MasukHe teaches by day… and rules the road by night. Fleeing New Orleans was supposed to be Nirvana Hale’s fresh start. She was finally going to meet Adrian Cross; her brother’s best friend and the voice that had comforted her through her darkest nights. But the man waiting for her in New York is a stranger. He’s the lethal enforcer of a notorious motorcycle club, a man who treats her like a burden to be locked away. Just as Nirvana begins to hate the man she once adored, the world shifts again. On her first day at Rodrigo University, she walks into her lecture hall to find Adrian standing at the podium. In a crisp suit and glasses, Professor Cross is composed, brilliant, and completely off-limits. Now, Nirvana is trapped in a dangerous game of cat and mouse. By day, he's the teacher who refuses to look her in the eye. By night, he’s the biker who makes her pulse race.
Lihat lebih banyak"What is peace?" I typed the caption. "What, who, or where do you regard as your peace? Inspire me.”
The glow of my phone was the only thing lighting my dark bedroom. I sat on the edge of the mattress, staring at the painting I’d just uploaded to my art profile. It was a piece I’d finished at 3 o’clock in the morning, when the house was finally quiet enough for me to breathe. It showed a woman with her head tilted back, her mouth pulled into a silent, jagged scream. It wasn't pretty, but it was honest. The notifications started to roll in. People loved the "tortured artist" vibe, unaware that the real torture was passed out in the living room right below me. “Peace is having enough money to never look at a price tag,” the first comment read. I let out a short, dry laugh. If money bought peace, I wouldn't feel like my chest was being crushed. I had been recognized in the art world since I was eleven. I had made plenty of money, but I never saw a dime of it. My mother made sure of that. A sudden crash downstairs made me freeze. Then came the loud, thumping bass of a pop song that didn't belong at nine o'clock on a Tuesday morning. I closed my eyes and counted to ten. I shut my laptop and headed downstairs. The smell hit me immediately: stale gin and cheap cigar smoke. My mother, Katerina, was swaying in the middle of the living room in a tattered silk robe. Her blonde hair was a tangled mess, her eyes bloodshot and glassy. "What are you doing up there all day, Nirvana?" she slurred. "It’s morning, Mom," I said, my voice heavy with exhaustion. "And you’re drunk already." "It’s New Orleans, nobody cares what time it is," she waved her glass around. "Did you check the college admissions?" I walked into the kitchen, ignoring the sticky mess on the counters. "I told you yesterday. I can't check it because I haven't paid the f*e. You took the money I saved in my drawer." She laughed. "I didn't take it. I invested it. Well, sell a painting then. Sell that one with the screaming lady. Some idiot will pay a fortune for it." She stumbled toward the stairs. I watched her disappear, my throat tightening. She didn't see my work as art. She saw it as a way to fund her next bottle. I couldn't stay in the house. I grabbed my jacket and spent the day walking the humid city streets, desperate for a few hours where I could just pretend to be a normal nineteen-year-old. But eventually, the sun went down, and I had to go back. The house was dead silent when I walked in. That was usually a bad sign. I hurried up to my room, and the second I opened the door, my stomach dropped. My desk was bare. My closet hung wide open. I ran into the small room I used as a studio and stopped in the doorway, my breath catching in my throat. It was empty. Every canvas I had worked on for the last year was gone. The screaming woman, the landscapes, the sketches. All of it. The moment I heard front door opened downstairs, I didn't hesitate. I marched down the steps, my blood pounding in my ears. My mother was standing in the foyer, proudly clutching a brand-new, bright blue designer handbag to her chest. She gave me a wide, fake smile. "Look what I got, Nir! It was on sale." "Where are my paintings, Mom?" I asked, my voice low and surprisingly steady. "Oh, those?" She waved a hand dismissively. "They were just taking up space. You’re a genius, honey. You can just paint more tomorrow." "You sold my life for a bag?" I screamed. A hot surge of rage finally shattered my numbness. "That was my portfolio! That was my only way out of this house!" Her face hardened instantly. She stepped forward, and before I could react, her hand swung out, catching me hard across the face. The slap echoed, the sting