تسجيل الدخولRYDER POV
I slam the door of the empty locker room behind me, the sound bouncing off the tiles like a gunshot. My heart is still jackhammering from the hallway shitshow, adrenaline mixed with something sour that won’t settle. Mia’s face keeps flashing in my head—red, tear-streaked, eyes wide with pure hatred as she scrambled on the floor gathering those stupid pages. I went too far. Way too far. Again. But fuck, she makes it so easy to love her. The way she looks at me, all fire and fear, that virgin blush spreading down her neck… it twists something dark and addictive inside me. I can’t stop pushing. Can’t stop wanting to break her open just to see what spills out. I rip off my letterman jacket and throw it against the lockers. It doesn’t help. Nothing helps. “Shit,” I mutter, pacing like a caged animal. The private part starts the second I’m alone. No audience. No teammates to impress. Just me and the ugly truth. I pull out my phone and open the photos I secretly took while she was crying—close-ups of her tear-filled eyes, the way her lips trembled when I called her “virgin” in front of everyone. My thumb hovers over delete, but I don’t press it. Instead, I zoom in on her face. She looked so small. So destroyed. A sick thrill shoots through me even now. I hate that it does. “Goddamn it, Vaughn, you’re fucked up.” I replay the scene in my mind on loop, but this time without the crowd’s laughter as a soundtrack. Just her broken “I hate you” ringing clear. The way her voice cracked. How she dropped to her knees like I’d physically hit her. I went overboard. Deliberately. Cruelly. I told myself it was just banter, just keeping the king-of-the-school act alive. But deep down I know the truth: I wanted her to break. Wanted her to feel as obsessed and messed up as I’ve been since she started writing my name in that notebook like a prayer. I sink onto the bench, head in my hands. My chest feels tight. For the first time in years, real regret crawls up my throat like bile. She’s going to hate me forever now. The thought should feel like victory. Instead it hollows me out. My phone buzzes. It’s Jax: “Bro that was legendary. Virgin Mia is trending on the group chat lol. You destroyed her.” I stare at the message until the screen goes black. Legendary. Right. I destroyed her in front of the entire school—twice. Made her cry in public. Called her pathetic, creepy, a charity case. Read her most private sexual fantasies out loud like they were jokes. She’ll never forgive me. I stood up too fast, dizzy. The locker room spins. I punched the metal door of my locker hard enough to dent it, knuckles splitting open. Blood smears across the cold steel. Good. Pain feels honest. I imagine her at home right now, packing her bags. The rumor already hit me in the parking lot—someone overheard her mom on the phone saying they’re pulling her out of Lakewood High. Moving. Leaving town. Her family decided enough is enough after the arena and the hallway. Because of me. She’s running. Because I made her life hell. Because I couldn’t stop being the asshole everyone expects me to be. I should feel powerful. Captain. Untouchable. Instead I feel like the biggest piece of shit on the planet. I grab my jacket and storm out of the locker room, ignoring the few teammates still hanging around. Their congratulations bounce off me like rubber bullets. I don’t stop until I’m in my truck, engine roaring to life. Driving past her neighborhood is a mistake. Her house is dark except for one upstairs window. Her window. I kill the lights and sit there like a creep, staring. Is she crying again? Packing boxes while telling her parents how much she hates this school—hates me? My hands grip the steering wheel until they ache. I want to go knock on her door. Apologize. Tell her the truth: that her diary entries didn’t disgust me, they haunted me. Every time I embarrassed her, part of me was screaming because I couldn’t handle how badly I wanted the girl who saw something in me worth writing about. But what the hell would I even say? “Sorry I announced to the whole school that you’re a virgin and want my dick”? “Sorry I made you cry and now you’re leaving town because of me”? There’s no fixing this. No grand gesture that erases public humiliation. She’ll remember me as the bully who broke her. The crazy asshole who took it too far for laughs. I rest my forehead against the wheel. For once, the cocky smirk is gone. Just raw, ugly guilt. She’s leaving because of me. Packing up her life, her friends, her future here—all because I couldn’t control my need to torment the one girl whoever made me feel seen. The worst part? Even now, sitting in the dark like a loser, some twisted piece of me still replayed her tears and felt that rush. I hate myself for it. I start the truck again before I do something stupid like walk up to her door. As I drive away, one thought loops louder than the rest: Mia Thompson is leaving town. And there’s nothing I can do to make it better. I ruined her. I ruined us before we even had a chance.I think I’m going to miss hating how much I want her. And the craziest thing of all? She was dead wrong if she thought I was going to let go.MIA POV The elevator ride to the top floor felt like a trap closing. Ryder stood beside me in his perfect suit, one hand resting possessively on my lower back. Anyone looking would see a powerful CEO and his new assistant. Only I felt the weight of his fingers like a brand. “You’re shaking,” he murmured as the doors opened. “Because I’m walking back into the place where you own everything. Including me.” He didn’t deny it. Just guided me into his suite and closed the door. The lock clicked. My pulse spiked. “Work first,” he said, but his eyes said something else entirely. “Then we deal with the new message.” The teammate threat. The demand for a “live” video. It sat like poison in my veins. I sat at my desk inside his office and tried to focus on emails, but every sound made me jump. Ryder worked across from me, watching me more than his screen. An hour later, his phone buzzed. He read the message and his expression turned deadly. “They sent proof,” he said. “A clip from the
