LOGINChapter 7: Nikolai’s POV – Correction
By the next morning, Nikolai had already decided. Not consciously. Not in words he could repeat back to himself. But in the way he moved through the house, in the direction his steps took without hesitation, in the quiet certainty that settled beneath his ribs— He would not ignore Arlo again. The hall was already occupied when he entered. Arlo stood near the staircase, sleeves rolled slightly, cloth in hand, polishing the banister with that same careful precision Nikolai had come to expect. Head slightly bowed. Movements controlled. Measured. Predictable. Nikolai stopped a few steps away, watching. Arlo didn’t look up immediately. But he knew. Nikolai saw it in the subtle shift of his shoulders, the way his grip tightened just slightly around the cloth. Awareness. Always there, just beneath the surface. Good. “You’re early,” Nikolai said. Arlo glanced up, then quickly lowered his gaze again. “There was dust left from yesterday, sir.” There wasn’t. Nikolai knew there wasn’t. He had checked that exact rail himself the night before. But he didn’t correct him for the lie. Not yet. He stepped closer instead. “Show me.” Arlo hesitated—just for a second—before moving his hand along the rail, wiping a section that was already spotless. Nikolai watched the motion carefully. The slight tremor in his fingers. The way he leaned in just enough to do the job properly, even when unnecessary. “You missed it,” Nikolai said quietly. Arlo blinked. “I—no, I just—” “You missed it,” he repeated. Silence. Arlo’s jaw tightened almost imperceptibly before he nodded. “Yes, sir.” He wiped the same spot again. Slower this time. More deliberate. Nikolai felt something settle in his chest at the sight. Not satisfaction exactly. Something sharper. More controlled. Correction. He didn’t leave. That was the first change. Normally, he would have moved on—found something else to occupy his time, something more important. But instead, he stayed. Watching. Arlo finished the rail and stepped back slightly, as if waiting. For dismissal. For instruction. For something. Nikolai tilted his head. “Is that all?” Arlo glanced toward the rest of the staircase. “I still have the lower steps to finish.” “Then why are you standing still?” The words landed softly. But they worked. Arlo immediately moved, dropping to the next step, cloth sweeping across the marble with renewed focus. Too much focus. Nikolai noticed that too. He leaned against the railing, arms folding loosely as he observed. Every movement Arlo made was careful—but now it carried something else. Tension. Not fear. Not entirely. Something more… aware. And Nikolai didn’t look away. Footsteps echoed faintly from the far end of the hall. One of the other staff boys—young, loud, careless—approached with an easy grin. “Arlo,” he called lightly, “you’re still on this? You’ll wear the rail out before the week ends.” Arlo let out a small breath—almost a laugh—and shook his head. “Just finishing up.” The sound hit Nikolai wrong. That ease. That softness. He straightened. “You,” Nikolai said. The boy froze mid-step. “Sir?” “Is your work finished?” “Almost, I just—” “Then finish it.” The smile disappeared instantly. “Yes, sir.” He turned and left without another word. Silence settled again. He didn’t look at Arlo immediately. But he could feel it. That shift. “Was there something else?” Arlo asked quietly. Nikolai turned his head slowly. Arlo was still kneeling on the step, cloth in hand, but his attention had shifted. Focused. Careful. Watching him back. Interesting. “You seem distracted,” Nikolai said. “I’m not, sir.” “You are.” Arlo hesitated. “I’ll be more careful.” Nikolai stepped closer. Close enough that Arlo had to tilt his head slightly to look up at him. “Careful,” he repeated. “You keep using that word.” Arlo swallowed. “It’s important,” he said softly. Nikolai studied him. There it was again—that awareness. That deliberate restraint. Like Arlo was constantly holding something back, even when he didn’t realize it. “Careful doesn’t mean correct,” Nikolai said. Arlo’s brows pulled together slightly. “I don’t understand.” “I know.” The answer came easily. Too easily. He crouched slightly—not fully, just enough to close the distance between them. Arlo went still. Not pulling away. Not leaning in. Just… waiting. Nikolai’s gaze dropped briefly—to the cloth in his hand, the faint smear of polish along his fingers, the tension in the way he held himself. Then back up. “You hesitate,” Nikolai said. Arlo blinked. “I—” “You think before you act. You second-guess. It slows you down.” “I’m just trying not to make mistakes.” “And yet you still do.” The words were quiet. Measured. But they landed. Nikolai saw it in the way Arlo’s expression flickered—just slightly—before settling again. “Yes, sir.” There it was again. Submission. Acceptance. And something else beneath it. Something Nikolai couldn’t name—but didn’t want to ignore. He straightened. “Finish the steps,” he said. Arlo nodded quickly. “Yes, sir.” But Nikolai didn’t move. He stayed exactly where he was. Watching. Again. Arlo worked faster now. Too fast. The precision was still