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Chapter 34

作者: Ivy Vane
last update 公開日: 2026-03-17 10:08:53

(Adrian POV)

Adrian didn’t wake up restless.

That was what unsettled her.

She woke calm — the kind of calm that didn’t come from rest, but from decision. Not a loud one. Not even a conscious one. Just a subtle recalibration that had settled somewhere beneath her ribs overnight.

She lay still for a moment, listening to the city hum beyond her windows. Cars moved. Someone laughed faintly on the street below. Life continued without urgency.

So did she.

Her phone sat untouched on the nightsta
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  • Proximity Without Permission    Chapter 36

    (Damon POV) Damon noticed the distance the same way he noticed everything else. By what didn’t happen. No late-night text asking for distraction. No half-formed invitation framed as convenience. No sudden shift in tone that suggested uncertainty. Adrian hadn’t gone silent. She’d gone still. That mattered. Damon sat in his apartment with the lights low, jacket draped over the back of a chair, glass of water untouched on the table beside him. The city pressed in softly through the windows, distant and indifferent. He hadn’t reached out. Not because he didn’t want to — but because he understood what she was doing. She was watching. People mistook space for absence. Damon had learned better. Space was a test. It revealed impatience. Entitlement. Fear of losing relevance. He refused to fail it. His phone lay face up on the table. No new messages. No missed calls. He didn’t check it every few minutes. He didn’t rehearse conversations that hadn’t been requested.

  • Proximity Without Permission    Chapter 34

    (Adrian POV) Adrian didn’t wake up restless. That was what unsettled her. She woke calm — the kind of calm that didn’t come from rest, but from decision. Not a loud one. Not even a conscious one. Just a subtle recalibration that had settled somewhere beneath her ribs overnight. She lay still for a moment, listening to the city hum beyond her windows. Cars moved. Someone laughed faintly on the street below. Life continued without urgency. So did she. Her phone sat untouched on the nightstand. No missed calls. No messages waiting. That, too, felt intentional. She hadn’t told anyone she wanted quiet, but somehow the quiet had arrived anyway. Adrian rose and moved through her apartment slowly, barefoot on cool floors. She made coffee without checking her email. She showered without replaying conversations. The absence of mental noise felt unfamiliar — not unpleasant, just strange. She dressed simply. Neutral colors. Clean lines. Armor she’d worn long enough to forget it was armor

  • Proximity Without Permission    Chapter 33

    (Celeste POV) Celeste noticed changes before most people did. Not because she was paranoid — because she paid attention. Patterns mattered. Timing mattered. Adrian’s habits, once predictable in their discipline, had begun to loosen at the edges. Meetings still started on time. Decisions were still sharp. But something underneath had shifted, like a current redirecting itself just enough to be felt, not seen. Celeste sat at her desk, tablet glowing softly as she reviewed schedules that didn’t need reviewing. Adrian had canceled dinner twice this week. Not postponed. Canceled. That distinction lingered. It wasn’t unlike Adrian to protect her time, but she usually replaced one obligation with another. Silence was new. Gaps were new. Space — intentional space — was new. Celeste tapped her pen against the desk, once, then stopped herself. Control wasn’t about tightening. It was about knowing when not to. She rose and crossed the office floor, heels clicking lightly against polis

  • Proximity Without Permission    Chapter 32

    (Damon POV) Damon had learned a long time ago that urgency scared people like Adrian. She didn’t respond to pressure. She responded to certainty — the quiet kind. The kind that didn’t ask for attention or demand reassurance. The kind that stayed exactly where it was placed and let her come to it. That was how you stayed close to someone like her. Not by chasing. By being familiar. He parked two blocks from her building and cut the engine, hands resting loosely on the steering wheel. The city moved around him, indifferent, alive. He could go up. He could text. He could do nothing. So he did nothing. Instead, he waited. Adrian didn’t need to be reminded she wasn’t alone. She needed to feel that she wasn’t being managed. Damon understood that instinctively. He had known her before the layers hardened — before control became armor instead of instinct. That was the advantage of history. He checked his phone. Nothing from her. Good. If she reached out tonight, it would be beca

  • Proximity Without Permission    Chapter 31

    (Elliot POV) Elliot didn’t need confirmation. He needed patterns. That was the mistake people made when they thought caution meant hesitation. Elliot wasn’t unsure—he was measuring. And tonight, the measurements stopped lining up. Adrian’s response had been simple. I did. No defensiveness. No explanation. No irritation. Just a clean declaration of agency. He respected that. What unsettled him was everything surrounding it. He stood in his office with the lights off, city glow bleeding in through the windows as data scrolled across his tablet. Schedules. Access logs. Subtle shifts in routine that would mean nothing to anyone not looking for them. Someone was smoothing Adrian’s edges. Not protecting her. Not isolating her. Positioning her. Elliot’s jaw tightened. He replayed the last two weeks in his mind—not emotionally, but structurally. Who’d been present. Who’d stepped back. Who’d filled the silence when others paused. Celeste. Always Celeste. Not overtly. Not aggr

  • Proximity Without Permission    Chapter 30

    (Adrian POV) Adrian learned quickly that control didn’t disappear all at once. It eroded. In small permissions she didn’t remember granting. In decisions that felt mutual until she replayed them later and realized she’d been guided there. She noticed it most in the quiet moments — the pauses between calls, the silence after meetings ended, the way her calendar seemed fuller without her adding anything new. She hated that feeling. It followed her now as she stood in her office long after most of the floor had emptied, heels kicked off beneath her desk, city lights pulsing beyond the glass. The building hummed with residual energy, systems running even when people weren’t. She liked systems. Systems didn’t pretend. Her phone lay face down on the desk. She hadn’t turned it over since Elliot’s last message. Did you change your plans tonight? The question itself wasn’t invasive. It was the tone — restrained, precise — that unsettled her. Elliot rarely asked anything without alre

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