LOGINIvy
The drive to my parents’ house felt unreal.
My hands stayed tight around the steering wheel the entire time, my thoughts looping so violently I nearly missed two traffic lights.
He knew my name.
Not my screen name. Not the fake persona.
My real name.
And somehow that wasn’t even the worst part.
The worst part was the voice.
That deep calm tone had followed me out of the livestream and into the silence of my car, wrapping around every thought until I could barely breathe without hearing it again.
Go welcome your guest.
No.
No, that was impossible.
Patrick Laurent was one of the most recognizable actors in the world. Men like him didn’t spend their nights hidden behind masks throwing obscene amounts of money at girls online.
Right?
I tightened my grip harder.
Maybe the voice only sounded similar. Maybe I was panicking over nothing. Maybe—
My phone buzzed in the cupholder.
Unknown Number.
My chest tightened instantly.
I ignored it.
Three seconds later another message came through.
Drive carefully, Ivy. Roads are icy tonight.
Every nerve in my body went cold.
I stared at the message at the next red light, heartbeat hammering so hard it physically hurt.
No emojis. No explanation.
Just that.
My fingers shook as I typed back.
Who is this?
The reply came immediately.
You know who it is.
I threw the phone onto the passenger seat as it burned me.
The rest of the drive passed in suffocating silence.
By the time I reached my parents’ neighborhood, snow had started falling harder, soft white flakes coating the massive gated homes lining the street.
Christmas lights glowed from rooftops and windows while expensive cars filled driveways. Somewhere nearby, music drifted faintly through the cold air.
Normal.
Meanwhile, I felt like my entire life was seconds from collapsing.
The moment I stepped through the front door, warmth hit my skin along with the familiar scent of cinnamon candles and pine.
“Ivy?” my mother called from upstairs. “Is that you?”
“Yeah.”
I quickly locked the door behind me like something might follow me inside.
My father appeared from the dining room holding a glass of whiskey, grinning proudly the second he saw me.
“There she is.”
I forced a smile.
“You look nervous,” he said.
If only he knew.
“I drove through a snowstorm to get here.”
“Nonsense. It’s barely snowing.”
Easy for him to say from inside a heated mansion.
He walked closer, adjusting the sleeves of his expensive sweater before lowering his voice slightly.
“Listen carefully tonight.”
I blinked.
“Dad—”
“No attitude. No sarcasm. And for God’s sake stay off your phone while he’s here.”
I almost laughed at the irony.
“You’re acting like the president is visiting.”
“He’s more famous than the president,” my father muttered.
My mother descended the stairs then, elegant as always in cream cashmere and gold jewelry.
The moment she saw me, her eyes narrowed slightly.
“You look pale.”
“I’m fine.”
“You should change,” she said immediately. “That outfit looks too casual.”
I looked down at my black sweater and jeans.
“It’s literally snowing outside.”
“And?”
Before I could respond, headlights swept across the front windows.
Silence immediately filled the room.
My father straightened.
My mother smoothed her hair.
And somehow my own pulse became deafening.
A car door shut outside.
Then another.
The front gate clicked softly in the distance.
For one insane second, I actually considered running.
The knock came three beats later.
My father practically rushed to open it.
Cold winter air flooded the foyer first.
“Merry Christmas,” he said warmly as he stepped inside, snow melting slowly from the shoulders of his dark coat.
His voice hit me like a physical blow. It was the same voice I had heard every night for the past year.
“Merry Christmas!” my mother answered immediately, smiling as she moved toward him.
My father grinned, pulling Patrick into a brief one-armed hug. “About time you got here.”
His voice was smooth and familiar enough to make my stomach twist instantly.
He was tall, with broad shoulders, filling the doorway with effortless presence.
And those eyes.
God.
I recognized them instantly even before he smiled politely at my father.
Not because of magazines or the number of times I have watched his movies.
But because I’d stared into them through a screen for almost a year. For a few seconds, I forgot how to breathe.
Patrick Laurent stepped inside the house slowly, removing leather gloves with calm controlled movements.
Older than me by at least fifteen years.
Maybe more.
Beautiful in a way that felt dangerous rather than charming. The kind of man people fantasized about before realizing fantasy was safer from a distance.
