Home / Romance / Doll / Chapter 3

Share

Chapter 3

Author: Dorian
last update publish date: 2026-03-26 15:50:03

I woke up with the card still on the floor where I’d dropped it.

The morning light was thin and gray, slipping through the blinds I’d never gotten around to replacing. For a long moment I just lay there, staring at the ceiling, letting the weight of last night settle back onto my chest. The dent in my car. The empty street. The way he’d looked at me like I was something he’d already figured out.

I reached down and picked up the card. Silver letters. No phone number. Just an address on the other side of the city, the kind of place where people like me didn’t go unless they were holding a mop.

I sat up. My neck was stiff from sleeping against the door. My phone was on the nightstand, plugged in, the screen dark. I checked the time: 8:14 AM.

Noon. I had until noon to decide whether I was going to hand myself over to a man who’d been following me for two weeks and now had a reason to own me.

I got up. Showered. Let the water run hot until the bathroom was full of steam, until I couldn’t see my own face in the mirror. I dressed in jeans and a loose sweater, the kind of clothes that said I’m not trying to impress anyone, and I stood in front of my closet for longer than I needed to, because my brain was trying to figure out what you wore to meet your stalker for a debt negotiation.

Then I stopped.

What was I doing?

I sat down on the edge of my bed. My hands were cold. I wrapped them around my knees and I thought about the way he’d said my name. Miss Vance. Like he’d already tasted it. Like he’d already decided what it meant to him.

I hadn’t imagined the car. I knew I hadn’t. Two weeks of seeing it in my rearview, of taking different routes home, of lying awake and telling myself I was being ridiculous. I’d memorized the license plate. I’d checked it three times.

So what if I hit him? So what if I made a U‑turn and aimed my car at his? I was scared. I was tired. I was a woman alone on an empty road with a man who’d been following me for fourteen days, and I did what I had to do to protect myself.

A court would see that. A judge would understand.

I wasn’t crazy. I was a victim.

The thought landed in my chest and settled there, warm and solid. I was the victim. He was the one who’d been stalking me. He was the one who’d showed up on the street where I lived, night after night, waiting for the right moment. The car was just the final piece of evidence.

I didn’t have to go to his office. I didn’t have to do anything he said.

I stood up. Walked to the kitchen. Made coffee. Put the card on the table and stared at it while the coffee brewed, and with every sip I felt the fear recede a little. I was right. I was in the right. He couldn’t do anything to me that wouldn’t also expose what he’d been doing.

By the time I finished my first cup, I’d decided. I wasn’t going anywhere.

Mia was still asleep on the couch, her face buried in a pillow, her phone on the floor where she’d dropped it. I pulled the blanket up over her shoulders and she didn’t stir. She’d been up late crying again, I could tell from the salt stains on her cheeks and the way her breathing was too heavy, like she’d exhausted herself all the way down to her bones.

I left her there and went back to my room. The TV was still on from last night, the documentary I’d meant to watch frozen on the title screen. I’d forgotten about it. Last night everything had been about the car and the man and the forty‑two thousand dollars I didn’t have.

Now I sat on my bed, found the remote, and pressed play.

The documentary was about a woman who’d faked her own death to escape her husband. She’d spent three years planning it, draining accounts, building a new identity, all while smiling at him across the dinner table. At some point she’d realized she couldn’t win by fighting. She had to disappear.

I watched her pack a bag in the middle of the night, watched her slip out the back door while her husband slept, watched her become someone else in a city where no one knew her name. And I thought about the address on the card, the one I wasn’t going to, and I wondered what it felt like to run and never look back.

By ten o’clock, I’d stopped watching. I was just staring at the screen, my mind somewhere else, my hands still cold.

By eleven, I’d made another cup of coffee and checked my phone twelve times. No messages. No calls. Nothing from Marcus, who I’d texted last night and who still hadn’t responded. Nothing from the bank. Nothing from anyone.

By noon, I was sitting on the couch next to Mia, who’d woken up long enough to eat a bowl of cereal and was now scrolling through her phone with the kind of lazy focus that meant she was looking at pictures of her ex again.

“You’re quiet,” she said, not looking up.

