Valerius stepped behind her, and the moment the blindfold touched her skin, it was as if the world narrowed to the thrum of her pulse.
The silk slid across her forehead, tying behind her head with a delicate, final pull. Darkness enveloped her, soft and complete, heightening everything else, her hearing, her breath, the sudden rawness of her own body standing exposed to the unseen. The air moved around her. She felt him, even though he hadn’t laid a single finger on her. The weight of his gaze, if he was even looking was heavier than hands. She could feel her heart beating in her throat. Then his voice came. Low. Velvet-dark. “Breathe.” She did. “Slower.” She tried, but her chest was already rising too quickly, heat flooding her limbs like wine. “You’re not in danger,” he said, tone calm, coaxing. “You’re being studied. Heard. Worshipped. You’ve stepped out of the world… and into mine.” He moved around her, she heard nothing, but she knew. A shift in pressure, the way one might feel a storm approaching before the first drop falls. “Tension lives in your shoulders,” he said. “Release it.” Her shoulders fell. “Your jaw… unclench.” Her mouth parted slightly. Her lips tingled. “Your pulse…” His breath, maybe? Brushed her collarbone. “Let it race. That’s mine now.” She shivered. A slow bloom ignited low in her belly, liquid and consuming. He circled her again, and though there was no physical contact, her skin responded like wind over water ripples of sensation everywhere. Her nipples tightened beneath her dress, sensitive against the thin fabric. Her thighs pressed together instinctively. Valerius’ voice was nearer again, by her ear. “Do you feel it?” he asked. She nodded, breathless. “The ache?” Another nod. “Good.” She could smell him, something dark and rare, cedarwood and ancient spice, like pages of forbidden books left open too long. It made her dizzy. “I want you to listen,” he said. “Listen not to my words. But the way I speak them. Let that wrap around you. Let it in.” She did. His tone shifted, deeper now. Slower. Each word struck like a soft drumbeat on the inside of her skin. “I want to hear your pleasure. Not from my hands. Not from your lips. From your mind. From your memory. From your need.” Chloe gasped as something brushed her neck, a phantom touch, a breath, a thought. She wasn’t sure. Her skin had become so attuned that she felt each pulse of air as if it were a caress. Then his words twisted, darker. Richer. “I want you to imagine yourself kneeling. Before me. Stripped, not just of fabric, but of fear. Of shame. And I want you to feel my eyes, only my eyes traveling down your spine like a kiss made of fire.” Her knees weakened. “I want you to hear me telling you what to do… not because you must obey… but because you want to. Because every part of you aches to follow. And be praised. And be seen.” She moaned softly. She didn’t even know she was doing it until the sound left her lips. “Good girl,” he whispered. Her whole body trembled. It was ridiculously impossible. He wasn’t touching her. And yet her core clenched with desperate longing. Her breath stuttered. There was no logic in it. Just sensation, surrender, the truth of her body singing louder than thought. “Now,” he said, his voice a slow pour of heat. “I want you to remember the last time you touched yourself. But this time, it’s not your fingers. It’s me. Only my voice. Only your mind. No hands. No shame.” The suggestion sank into her like velvet chains. She obeyed not with movement, but with imagination, breath, tension. He circled again, silent, invisible, everywhere. “Show me what it sounds like when you feel… completely undone.” She didn’t mean to cry out. But the pressure inside her, coiled and trembling, finally broke. It was soft and sharp at once like something electric unlocking. Climax hit her in a wave she couldn’t understand. Her hands never moved. Her legs buckled. Her cry was sharp, beautiful, raw. Every inch of her skin burned with pleasure. And when the wave receded, she was shaking. Barely able to breathe. Silence returned like a blanket, heavy and warm. The silk loosened. Fingers gently untied the knot. The blindfold slipped away. She blinked. The candlelight returned. The room. The air. Valerius stood before her, no closer than before. His face was calm. Reverent. Unhurried. Clothes intact. Body untouched. And yet.. She felt as if she’d been opened and rewritten. He smiled. “I don’t need to touch you to own you,” he said. “Your body is already speaking to me.” She stared at him, too flushed to respond. He turned and walked back to the tall leather chair. “Come back tomorrow,” he said simply. “Unless you’re afraid of what else I might make you feel.” She didn’t speak. She couldn’t. When the doors finally opened again, the woman in burgundy waited silently in the hall. As poised and unknowable as before. She handed Chloe a pale envelope. “This is your payment,” she said. Chloe took it, her fingers tingling against the smooth paper. She didn’t ask questions. Didn’t speak. She passed the woman and retrieved her shoes, her phone. The iron gates opened before her with a hiss and sigh, as if breathing her out. She walked through the fog, head spinning. Maybe it was electric. Maybe automated. Maybe. She slid into her car and shut the door. The envelope trembled slightly in her lap. She opened it. Stacked bills. She counted once. Then again. Two thousand dollars. For what? For surrender? For being undone without a single touch? She didn’t know. But the heat between her legs still pulsed gently. Her breath hadn’t slowed. And somewhere behind her, the mansion watched. Waiting.The room seemed to pulse with shadows, candlelight flickering against dark wood and iron. Chloe’s breath came shallow and fast as Valerius guided her toward the looming cross in the center. Her wrists were bound first, then her ankles, each leather strap pulled snug until she could no longer shift without feeling his control. The cold of the restraints sank into her skin, yet heat coiled low in her belly. She stood bound to the cross, her bare skin illuminated by the flickering candlelight that danced across the walls. Her breath came in shallow gasps, each one a testament to the tension coiled within her. The restraints bit into her wrists and ankles, a constant reminder of her vulnerability and the power she had willingly surrendered. Her body, a canvas of soft curves and delicate lines, was exposed, her nipples tight buds of arousal, her skin flushed with a mixture of excitement and apprehension. Valerius stood before her, his presence commanding, his tall frame casting a long
