LOGIN
°❀⋆.ೃ࿔*:・
“Are you trying to fucking kill me?” Noah yelled at his friend after they’d held his head underwater a little too long. “What the hell!” he snapped, but the curse didn’t stop laughter from bubbling out of him. And somehow that laugh was contagious enough to pull a smile onto my lips. Yeah, for some reason, I always loved watching him in water. There was something freeing about the way he moved there, like the world couldn't touch him as long as his feet were off the ground. Today was one of those rare days when that version of him showed up again. Sunlight glazed over his shoulders as he dove under, resurfacing with a grin I hadn’t seen in what felt like weeks. His laughter carried across the pool, mixing with the splash of water and clinking of ice from the drink he’d balanced on the edge earlier. It made my chest loosen a little. He’d been so serious lately, so tense around me, like every conversation had a hidden trap he was trying to avoid. And each time I tried to ask what was wrong, he dodged the question with a vague “It’s nothing,” or “Just tired,” or “Don’t worry about it.” The kind of answers that weren’t answers at all and leaves you turning things over in your mind, inventing problems that may or may not be real. But here he was… smiling. Laughing. Splashing water at his friends while downing another sip of his drink. It was refreshing. Painfully so. Part of me wanted to believe this was just who he was—easy-going, fun-loving, unconcerned with things. But another part of me, the part that refused to shut up no matter how hard I tried, wondered if maybe the reason he’d been so tense lately was… me. I mean, who wouldn’t be bothered? I moved in with him and his father two months ago, after losing my job and failing spectacularly at finding another. I was still going to school, sure, but that didn’t make paying bills any easier. And even though his father had insisted—actually insisted—that I focus on getting back on my feet, that I was welcome… the guilt still found ways to crawl under my skin and lodge itself there. Nobody wants a partner who starts to feel like a burden. Least of all me. And I had started seeing myself that way… like a leech that was feeding off whatever warmth he had left. His cold shoulder these past weeks… God, it wasn’t helping. But after he invited his friends over for drinks by the pool, somehow the mood shifted. He was… in a better mood. “Oh stop it!” one of the girls squealed, splashing him as he tickled her sides. They both burst into loud carefree giggles, obnoxiously close to each other. I tried to ignore the sting in my stomach. I really did. I wasn’t the type to get jealous over nothing. And I trusted him. But trust didn’t erase the little pangs when she touched him so casually. Truth be told, I already felt left out. They were having fun, lounging at the edge of the pool while I sat in the shade with my legs crossed, hands wrapped around a sweating glass of soda I hadn’t taken a sip from in twenty minutes. They’d said hi to me when they came in, but after that… it was like I disappeared. Not out of malice—just out of that natural ease people have with their long-time friends. They slipped back into old inside jokes and familiar dynamics like slipping into shoes they’d worn for years. And me? I was the guest in my own house. He glanced over at me then, brushing wet hair out of his face, his smile widening. “Come in!” he called out, gesturing for me to join them in the water. I shook my head quickly. He knew I was terrified of deep water. I’d told him about the time I nearly drowned as a kid, how the panic had never left me. The most I ever did around pools was dip my feet in. Sometimes my knees, if I felt particularly brave. He knew that. Still, he insisted. “Come on, babe! Just for a little. It’s not even cold.” “I’m fine here,” I called back with a smile that I hoped didn’t look forced. But he kept urging. And urging. And urging. And the more he insisted, the more embarrassed I felt—especially when his friends turned to look at me with encouraging grins, as though my fear was something cute or silly. It wasn’t cute. I was trying not to hyperventilate at the idea. Eventually his playful smile twisted into something else. “You’re being dramatic,” he said, half laughing. And before I could react, or even fully stand up, he waded out of the pool, water dripping off him in sheets, and strode toward me. “No… hey, stop, I’m serious,” I protested, bracing myself against the arm of the chair as he reached for me. He didn’t listen. He never listened when it came to this. “Come on, it’ll be fun,” he grinned. I grabbed the chair, digging my nails into the cushion. “I mean it… please—don’t.” But he laughed, hooked his arms around my waist, and hauled me up while I kicked and screamed and tried to curl away from him. His friends cheered. God. Please don’t do this, Noah. My stomach twisted, heat rushing to my face because boo hoo, humiliation had a temperature of its own. “Stop! Seriously, I’ll cry…. stop!” “You’re fine.” His wet arms tightened around me. “Please,” I whispered, voice cracking. But he didn’t hear it. Or maybe he didn’t care to. All I knew was that the moment my foot slipped off the last pool tile and the smell of chlorine filled my nose, my body locked up. I couldn’t breathe and panic surged through me, my mind shrieking even though my mouth couldn’t make a single sound. I tried to claw my way upward but the world twisted around me until up and down blurred together and every direction felt like drowning. Please, someone save me! And in that cruel moment of plea, I felt my lungs give that horrible and terrifying final warning—BREATH or DIE—and In panic, I inhaled water.The fall was shorter than I expected but still felt like forever. Cold air rushed past me as I dropped, arms