LOGINAdrian's mouth claimed hers again, more desperate this time — not asking, not questioning, just taking. His hands roamed her body like he’d been starving for her, like every second of restraint had only sharpened the ache now unraveling between them.
Eva clung to him — to the heat, the hunger, the madness of the moment. Her back hit the hallway wall, breath catching as he pinned her there with nothing but his body and his need. Her legs wrapped around his waist instinctively, drawing him closer, deeper into the pull neither of them could fight anymore.
“Eva…” he growled against her throat, voice rough, strained, sinful.
She answered with a gasp, her fingers sliding on his chest, nails grazing his back. Damn, he felt like carved stone under her touch — solid, unshakable, until her hands made him tremble.
His lips traced a hot, open trail down her collarbone, sinking lower, devouring every inch of skin like it was his salvation. Her moans weren’t gentle — they were raw, breathy, soaked in the shock of how badly she wanted him.
She was burning — from the inside out — and Adrian only fueled the flame.
When he finally laid her down on the couch, hovering above her, jeans unzipped, she looked up at him with wide, glassy eyes. For a heartbeat, they just stared — the weight of what they were doing hovering in the silence.
“Tell me to stop,” he whispered, voice cracked and broken with need. “And I will.”
Her fingers curled around his neck, pulling him down until their foreheads touched.
“I can’t,” she whispered.
That was all he needed.
He plunged into her with one stroke, and moved with a fevered urgency — every thrust of his hips, every drag of his mouth against her skin, a mixture of pleasure and punishment. The world outside faded. There was only this: flesh on flesh, heartbeat against heartbeat, lips parted with gasps and moans and names whispered like confessions.
Adrian kissed her like he was claiming her.
Eva touched him like he was the only thing keeping her from falling apart.And when release finally shattered through them, fierce and consuming, they held each other — not speaking, not moving — just breathing. Entangled.
----
Sunlight leaked through the half-drawn blinds, signaling it was morning. The quiet hum of the city outside seeped into the stillness of Eva’s home. But inside, the silence was deafening—thick with memory, with heat, with guilt.
Eva lay on her side, the sheets tangled around her body, her skin still tingling where his hands had been. Her lips were swollen, tender reminders of a night she wished she could rewrite, even as her body betrayed her with the ache of wanting more.
Daniel’s face haunted her in the quiet. The way his hand had held hers at their wedding, the way he whispered “forever” against her hair. And now here she was, in their bed—or worse, in a bed still warm with another man’s presence—while her husband lay unconscious at the hospital, fighting for life.
Her chest squeezed, tears burning behind her eyes. What kind of wife did that make her?
The faint clatter of pans snapped her back to the present. A smell drifted from the kitchen—coffee, eggs, something buttery. Her heart stopped. He was still here.
Moments later, the bedroom door pushed open, and Adrian Cole stepped inside, impossibly composed, carrying a tray. He is jean trouser on, but he was still bare chested. And as he walked in, he looked as though he belonged here, as though this wasn’t a stolen, forbidden morning after but the start of something ordinary. Something real.
“Good morning,” he said simply, his voice deep, controlled.
Eva sat up, clutching the sheet around her chest like a shield. “Adrian…”
He set the tray down on the nightstand before she could finish. Scrambled eggs, toast, fruit, a steaming mug of coffee. The normalcy of it made her stomach twist violently with guilt.
“You didn’t eat last night,” he reminded her, pulling a chair close to the bed. “You need your strength.”
Eva stared at the food, her hands trembling in her lap. “This… this is wrong.” Her voice cracked. “We can’t pretend this is—”
He cut her off gently, but firmly. “Eat first. Talk later.”
Something in the way he said it made her obey, even against her will. She picked up a piece of toast, her hand unsteady. They ate in silence, the sound of cutlery against porcelain oddly intimate, suffocating.
Adrian reached over once, brushing his fingertips against hers as she passed him the butter. The touch was light, casual, but Eva flinched.
His eyes caught the movement immediately. He said nothing, but the air shifted, heavy with the unspoken.