immediate and sharp. A single tear slipped down my cheek. "Don't you ever raise your voice to me," she hissed. "I brought you into this world. Everything you make belongs to me." "I wish you hadn't," I whispered, my voice shaking. "I wish you’d just left me alone." "I didn't ask to be a mother either, Nir," she snapped back. She turned on her heel and locked herself inside her bedroom. I retreated to my room and slumped on the floor against my bed, drowning in the silence. I reached for my phone. I didn't call my brother, Ronan. He was in New York. And every time I complained, he just told me to hold on a little longer. He didn't understand. Instead, I opened my messages to the only person who felt real to me. Adrian. He was Ronan's best friend. He was older, my brother's agemate but probably older and in his late twenties. I'd always known Adrian, like almost my whole life. But things had definitely changed. It had started with art, but lately, it was something else. He was the only person who didn't look at me like a paycheck or a victim. Nirvana: “I can't do this anymore. She took everything.” I waited. One minute. Two. Then his name appeared. Adrian: “What did she do?” I typed furiously, telling him about the stolen paintings, the bag, the slap. I told him how I felt like I was disappearing. Adrian: “You aren't disappearing. You're too bright for that. Just stay calm.” But I did not want calm. Not anymore. Nirvana: “I don't want to stay calm. I want to feel something else. Anything else.” My heart raced. He was off-limits. He was forbidden. He was alike a brother to me. But the rage and the sadness were making me reckless. I just wanted something to erase the pain. Nirvana: “Do you like me, Adrian? Really.” The silence stretched. Adrian: “You know I do. But you're Ronan's sister. We've talked about this.” Nirvana: “I don't care about Ronan right now. I care about you. Talk dirty to me. I don't want your polite tones tonight. I need you to take my mind off this.” That's it. I've dropped the bombshell. But my phone didn't buzz with a text. It started to vibrate with a video call. My stomach did a somersault. I hit the green button. The screen was dark on his end, but I could hear his tightly controlled breath. "Nirvana," he said. His voice was a low, rough growl that made the hair on my arms stand up. "You have no idea what you're asking for." "I do," I whispered to my reflection on the screen. "Please." "Take off your shirt." The blunt command made me gasp. But I didn't stop. I pulled my t-shirt over my head and tossed it aside, sitting there in my bra, my skin flushing under the glow of the phone. "Now touch yourself. I want to see how much you want this." I felt outside my own body. I followed his voice. My fingers traced the line of my neck, moving down to the edge of my panty. I closed my eyes, imagining his large hands replacing mine. "Harder," he muttered. "I want to hear you." I let out a soft moan, my body humming with an electricity I’d never felt before. For a few minutes, the empty studio and the sting on my cheek vanished. There was only his voice and the heat building between my legs. "You're a little brat," he whispered, sounding close. "You're going to be the death of me." "Then let me," I breathed. Suddenly, the call ended. The screen went black. I sat in the dark, gasping for air, confused and aching, until a text popped up. I opened my laptop with shaking hands. There was an unread message from an unknown address. I clicked it, expecting a photo of Adrian. Instead, it was a photo of my mother’s new blue handbag. It was sitting right outside on our front steps, covered in wet red spray paint. Resting on top of the ruined leather was a single, black motorcycle glove. I looked at the timestamp. The photo had been taken three minutes ago. I stared at my dark bedroom window, the realization turning my blood to ice. While I was talking to Adrian in New York, someone else was already here. And it seemed like they had come to avenge me.Adrian’s POVI pulled the phone away from my ear, ending the call. Then I shoved it back into my suit jacket pocket. Without a single word, I grabbed the handle of the SUV’s passenger door and ushered Nirvana inside. I slammed it shut with force.I walked around the hood, my jaw locked so tight. I slid into the driver's seat, threw the car into drive and merged into the afternoon traffic, completely cutting off a delivery van.The fierce, jealous anger that had been burning a hole in my chest just thirty seconds ago was completely gone. It was wiped out, replaced by a cold, sharp, and lethal focus.Nirvana sat in the passenger seat, watching me. She didn't yell about me pushing her into the car. She was smart enough to read the immediate shift in the air."What happened?" she asked, her voice quiet but steady."Work," I replied simply, keeping my eyes on the road as I ran a yellow light.She let out a frustrated sigh, sinking back into the leather seat. "Adrian, I left half my notes