The air was suffocating in its weight. Chloe clutched the sheets against her chest, heart hammering as Valerius loomed at the foot of the bed. Her lips trembled. “Valerius, I am really sorry… I wasn’t myself,” she whispered. “I missed you. I was lonely. I…” “Lonely?” His laugh was bitter, sharp. His voice cracked, breaking. “Do you know what that did to me? To hear it from her of all people? To imagine it?” Tears spilled down Chloe’s cheeks. “I hated myself for it the second it happened. But it was never love, it was pain. You are the only one I’ve ever loved.” Valerius’s breath shuddered. His eyes softened for just a heartbeat before hardening again. He paced, dragging a hand through his hair, the silence between them charged and unbearable. Finally, he turned back, his face carved in anguish. “Do you know what I felt when Cerys spoke those words? I wanted to rip her apart for daring to poison me with them but worse, I feared she was right. That you never truly belonged to
Chloe had lost all sense of time within the mansion’s gilded walls. Morning and night blurred together in a haze of velvet drapes, candlelight, and the steady click of Cordelia’s heels against marble floors. Every day, Cordelia came with a tray, meals plated like art, crystal glasses of water, sometimes tea laced with herbs she swore would “steady the spirit.” A doctor had also been summoned more than once, a discreet man with careful hands who checked her pulse, healing, and vitals with quiet professionalism. “You’re recovering faster than expected,” he told her one morning, packing away his instruments. “But you must rest. No strain.” Rest. That was all Chloe did. Rest and wait. And wait. For Valerius. But he never came. Not once. Though she was in his house, in his bedroom, surrounded by his presence, his scent lingering on the sheets, his books lined along the shelves, his shadow etched into every corner, he himself was absent. At first, she told herself he was bus
Alexa’s mouth opened, then closed, as though she were struggling to swallow her own words. Angela folded her arms lightly, her expression serene, though the glimmer in her eyes betrayed how much she was enjoying the turn of events. Daniel cleared his throat, stepping in between them with his easy grin. “Well, this is quite the coincidence, isn’t it?” he said, looking from his daughter to Angela. “One moment, Alexa, you’re raving about how Luxe cosmetics are the best on the market, and the next moment… boom, you insult the mother of Luxe herself.” Alexa’s cheeks flushed crimson. “Dad, I didn’t know! I was just…” Daniel chuckled and gently placed a hand on her shoulder. “You were just doing what you always do, running that quick tongue of yours without checking the facts first.” He winked at Angela, clearly trying to defuse the awkwardness with humor. “Don’t mind her, Angela. She inherited my sharp mouth, but not my good timing.” Angela’s lips curved into a graceful smile, her voice
Angela strolled into the sleek, glass-walled cosmetic boutique, the soft lighting reflecting off golden shelves stacked with her daughter’s products. Pride bloomed in her chest as she reached for one of the lip kits bearing Chloe’s name, turning it over in her hand like a mother treasuring a photograph. She smiled faintly, imagining Chloe’s journey from uncertainty to success. Even with all the distance between them, moments like this reminded Angela of her daughter’s brilliance. Just then, a voice pierced the hush of the boutique. “Oh my God…” a young woman near the display let out a surprised laugh, her friend snickering beside her. “Even older women use these products?” Angela’s head turned slowly. “Excuse me?” The girl looked her up and down with an incredulous smirk. “No offense, it’s just… You know, you’re kind of older. Like, why still bother with makeup at that age? Are you trying to attract men or something? Shouldn’t you be doing, I don’t know, other things? Reading nov
The bar was dim, warm with amber light, and smelled faintly of whiskey and citrus. A low hum of conversation floated around them, but the booth Emma chose was tucked away in the corner, private enough to make Diana feel like they’d slipped into their own little world. Diana slid into the seat opposite, crossing her legs as she watched Emma settle in. “Alright,” she said, arching a brow. “You’ve been mysterious enough. What is it you wanted to tell me so badly?” Emma’s fingers toyed with the rim of her glass of water, her eyes flicking up and locking with Diana’s. There was nervousness there, but also determination. “I… I’ve seen you around before,” Emma began, her voice low but steady. “We live on the same street. For months, actually. I’d see you walking home sometimes, or heading out, and…” She broke off, shaking her head with a soft laugh. “This feels crazy to say out loud.” Diana leaned back, smirking despite herself. “Try me. I’ve heard worse.” Emma’s eyes softened. “I