LOGIN"What do you mean this is my home? You don't own me. Who do you think you are?" I asked, my voice sharp, but my hands were shaking.
He didn't blink. Didn't smile. He just stared at me like l just asked a stupid question.
"Your soon-to-be husband," he said calmly, like he was talking about the weather.
I scoffed, stepping back. "Don't fuck with me right now. Today is not the day."
I could already feel the tears crawling up my throat again.
"I was just humiliated at the restaurant by my fiance, he did not only break up with me but he embarrassed me in front of the whole damn place. I went there looking pretty for him and he called me a fat pig in front of everyone." I began to crash out.
I pressed my palm to my chest, trying to breathe. "So don't think that because I showed up here to help my friend, I don't have a heartbreak to deal with. I haven't even cried enough yet. I need to go home. Drown myself in a bottle of wine. Just... let it all out."
The tears l had been fighting broke free, falling down my cheeks. I turned away from him, trying to hide my face. I didn't want to cry in front of another stranger.
I didn't want to seem weak again. But I couldn't help it. I couldn't hold anything in anymore.
"Please," I whispered, "please let me go."
He was quiet for a second. Then his voice came, low but dangerous.
"Who hurt you?"
I turned back to look at him.
"I just need a name," he said. "That's all. I'll fix everything."
I laughed bitterly through my tears. "Fix it? Really? Do you even know what I'm going through? You think you can fix this?"
"I'll kill whoever made you cry like this," he said.
My breath caught.
"I just need his name," he added, like he was offering to pick up my groceries.
I shook my head and wiped my eyes. "You don't need to do anything. If you really want to help me, then let me go home."
He didn't speak. He just slowly stood up from the bed, his body tall and intimidating. He walked toward me, barefoot, shirtless, stitched up and my feet instinctively backed away.
But before I could move far, he reached for my waist and pulled me into him. My chest hit his bare skin. I gasped.
He tilted my chin up with two fingers, his other hand tracing along my face like he was memorizing it.
"You look so good," he said. "Is this love at first sight, or what?"
I stared at him like he had lost his damn mind. "This is not love at first sight," I snapped. "This is an obsession. And you're sick."
He grinned. "Obviously I am. And I need medical attention."
"Go to the hospital then," I hissed. "What do you want from me?"
"Why would I go to the hospital," he said, titling his head, "when I've got you here to take care of me?"
I felt another tear slip down my cheek. "Please..." My voice cracked. "Leave me alone please. Let me go."
He stared at me for a second, then turned to the door and said to the guards, "Get her some clothes. And everything a woman needs. Then leave us."
The men nodded and walked out like it was just a regular Tuesday.
I spun to him, my voice rising now. "Are you fucking for real? What the hell are you thinking? I can't stay here.
Don't you understand that?"
"You're mine," he said simply. "Don't you understand?"
I shook my head, chest heaving. "I'm not your anything! You can't keep me here! You can't just decide you own me! I'm not scared of you, okay?!"
I turned and marched to the door, pulled my hand forward to grab the handle and then-
BANG.
A gunshot rang out.
I screamed. My whole body froze.
I looked up at the door. A bullet hole sat right where my hand had been a second ago.
My heart dropped. My knees buckled slightly. What the hell did I just walk into? Slowly, I turned around. He was still holding the gun, but it was pointed at the floor now. His eyes were locked on me. Cold and burning.
"You still want to leave?" he asked.
My mouth opened, but nothing came out. I shook my head, whispering, "No... no, I don't."
Tears were falling again, faster than before. I couldn't breathe. Couldn't move. My legs felt like jelly.
He dropped the gun and walked over to me slowly.
When he reached me, he gently cupped my face in both hands, brushing the tears off my cheeks.
"I'm sorry," he whispered. "I didn't mean to scare you."
I was still crying, still shaking. His voice came out deep and commanding. "What's your name?"
“B… Bella.” I stammered, trying to keep my voice still.
He touched my hair, slowly pushing it behind my ear.
His fingers grazed my cheek.
"I don't want to see you cry," he said. "You're too pretty to be crying like that. Understood?"
I nodded quickly. "Yes. I understand."
He nodded back and walked to the bed, sitting down with a quiet groan as he rested against the pillows.
Then he looked at me again. "Liam. My name is Liam."
I stood there like a statue. My heart was pounding so fast I thought it might rip out of my chest.
And I realized something in that moment.
I was trapped. Not just trapped, practically kidnapped.
And Liam? He didn't plan to let me go.