He was dangerously masculine. Like the kind of man who noticed everything and forgot nothing.
“I’m sorry for the late arrival,” he said smoothly.
My father clapped him warmly on the shoulder while my mother practically glowed beside them.
“It’s an honor having you here.”
Patrick smiled politely.
Then his gaze shifted to me.
Everything inside me locked.
Recognition flickered there instantly.
No surprise.
Not curiosity.
Recognition.
Like he’d been waiting for this moment too.
“Ivy,” my father said proudly, “this is Patrick. I am sure you already know, anyone who doesn't would have to be living under a rock”
Patrick held my gaze as he stepped closer.
Too close.
“It’s nice to finally meet you properly,” he said quietly.
My stomach dropped. His word wrapped around me like a threat.
I stared at him, unable to breathe correctly.
He looked even more dangerous in person because now I could see all the things the screen hid:
The roughness of his jaw, the faint scar near his mouth, the calm confidence in the way he moved, and the exhaustion hidden beneath his eyes made him feel dangerously real.
He was real.
And suddenly every late-night conversation we’d ever had became horrifying.
Because this man had known exactly who I was the entire time.
“You two will probably get along well,” my mother said cheerfully, completely oblivious. “Ivy works in media too.”
My chest nearly collapsed.
Patrick’s eyes stayed on mine.
“Does she?”
I wanted to throw up.
My father laughed proudly. “She’s doing incredibly for herself. Big corporate clients already.”
“Impressive,” Patrick murmured.
There was something almost cruel in how calm he sounded.
Not mocking.
Worse.
Interested.
Like he wanted to see how long I could keep lying.
Dinner passed like a fever dream.
I barely tasted anything.
My father spent most of the evening bragging while Patrick listened with terrifying patience.
Every time I accidentally looked up, I found his eyes already on me.
Watching.
Studying.
“Mrs. Hart,” Patrick said after taking another bite, “this may be the best roast I’ve had in years.”
My mother practically lit up.
“Finally,” she laughed. “Someone in this house appreciates my cooking.”
“I appreciate it,” my father argued immediately.
“You inhale food. That’s not appreciation.”
Patrick smiled softly at that, relaxed and effortless, and for one horrifying second I understood exactly why people loved him on screen.
At one point my father left to answer a phone call upstairs while my mother disappeared into the kitchen.
And suddenly we were alone.
The silence between us felt alive.
I kept my eyes fixed on my wine glass.
“You ignored my messages.”
The quietness of his voice made it worse somehow.
I swallowed hard.
“You’re insane.”
A soft chuckle.
“No,” he said calmly. “Just honest.”
I looked up finally.
Big mistake.
Because his expression wasn’t playful.
It was intent.
“You lied to me too, Ivy.”
My pulse stumbled.
“I never told you my real name either.”
“But you let me believe you were safe.”
The words hit unexpectedly hard.
I frowned slightly. “What does that even mean?”
His gaze moved slowly over my face.
“You have no idea what kind of men watch girls online like you. What they are capable of doing to you. To your body.”
Cold spread through me.
“And you’re one of them?”
Something dark flickered in his expression then.
“Yes,” he said quietly. “I am.”