“I’m always quiet.”

“You’re usually annoyed.” She glanced at me. “What’s going on?”

“Nothing.” I picked at a thread on my jeans. “I just didn’t sleep well.”

She made a sound that was half sympathy, half dismissal. “Marcus still not texting you back?”

“Marcus is Marcus.”

“You should dump him.”

“You should dump yours first.”

She laughed, and it was nice to hear her laugh, even if it was thin and didn’t reach her eyes. “We’re a mess, aren’t we?”

“We’re fine.”

She went back to her phone, and I went back to staring at the wall, and the clock on the microwave ticked past twelve, past twelve‑thirty, past one.

By one forty‑five, I’d started to believe I’d actually done it. I’d stood my ground. I’d called his bluff. He was probably sitting in his office right now, waiting for me to show up, and I wasn’t going to, and eventually he’d get tired of waiting and he’d move on to someone else. Someone with more money, more fear, more something I didn’t have.

I was nobody. He’d forget about me by the end of the week.

I was leaning back into the couch, my eyes half‑closed, when I heard the knock.

It wasn’t loud. Just three firm raps on the door, the kind that said I’m here and I expect you to answer. My body went cold. My hands, which had finally warmed up, went cold again.

Mia looked up from her phone, her eyebrows raised. “You expecting someone?”

I shook my head. I couldn’t speak. I knew, the way you know things in your bones, the way you know the dark at the bottom of the stairs.

She got up before I could stop her. She was already walking to the door, already smoothing her hair down, already shifting into the version of herself that appeared whenever a man might be on the other side. The flirty one. The one who leaned against doorframes and laughed too loud and made people like her without trying.

“Elara,” she called back, her voice bright. “You didn’t tell me you had friends coming over.”

I forced myself off the couch. My legs were shaking. I walked toward the door, and with every step I felt like I was walking into something I couldn’t walk out of.

I reached the doorway just as Mia pulled the door open.

He was there.

Adrian Volkov, standing on the landing like he belonged there, like he’d always been there, like the peeling paint and the flickering light and the smell of cabbage from Mrs. Patterson’s apartment were just props in a stage he’d built for himself. He was in a dark suit, crisp and clean, and behind him stood a woman in a sharp gray blazer holding a stack of files, and behind her, two men in black suits who didn’t look like they’d ever been scared of anything.

Mia had her hand on the doorframe, her body angled just so, her smile already in place. “Hi,” she said, and her voice had that breathless quality I’d heard a hundred times before. “Can I help you?”

He didn’t look at her. His eyes were on me.

“We had an agreement,” he said. “Noon. My office.”

Mia glanced back at me, confused. Her smile was still there, but it was starting to crack around the edges. “El?”

I stepped forward. My voice came out steadier than I felt. “I didn’t agree to anything.”

His jaw tightened. Just a flicker, there and gone, but I saw it. “You caused forty‑two thousand dollars in damage to my car. You admitted fault. You said you’d do whatever it took to make it right.”

“You followed me.” I could hear my heartbeat in my ears, loud and fast, but I kept my voice even. “For two weeks. You stalked me. I was defending myself.”

“You hit my car.”

“Because you were following me.”

“I was driving home.” His voice was flat. “You made a U‑turn in front of me. You turned your car into mine. There’s no version of this where you’re the victim.”

I wanted to argue. I wanted to scream. But the woman in the gray blazer was holding up the files, and I could see the top page, my name printed in bold letters, and I knew what was in those files. My financials. My driving record. My sister’s eviction notices. Everything.

“You want to go to court?” He tilted his head. “Fine. We’ll do it your way.”

He looked at the woman. She stepped forward, not waiting for permission, not asking. She just held out the files where I could see them, and I saw my whole life laid out in paper. The missed payments. The overdue notices. The credit card I’d maxed out to pay for Mia’s security deposit. The bank letter that said I had thirty days.

“You have no insurance,” he said. “No assets. No savings. You hit a car worth more than everything you own, and you did it on purpose.” He paused. “I can have you in court by Friday. By Monday, you’ll be looking at a judgment that will follow you for the rest of your life. Garnished wages. Seized property. A record that will make sure no one ever hires you for anything more than minimum wage.”