He tried again minutes later, speaking about nothing—the weather, a new wing being built at the hospital, the kind of idle conversation couples might share at breakfast. But Eva’s responses were clipped, her smile forced, her gaze often fixed on her plate.
Adrian’s jaw flexed as he buttered his own toast. He noticed everything—the way she pulled the sheet tighter whenever his gaze rested on her, the way her laughter from last night had been replaced by silence.
He didn’t call her out. He didn’t press. But inside, anger coiled like smoke.
She was withdrawing. She was thinking of Daniel.
And Adrian couldn’t allow that.
Because last night had not been a mistake to him. Last night was a beginning.
When Eva excused herself, carrying the tray back toward the kitchen with shaking hands, Adrian leaned back in the chair, watching her. His eyes lingered on her bare shoulders, on the way the morning light kissed her skin, on the way her hair tumbled down her back. She didn’t look like a woman full of regret. She looked like his.
As she set the tray down with more force than necessary, Adrian rose. He crossed the room silently, coming up behind her in the kitchen.
His hand slid around her waist—not rough, not urgent, but deliberate. She stiffened.
“Adrian, please…” she whispered, her voice trembling. “I can’t—”
He leaned down, his breath brushing the shell of her ear. “You can.”
She turned, eyes wide, fear and longing colliding in her gaze. For a moment, she thought she saw something raw flicker in his—something darker than tenderness, deeper than lust.
Possession.
But then it was gone, hidden behind his practiced calm. He released her, stepping back with a small, almost casual smile. “I’ll head back to the hospital,” he said lightly. “Daniel’s charts need updating. But I’ll check in on you later.”
He said it as though it were inevitable, as though her consent was a given.
Eva could only nod, her throat too tight to speak.
And then to her surprise, he leaned forward and claimed her lips with his before she could even protest.
The kiss was so good, it made weak in her knees. And she kissed him back with the same passion.
Vanessa didn't say another word.She simply held Eva's gaze for one long, unreadable moment.Then, without apology or sympathy.She slowly closed the front door.Click.The sound echoed louder than it should have.Eva remained standing on the doorstep.Frozen.Her hand still hung awkwardly by her side.Her mind refused to process what had just happened."I'm Adrian's fiancée."The words replayed again.And again.And again."No..."She whispered to herself."No... that's impossible."Only months ago Adrian had been obsessively pursuing her.Promising her forever.Promising they belonged together.Promising they would build a family.Now...He was engaged?How?When?Her chest tightened painfully.Had he simply replaced her that quickly?She felt foolish standing there.Like someone who had arrived too late to a story that had already ended.She turned slowly toward the gate.Maybe she should just leave.Maybe coming here had been the biggest mistake yet.Just as she reached the drivew
The ride home felt longer than it actually was.Eva sat silently in the backseat of the taxi, staring blankly out of the window as the city rushed past her.People walked along sidewalks laughing.A young couple held hands while crossing the road.A father carried his little daughter on his shoulders.Life...Everyone seemed to have someone.Everyone seemed to belong somewhere.Except her.The image of Daniel and Lydia refused to leave her mind.The way Daniel had looked at Lydia.The tenderness in his eyes.The protective way he had rested his hand over her swollen belly.The excitement on both their faces as they shopped for tiny clothes.It should have been her.Those thoughts echoed relentlessly until the taxi finally stopped outside her apartment building."We're here, ma'am."Eva blinked.She hadn't even realized they had arrived.She paid the driver quietly before making her way upstairs.The moment she stepped inside her apartment, she locked the door behind her.The silence g
Months had passed.Not enough to erase the past.But enough for life to move on...With or without her.Eva stood in the middle of her small apartment, staring at the half-unpacked cardboard boxes that still occupied one corner of the living room.She had promised herself she would unpack them weeks ago.She never did.The apartment wasn't luxurious.It wasn't the spacious home she had once shared with Daniel.There was no elegant dining room.No garden.No framed wedding photographs decorating the walls.Just a modest one-bedroom apartment with cream-colored walls, simple furniture, and silence.Lots of silence.She had chosen it because it was affordable.Because nobody here knew who she was.Or everything that had happened.It was her chance to disappear.To begin again.If beginning again was even possible.Every morning followed the same routine.Wake up.Make coffee.Search endlessly for jobs.Attend interviews.Come home.Eat alone.Sleep alone.Repeat.Life had become predicta