Nirvana’s POV"Can I clear these for you guys?"A barista in a green apron stopped at our booth. She reached for the empty pastry bag, but her eyes were entirely fixed on Jesse. She gave him a slow lingering smile, leaning forward just a bit. She twisted a strand of her hair around her finger, her voice dropping into a softer, clearly flirty register as she asked if he needed a refill on his iced coffee.Jesse just gave her a polite and oblivious shake of his head. "No, I'm all set, thank you."The barista looked slightly disappointed, but she nodded and walked away, casting one last obvious glance over her shoulder at him.The second she was out of earshot, I couldn't help but laugh. "What?" Jesse asked, looking confused as he packed his sociology textbook into his bag."She was practically throwing her number at you," I teased, leaning my elbows on the table. "You really didn't catch that?"Jesse rolled his eyes, zipping his bag shut. "I have a midterm on Friday, and my roommate i
Nirvana’s POVIt had been three days since the last security scare, and my brain was finally starting to untangle itself from the constant state of panic. Sitting across from Jesse in our usual coffee shop booth, I felt like a normal college student for the first time all week. The heavy weight of the guards, the rules and the chaos felt miles away.I dropped my bag on the floor and slumped into the vinyl seat.Before I could even complain about my morning, a guy rushing past our table clipped the edge of Jesse's iced coffee with his backpack. The plastic cup tipped over, spilling cold milk and ice across Jesse's knuckles and the table.The guy froze, his eyes widening. "Oh man, I am so sorry, I didn't even see you—"Jesse just smiled. He grabbed a paper napkin and wiped his hand with a quick shrug. "Don't sweat it, man. I put the cup too close to the edge anyway."The guy breathed a huge sigh of relief. He muttered another apology and hurried away.Jesse tossed the damp napkin into
ADRIAN'S POVI adjusted my grip on the leather briefcase. I kept my stride measured and even, demanding the space around me as I walked toward the humanities block. To the passing crowd, I was Professor Adrian Cross. They saw the expensive charcoal suit, the perfectly knotted tie, and the unyielding authority. They didn't see the bruised knuckles gripping the leather handle. They had absolutely no idea what I was doing.And they had no idea that I had spent the night completely at the mercy of my student.The memory of Nirvana straddling my hips was a live wire burning right through my chest. She had walked into my bedroom, pushed my shoulders into the mattress, and taken absolute control. I had built impenetrable walls between my underworld and my academic life, but she was tearing them down effortlessly. I was a syndicate boss letting a nineteen-year-old civilian dictate my undoing. It was reckless. It was a massive liability. But I had no intention of stopping it. I was entirely
The fresh white petal was more terrifying than the scorched rose had been. It meant someone had been inside my room. The locks and the height of the penthouse meant nothing to them. I felt a sudden prickly sensation on the back of my head. I looked around, expecting a shadow in the corner or a fig
I watched from the window as Adrian's bike wove through the New York traffic, becoming a smaller and smaller speck until he vanished around a corner. The roar of the engine lingered for a second before the city swallowed it whole. I moved away from the glass and sat on the edge of the bed. The sile
Adrian's hands were large and hot, anchoring me against the glass door while he kissed me like he was trying to swallow my breath. I let out a low moan against his lips. Every part of me felt wired and sensitive. The calloused texture of his palms against my waist sent a jolt through my spine that
The penthouse was exactly how I expected a billionaire's place to look. All glass and stone, polished grey floors, matte white walls. After all the noise in New Orleans, the silence here felt expensive. Ronan dropped my bags by the door and looked around, his shoulders dropping an inch. "It's yo






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