LOGINI’d always wondered what his hands would feel like without the gloves.
Day in, day out, Nolan wore them. Sleek, black leather over fingers I imagined were rough from work and discipline. His jaw stayed tense, his eyes never lingered too long, and his voice when he rarely spoke was firm and low enough to ruin me. He was thirty-eight. Stoic. Private. My father’s chauffeur for six years. I was twenty-one. Barely allowed to drink, let alone climb into the front seat with the man I had undressed with my eyes since I was sixteen. Tonight, I climbed in anyway. It started with my voice. Whispered and syrupy, a little too close to his ear as I leaned forward from the backseat. “Drive the long way.” His eyes flicked up to the mirror. A pause. “Yes, Miss Arden.” Miss Arden. My last name. Cold. Detached. That mask he wore like skin. I wasn’t wearing any underwear. And my dress was tight cut just high enough that if I crossed my legs the wrong way, he’d notice. And I wanted him to. Ten minutes into the drive, with the rain coming down and city lights streaking the windows, I pressed my thighs together and whispered again. “You always keep both hands on the wheel, Mr. Nolan?” “I’m paid to keep them there.” I smiled. “But what if I asked you to use them somewhere else?” A sharp inhale. No answer. I reached forward again. Fingers grazing his shoulder. “You ever wanted to touch something you weren’t supposed to?” “Every fucking day,” he muttered, finally meeting my eyes in the mirror. Then he swerved off the main road. No hesitation. No questions. Just heat. We stopped under an overpass, engine humming. The rain hammered down above us. He turned to me slowly, face unreadable but his eyes dark with decision. “I lose my job for this.” “I won’t tell,” I whispered, crawling into the front seat, into his lap. He caught me by the waist, hard and fast, like he’d been starving for years. His mouth crushed mine. No pretense. No buildup. Just raw, pent up lust that shattered any line we were pretending to stay behind. “I’ve watched you grow into a little fucking tease,” he growled, hand under my dress already. “Parading around without panties? You wanted me to see.” “I wanted you to touch.” He hooked a finger inside me deep. “Goddamn. You’re soaked.” “All for you.” Then he lifted me slightly, pushed his pants down just enough, and let his cock slap against my bare heat. Thick. Heavy. Already dripping pre cum. “Fuck,” I gasped. “You’re huge.” He didn’t respond. Just aligned himself and slid inside in one long, punishing thrust. I arched. Cried out. “Shh,” he whispered against my throat. “Unless you want the cops to find us like this.” That only made it hotter. He bounced me on his cock like the car was his bed my hands braced on the dashboard, my moans muffled by his shoulder. He grabbed my throat firm but not too tight forcing my eyes to his. “I used to imagine your legs spread in the backseat.” “You mean like this?” I reached behind, spread myself wider. “Wetter now?” He groaned. Bit my lip. And thrust harder. I came fast clenching around him, body twitching. He didn’t stop. Pulled out. Spun me around. Bent me over the center console and shoved back in. “Now I fuck you like you begged for it.” He was feral. Focused. Pounding into me while gripping my hair with one hand and pressing the other to the foggy windshield for leverage. I couldn’t see. Couldn’t speak. Just felt. Hot, wet, full. When he came, he didn’t pull out. He just buried himself deep, groaning like it physically hurt to stop. His seed filled me in slow, pulsing waves. Silence followed. Heavy. Breathless. I collapsed against the seat. Shaking. Satisfied. He adjusted himself. Reached for his gloves again. “You say one word of this” “I’ll be in the backseat tomorrow,” I interrupted, smiling. “No panties.”The EvaluationThe convent smelled of candle wax, lavender soap, and rain drifting through the open arches. Sister Clara moved like a whisper through the corridor, the rosary brushing softly against her hip. Today was the day of her final evaluation the last step before she gave up her life to God completely.She felt ready.Or at least she thought she did.When she stepped into the office, she expected white hair and wrinkled hands measuring her soul like an old ledger. Instead, the man waiting by the window was young too young. His back was straight, his shoulders tense, and his eyes touched her before his words did.“Good morning, Sister Clara,” he said.His voice wasn’t heavy with authority. It was quiet, curious almost cautious.“Good morning, Doctor,” she answered, bowing her head.He didn’t offer a hand. Doctors usually did. He only gestured toward the chair, his fingers rigid near his side like he was afraid of his own movements.“My name is Daniel Hayes,” he said. “I’m here t
