LOGINHeat blooms between my legs, sudden and dizzying. It's as if he's run a thick finger between my pussy lips, circled my clit, slipped inside my slick channel. I can feel him stroking me, gently, then faster until I fall apart under his hands, under his stare, under his body. **** Iris Caldwell marries Edward Ashcroft for money and security – and becomes a widow before the day is over. The marriage contract leaves her with nothing but dependency, silence, and a place in the house of Edward’s father, Thomas: decades older, controlled, and dangerously attentive. From the first charged look, their attraction is immediate and illicit. What begins as protection hardens into command, what begins as fear turns into surrender. Under Thomas’s rule, Iris finds safety in obedience and heat in restraint. Every boundary sharpens the desire neither of them should feel... and cannot stop. A Daddy Dom and his little girl sub; a forbidden age-gap romance; a power exchange born of grief. A love that knows it’s wrong... and wants it anyway.
View MoreIRIS
I stand at the front of the church and think, with an odd, dispassionate clarity, that nothing has ever felt less like a beginning.
The air is cool and smells faintly of lilies and old stone, a ceremonial chill that presses against my skin through silk and lace. My wedding dress is heavier than I remember from the fittings, weighted with intention, with expense, with the silent labor of women who will never know my name. During the nuptials, I keep my hands folded because it gives them something to do, and also because if I let them rest at my sides, I'm afraid they'll tremble and someone will surely mistake that for bridal nerves and excitement.
This isn't nerves, and it sure as hell isn't excitement. It's awareness, it's acceptance. I'm not in love, and I'm not even pretending to be.
That's the truth of it, stripped of all ceremony. I've stepped up to this church altar because retreat was no longer an option. The dress is a gorgeous trap, pressing me into stillness. I'm acutely aware of how young I look in it, far younger than my twenty-four years. Despite that, I've made the most adult decision that I'll probably ever make, for the whole rest of my life.
I'm marrying Edward Ashcroft because there was no other door open to me, because Edward needs a wife, and because I need money. Money – even money accessed by a contract, even money with strings and conditions attached – feels like something solid that I can stand on after years of balancing on nothing at all. He needs a wife to cleanly and serenely step into his life without complication or drama, and I need security badly enough that I've learned not to flinch at the cost of entering that life.
This is the entire architecture of the day, though I sure won't say it out loud, and neither will he. I've practiced the reception smile in the mirror anyway, the one that says grateful, the one that says lucky me, the one that implies love without actually requiring it. This smile has carried me further than honesty ever has.... it's carried me right into the luxurious, sumptuous world of the Ashcrofts.
Edward stands in front of me now, slipping a gold band onto my finger. He looks exactly as he should: dark-haired and handsome, rich and respectable. When he smiles at me, it's the smile of a man who believes he's arrived at the correct outcome, and I return the smile radiantly because that's what I'm here to do. I have to sell this publicly as a fairy-tale romance – the marriage contract that I signed six months ago made that explicitly clear.
I tell myself, for about the nine-hundredth time, that this is enough, more than enough. For the first time ever, I'm safe, I'm protected, and I have a clear and predictable path set before me, one that I can navigate with confidence, even right here at the very beginning. All I have to say is, "I do."
So I say the two words that activate the agreement. I say that I do: I do agree to everything laid out in the 147-page wedding contract, to the rules and the expectations, to the lifetsyle and the rewards. I say yes to an entirely new life.
And then I feel it. Someone is looking at me, and not in the way guests look at a bride, not with polite admiration or ceremonial interest, but with weight. With intent.
I know who it is before I even shift my eyes. I know that Edward's father is watching me.
I've sat across from him in offices with solid oak tables, watched him skim the wedding contract with ruthless efficiency, listened to his voice as it shaped the conditions of my life. I've met him dozens of times, always in the presence of lawyers, always with Edward next to me. I've told myself, repeatedly, that the unease he stirs in me is nothing more than the stress and strain of bargaining away my future clause by clause.
That explanation dissolves the moment I look at him now.
Thomas Ashcroft sits two rows back, filling the space as though the pew were built for him alone. At fifty-three, his body hasn't softened into comfort, it's hardened into authority. Broad, muscular shoulders stretch the fabric of his suit, his chest thick and solid beneath fine wool that can't disguise the sheer physical fact of him. His hands rest loosely on his knees – large hands, capable hands, the kind that look like they've signed contracts worth millions and closed around people’s lives without ever trembling. This is a man accustomed to being listened to and obeyed.