Nine months changed everything.I used to think happiness was loud. Big moments. Things that felt heavy and dramatic. I was wrong. Happiness was quieter than that. It came in small pieces, in waiting, in fear mixed with hope, in love that stayed even when things got hard.Right now, happiness was pain. A lot of it.I held onto the bedrail with one hand and Liam’s hand with the other. My body shook as another wave hit me, strong and deep, the kind that took your breath away.“Bella,” Liam said, his voice tight, scared in a way I’d never heard before. “Look at me. Look at me.”I turned my head toward him. His eyes were wet. Not tears falling, but close. His face was pale, jaw clenched like he was the one fighting through this.“I’m here,” he said again. “I’m not going anywhere.”I nodded, even though my whole body felt like it was splitting apart.“Push,” the doctor said calmly.I took a breath and pushed.I didn’t scream. I didn’t cry. I pushed with everything I had, every part of me f
I got home earlier than usual.The house was quiet when I walked in. Liam wasn’t back yet. I dropped my bag on the bed and stood there for a moment, letting the silence settle. My chest still felt tight from everything that happened at the hospital.Ruby’s face. Her voice. The way she looked at me like she expected something.I pushed it away and went into the bathroom.The shower helped a little. The warm water ran down my back as I leaned my forehead against the tiles, closing my eyes. I let myself breathe. Let the weight of the day slide off me slowly. By the time I wrapped myself in a robe and went downstairs, my head felt clearer.That was when the front door opened.Liam stepped in, loosening his tie as he walked inside. His shoulders were tense, his movements sharp like his day hadn’t gone easy.I crossed the space between us and wrapped my arms around him, pressing my face against his chest. For a second, he froze. Then his arms came around me, strong and sure.“I needed this,
Liam kissed my forehead before I could even say good morning.“Be careful,” he murmured, adjusting the cuff of his shirt. He was already half in work mode, his mind probably at the warehouse, mine already drifting toward the hospital.“I will,” I said, standing on my toes to kiss him back properly. “Don’t stress yourself.”He smiled, that small smile he always gave me when he didn’t plan on listening. “I’ll try.”I watched him for a second longer than usual, committing the sight of him to memory the way I still did sometimes, like my mind hadn’t fully accepted yet that he was here, alive, and mine. Then I grabbed my bag and headed out.The drive to the hospital was quiet. Not empty, just calm. When I arrived, the building felt alive in a way that still surprised me. People moving with purpose. Voices blending into something steady and controlled. This place was no longer an idea or a dream. It was working. It was real.I went straight to my office.I sat behind my desk and opened the
Three months later, I stood in front of my hospital building and felt my chest tighten in a way that had nothing to do with fear.My hands shook as I held the clipboard, not because I didn’t know what to do, but because I knew exactly what this moment meant. I had imagined it for so long that it almost didn’t feel real now that it was here.Behind me, voices moved in and out, familiar ones. Nurses adjusting their coats. Doctors greeting each other with quiet smiles and quick nods. People who had trusted me enough to say yes when this place was still nothing but plans and hope.I turned slightly and saw Liam standing a few steps away.He wasn’t trying to take control of the room. He didn’t need to. He leaned back against the wall, hands in his pockets, watching everything with calm eyes. Watching me.Our eyes met.He smiled, slow and steady, like he had all the time in the world.I looked away before my emotions betrayed me.“Mrs. Bella?”I turned to see one of the senior nurses standi
The first night back home, Liam fell asleep on the couch before the movie even reached the opening credits.His head rested against the pillow I had placed carefully behind him, one arm stretched out, the other bent awkwardly because he was still learning what positions didn’t hurt. His breathing was slow, even. Real. I sat beside him, watching the small rise and fall of his chest like it was something fragile.Home felt different now.Not in a bad way. Just… quieter. Like the walls themselves were holding their breath, afraid to disturb him.I reached out and gently pulled the blanket higher over his chest. He stirred slightly, brows pulling together, then relaxed again. My fingers lingered at his temple, brushing his hair back carefully, avoiding the place where it was still growing unevenly.Two weeks ago, I didn’t know if I’d ever see him open his eyes again.Now he was here. Sleeping. Alive.I swallowed hard and stood up slowly, my knees stiff from sitting too long. I moved aroun
I had stopped counting the days.Morning and night blended into each other, marked only by the nurses coming in, the doctors checking monitors, and me sitting in the same chair beside Liam’s bed. I slept there. Ate there. Lived there. If I closed my eyes, I still saw him lying still, the rise and fall of his chest the only thing reminding me he was still here.A week.One full week of talking to him even when he didn’t answer. Of holding his hand and begging him silently not to leave me. Of pretending I was strong when my chest felt like it was caving in.That morning, I was sitting the same way I always did, my fingers wrapped around his hand. His skin was warm and steady. I rubbed my thumb over his knuckles, slow and careful, like I might break him if I moved too fast.“I’m going to be mad at you,” I said quietly, my voice rough. “You know that, right?”No response.“You promised me,” I went on. “You don’t get to scare me like this and then stay quiet.”I rested my forehead against







