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I had never understood how people got excited, or happy, or sad. I never understood how they laughed so hard until their eyes watered, or how they cried just as hard and their eyes got all swollen.
I don't think I have ever felt those emotions before, even as a child. I think… whatever makes people feel things like joy, or excitement, or even sadness, maybe that was never built in me. Like a missing set of cells. Or maybe it just burned out before I ever got to use it. The only emotions I ever felt, that were familiar, like old friends, were hate, rage, fear, and lust—the latter had developed when I hit puberty, and the other three… well, for as long as I could remember. And right now what I was feeling was rage. Pure rage that made me tremble. “What?” I asked my mother, my fists clenched so tight, my nails dug into my palm, piercing skin. “You’re getting married?” “Uh-huh,” she answered, grinning from ear to ear as she watched the diamond ring on her finger—her engagement ring. The diamond hit the sun and reflected, glowing. “Oh! Look at that!” “It's barely been a month,” I reminded her, my voice shaking. “His body has just been buried and you're getting married again?” My parents’ relationship has never been sweet, never been like all those other people I had seen who loved each other. They fought and argued all the time and I always ended up being dragged into it. It always ended with me covered in bruises. I hated them both. I used to fear them, but one day I just woke up and decided, “Never again.” That I was never going to be afraid of them, I would only hate them, and forever feel rage towards them. So I really didn't give a fuck that she was getting married barely a month after her husband died. What I did give a fuck about was she could at least pretended to mourn him. People would be watching, and they were going to talk. My mother just shrugged, turning away from the window, and looking at me the way she always did—like I was stupid and wasn't worth her time. “I thought since you grew tall and curvy, you’d grow out of your stupidity,” she snarled, “but I thought wrong. When life gives you an opportunity, Rosette, dear, you grab it with both hands. Damn the consequences to hell.” She brushed past me, heading towards the door. “I'm selling the house. We’re moving to his house as soon as the vows are said.” *** I didn't go to the wedding. Mom blew my phone up with calls but I didn't pick a single one. I didn't go back to the house and stayed at a friend’s place, going to my part-time job from there. But my friend's generosity could only extend so long, and I couldn't stay there any longer. So a week after the wedding, I finally picked up Mom’s call. “Stupid girl,” were the first words she spat, her voice harsh. “Do you know the lies I had to make up? We were supposed to put up a lovely family front. We were supposed to show my new husband and his family a united front!” “I'm sure you came up with a convincing lie,” I said, my voice flat. “Send the address. I’ll come there straight when I close from work.” “You and that–” The phone beeped as I ended the call, tossing it into my bag and going back to work. I didn't want to go. I didn't want to make my mother feel like she won, or she still had some control over me, but I had no choice. I couldn't get an apartment because I was saving to go to college. So I would go, but I wasn't going to play her stupid united family. I was just going to swallow everything she threw at me. It was just until this year's end, and then I was moving. I would finally be going to college. *** As soon as I saw the address Mom sent, I knew this wasn't some regular businessman she got married to. When I got to the mansion, that was only confirmed. It was huge, like a damn castle, with towering walls and big gates. As soon as I got out of the taxi, someone was there to take my bags and led me inside. “Welcome, Miss Rosette,” a man dressed in a suit, with thick glasses resting on his nose, greeted me while my bags were being taken away. “I'm Gabriel, the butler, and I shall be the one you come to if you need anything.” “Nice to meet you,” I said with a slight nod. I was led inside the mansion, through a long hall, until I entered a room where Mother was, and then I was left alone with her. She was immediately on her feet when she saw me, marching toward me with her hands resting on her hips and her face red with anger. “I will not have you ruin this for me, Rose,” she hissed into my face. “You will behave. You will act like the perfect child, smile when you should, and talk nicely.” “If I decide not to?” I asked just to taunt her. “What will you do, Mom? Hit me? Not feed me for a week? Or maybe your favorite punishment method—locking me in a dark cabinet with no food or water?” Her face grew redder as I spoke, her breathing harsh. “You can't do any of those things any longer. You hold no control over me anymore, and I will behave as I want. Smile when I want, talk nicely, or be rude if I decide to. We both know we wouldn't be able to present a lovely front when we hold so much hate for each other, so much venom. It’s only a matter of time before your new husband finds out you're all pretense. What will you do, then? Jump to the next person that looks your way?” She was red all down to her neck now, her breathing a harsh pant. “You ungrateful–” I already anticipated it before she even raised her hand, but I still let the slap land. The sound rang in the big room, echoing back to me, but I didn't even feel it. I pointed at my cheek, at the spot I was sure it was already bruised. “United, my fucking ass.” She took a step closer to me, but halted when a new voice spoke. “Is everything alright?”KROSS The hotel room smelled like new clothes and a sharp cologne; it was deep yet calming at the same time, and I stood there letting the tailor finish the last adjustments even though my hands wouldn’t stop moving, my fingers flexing, my chest tight with excitement that refused to sit still.I had faced bigger deals, more complex decisions, losses that nearly broke me, but this felt different; this felt like standing on the edge of something that mattered more than anything else I had ever built.The door opened without a knock, and I turned just in time to see Axel and Kade walking in like they owned the place, grinning wide, suits sharp, eyes already scanning me like they were about to start trouble.“Well damn,” Axel said, nodding slowly. “You actually clean up nice when your life depends on it.”I laughed, the sound coming out louder than I expected, and before I knew it, they were on me, arms wrapping around me, rough and familiar and grounding in a way only brothers could be.
