LOGINAurelia Blackwood rules her world with precision. As the formidable CEO of Blackwood Global, she believes power is safest when it is controlled, emotions negotiated, and attachments temporary. Love has no place in her life—only desire, on her terms. So when a quiet, attentive man slips into her orbit after a chance encounter, she doesn’t resist. He becomes her indulgence. Her secret. Her sugar boy. He is everything she allows herself to want—present when summoned, patient, observant, willing to give without demanding permanence. With Aurelia, he learns her rhythms, her silences, her need for dominance and certainty. She keeps him close but contained, convinced she holds every string. What Aurelia doesn’t realize is that he was never accidental. As months pass, control blurs into attachment. She starts looking for him when she’s tired. Trusting him with fragments of herself she never intended to share. Falling—slowly, unwillingly—for the one man who never tried to own her. Then the truth fractures everything. He is not just a man with ambition. He is not just someone else’s partner. He is tied to her greatest corporate rival—and he has been gathering information from the inside, feeding secrets that could dismantle the empire she built with blood, discipline, and sacrifice. Betrayal cuts deeper when it wears the face of devotion. Now Aurelia stands at a crossroads she never prepared for. Expose him and destroy the man who made her feel seen—or protect him and risk losing everything she’s ever fought for. Revenge promises safety. Love promises ruin. In a world where power is currency and intimacy is leverage, Her Sugar Boy Was a Rival is a dark, obsessive romance about dominance, deception, and the most dangerous choice of all: When the enemy knows your body, your secrets, and your heart
View MoreAurelia
Power bends easily.
I learned that lesson in the quiet corners of my childhood—repeating it like a solemn prayer until it nestled into my bones, an instinctive response to a world that demands strength.
Men, I discovered, bend even easier.
Yet tonight, control thrums restlessly beneath my skin, fidgeting like a wild animal yearning for release. From the confines of the car, the city outside flickers and glimmers, raindrops dancing on glass, scattering streetlights into a kaleidoscope of colors. I watch, somewhat detached, as if peering through a distorted portal. My reflection hovers faintly within the glass—perfectly poised, my hair a dark waterfall cascading over my shoulders—a woman untouched by accusations of frailty.
And yet…
I unfasten my cufflink, the small metal click sounding almost like a whispered protest against the mounting tension. I fasten it again, but the act provides no comfort.
“Home, Ms. Blackwood?” my driver inquires, his tone respectful yet probing.
I pause, contemplating. Home is a sleek penthouse filled with expanse, silence wrapping around me like an unwelcome shroud. It's a sanctuary where no one breaches my space without my consent.
“No,” I reply at last. “The Black Iris.”
My driver nods without hesitation. He never pries; questions rarely surface from those who understand the unspoken language of discretion.
The Black Iris waits beneath the city's beating heart, hidden behind a facade so ordinary it could be overlooked by anyone rushing by. Inside, the atmosphere transforms—shadowy corners draped in velvet, gold-edged mirrors reflecting secrets, and a low hum of music that vibrates through the air, wrapping around us like an embrace. The scent—a heady mixture of premium liquor and lingering desire—clings to the atmosphere, infusing it with an intoxicating allure. Here, everyone wears a mask, playing parts or shrouded in indifference.
As I slip my coat off, the movement deliberate and fluid, I sense a handful of eyes dart in my direction, only to quickly avert. Perfect. I seek not attention, only the gaze of one specific person.
And then I see him.
He occupies a barstool alone, his shoulders relaxed, jacket draped carelessly over the back, exuding a calm confidence that draws the eye. He is poised without being rigid, taking up space as if it truly belongs to him. His forearms, strong and defined, catch the low light, veins gently tracing the warmth of his skin.
But he isn’t scanning the room; he’s waiting.
When our eyes meet, his does not widen in surprise, nor sharpen in appraisal. Instead, his gaze remains steady—curious and unafraid. The sight sends a wave of unwelcome anticipation coursing through me, unsettling yet thrilling.
I glide onto the stool next to him.
“Whiskey,” I command the bartender. “Neat.”
