Aria woke with a strange stillness hanging in the air. The side of the bed where Damian usually slept was rumpled, but when she reached out, the sheets were cold. He had been gone for hours.
She sat up slowly, brushing her tangled hair from her face. Sunlight streamed through the tall windows of the bedroom, illuminating the elegant molding and muted tones of the walls. For a moment, she let herself forget where she was. Then the memory of yesterday—the rules, the tension, the locked door with Elena engraved on the plate—came rushing back like an icy wave. She climbed out of bed and made her way to the en-suite bathroom. After a long, hot shower and dressing in a soft floral dress that flowed just pat her mid thigh, she stepped into nude sandals and applied light makeup. She might be trapped in a cold marriage, but she refused to look like it. The scent of eggs and freshly brewed coffee led her downstairs. She paused at the foot of the grand staircase, took a breath, and then entered the sunlit breakfast room. Damian was already there, seated at the long mahogany table with his phone in one hand and a glass of orange juice in the other. He glanced up at the sound of her heels, and for a fraction of a second, something in his eyes softened. But it vanished so quickly she wondered if she imagined it. “You’re late,” he said, taking a sip of juice. “I didn’t know there was a schedule to waking up,” she replied with a cool smile. His gaze traveled down the length of her figure before returning to her face. “That dress is inappropriate.” She arched a brow and sat across from him. “It’s just a dress.” “It’s a distraction,” he muttered. “To you, maybe.” She reached for a piece of toast. “I’m perfectly comfortable.” He didn’t reply. Instead, he set his glass down with a soft clink and folded his arms. “We need to discuss your movements.” “Am I on house arrest now?” “No. But I’ve assigned you a bodyguard.” She blinked. “I’m sorry, what?” “Jaxon,” he said. “My head of security. He’ll be with you wherever you go. Starting today.” “I know you are joking, right?” she said, half-laughing. Damain started at her blankly. “You’re assigning me a babysitter?” she nearly shouted. “I’m assigning someone to ensure you are safe, and make sure you don’t stir trouble.” “Right,” she said, voice tight. “Because heaven forbid I water lilies unchaperoned.” If it was any other person, he would have smiled at the statement. But he kept his face straight, not budging. At that moment, a tall, broad-shouldered man entered the room, dressed in black slacks and a charcoal-grey shirt with a clean-cut jawline and military precision in every step. He looked like he’d rather be walking into a warzone than a domestic breakfast scene. “This is Jaxon,” Damian said. “He answers to me.” “Clearly,” Jaxon muttered under his breath. Aria tried not to laugh. Oh, she liked him already. Jaxon glanced at her, gave a curt nod, and looked back at Damian. “You want me following her around flower arrangements now? Really?” “She’s my wife,” Damian replied. “Which means she’s now a target.” "Target of what?" Aria asked. They both ignored the question. Jaxon’s jaw clenched. “Fine.” Aria stood. “Well, Jaxon. I’ll be at my shop. I suggest you bring a book. It’s going to be a long, uneventful day.” The morning air was crisp as Aria stepped out of the town car in front of her flower shop in Brooklyn The building stood just as she left it—welcoming, colorful, and warm, like a piece of her heart she’d tried to keep untouched. Inside, the familiar scents of lavender, eucalyptus, and fresh roses greeted her. Jaxon followed like a silent shadow, arms crossed, eyes sweeping the shop like it was a military post. “This place smells weird,” he grunted. “It’s a flower shop,” she replied. “It’s supposed to.” He didn’t respond. Just leaned against a wall and stared at the passersby through the shop window. Around midday, the bell above the door chimed, and Zara burst in like a glittering hurricane in a leopard-print blouse and oversized sunglasses. “There she is!” Zara threw her arms around Aria dramatically. “Married and hiding from your best friend.” “I’m not hiding. I was going to come see you,” Aria said, hugging her tightly. “It just… happened.” Zara pulled back, holding her by the shoulders. “Do I need to stage an intervention? Is this man keeping you in a tower?” “More like a mansion with mood lighting and emotional repression.” Zara laughed. “You don’t look miserable, though. Actually, you look kind of—” She paused, her eyes narrowing. “Is that a bodyguard?” Aria turned to see Jaxon glaring at them from the far wall. Zara raised her brows. “He looks like he’d kill a man with a spoon.” “He probably has,” Aria muttered. They talked and laughed until the sun began to set. Aria felt something inside her slowly ease, like a tight knot uncoiling in her chest. This—this was normal. This was who she was. “Come on,” Zara said, slinging her purse over her shoulder. “I’ll drive you back to your castle.” They stepped outside, chatting as they reached Zara’s sleek black car. The ride back was filled with laughter and Zara teasing her about being a ‘mafia princess.’ As they pulled up to the mansion’s grand entrance, Jaxon stepped out of a separate security car and stalked toward them. “Oh right. I forgot about the babysitter,” Zara muttered under her breath, then turned to Jaxon. “Don’t worry, I didn’t try to kidnap her.” Jaxon narrowed his eyes. “Next time, don’t take detours.” “Oh, I like him,” Zara said dryly. “He’s got the charm of a rabid porcupine.” “And you’ve got the subtlety of a sledgehammer. Go home.” he shot back. Sparks flew. Or rather, knives did. Aria stood between them, amused and slightly horrified. “Well,” she said, opening the door, “this should be fun.” Zara blew her a kiss and drove off, leaving Jaxon glaring after her. Aria entered the mansion with a faint smile tugging at her lips. Something told her that her best friend had just met her match. Back in the grand hallway, Jaxon turned to Damian, who was waiting with a glass of scotch in hand. He had come home early today. “She’s sharp,” Jaxon said. Damian didn’t look up. “Keep a close eye on her. I want eve rything reported to me.” “She’s not what you think,” Jaxon added. Damian’s gaze darkened. “Neither was my sister.”