LOGINDawn’s Point of View
“I know some guys who would be interested in you, if you’re that desperate,” Bree offers pleasantly.
“Bree—”
“What, babe? I am genuinely tired of hearing her name. She was your friend, fine, people move on. You don’t owe her anything. You literally told me she was annoying.” Her voice rises.
Damian says nothing. He does not deny it. He does not even try.
She keeps talking about how exhausting I am, so I just turn around and walk away.
He does not come after me this time either. I have lost my best friend.
I keep moving, the ground feeling unsteady beneath me. Everything I did over these years, every choice, and every compromise I made with him somewhere in it. He was the constant. He was my safe place. And he was telling her I was annoying while I was out here building my entire world around him.
“Dawny, wait!” he calls.
I keep walking, tears burning behind my eyes, and I don’t think I know how to breathe anymore.
“About what she said—”
“Am I annoying?” I stop, turning to face him. “Did you tell her about the promise?”
“I was just trying to—”
I laugh, and it comes out broken. “We are done, Damian.” I move past him.
He grabs my arm. “Just listen. One minute. I messed up, okay?”
“Let go.” I try to pull free. His grip tightens, shaking his head. There’s a flicker of remorse in his eyes, and he gives me that look that normally I would give in, but not today.
“No. Just listen to me—”
“Let go of her, Damian.”
Killian’s voice comes cold and final. We both go still, turning to look at Killian, who is in back tight jeans that are hugging his thighs, and he’s in a black t-shirt with a black leather jacket.
“Stay out of this, Kill. This is between us.”
Killian does not even blink. He moves to stand beside me, close enough that I feel the warmth of him at my back.
“Dawn is my business,” he says, eyes steady on his brother. “And I do not like people putting their hands on what’s mine. But then, you already know that, don’t you?”
I bite down on the urge to tell him I am not his anything.
“Yours?” Damian’s jaw tightens. “She is not yours.”
Killian drapes his arm over my shoulder and draws me in. I stagger slightly against him, but he holds me there, easy, and unhurried, like this is the most natural thing in the world.
“Actually, she is. Since Saturday,” he says, and smiles at his brother.
I stand between them, neither moving nor speaking, and take them in for a moment. Damian, lean and familiar, a head shorter. Killian, broader, darker, solid in a way that feels deliberate, like everything about him is built to take up space.
“What?” Damian looks genuinely thrown, his eyes moving back and forth between us.
“Let go of my arm, Damian,” I say quietly. “I have somewhere to be.”
“Tell me this is not true. You have no business with this asshole,” he points towards Killian, and I just stare at him.
I don’t deny or confirm it. “Just let go of me, Damian,” I say through gritted teeth.
Damian drops his hand, his eyes wide and lips part to say something, but he doesn’t.
Killian turns us both around and walks me out of there, his arm still across my shoulders, steering me through the crowd until the noise fades behind us.
My heart has not slowed down once, and I feel shivers all over my body because everyone stares at us.
I pull away from him when we are far enough out. “I didn’t ask for your help.”
“No,” he agrees. “You didn’t. But you needed it.”
“What do you want, Killian? You are not doing this out of generosity. You never do anything without wanting something back.”
“I already told you what I want.”
I hold his gaze. “Tell me again. Clearly.”
He tilts his head, and the corner of his mouth lifts. There is something behind his eyes that I do not entirely trust.
“You. Just for this semester.”
“What?”
“Let me have you,” he says. “I will teach you everything you need to know. How to make someone want you. How to win.” He pauses. “Just not my brother.”
I frown. “That makes no sense.”
“No, thank you,” I say, and turn to leave.
“You want Princeton.”
I stop walking.
“After your diploma. Princeton.” His voice is even, almost casual. “Damian thinks you are both headed to Harvard or Yale. But that is not what you want, is it?”
I have never told anyone that. Not once.
“What if I get you there,” he says, “and you give me this semester in return?”
“Why?” I turn back to face him. “Why do you even want this?”
“Say yes, and I will tell you.”
I search his face for the trap. It is Killian, so there is always one somewhere.
“And there is the other thing to consider,” he adds, almost as an afterthought, his eyes glinting. “ You would be getting under my brother’s skin in the most permanent way possible, once he sees you with me.”
I breathe slowly.
This is a bad idea. I know it is a bad idea. Every rational part of me is saying exactly that.
“You want to hurt my brother? Use me”
“I don’t trust you,” I reply, and he smirks, his dimples showing once he does that. I understand why girls take off their bras and pants, throwing them at him. The guy is hot. But he is not my Damian.
“You’re wise not to trust me.”
“If we do this…” I start, my throat suddenly dry. “I’m not giving myself to you.”
“No?” he raises an eyebrow with a smile, but when he sees how serious I am, he closes the distance between us.
“I know I will have you crawling to me on your own, Dawn,” he smirks, and Christ, if that isn’t enough to make my breath hitch.
“Fine,” I hear myself say. “Let’s do it.”
Something shifts in his expression. Satisfaction, maybe. I don’t know. I can never read him.
“Princeton, in exchange for whatever I ask.”
“Fine,” I say again.
He steps forward, closing the distance between us entirely, and before I can think or step back or say a single word, he takes my face in his hands and brings his mouth down on mine.