I avoid looking at him until his voice cuts through the ambient noise, calm and edged with playful amusement. “Of course you take it neat.”
Turning slightly, I regard him fully. “And you’ve come to that conclusion because…?”
“Because you strike me as someone who enjoys neither dilution nor surrender,” he replies, an intriguing smile tugging at the corners of his mouth.
Fascinating.
“Careful,” I warn lightly, my tone teasing. “Assumptions can lead to dangerous outcomes.”
“And so can underestimating people,” he counters, his gaze now sharper, not on the defensive but rather keenly engaged.
With a deliberate pause, I inquire, “What’s your name?”
“Luca,” he states simply.
Allowing the silence to expand between us, I let him ponder whether I’ll accept it. “Is that the truth?” I ask at length.
A flicker of amusement plays on his lips. “Does it need to be?”
“No,” I answer, “but lies should always be chosen with intention.”
His expression sharpens again, not in aggression, but in genuine intrigue.
We dive into conversation—not in the polite, surface-level manner typical of strangers, but instead, we dance around one another, sharing observations that reveal more than mere facts. He doesn’t pry into my profession, nor does he flaunt stories of grandeur to impress me. Instead, he listens—truly listens—like my words are a script he’s eager to memorize.
That in itself is intoxicating.
When his knee brushes against mine, it feels fleetingly accidental.
Yet when it stays, it becomes purposeful.
I don’t shift away.
As I finish my drink and rise, the air feels charged.
“My place,” I declare, my voice firm.
Not an inquiry, but an expectation.
He springs to his feet without hesitation, compliance woven into his every move, a subtle but unmistakable acknowledgment of what I demand.
In the car, the tension swells to a near unbearable point. Our bodies are tantalizingly close, enough to feel warmth radiating between us, yet he refrains from making contact. His restraint is palpable, deliberate—a mark of respect.
It stirs something deep within me, a desire to break the boundaries he upholds.
As the door to my penthouse clicks shut, I turn to confront him.
“Before this continues,” I say, my voice calm and steady, closing the distance between us, “you need to listen.”
His eyes darken with intensity, focused entirely on me. “I am.”
“You won’t take control unless I grant it. You won’t stay unless I invite you. And you won’t touch me unless I desire it.”
“And if you don’t?” he inquires softly.
A slow smile blooms on my lips, sharp and deliberate. “Then you’ll know.”
A shift occurs in his gaze—something akin to approval, want, or perhaps a trepidation that borders on reverence.
With purpose, I remove his jacket. My fingers linger at his collar, teasing at the fabric, then trailing down to the line of his chest and the curve of his throat. I watch as his breathing alters, a faint quiver of control evident as he resists the instinct to advance without permission.
Good.
When I kiss him, it comes as a measured act, a test. I want to gauge his limits; he remains steady, responding only when I deepen the connection, only when I allow it to escalate. His hands hover, waiting until I guide him where I want them to be.
He follows flawlessly.
The bedroom dims under the muted glow of the city outside, the lights bleeding through the floor-to-ceiling glass like a thousand eyes observing intently. I push him back, a careful choreography where each step strips not only layers of clothing but distances and pretenses alike. Every action is deliberate, cataloging his reactions akin to a study.
He learns swiftly—what quickens my breath, what stirs my pulse, when to throttle the pace and when to remain still. He watches me with rapt attention, as though my reactions are unspoken commands.
Later, as the world narrows to the mingling of heat and breath, control slipping just enough to feel deliciously precarious, realization creeps in—he doesn’t attempt to take.
He lets me.
Afterward, he lies beside me, silent yet attentive, a statue of calm even in his rest. His hand finds its place at my waist—not possessive, nor reckless, simply present.
I stare at the ceiling long after his breathing becomes steady, the city outside continuing its relentless pulse, a backdrop to our ephemeral connection.