flailing, legs kicking on instinct. My back hit the sloped ground first with a jarring thud that knocked the air out of my lungs. Pain rushed up my spine and through my right ankle as I rolled, rocks and dirt scraping my skin open. I tumbled a few feet before slamming to a stop against a thick patch of brush.For a second, everything went white.Then the pain in my ankle hit harshly, followed by the dull and deep pain in my back and ribs. I gasped, coughing, tasting dirt and blood. My vision swam as I pushed myself up on shaky arms. The cabin looming above me on the ridge, the open window like a dark eye staring down. I could still hear the muffled sounds of the fight inside—grunts, the occasional crash—but that was no longer any of my fucking problem.I was out.I was actually fucking out.My right ankle throbbed when I tried to put weight on it, but it held, which meant n
Or at least I tried to.The second my body shifted forward, his hand shot out like lightning and clamped around my wrist like a steel trap. The momentum yanked me hard, and suddenly I wasn’t falling—I was dangling. My feet kicked uselessly in open air as my full weight jerked against his grip. Pain shot through my shoulder, but I didn’t scream. I just hung there, gasping, the wind whipping around me while the ground loomed fifteen feet below.Mr. James’ eyes were wide, his calm mask completely shattered for the first fucking time since I’d met him. His other hand gripped the windowsill so hard his knuckles were white, veins standing out on his forearm as he held my entire body weight with one arm.“Are you fucking insane?!” he growled, voice rough with effort and something that almost sounded like genuine shock. “You could’ve broken your goddamn legs!”I dangled there, legs swinging, heart hammering so hard I could barely breathe. The drop didn’t feel quite as deadly now—his arm len
Then silence.Fuck!That wasn’t good.That couldn’t possibly be good.Silence never meant good in situations like this. It usually meant someone had won… or someone had lost badly. My stomach twisted as I kept yanking at the old window frame, fingers scrabbling for any kind of grip. The damn thing was stuck—warped wood, years of neglect, maybe even painted shut. I kept trying anyway, heart hammering so loud it drowned out everything else for a second. My palms turned sweaty within a minute and each breath came in short, panicked bursts.Fuck fuck fuck.Footsteps.I heard footsteps coming down the short hallway toward the back room. Fuck!I gave the window one last desperate shove, and it finally gave with a loud, splintering crack. The frame groaned as I shoved it upward, cool evening air rushing in. I was already half-climbing onto the sill when the voice came from right behind me—low, calm, and way too close.“It’s pointless.”I froze.I didn’t understand at first. My brain was sti
RILEY °❀⋆.ೃ࿔*:・ It was too late to think about whether we’d been too loud. For now, I needed to completely free myself. If there was even the slightest chance of escaping this nightmare, I couldn’t stay tied to this fucking chair. “Cut me loose,” I urged him, voice low but urgent, eyes locked on Kai. “Right now. I need to be able to move. You can’t drag me out of here like this.” His head snapped back to me, eyes still wild from the locked door. He hesitated, the knife twitching in his hand like he was debating whether to trust me or just stab first and ask questions later. His jaw worked for a second, that unhinged energy still crackling around him. Then he muttered, “Fuck,” and stepped forward. In one rough motion he bent down and sliced through the zip ties on my ankles. The plastic snapped open and I kicked free immediately, the blood rushing back into my feet with a painful tingle. I stood up fast, legs shaky but ready, both hands free and fists clenched at my sides. Kai
“One,” James said, standing up. The chair creaked behind him as he moved. “I’ll go check it out.” I nodded and watched him press out his cigar in the ashtray. He was already checking the gun at his hip like it was second nature. “Don’t hesitate if it comes to it,” I told him. “Simply because she’s related to me. That doesn’t change a damn thing.” He paused at the door, hand on the frame. He didn’t turn around right away. Just stood there for a beat, letting the words land. “I’ll keep that in mind,” he said quietly. And just like that, James was gone. The heavy wooden door clicked shut behind him with a finality that echoed through the study, leaving the room feeling too goddamn quiet and way too crowded all at once—like the silence itself was pressing in from every corner. I stayed planted in my chair, staring at the dying ember in the ashtray, that faint orange glow blinking its last pathetic breaths. The taste of smoke sat disgusting and bitter on my tongue, clinging like an a
I exhaled through my nose, watching the smoke curl up toward the ceiling.“So we just sit back and wait for someone to come knocking?” I asked.He nodded once. “That’s the plan. Until then…” He shrugged. “We wait.”I stared at him for a beat, then shook my head. “Do whatever the fuck you want. I’m pretty sure you weren’t gonna listen to me anyway since it seems like you already made up your mind.”“You know me too well,” he said with a low chuckle, the sound almost warm in the heavy air.“Yeah, well, your ‘wait and see’ bullshit is gonna get us both killed if she’s playing us,” I muttered, flicking ash into the tray harder than necessary.James leaned back in his chair.“Patience isn’t bullshit, kid,” he said quietly. “It’s the only reason I’m still breathing at my age.”I let out a soft chuckle, shaking my head as I exhaled a thick plume of cigar smoke. “You sound like an old man just now, James.”He didn’t even hesitate, leaning forward with that gravelly voice of his. “I AM old.”I