The Voice That Should Not ExistThe cathedral was too large for her voice.That’s what everyone said.Eliora was sixteen when Bishop Adrien first heard her sing small in stature, shy in posture, a single drop of sound in a chamber meant for thunder. She blended into pews, into shadows, into her own silence.No one expected him to notice her.But on the night of the Saint’s Vigil, when she lifted her voice for the final hymn, something shifted in the air like a veil being drawn aside.Her tone was fragile soft as candle flame but it carried. Not loud. Not powerful. Just piercing, like truth whispered.It wasn’t talent.It was something else.Bishop Adrien froze where he stood behind the altar steps. His hands tightened around the cold silver of the censer, smoke lifting between his fingers. His heart usually steady as stone missed one beat. Then another.It was the way she sang.As though she wasn’t performing.As though she was praying from the marrow.The cathedral responded to her y
The Lesson That BurnedElias had grown up in a house where every word of Scripture carried weight, and every glance from his parents was measured. Curiosity was a sin. Desire unthinkable.Yet when she arrived, everything changed.Her name was Selene. Ten years older, with a presence that made the air vibrate. Her hair fell in dark waves, eyes that seemed to see everything beneath the surface, and a smile that promised mischief she couldn’t suppress. She was the new tutor assigned to help him with Latin and Biblical studies a necessity for his coming confirmation.From the first moment, Elias felt it. A strange heat in his chest whenever she bent over the books, pointing to a verse, her perfume trailing like a forbidden whisper.She noticed him staring.“You’re more attentive than most,” she said softly one afternoon, voice low, velvet and teasing. “But is it the Scriptures that interest you, or me?”Elias flushed violently. He opened his mouth, but no words came. Selene chuckled, a wa
The Watcher Who FellShe always felt ita presence that wasn’t entirely human.Not dangerous.Not frightening.Just watching her. Protecting her. Holding a breath she didn’t know she could steal.Mara had grown up with the strange sensation that someone stood behind her whenever she cried, or smiled, or whispered desperate prayers into her pillow. A warmth on her neck. A featherlight pressure on her skin. A calming hush in her ears when her world felt loud.She never saw anything.Never heard anything.But she felt him.And tonight, she felt him stronger than ever.The storm outside had swallowed the moon. Rain streaked the windows of her tiny apartment. She was curled on her bed, hugging her knees, drowning in the heaviness she hid from everyone else.“Why does nothing ever feel enough” she whispered into the dark.The air changed.Softly, just softly the room warmed. Like someone had lit a candle inside her chest.She froze.“Mara.”Her name floated through the room like it came on
i should never have told her about Frank. Not about the way he spoke to me, not about the pull he had over me, and definitely not about the things we shared in the dark hours between midnight and dawn. It had started innocently if anything between us could ever be called innocent. We met on a dating site meant for fleeting connections, yet somehow, our conversations felt anything but fleeting. Frank had a way of speaking that slid under my guard, a way of noticing the things no one else paid attention to. He made me feel seen dangerously. Soon, our chats stretched longer, deeper. We talked about everything work, fears, fantasies, the versions of ourselves we never showed the world. The tension between us grew like something alive, humming beneath every message, every call. Then came the video calls. The late nights. The moments where silence said more than any words we dared speak. There were times when his voice alone made my breath catch, when the space between us fel
The Study of Sin (Eve’s POV) The first time I saw him, he was already speaking. No introduction, no greeting, just words, low and steady, cutting through the hum of restless students like a blade. “The story of the fall isn’t about punishment,” Dr. Holt said, chalk tapping the board. “It’s about awakening. The first sin was knowledge.” The lecture hall stilled. Rows of notebooks hung open, pens frozen. I’d expected another dull theology course filled with rote recitation and inherited reverence. Instead, he spoke like a man trying to reason with fire. He looked older than the photographs in the university catalogue grey threaded through his dark hair, glasses balanced low on the bridge of his nose. His posture was austere, but there was something deliberate in the way he moved, as though he knew he was being watched and didn’t trust himself to notice who was watching back. I shouldn’t have stared. But curiosity is its own prayer. He turned from the board, eyes scanning