Killian’s point of view“I’m here to see you,” I tell her, my voice low.She doesn’t even hesitate. She throws her head up, her jaw locking into a stubborn line, and tries to push right past me to get to the glass doors.Before she can take another step, I wrap my arm around her waist, lift her right off her feet, and hoist her over my shoulder. I turn on my heel, ignoring the sharp gasp that leaves her mouth, and head straight back down the steps toward my car.“Killian! Put me down! Let me go!” she screams, her fists hammering against my back.I don’t say a word. I just raise my hand, deliver a spank to her ass, and she goes still in shock.A second later, she starts squirming again, kicking her legs, so I do it a second time until she stops fighting. I reach my car, yank the passenger door open, and slide her safely onto the leather seat.“We are going to talk, Dawn. No matter what,” I bark, leaning into the car’s interior to prevent her from sliding out.She glares up at me, her e
Dawn’s point of viewThe man looks dangerous and radiates violent energy. He just smashed my phone into pieces on the asphalt and almost hit me, but Lauriel stepped right into the line of fire to shield me.Before his fist could connect with her face, Andrea arrived out of nowhere. He grabs the man’s wrist in a grip. The man twists, trying to throw punches with his free hand, but Andrea is strong, easily throwing his weight forward to pin the guy’s arm back.I look over at LJ, and my chest tightens. She looks so confused, her eyes are wide, and her lips are trembling. She looks like she might break down right here in the parking lot. The one person who always keeps it together for me. The badass friend who protects me looks like she is about to shatter.I quickly move, grabbing her upper arms and pulling her flush against my side to hold her close.The man glares at Andrea, his teeth bared. “You’re going to pay for this, asshole.”Andrea doesn’t even blink. His jaw is tight, and his e
Lauriel’s Point of ViewI wake up with a pounding headache. My back is pressed flat against something hard and warm.I blink a few times against the morning light filtering through the blinds, the foggy haze of the alcohol slowly lifting.The moment I realized I was wrapped in someone’s heavy arms, panic hit me like a bucket of ice water. Dawn isn’t built like a brick wall, which means I left the party last night without her.God, I’m such a terrible friend.I lift the sheet and look down at my body. I’m naked.A wave of pure dread washes over me. I slowly slide out from under the heavy arm draped over my waist, trying not to wake the sleeping giant beside me, and throw on my scattered clothes. I don’t even look back at the bed before rushing out into the hallway.The second the full weight of what I’ve done sinks in, I make a beeline for the dorms. I have spent the last several hours in my head, desperately trying to figure out how to handle the mess I’m making. When I finally reach
Dawn’s point of view“I’m so sorry, D,” LJ apologizes for what feels like the hundredth time just this morning, her face full of guilt.I give her the same answer I’ve been giving her all morning. “It’s okay, LJ. Really.”She looks at me closely, scanning my face to see if I actually mean it. When I force a small, reassuring smile onto my lips, she lets out a sigh of relief.The tension drains from her shoulders, and she drops onto my mattress, pulling her legs up to sit cross-legged in the center of my bed.“So, tell me again exactly what happened,” she says, leaning forward.I take a deep breath and explain the entire event from last night: how I walked up the stairs, how I found Killian at the end of the hall, and the way Sabrina was draped all over him right outside that bedroom door. As the words leave my mouth, LJ nervously chews on her lower lip.“Sabrina?” she murmurs, her brow furrowing. “Honestly, D, I’ve never heard anything about those two before. It really could have been
Dawn’s point of view“Kill didn’t make it worse for me!” I snap back, tearing myself out of his embrace. My voice echoes sharply in the dark park.I can’t believe he’s trying to compare a stupid, thoughtless high school comment to the torment I endured. Yes, Damian is desperately trying to defend his girlfriend right now, but Bree ruined me.“You know what she did to me, Damian!” I snap, the words pouring out like venom, and I can’t stop them. “I can’t even eat a full meal or look at myself in a mirror because of her! I can’t walk anywhere on this campus without a label on my back! I can’t clear my head of dark thoughts because of what she put me through, and you went out and got with her anyway!”“I’m sorry, D,” he whispers, his voice cracking. He reaches out, his large hands gently cupping my cheeks to wipe away the fresh tears. “I just... I didn’t know what else I could do.”I close my eyes, letting out a breath. I give him a tiny nod to show that I hear him, but the emotional exha
Damian’s point of viewHe swings a punch, and it lands on my jaw, the force of it rattling my teeth, but I don’t back down. Not this time. I am so fucking tired of him. I am tired of his anger and the trail of wreckage he leaves in his wake.“I told you to stay away from her!” I roar, throwing my weight forward and driving my fist into his ribs.Killian stumbles, coughing out a bitter laugh as he lunges back at me. “Oh, brother, please. She was mine before you played that fucking trick! You don’t get to tell me shit!”I know what he means. I don’t fucking care. Dawn is mine; he lost her.We are still tearing into each other, shoulders slamming against the drywall, when the footsteps of campus security echo down the hall. Three guards throw themselves between us, tearing us apart. I’m breathing heavily, wiping a streak of blood from my lip, glaring at my brother through the space separating us.“You don’t deserve a person like Dawn,” I spit, my chest heaving.Killian just laughs, a col
Dawn’s Point of View“Let go of me, Killian.”He does not let go.I try to yank my arm free, but he pulls me closer instead, and I am forced to tilt my head back just to look at him.“Please, Kill. I didn’t...” I start, but he presses a single finger to my lips, and my heart does something it has n
Killian Point of ViewI stand at the edge of the hallway and watch my brother make his case.He has always been good at that, Damian. Talking his way in and out of things, wearing that face that makes people want to believe him. I followed Dawn after she ran off after I took Ellie’s call, and befor
Dawn Point of ViewHis kiss is neither gentle nor slow. It is hard and demanding.It is nothing like I imagined a kiss could be. Not that I have much to compare it to, but whatever version I imagined soft and slow and sweet, this is the complete opposite.It is hard and consuming and hot, and it pu
Dawn’s Point of ViewI have cried. I have stared at the ceiling. I have told myself repeatedly that I need to go to class, and eventually I listen, forcing myself up and into the bathroom to put on enough makeup to bury the evidence under my eyes.Damian tried yesterday. He stayed outside my door f