His wealth is visible without being advertised: it clings to him in the quality of his clothes, the stillness of his posture, the absolute absence of hurry. He looks like a man who owns rooms, who owns time, who owns outcomes. A man who has never had to ask whether he's allowed to own something.
And right now, as of 'I do', he owns me. I find that a part of me likes that. A lot.
Thomas' dark gaze moves over me slowly, unapologetically, as though the heavy material is no barrier at all. He doesn't look at the facade of the dress; he looks at my body inside it, young, contained, already disciplined by silk and contract and circumstance.
Heat blooms between my legs, sudden and dizzying. It's as if he's run a thick finger between my pussy lips, circled my clit, slipped inside my slick channel. I can feel him stroking me, gently, then faster until I fall apart under his hands, under his stare, under his body.
Then realization lands like cold water thrown smack in my face:
Clause forty-two.
Fidelity.
IRISI wake long before Daddy permits me to move.There's a particular stillness that lives only in places where power is quiet and absolute, and it presses against my skin now, gentle but unyielding, as if the walls themselves are holding their breath. I lie beneath the sheets, the linen cool against my thighs, faintly scented with something clean and citrusy that makes my chest ache in a way that I don’t yet have language for.In the past couple of days, waiting has become something entirely new for me. It's no longer the sharp-edged waiting of fear, the kind that keeps muscles locked and breath shallow. This new waiting hums, it settles into me. It feels intentional, chosen, like stepping into a current and allowing it to carry me without struggling for the shore.I'm aware of my body in a way that feels new and dangerous: the pulsing warmth between my legs, the sensitivity at the nape of my neck, the way my skin seems to register the house as a presence rather than a structure. I
THOMASI watched her all day. Not openly, not the way men do when they want to be seen wanting. I watched her the way I watch markets, systems, fault lines: attentively, without interference, letting patterns reveal themselves.She did everything I asked. Not eventually. Not approximately. Exactly.Each instruction landed cleanly, each boundary sharpened her rather than dulled her. She moved through the house with an awareness that wasn’t fear anymore, but focus, her body tuned to mine, even when we weren't in the same room. I felt it when she paused before entering a space, when she waited for confirmation that never came because she already knew the answer.Obedience suits her.Not because she lacks will – she actually has more of that than most– but because she's spent her life braced against chaos, making decisions that cost her something every time. Structure doesn't diminish her, it steadies her. The relief of it registers in her body before it reaches her mind.I didn't touch he
IRISMondayThe house feels different this morning.Not louder, not warmer, not altered in any way I could point to if asked... but somehow aware. As though it's registered something new in me and adjusted its posture accordingly. I wake with that awareness already humming under my skin, a low, restless current that makes stillness feel impossible and movement feel charged.I wake up alone in my bed, Thomas' scent and shape still noticeable in the sheets and pillow. I didn't hear him get up, didn't even notice when he slipped out of my bedroom. He did tell me last night that he didn't want our new dynamic to be obvious to the staff yet, so he warned me that he'd be back in his own room before Margaret arrived at seven a.m. to start her day. I'd nodded against his broad, naked chest, then fallen into a deep, langorous sleep curled up to his large body.I dress slowly now, not because I dislike the clothes that Thomas' PA bought for me, but because donning each piece of clothing feels de
MARGARETI’ve been inside the Ashcroft house longer than anyone likes to remember.Longer than the paint on the walls, longer than the locks on the doors, longer even than Helen’s marriage, though she likes to pretend otherwise. I arrived at the age of twenty-five – young enough to be useful, old enough to know better – and I've stayed because I learned early that the most powerful position in any home is not ownership, but proximity.You see everything when people forget you’re there.I watched Helen become Mrs. Ashcroft with a smile that never reached her eyes, watched her sweep through rooms like she was performing for an audience that had already grown bored. She was truly beautiful then, but in a hard, brittle way, all angles and ambition. I hated her immediately, instinctively, because she never once looked at Thomas the way I did.She wanted his name. His money. His position. I wanted him.Not in a foolish, romantic way....no fantasies, no delusions that I would ever be chosen.


















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