LOGINMyra
I stared at my reflection in the bathroom mirror, but I didn’t see my face. Not really. I saw the problem. The object. The beautiful, fragile doll that had started a war between my father and my brother, and was now being packaged up for delivery to a stranger. I hated it
Zyran Theon.
Luca had just texted me. Two words: He agreed.
A hysterical laugh bubbled in my throat, but it died before it could escape. He agreed. Of course he did. Luca said he owed him a favor. This was just another business transaction for a man like Zyran. A strategic alliance. A temporary asset acquisition, then would be shipped of to another, I would tossed around like a volleyball.
I pressed my palms flat against the cool marble of the sink, leaning in until my forehead nearly touched the glass. The conversation with my mother replayed in a fuzzy loop.
“Are you sure about this, solntse?” she’d asked, her hands warm as they cupped my face after Luca had pulled me away. Her eyes, the same blue as mine, were full of a deep, weary understanding.
“Do I have a choice, Mama?”
“There is always a choice. But sometimes… the choices are between bad and worse.” She’d stroked my hair. “Your father and I… it was like this, in the beginning. A deal. Look at us now.”
Not everyone can have a perfect love story mama.
She’d said it to give me hope. But it only made the pressure in my chest tighten. What if we didn’t become like them? What if Zyran’s cold silence wasn’t a just a mask for a good person, but just… silence? Or hate? What if a year in that silence broke something in me for good?
What if he was like him? What if he hurts me like he did?
The thought made my own image irritate me, I felt a familiar disgust. Not a Zyran or anyone else but a myself, at the supposedly perfect girl.
A familiar, itchy-crawly feeling started under my skin. It began at the base of my skull, a buzzing anxiety, and slithered down my arms. It was the feeling of being a collection of parts that didn’t fit together right. Of being too much and not enough, all at once. The feeling that had started in college, after Jeremy. The feeling that only one thing made quiet.
My eyes drifted from my blurred reflection to the top drawer of the vanity.
I hadn’t done it in over a year. I’d promised myself. After the last time, seeing the clear, shocking line against my skin, the wave of shame that followed had been worse than the relief. I’d thrown the small, precise blade away. But the urge… the urge was a tenant that left but came back with a even stronger urge. What if I am not good a enough for Zyran? what if I was too much? Would he cut the contract shorter? Would I be sent off to that old man? Breathe, Myra, breathe. I tried to talk myself out of it.
My hands started to shake. It wasn’t about wanting to die. Not really. It was about wanting the noise to stop. The fear, the expectations, the feeling of being a passive object in a game played by powerful men. It was about needing to feel something I controlled, even if it was pain. Even if it was a secret. To just let the darkness in my blood spill out a little, just a little.
He agreed.
My fingers trembled as I pulled the drawer open. It was full of mundane things: cotton pads, hair ties, a forgotten tube of lip gloss. And there, tucked behind a box of bandaids, was a single, unused disposable razor. I’d bought it months ago, during a bad week, and then hidden it away, a shameful secret.
I took it out. The plastic was cool and light in my palm.
This was the real me. Not the beautiful daughter, not the prized mafia princess, not Luca’s beloved sister. This. A girl in a too-big bathroom, shaking, holding a secret that would horrify everyone who claimed to love her. They saw a delicate vase. They didn’t see the cracks underneath.
I rolled up the sleeve of my silk blouse, exposing the inside of my left forearm. The skin there was pale, unmarked. A clean canvas.
The relief was already whispering to me, a dark promise. Just one. Just a small one. To make the buzzing stop. To make it all feel real.
I positioned the razor.
A sharp knock on the bathroom door made me jump, the razor clattering into the sink.
“Myra? You okay in there?” It was Luca. “You’ve been in there forever. Mom made tea.”
His voice, normal and concerned, sliced through the static in my head like a lifeline. The spell broke. Shame, hot and immediate, washed over me. I quickly shoved the razor back into the drawer, yanked my sleeve down, and turned on the faucet, splashing cold water on my face.
“I’m fine!” I called, my voice only slightly unsteady. “Be right out!”
I looked at my reflection again. My eyes were too wide, my cheeks flushed. But the moment had passed. The compulsion, held at bay by my brother’s voice.
I had just agreed to marry one of the most dangerous men in the city to escape a monster. I was trading one cage for another, hoping the new one had softer walls. And here I was, in the bathroom, fighting the oldest demon in my closet.
I took a deep, shuddering breath. The wedding was happening all so soon. The arrangement to ship me off would be made and I had to just go with it, there was no other choice.
But the quiet war inside me, the one nobody knew about, was still raging. And as I turned off the light and opened the door to my brother’s worried face. Was the devil I knew really going to treat me better than the angel I didn't know?
"Attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity."MYRAIt was sitting on my pillow when I came to bed.Not wrapped elaborately, not presented with any kind of ceremony. Just there, on my side of the bed, a flat rectangular package wrapped in plain brown paper with a small piece of twine around it. No bow. No card.I stood at the edge of the bed and looked at it for a moment.Zyran was in the bathroom, I could hear the shower running, and I had the particular feeling of someone who'd walked into a room and found something they hadn't been prepared for. Not alarming. Just — unexpected, in the specific way that made your heart do something before your brain had caught up enough to explain why.I sat down on the bed and picked it up.It was lighter than I expected. And slightly irregular in shape, not perfectly flat, which ruled out most obvious guesses. I turned it over in my hands once.Then I unwrapped it.The brown paper came away carefully, because I had always been a careful
"The most romantic thing isn't grand gestures. It's being remembered in the small, ordinary details."MYRAHe knocked on my door at seven in the evening on a Wednesday.That was already unusual. Zyran didn't knock on my door at seven on Wednesdays. Wednesdays were call nights — he had standing meetings with various people that ran from five until sometimes ten, the kind of back to back scheduling that meant I usually saw him briefly at dinner and then not again until late. I'd learned the shape of his week the way you learned the layout of a house you lived in, knowing which rooms would be occupied at which hours without having to check.So when the knock came I was already slightly confused before I even opened the door.He was standing in the hallway in dark jeans and a black jacket instead of the work clothes he'd been in all day. No tie. His hair was slightly less formal than usual. He looked — almost casual, which on Zyran was a significant departure from the baseline."Get dress
"The hardest thing about being wrong is watching the evidence pile up before you're ready to admit it."LUCAI'd been avoiding the Theon estate.That was deliberate. Three weeks of deliberate, conscious avoidance that I'd justified to myself in a dozen different ways — too busy, too much happening with the Serpents situation, too many things requiring my attention that weren't my sister and my best friend and the mess I'd made by putting them in the same house together.The real reason was simpler and less flattering.I wasn't ready to see them together and know what I knew now.Zyran had broken the one promise that had mattered. I'd built the entire arrangement around my certainty that he was incapable of wanting Myra the way he apparently wanted her, and I'd been wrong in a way that made every decision I'd made since look different in hindsight. I'd handed him the one person I'd spend my life protecting and told myself it was safe because he wouldn't feel anything.The man felt some
"Sometimes the bravest thing is not fighting the dark. Sometimes it's just walking toward the light in someone else's room."MYRAThe nightmare was the same one.It was always the same one, or close enough to the same one that the differences didn't matter. The details shifted sometimes — the room changed, the lighting changed, the specific words were different — but the feeling was identical every time. That particular helpless quality, the sensation of being very small in a space that had decided to close around you, and no matter which direction you moved the walls were already there.I woke up at two forty seven in the morning with my heart going too fast and my hands clenched so hard that the palms ached.I lay there for a moment doing the thing I always did after nightmares — orienting myself. Ceiling. Window. The weight of the covers. The familiar smell of the room. Real things, present things, the inventory of right now rather than whatever my sleeping brain had been building.
"The most dangerous place a person can live is inside someone else's mind. Because no one can follow them there to get them out."ZYRANHe was home.I'd known he would be. Nikolai's surveillance had established his patterns with the kind of precision that came from ten days of careful, patient observation, and Tuesday evenings Jeremy Torrence spent at his apartment. Alone. Consistent as clockwork, which was the particular irony of men who believed themselves untouchable — they stopped varying their routines because they'd stopped believing their routines needed protecting.The building was exactly as described. Midtown, mid-range, the kind of place that suggested comfortable rather than wealthy. A single camera at the entrance that I walked past without concern because I'd had Marcus loop the feed twenty minutes ago. A doorman who was currently on a break that would last exactly as long as I needed it to.I took the stairs.Fourth floor. Apartment 4C. I stood outside the door for a mo
"There is a particular kind of man who looks at something gentle and sees something to destroy. And there is a particular kind of consequence for that."ZYRANI stood in the kitchen for four minutes after she left.I know it was four minutes because I watched the clock on the wall without meaning to, my eyes fixing on it the way eyes fixed on things when the brain needed something simple and external to anchor itself to while it processed something it wasn't ready to process.Four minutes.Then I picked up my phone and called Nikolai."I need everything you have on Jeremy Torrence and self-harm," I said. "Specifically whether he knew. Whether he was aware of it during the relationship."A pause. "That's in the supplemental file. Section four. I flagged it but you hadn't asked about it specifically so I didn't push.""Send it now.""Already sending."I hung up and waited.The file arrived in three minutes. I opened it standing at the kitchen counter in the quiet house and read it the w







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