MIA POV I woke to the sound of the bedroom door opening. Ryder stood in the doorway, shirtless, sweatpants low on his hips, holding two coffees like this was normal. Like he hadn’t spent the night on my couch after making me come twice the day before. “You locked the door last night,” I said, sitting up and pulling the sheet higher. “You didn’t.” His voice was rough with sleep. He set a coffee on the nightstand and sat on the edge of the bed. Too close. The mattress dipped under his weight. “That tells me everything I need to know.” Heat crawled up my neck. Sparrow’s heroines always fought until the fight felt like foreplay. I was doing the same thing — pretending I hated him while my body remembered every second of his fingers inside me. “I was tired,” I lied. Ryder’s hand landed on my blanket-covered thigh. Not moving. Just resting there like a claim. “You were scared. And wet. And hoping I’d test that lock.” I shoved his hand off. He caught my wrist and brought it to his mou
MIA POV Ryder stepped inside like he owned the air itself. The door shut with a soft click that sounded louder than any lock. I backed up until the back of my knees hit the couch, heart pounding so hard I felt it in my throat. “You shouldn’t be here,” I said. He shrugged off his jacket, eyes never leaving mine. “You opened the door. That’s the part that matters.” The apartment felt smaller with him in it. Too intimate. Too dangerous. I could still feel his fingers from earlier, the way he made me count while I fell apart on his desk. My body remembered. My mind screamed at me to run. He moved closer, slow like he was giving me time to panic. “Lesson two. No desk this time. No counting out loud. Just you learning how much you need this. Need me.” “I don’t.” The lie tasted bitter. My nipples tightened under my shirt as he stopped inches away. Sparrow’s heroines always fought the wrong brother until the fight itself became foreplay. I was living it. Hating it. Wet from it. Ryder’s
MIA POV I followed Ryder down to the apartment two floors below his penthouse suite. My legs still felt unsteady from the desk. Every step reminded me of how easily he had broken me — pinned, counted, and shattered. The worst part was the small, traitorous voice in my head that whispered I had let him.The apartment was beautiful and cold. Modern furniture, floor-to-ceiling windows, a kitchen bigger than my old studio. My bags already sat neatly in the bedroom. He had moved me in without asking. Again.“Home for now,” Ryder said, closing the door behind us. He locked it. The sound made my stomach flip.“This isn’t home,” I shot back. “This is a cage.”He crossed the room and poured two glasses of water like we were normal people after a normal day. “A safe cage. Jax and the others won’t reach you here. The building has security that answers to me.”I took the glass but didn’t drink. “And who protects me from you?”His eyes darkened. He set his glass down and stepped closer. “No one.
MIA POV I followed Ryder down to the apartment two floors below his penthouse suite. My legs still felt unsteady from the desk. Every step reminded me of how easily he had broken me — pinned, counted, and shattered. The worst part was the small, traitorous voice in my head that whispered I had let him.The apartment was beautiful and cold. Modern furniture, floor-to-ceiling windows, a kitchen bigger than my old studio. My bags already sat neatly in the bedroom. He had moved me in without asking. Again.“Home for now,” Ryder said, closing the door behind us. He locked it. The sound made my stomach flip.“This isn’t home,” I shot back. “This is a cage.”He crossed the room and poured two glasses of water like we were normal people after a normal day. “A safe cage. Jax and the others won’t reach you here. The building has security that answers to me.”I took the glass but didn’t drink. “And who protects me from you?”His eyes darkened. He set his glass down and stepped closer. “No one.
MIA POVThe door wouldn’t open.I twisted the handle again, panic rising fast. Locked. Ryder stood behind his desk, watching me with calm, predatory eyes. He must have locked it the second Jax left. He knew. He always knew I would run.“Open it,” I demanded, voice shaking.“No.” He stepped around the desk, slow and deliberate. “You heard too much. You’re not leaving like this.”My back hit the door. He closed the distance in three strides and caged me there, one hand beside my head, the other gripping my hip. Up close he looked feral. The boy who once destroyed me in front of everyone had become a man who could ruin me in private.“You’re scaring me,” I whispered.“Good.” His breath brushed my lips. “You should be scared. I kept those videos for myself. I sabotaged your jobs because the thought of you happy somewhere else made me crazy. And now you’re here. In my office. In my life. Mine.”I shoved at his chest. He didn’t budge. Instead he caught my wrists, spun me around, and pinned