Ivy.I lasted exactly two hours upstairs before making the most dangerous decision of my life.Or maybe the best one.My body still wasn’t sure which.The house was dead silent after midnight, the snowstorm whispering against the windows while the Christmas lights outside painted soft, golden flickers across my bedroom walls. Everyone else was asleep.I should have been too.Instead, I sat cross-legged on the bed in a short silk robe, the deep crimson fabric clinging to my bare skin like a secret. My nipples were already tight, aching against the cool silk as I stared at my streaming dashboard.His last words echoed in my head on repeat.*Then don’t stream tonight.*So of course I did it anyway.For him.Only him.I opened a private room. Invite Only.My fingers trembled slightly as I typed the username.BigDaddyPHe joined in under five seconds.The second his name appeared, heat flooded between my thighs.No camera on his end. Just pure darkness.He was watching me. Hunting me with
Patrick.The second she whispered “Don’t,” something primal tore loose inside me.I still held back.Barely.My hands slammed onto the counter on either side of her, caging her in without touching. The marble was cool beneath my palms. Ivy was anything but. Flushed cheeks, swollen lips, and that oversized sweater slipping off one shoulder, exposing smooth skin I wanted to bite.She looked up at me with wide, hungry eyes, breathing fast, thighs pressed together like she was already aching.Fuck.I’d imagined this exact scene for months. She backed against a counter, wet and waiting for me to ruin her.“You should be very careful with that word,” I said, voice low and rough.Her fingers twisted tighter into my shirt.“What word?”“Don’t.”The innocent way she said it made my cock throb painfully against my zipper. She had no idea what that single word did to a man like me.I’d spent months jerking off to her streams, controlling every urge while she teased thousands of strangers. Now sh
Ivy.Avoiding Patrick became impossible by noon.Not because he chased me. Because he didn’t.He moved through the house with that infuriating calm, every glance measured, every word deliberate. Meanwhile, I was falling apart.I nearly dropped a plate when his fingers brushed mine passing the salad. I forgot what my mother asked me twice in one conversation. At dinner I caught myself staring at his mouth while he spoke to my father and I had to press my thighs together under the table when a rush of heat flooded between my legs.He stayed perfectly composed.Which only made me wetter.By evening my parents finally left for their airport hotel. The house grew quiet the second the front door closed behind them, thick snow falling heavily outside while warm Christmas lights glowed through the rooms.Just us.I stood at the kitchen island pretending to scroll on my phone, but every nerve in my body was locked on him as he poured whiskey across the room. The black sweater stretched acros
IvyI barely slept.Every time I closed my eyes, I saw him standing in the doorway, snow melting on his dark coat, that calm, predatory stillness, and those eyes that already knew every filthy secret I’d ever whispered to the camera.By four in the morning, I gave up.I crept downstairs in nothing but an oversized sweater and tiny sleep shorts, the house dark except for the soft glow of the Christmas tree. My nipples were already tight from the chill… or maybe from the knowledge that he was somewhere under the same roof.Outside, fresh snow blanketed everything. Inside me? Pure chaos.I needed coffee. I needed five minutes where Patrick Laurent didn’t exist.The second I stepped into the kitchen, I knew I wasn’t getting it.He was already there.Leaning against the marble island in black sweatpants that hung dangerously low on his hips and a dark long-sleeved shirt pushed up to his elbows, exposing strong forearms. A mug steamed near his hand while low, sultry jazz played softly. The
IvyThe drive to my parents’ house felt unreal.My hands stayed tight around the steering wheel the entire time, my thoughts looping so violently I nearly missed two traffic lights.He knew my name.Not my screen name. Not the fake persona.My real name.And somehow that wasn’t even the worst part.The worst part was the voice.That deep calm tone had followed me out of the livestream and into the silence of my car, wrapping around every thought until I could barely breathe without hearing it again.Go welcome your guest.No.No, that was impossible.Patrick Laurent was one of the most recognizable actors in the world. Men like him didn’t spend their nights hidden behind masks throwing obscene amounts of money at girls online.Right?I tightened my grip harder.Maybe the voice only sounded similar. Maybe I was panicking over nothing. Maybe—My phone buzzed in the cupholder.Unknown Number.My chest tightened instantly.I ignored it.Three seconds later another message came through.Dr
Ivy.“Say thank you.”His voice slid through my headphones low and smooth, distorted just enough to hide who he was, but not enough to hide what he could do to me.The comments on my livestream moved too fast to read properly.Tips. Requests. Men trying too hard to be noticed.But my eyes only searched for one username.BigDaddyP.A donation notification flashed across my screen.$5,000.My stomach tightened.The room around me glowed warm from the fairy lights hanging behind my bed, everything carefully arranged to look effortless. The red satin robe slipping off one shoulder. The untouched wine glass beside me. The soft music in the background.It was all fake intimacy.That was the job.“Thank you,” I said softly, smiling at the camera even though my face already hurt from pretending for the last hour.Another notification appeared almost instantly.$10,000.The chat exploded.I swallowed hard.He always did this. Dropped into my streams quietly, sat behind that black mask in the d