“Damian is a heartless bastard! What the hell was he thinking?!” Zara fumed, pacing the living room as Aria sat numbly on the couch, her eyes swollen and red. “He didn’t even give you a chance to speak, Aria. He just threw you out like trash!”Aria wiped her nose, her hands trembling. “I tried. I begged him to listen. But he looked at me like I was nothing. Like I disgusted him.”Zara dropped beside her and wrapped her arms around her best friend. “You don’t deserve this. You gave everything to him, Aria. Everything! And what did he do? Humiliate you. Toss you out like a used napkin!”Tears slipped down Aria’s cheek silently. “He wouldn’t even let me explain. He just showed me those stupid pictures and assumed the worst.”“I swear, if I ever see that man again, I’ll punch his arrogant face,” Zara snapped. “Jaxon should’ve known better too. He knows you!”“What does he know? They both believed Amelia or whoever took those pics,” Aria whispered. “She got what she wanted.”Zara looked at
Damian’s jaw clenched as he shoved the phone toward Jaxon. “She said she was at the shop yesterday,” he muttered. “Explain this.” Jaxon squinted at the screen. A photo of Aria — standing too close to a man outside a dimly lit building. The man was standing so close to her. Jaxon hesitated. “Where did you get this?” “It was sent to me this morning,” Damian bit out. “No name. Just the photo. Perfect timing too, considering how distant she’s been. This past few days.” Jaxon rubbed his brow. “You really think she—” “I don’t think,” Damian cut in coldly. “I know what I'm seeing.” And with that, he turned and stormed upstairs. Aria blinked her eyes open and reached for the other side of the bed, only to find it cold, empty—abandoned. A knot twisted in her stomach. Damian hadn’t returned to their room last night. She sat up slowly, brushing the hair from her face, her heart already dreading what the day might bring. Then she heard it—his voice. “Do you want to explain these?” Dam
A week passed since the letter arrived from Amelia, and yet Aria still felt the tremble in her bones. Fear lingered under her skin like a second heartbeat. Every morning she would wake up hoping the entire thing had been a cruel joke, but the envelope with Amelia's name remained real—tucked away in the bottom drawer of her desk at the flower shop.On the seventh day, her phone buzzed. AMELIA: In an hour meet me at an old white building just past the outskirts of town. Come alone.Aria’s heart dropped. Her hands shook as she closed the shop early, giving the staff a flimsy excuse about having a migraine. She didn’t want anyone asking questions. Not yet.She stepped into a cab, directions clenched in her mind like a lifeline. What she didn’t know was that someone followed her—a tall figure in plain clothes, discreet and silent. Damian's bodyguard, Mikhail had seen her leave and, sensing something off, trailed her from a distance. When the cab veered out of town, he immediately called D
The sunlight poured through the gaps in the curtains, casting soft golden beams over the bed. Aria stirred. Her lashes fluttered open slowly, and she turned instinctively toward the other side of the bed.Empty.A strange ache thudded gently in her chest. Not physical—something deeper. Something quiet.She sat up and winced. A soft gasp slipped from her lips as a tender soreness pulsed between her thighs. Her cheeks warmed with the memory of last night—his hands, his mouth, the way he had touched her like she was something rare and breakable.Carefully, she stood. As she turned toward the bathroom, her gaze caught on something on the sheet, a small spot of red.She stilled.A flush rose up her neck. It was real. Not just the way he held her or the way her body had clung to his—but this. This mark of what they shared. Her first time. With him.Aria walked into the bathroom, her steps slow. She sank into a warm bath, her mind flooded with everything that had happened. His words. His tou
The house was quiet when Damian returned home, the kind of silence that pressed into the walls and settled over the furniture like an unspoken secret. He shrugged off his blazer as Marta, the older housekeeper, appeared near the foyer with a polite smile. “Dinner is ready, sir.” He nodded, voice low. “Thank you, Marta.” Without another word, he headed up the staircase to change. His mind was still tangled in knots—Zara, Calder, Amelia, and now this haunting sense that Aria was slipping further from him. Again. At the top of the staircase, he took a sharp turn around the corner and almost collided with her. Aria froze in the doorway, halfway out of the bedroom. Her eyes widened for a second. “Good evening.” It was the first time they’d come face-to-face like this since the gala. Since the kiss that neither of them could confront. Damian stood still, pulse thudding low in his throat. “Good evening,” he mumbled, brushing past her and disappearing into the en suite without anothe
The morning sun streamed faintly through half-closed blinds, casting lines of gold across a strange ceiling.Zara blinked up at it, confused. The sheets felt too clean. The air too still.Then it all came rushing back—The alley. Calder.The fear.Jaxon.She sat up too fast, a sharp ache blooming across her ribs. Her bruises throbbed, but she winced through it, dragging the blanket off as she swung her legs over the edge of the couch.“You’re finally awake.”His voice came from the kitchen.Zara turned slowly—and froze.Jaxon stood shirtless, a steaming mug in his hand, the morning light catching every hard line of his torso. His chest was a canvas of ink and old wounds, each scar whispering stories. Stories she wasn’t sure she was ready to hear.Her eyes lingered on the tattoos, tracing the chaos and beauty of them—until one held her still.A man engulfed in flames.The image was haunting, almost too real.She didn’t mean to, but her fingers twitched with the urge to reach out, to ru