The hotel room had long since fallen silent.Eva stood motionless for a heartbeat after Adrian's words, her emotions battling inside her.Grief.Loneliness.Anger.Regret.Everything seemed tangled together until she could no longer tell where one feeling ended and another began.Adrian gently brushed a strand of hair away from her face."You've carried enough pain," he murmured.Eva looked into his eyes.For the first time in a long while, she didn't see the manipulative man who had turned her life upside down.She only saw someone looking at her with unwavering intensity.Whether that love was healthy or destructive no longer mattered in that fragile moment.She was exhausted.She was lonely.And she desperately wanted the ache inside her heart to disappear, even if only for a few hours.Without another word, she leaned forward.Their lips met softly.Not with the urgency that had once defined them.This kiss carried sadness.It carried resignation.It carried two broken people tryi
Eva stared at her sister.For several seconds, neither woman moved.Then Eva slowly shook her head."I don't think peace exists between us anymore."Lydia's shoulders slumped."I had to try."Eva remained silent.Lydia took a hesitant step closer."Daniel told me something."Eva's expression hardened instantly."What?""He told me..."She hesitated."...that you almost changed your mind."Eva didn't answer.Lydia continued carefully."He told me you offered to forgive us."Silence."You were willing to give your marriage another chance."Eva looked away."There isn't much point talking about that now.""But why?" Lydia asked quietly.Eva laughed softly.Not because anything was funny.But because the question felt almost absurd."Because despite everything..."She paused."...I loved my husband."The admission hung heavily in the room."I thought..."Eva continued."...maybe if I forgave him..."Her voice faltered."...we could somehow find our way back."Lydia's tears flowed freely n
Lydia whispered."So, I would've lost you."Daniel immediately reached across the table."Lydia."She looked at him."I'm just thinking..." she admitted quietly."What if you had accepted?""What if seeing her standing there... made you remember how much you loved her?""What if you chose to give your marriage one more shot?"Daniel stood from his chair.Walked around the table.Then crouched beside her."Lydia."He gently took both of her hands."I already made my choice."She searched his face."You don't regret it?"He was quiet for a moment."I regret how we got here."His answer was immediate."I regret hurting Eva.""I regret betraying my marriage.""I regret causing this much pain."He squeezed her hands gently."But..."His eyes locked onto hers."I don't regret how I feel about you."Lydia's breath caught.Daniel smiled sadly."I made it very clear to Eva.""What did you tell her?""I told her I have feelings for you."Lydia's heart skipped."And?""And I intend to pursue tho
Eva froze. “He’s… a friend.”Lydia gave a short, humorless laugh. “A friend who leaves you notes on your dining table?”“He’s… he’s Daniel’s doctor.”That only made Lydia’s expression twist further. “His doctor? Eva—what the hell does that mean?”“Lydia, please—”“No, you’re going to tell me,” her
Eva stood in the bedroom staring at her reflection, barely recognizing the woman looking back at her.Her hands trembled as she smoothed them over the front of her dress—an unconscious, protective gesture that had become second nature lately. The mirror showed a composed woman. Calm. Decided.Insid
The place Daniel chose wasn’t on any map worth noticing.It was an old private lounge tucked behind a shuttered cigar shop on the outskirts of the city, very discreet, the kind of place men came to when they wanted answers without witnesses. No windows. No music. Just low amber lighting and thick l
The police station smelled faintly of coffee, paper, and something old.Daniel had never noticed that smell before.Then again, he had never come here for something like this.The lobby was quiet, only a few people scattered around. A young officer sat behind the front desk typing into a computer w







