, slightly chewed-on wooden block. Lyra, the firebrand, had her hand firmly clamped on one side, her brow furrowed
Aria's POVThe three days following the clinic were a descent into a kind of silence I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy. Our house, once a place of celebration and new beginnings, felt like it was holding its breath. Noah hadn't eaten. He hadn't showered. He just sat in the guest room, staring at the wall, a hollowed-out version of the vibrant guy who had arrived two weeks ago.Next door, the Pastor’s house was a tomb of high-gloss brick. We saw the "private nurse" arrive and leave. We saw Timon leave for his mid-week Bible study, his head held high, waving to neighbors as if he hadn't just orchestrated a kidnapping and a forced procedure.I felt a cold, sharp rage every time I saw his silhouette through the window. It wasn't just anger; it was a fundamental shift in my soul. I had spent my life trying to be "good," trying to be the person who took the high road. But as I watched Noah wither away, I realized the high ro
Aria's POVThe silence that followed Lynn’s announcement didn't last. It shattered."Abortion."The word didn't come from Noah, and it didn't come from me. It came from Timon. He said it with the same clinical, detached tone he used to quote scripture during a lukewarm sermon. He sat back, his hands folded over his knee, his eyes as cold as two stones at the bottom of a well."Timon!" I gasped, the air leaving my lungs. "You cannot be serious. You’re a man of God.""I am a man of my legacy," Timon countered, his voice rising, gaining that rhythmic, booming quality that usually held hundreds of people in thrall. "I am the shepherd of this community. Do you have any idea what this does? A bastard child? Born to the Pastor’s 'pure' daughter and a... a drifter with no name? This is not a child, Aria. This is a weapon. A weapon that will be used to dismantle thirty years of ministry."
The air in our living room was so thick with tension I felt like I was breathing through a wet blanket. Noah sat on the edge of the velvet armchair, his face buried in his hands, his body vibrating with a frantic, restless energy. Beside him, Lynn looked like a porcelain doll that had been shattered and glued back together too many times. Her backpack—the one containing her entire life and those three life-altering strips of plastic—sat at her feet like a ticking bomb.I stood by the window, my eyes scanning the dark driveway next door. The Pastor’s house was a silent silhouette against the moon, oblivious to the fact that its foundation had just turned to dust.Then, I heard the heavy, familiar tread of Damon’s boots on the hardwood.My heart hammered against my ribs. Damon had been the rock I clung to through every storm of the last year. We had finally reached the shore. We had finally found peace.
The air in the Blackwood house had been thick with a weird, uneasy tension for a week, but I had been too caught up in the high of my secret life to really feel the ground shifting under my feet. For fourteen days, Lynn and I had played a game of suburban roulette, and every time the chamber clicked empty, we just got bolder.I thought I was the one in control. I thought I was the hero, the escape artist, the guy who was going to walk away from this two-month stay with a girl on his arm and a clean slate.Then came the text that made the world stop spinning.I was in my room, staring at a map on my phone, trying to figure out where I could take Lynn when my time here was up. The burner phone vibrated against my thigh.“Noah. I’m scared. I’m late. Like, ten days late.”I stared at the screen until the words blurred. My heart didn't just race; it felt like it was trying to punch it
They say you shouldn’t play with fire, but they never tell you how warm it feels right before you get burned.For two weeks, I had been living a double life that would make a spy sweat. By day, I was the helpful cousin, the volunteer at the community center, the guy washing his car and giving the neighborhood girls a polite nod. But every other hour of the day, my mind was thirty feet to the right, locked inside a brick house with a girl who was becoming my entire world.The tension was peaking. Every vibration of the burner phone in my pocket felt like an electric shock.“She saw it,” the text had come in three days ago. “The mark on my chest. She saw the hickey when I was changing for bed.”My heart had nearly stopped. “What did you tell her?”“I told her it was a spider bite. An insect from the garden. She stared at it for ten minutes, Noah. She didn't