The problem with a polished surface is that eventually, you start to see things that aren’t there.I spent the forty-eight hours following our "lapse" in the office constructing a masterpiece of architectural denial. I told myself that the heat in my chest was merely residual adrenaline from the Atlas project. I told myself that the way my eyes searched for Luca the moment I stepped into a room was simply a defensive reflex—keeping an eye on the most unpredictable variable in my orbit.But the silence between us had changed. It was no longer the silence of two predators weighing each other's strength; it was the heavy, pressurized silence of a storm that had already broken and was simply waiting for the second wave.I threw myself into the data. I became a ghost in the machine, arriving at the office before the sun touched the glass of the skyline and staying until the cleaning crews were the only other souls in the building. I was avoiding him, yes, but more than that, I was avoiding
The morning after was not a revelation; it was a crime scene.I woke up at 4:30 AM, the city below my penthouse still shrouded in a bruised purple haze. My hair, usually a disciplined coil, was a chaotic mess across the silk pillowcase. I sat up, the silence of the apartment feeling like an accusation. The memories of the office—the scent of scotch, the bruising force of his mouth, the terrifying loss of my own center—slammed into me with the force of a physical blow.I didn't linger in bed. I didn't let myself feel the warmth of the memory. I was in the shower by 4:45, the water as cold as I could endure. I scrubbed my skin until it was raw, as if I could wash away the sensation of his hands. By 6:00 AM, I was at my desk, my hair pinned back so tightly it gave me a headache, and my suit—a deep, impenetrable navy—buttoned to the chin.I had re-established the perimeter.When I arrived at the office, the air felt different. Every time a door opened, every time the elevator chimed, my h
The silence following Luca’s departure was not empty; it was heavy, vibrating with the ghost of his voice. I stayed in that boardroom for exactly five minutes—not because I needed the time to recover, but because leaving any sooner would look like a retreat to anyone watching the security feeds.I stood at the head of the table and began to gather my things. My movements were slow, rhythmic, and entirely performative. I aligned the edges of my folders. I capped my pen until I heard the precise, metallic click. I adjusted the sleeves of my blazer.I am fine, I told the empty room. I am the variable that does not change.But my skin felt too tight for my body. "You’re already on fire," he had said. It was a ridiculous, melodramatic thing to say, the kind of line men used in the novels I used to read before I realized that life was about balance sheets, not ballrooms. Yet, the air in the room felt scorched.I walked out of the boardroom and toward my office. My heels struck the floor wit
The air in the boardroom was recycled, sterile, and smelled faintly of expensive leather and the ozone of high-end electronics. It was a room designed for intimidation—a long, obsidian-topped table that reflected the faces of everyone seated around it like a dark mirror. At the head of the table, I sat in my accustomed throne, my spine a rigid line of defiance.Across from me sat the "Moretti Group" delegation.Luca had arrived ten minutes early, flanked by two associates who looked like they had been grown in a lab specifically for corporate warfare. To his left was Elena, a woman with a sharp bob and eyes that dissected spreadsheets like they were forensic evidence. To his right was Marcus, a man whose silence felt more tactical than passive.And then there was Luca.He had traded the casual, "sugar boy" softness of our private encounters for a slate-gray suit that screamed authority. He sat with his hands folded on the table, his expression unreadable. The man who had tucked a st
AureliaI prepare the apartment with the same meticulous care I apply to high-stakes negotiations. Each element has purpose, a carefully curated atmosphere designed to relax and invite confidence. The lights are set low but not dim enough to hide anything—just enough to soften edges and deflect har
AureliaAs consciousness seeps in, I awaken with a nagging sensation that something within my world has shifted ever so slightly. It’s not an overwhelming feeling of dread or foreboding—rather, it’s akin to the subtle shift of a door I was certain I’d locked that now stands ajar, inviting uncertain
Luca PovThe ice clinks against the glass as I swirl my drink, the dim light of the bar casting soft shadows across the table. It’s a quiet refuge—booths lined with rich leather, each offering a veneer of privacy. Rafe, seated across from me, leans back, arms crossed, a skeptical look etched on his
AureliaI don’t usually go out.My evenings belong to silence, to control, to rooms where nothing surprises me. But tonight, I let myself be persuaded—cornered, really—by women who have known me long enough to recognize when I’m carrying too much weight alone.We choose a lounge that hums instead o






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