I couldn’t breathe. I stood there in the doorway, my hands cold, my chest tight, and I wanted to be anywhere else. I wanted to be a victim of a stray bullet. I wanted to be the woman in the documentary, packing a bag in the dark, disappearing into a city where no one knew my name.

“What do you want?” The words came out small. Smaller than I meant them to.

He looked at me for a long moment. Then he reached out, and the woman handed him a document. A contract, I realized. Pages of it, stapled together, the kind of thing you signed when you had no other choice.

He held it out.

“Read it,” he said. “Sign it. And then you’ll know exactly what I want.”

I took it. My hands were shaking. I could feel Mia behind me, her confusion turning to fear, the way her body went still when she finally understood that this wasn’t a joke, wasn’t a misunderstanding, wasn’t something she could flirt her way out of.

I looked down at the first page. My eyes found the words, the small print, the legalese that was designed to mean nothing and everything. And then I found the word, bold and clear, right there in the title.

Doll.

I looked up at him. He was watching me, his expression unreadable, but there was something in his eyes that hadn’t been there before. Something that looked like satisfaction.

“I want you to be my Doll,” he said.

Mia made a sound behind me, a sharp intake of breath, but I didn’t turn around. I couldn’t. I was standing in my doorway, holding a contract that said I was his, and the man who’d been following me for two weeks was waiting for me to sign it.

I didn’t say anything. I just stood there, the paper cold in my hands, and I thought about the woman in the documentary, the one who’d packed her bag and run.

She’d been smart. She’d been fast.

I was neither.

I was just a girl with a dead father, a failing career, a sister who needed me, and forty‑two thousand dollars I would never have.

I looked at the contract again.

Doll.

And I knew, in that moment, that I was going to sign it.

---

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • Doll   Chapter 25

    The crushing pressure of Hector's fingers around my wrist sent a sharp spike of genuine agony up my arm. He stared down at me. His eyes held the cold, calculating look of a man who killed people for a living. He was looking right at my trapped hand. He knew I grabbed his belt.I had a fraction of a second to decide how I was going to survive this. If I fought him, he would break my arm and find the keycard. I needed him to think I was the most pathetic, useless creature in the entire building.I let out a piercing, ragged sob. I went completely limp against his grip, collapsing my knees slightly so he had to hold my weight. I curled my fingers inward, pressing the flat metal of the card tight against my palm, using the dark fabric of my dress to mask the bulky shape."You are hurting me!" I screamed, letting the raw terror in my chest bleed into my voice. Hot tears spilled over my cheeks. I thrashed my shoulders in a wild, uncoordinated panic. "Let me go! Please! I just want to find m

  • Doll   Chapter 24

    The air rushed completely out of my lungs. The voice whispering against my ear was smooth and laced with a thick, predatory amusement that made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up. The heavy hand resting on my bare shoulder squeezed tight. His fingers dug in just hard enough to leave deep bruises if I tried to pull away too fast.I forced myself to breathe through the sudden surge of nausea rising in my throat. I turned around slowly, pasting a wide, empty smile on my face.The man standing behind me wore a deep maroon suit tailored perfectly to his broad shoulders. A half-mask fashioned from dark leather covered the upper portion of his face, but his lips were curved into a vicious little smirk. I recognized the gold insignia pinned to his lapel instantly. Adrian had forced me to memorize the family crests on the car ride over. This man belonged to the Uncle's faction. He was a direct enemy in the inheritance war, and he was standing close enough to smell my fear."Lost your ke

  • Doll   Chapter 23

    The tires hummed against the asphalt as the black Rolls-Royce Cullinan tore through the quiet city streets, the passing streetlights casting long, sweeping shadows across the spacious leather cabin. Adrian and I sat in the back seat, separated from the driver by a thick glass partition that kept our world completely silent. He hadn't touched me since we got in, his focus locked onto a tablet in his lap, his jaw tight. The sheer wealth radiating from the car didn't make me feel safe; it just reminded me of how high the stakes were. The weight of the gun against my inner thigh felt heavier with every mile we traveled.Adrian didn't look up from the screen. "Listen closely," he said, his voice cutting through the quiet. "When we arrive, the driver will drop us at the main lobby of the Grand Horizon Hotel. To anyone watching, we are just an elite couple looking for a late-night drink. But once we hit the penthouse elevator, a specific key sequence takes us down into the sub-levels."I swa