My hands roamed his back, nails dragging lightly, then down to grip his ass, urging him deeper even though he was already as deep as he could go. He groaned, hips stuttering for a second before he found the rhythm again… slow, deep, relentless.“You’re dripping all over me,” he whispered, voice wrecked. “I can feel you soaking my balls, Sade.”I whimpered, the words making me clench so hard he hissed.He shifted slightly, hooking one of my knees over his elbow, opening me wider. The angle changed, deeper now, hitting that spot with every thrust. My eyes rolled back, mouth falling open on a long moan.“Right there?” he asked, voice soft but intense. “That spot, fiancée?”“Yes! God, yes! That's it! Don't stop!” He didn’t. He kept that same slow, devastating pace, grinding deep, circling his hips when he was fully inside so the base of his cock rubbed my clit perfectly. Sweat started to slick between us, my breasts sliding against his chest, nipples hard and aching.I reached between us
SADEI didn’t even remember moving.One second, I was standing there staring at him on his knees with that small box in his hands, and the next second, my chest cracked open, and everything poured out at once, the fear, the waiting, the doubt, the wanting, all of it crashing together so hard that the sound tore out of me before I could stop it.“Yes!” I screamed, my voice breaking as it echoed around the room, my hands flying to my mouth as tears rushed out without warning. “Yes! Yes! Yes! Oh my God, yes.”He didn’t even let me finish before he was on his feet, the ring box forgotten somewhere behind us as he crossed the space in two steps and grabbed my face in his hands, kissing me like he’d been holding that breath for years, like this was the answer to every unfinished sentence between us.I laughed and cried into his mouth at the same time, my hands shaking as I clung to him, my whole body buzzing, my knees weak, my heart racing so fast it felt unreal. “You scared me,” I said bet
SADE The sun was really bright and it came in through the curtains while I stood at the kitchen counter stirring coffee I’d already forgotten about, my mind somewhere else entirely even though Kross was behind me, close enough that I could feel the warmth of his body, his hand settling on my waist, a little space away from myself and yet he never wandered past, his touch was so gentle, and familiar in a way that still caught me off guard sometimes.Everything between us worked, maybe too well, which was what made the unease I felt more complicated to explain even to myself, because we lived here together, went to work together and worked side by side, argued about deadlines and shipping delays, laughed over burnt toast and dry jokes, shared kisses that left me breathless and nights that I couldn’t out into words. Yet, somehow there was still this thin line I kept bumping into, this unspoken thing neither of us named out loud.I met Lina later that day, and she didn’t even wait for me
SADE Kross watched me from the foot of the bed now. He was still fully dressed in that black button-down that hugged his shoulders just right, sleeves rolled to his elbows, eyes dark and patient but hungry. He didn’t move yet, just let me have this moment, let me peel the first button open while his gaze stayed glued to every inch of skin I revealed. The fabric parted slowly, and I saw his jaw tighten, saw the way his fingers flexed like he was fighting not to reach for me too fast.I popped the second button, then the third, letting the shirt fall open just enough that the lace of my bra peeked out, black against my skin, and I heard him exhale sharply through his nose.“Baby…” he said, voice low and rough. “You’re killing me.”I smiled, small and teasing, because I loved it when he sounded like that, like he was barely holding it together. “Then come help me,” I whispered, fingers pausing on the last two buttons.He was across the room in two strides, big hands gentle but sure as
I didn’t make it far.I barely reached the gate before I heard Kross shout my name again, sharp and urgent, breaking through the noise in my head like it always did when it came from him. I kept walking anyway because stopping felt like weakness, and I had spent too many years teaching myself how not to stop for him.“Sade.”I clenched my jaw and kept moving, my heels clicking too loud against the pavement, my chest tight, my vision blurry, and then his hand wrapped around my wrist, not hard, not forcing, just enough to say don’t go, just enough to remind me that he still knew how to stop me without hurting me.“Let me go,” I said, my voice shaking even though I hated that it did.“No,” he said, breathless, like he’d been running, as the thought of losing me again scared him more than his pride ever could. “You don’t get to walk away like that, not after everything you said, not after that kiss.”I turned on him then, anger flaring hot and fast, my eyes burning as I looked at his face







