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Author: Xiper
last update publish date: 2026-06-23 01:42:19

MIA POV

I make it three blocks before the first sob rips out of me. The city blurs—honking taxis, rushing pedestrians, the indifferent gray sky pressing down like it knows what I just walked away from. My heels click too loudly on the pavement, each step echoing the word no I hurled at him like a weapon.

I should feel victorious. I said it to his face. I looked Ryder Vaughn in the eyes—the man who once broke me so completely my family fled the state—and I chose dignity over desperation.

Instead I feel hollow.

My phone buzzes in my coat pocket. Mom. I answer immediately.

“Hey, sweetie.” Her voice is thinner than yesterday. Frailer. “How did the interview go?”

I swallow the lump in my throat. “I turned it down.”

Silence. Then a soft, tired sigh that carves another piece out of me. “Mia… the offer was real?”

“Triple my salary. Benefits. Everything.” My voice cracks. “But it was him , Mom. Ryder. I can’t. I just… I can’t.”

Another pause. Longer this time. I hear the beep of her IV machine in the background, the one we can barely afford.

“I understand,” she says quietly. Too quietly. “We’ll figure it out.”

But we both know we won’t. The last round of treatments drained what little savings we had left. Her cancer came back aggressive three months ago, and the doctors have been blunt: without the new immunotherapy trial, she has months. Maybe less.

I clutch the phone tighter. “I’ll find something else. I’ll take double shifts. I’ll—”

“Mia.” Her voice is gentle but final. “You’ve carried us long enough. If this job could have saved me… maybe you should have—”

I stop dead in the middle of the sidewalk. A courier nearly crashes into me.

“Mom, don’t.”

“I’m sorry,” she whispers. “I’m so sorry, baby. I just hate that you’re still hurting because of that boy. After all these years.”

I hang up before I start crying in public again. Five years and one ten-minute meeting with Ryder Vaughn, and I’m right back where I started—on the verge of shattering.

By the time I reach my tiny studio apartment, my hands are shaking so badly I drop my keys twice. The moment the door closes, I slide down the wall and let the tears come. Ugly, choking sobs that hurt my ribs. I cry for the girl I was at seventeen. For the mother who deserves better than a daughter too broken to take the devil’s money. For the future that feels like it’s slipping through my fingers.

My phone lights up on the floor beside me. Unknown number. I almost ignore it, but something makes me swipe.

Unknown: You walked away, but the offer hasn’t. Take the night. Sleep on it. The contract is on your email. — R

I delete the message without opening the attachment.

Hours later, I’m still curled on the couch in the dark when the second call comes. This one is from the hospital.

“Miss Thompson? This is Dr. Ellis. Your mother was admitted this evening. You need to come right away.”

The world tilts.

I don’t remember grabbing my coat. Don’t remember the subway ride or the sprint through sterile hallways that smell like death and disinfectant. All I know is the sight of my mother in that bed—smaller, paler, machines beeping around her like accusations.

“She had a bad reaction to the current meds,” the doctor says softly. “Her body is… struggling. The trial drug we discussed could buy her time. Quality time. But insurance won’t cover it, and the out-of-pocket cost is—”

“Two hundred and forty thousand for the first six months,” I finish dully. I already know the number by heart.

The doctor nods.

I sit beside Mom’s bed long after visiting hours end, holding her cold hand. She drifts in and out of consciousness, murmuring my name sometimes. When she’s lucid, she smiles weakly.

“You did the right thing today,” she lies. “Don’t carry guilt. I’m proud of you.”

I press my forehead to her knuckles and cry silently so she won’t hear.

At 3:17 a.m., my phone buzzes again. Another text from the unknown number.

Unknown: I know about your mom. I’m sorry. The job is still yours. No strings. Just come back. Let me fix one thing I broke.

I stare at the screen until it goes black.

Fix it.

As if anything could ever be fixed.

As if I could walk back into that glass tower tomorrow and kneel again—this time willingly—for the man who once made me bleed on the school floor for entertainment.

But Mom’s chest rises and falls so shallowly. The machines keep beeping. Time is running out.

I close my eyes and see seventeen-year-old Ryder laughing while I cried. Then I see twenty-three-year-old Ryder’s face when I said no—the flicker of something almost like pain.

My thumb hovers over the reply button.

I type one word.

Then delete it.

Type it again.

The choice feels like dying.

Mia: I’ll think about it.

I send it, then throw the phone across the room like it burned me.

Mom stirs. “Mia?”

“I’m here,” I whisper, voice hoarse. “I’m right here.”

She squeezes my hand once, weak as a breath.

Outside the window, the city lights glitter coldly. Somewhere in that glittering tower, Ryder Vaughn is probably sleeping like a king, unaware that his latest game might be the only thing standing between me and losing the last person I have left.

I hate him.

God, I hate him so much it feels like love sometimes.

And I think… I think I’m about to let him destroy me all over again.

Only this time, the stakes aren’t just my heart.

It's involves my mother’s life now.

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  • 37 Times You Called My Name    •014

    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

  • 37 Times You Called My Name    •013

    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

  • 37 Times You Called My Name    •012

    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

  • 37 Times You Called My Name    •011

    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.

  • 37 Times You Called My Name    •011

    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.

  • 37 Times You Called My Name    •010

    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

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