  • Doll   Chapter 22

    The heavy mattress shifted, and a sudden draft of cold air hit my bare shoulders. I reached blindly for the duvet, my eyes still heavy with sleep, but my fingers caught nothing but empty space."Up," a deep voice commanded.I blinked against the dim light of the bedroom, my vision clearing to find Adrian standing at the foot of the bed. He wore a crisp white shirt, the top buttons undone, but his face carried the grim expression of a man who hadn't slept a wink since we left his family's chaotic dinner table. He threw a heavy, black garment bag across the mattress. It landed with a dull thud right next to my legs."What is that?" I muttered, my throat dry. I pushed myself up on my elbows, squinting at the clock on the nightstand. The glowing red numbers read 1:30 AM. My stomach twisted with instant anxiety. "Adrian, it's the middle of the night.""We have an appointment at two-thirty," he said, turning toward the full-length mirror to adjust his cuffs. "You have twenty minutes to get

  • Doll   Chapter 21

    Adrian held me against his chest and I hated that I didn't pull away.His hand was on the back of my head, his fingers were pressed into my hair, and his heart was beating fast under my ear. He was scared, or angry, or both, I couldn't tell. He didn't say anything, he just held me there in the hallway with the bullet hole in the wall behind us and the smell of gunpowder still in the air.When I finally pulled back, his face was stone again. The moment was over."She pointed a gun at my head," I said. My voice was hoarse from her arm on my throat. "Why isn't she dead?""Because killing Viktor's daughter in my own house starts a war.""She tried to kill me.""She was testing you. And me. If she wanted you dead, you'd be dead."I stared at him. "That's supposed to make me feel better?""No." He turned and walked toward the sitting room. I followed him because I wasn't done being angry.He poured himself a glass of water, drank it, set the glass down. His hands were steady."What happens

  • Doll   Chapter 20

    Katya came the next morning.Dmitri announced her like she was unwanted, which she probably was, at least by Adrian. "Viktor's daughter is here. She says she wants tea with the lovely soon to be couple."Adrian was in the study when Dmitri said it. I was there too, because I had been asking about the folder again and he had been ignoring me."No," Adrian said."She's already inside."Adrian's jaw tightened. He looked at me. "Stay close to me.""Why? She seems nice."He stared at me like I had grown a second head. "Nice?""She was polite at dinner. Compared to everyone else, anyway."Adrian didn't answer. He just walked out of the study and headed to the sitting room. I followed.Katya was already there, sitting on the couch with her legs crossed and a smile on her face. She was wearing a cream colored dress and her hair was pulled back, she looked like she was going to a brunch, not a mafia heir's house."Adrian," she said, her voice was warm. "Thank you for having me.""I didn't invi

  • Doll   Chapter 12

    The dinner was over. Thank God.Antonia stood up from the table and walked straight to Adrian. She wrapped her arms around his neck and pressed her body against his. I watched her hands slide up his chest. I watched her fingers curl into the fabric of his jacket."Call me," she whispered. Loud enou

  • Doll   Chapter 11

    .Antonia's smile stayed on her face, but her eyes went dead cold. She looked at Adrian's hand holding mine, twitched her left eye, then she looked at me. Then back at him."Fiancée," she said. "You never mentioned her.""I'm mentioning her now."Antonia laughed. It was a sharp sound, like glass br

  • Doll   Chapter 10

    The car stopped at a different estate, one that dwarfed the house I had been staying in. Heavy stone walls and wrought iron gates framed the property, while a fountain threw water high into the darkening sky. Adrian stepped out first, smoothing his jacket before moving toward the entrance with the

  • Doll   chapter 5

    Chapter 5The foyer was too big. That was the first thing I noticed. Marble floors that reflected the chandelier above, a staircase that curved up to a second floor I couldn't see the end of, walls hung with paintings that probably cost more than my life. Everything was polished. Everything was qui

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status