there, but it was strained, stretched thin by the weight of being observed. Nikolai could see every small crack in it. Every breath. Every pause. Every moment of hesitation. And instead of looking away— He leaned into it. “You’re rushing,” he said. Arlo stopped immediately. “I thought you said I was too slow.” “I said you hesitate.” “That’s the same thing.” “No,” Nikolai said calmly. “It isn’t.” Arlo looked up at him then—really looked. Confusion clear in his eyes. Frustration, too. Good. “That doesn’t make sense,” Arlo said before he could stop himself. The silence that followed was sharp. Not loud. But heavy. Nikolai stepped closer again. Slowly. Deliberately. “Then learn,” he said. For a moment, neither of them moved. Arlo’s breathing had shifted—shallower now, quicker. But he didn’t look away. Didn’t drop his gaze like before. He held it. And something in Nikolai tightened. “Finish your work,” Nikolai said finally. This time, he turned. Actually turned. And walked away. But he didn’t go far. He stopped just past the doorway. Out of sight. Still within earshot. Listening to the faint sound of cloth against marble. The rhythm slightly uneven now. Disrupted. Changed. Nikolai leaned against the wall, eyes unfocused. That feeling was back again. Sharp. Unsettling. Persistent. Not anger. Not quite. Something else. Something that refused to settle into a shape he recognized. He exhaled slowly. And for the first time since the stables— He understood one thing clearly. This wasn’t going away. And neither was Arlo.Chapter 22: Nikolai’s POV – Deepening CurrentsNikolai woke with the ghost of Arlo’s touch still lingering on his skin. The memory of last night played behind his closed eyes like a perfectly cataloged film reel: Arlo’s shaky hand wrapping around him, the broken way he’d gasped Nikolai’s name as he came, the way their foreheads had pressed together in the aftermath while their breathing slowly synced. It had been raw, imperfect, and deeply satisfying. A significant step forward in a game Nikolai had been orchestrating for years.He turned his head on the pillow. The guest room was empty Arlo had retreated there sometime after midnight, as expected. Nikolai respected the small boundaries for now. Pushing too hard too fast would make Arlo bolt. But the foundation was solidifying. last night had crossed another line. Next would come mouths. Then everything else.He rose early, as always, and moved through his morning routine with disciplined precision. Gym session. Cold shower. Black cof
Chapter 21: Arlo’s POV – Outside CurrentsArlo shoved his notebook into his bag as the economics lecture ended, the professor’s voice still echoing about market distortions and hidden costs. The irony wasn’t lost on him. His own life felt like one giant hidden cost right now—living in Nikolai’s penthouse, kissing him, letting those careful touches linger longer each night.The kiss in the library three nights ago had cracked something open. Since then, they had crossed more small lines: heated kisses on the couch that left Arlo aching and hard, Nikolai’s thigh pressing between his legs with deliberate friction, hands roaming over clothes but never quite underneath. It was maddening. Addictive. Terrifying.He stepped out of the lecture hall into the bustling campus courtyard. Students laughed, shouted, made plans for the weekend. Normal life. Arlo’s phone buzzed again—Kevin.Hey, seriously need to talk. Coffee? I fucked up at the party but I miss you.Arlo stared at the message, thumb
Chapter 20: Nikolai’s POV – Slow ErosionThe days began to blur into a rhythm Nikolai found deeply satisfying.Arlo had settled into the penthouse despite his initial resistance, like a wild creature slowly accepting the comforts of a carefully built cage. Mornings started the same way: the rich aroma of fresh coffee pulling them both into the sunlit kitchen. Nikolai would already be there, dressed for the day, watching as Arlo padded in with sleep-mussed hair and guarded eyes. They shared quiet drives to campus Nikolai behind the wheel, one hand on the gear shift, the other occasionally resting near Arlo’s thigh. The city traffic hummed around them, but inside the car, the silence was comfortable, charged with everything unsaid.Evenings brought dinners at the long glass table overlooking the glittering skyline. At first, their conversations had been surface-level and cautious. But with each passing night, Arlo’s responses grew slightly less guarded. He spoke more about his classes,
Chapter 19: Arlo’s POV – Shared WallsThe first night in Nikolai’s penthouse was worse than Arlo expected.Not because of the luxury surrounding him—the soaring ceilings, the floor-to-ceiling windows that framed the glittering city skyline like a living painting, or the marble countertops that probably cost more than his entire childhood home. No, it was the awareness. The constant, skin-prickling knowledge that Nikolai was just on the other side of the wall. Close enough that Arlo could hear the faint creak of floorboards when he moved, the low hum of a distant shower, the occasional rustle of sheets. Every sound reminded him: Nikolai was *there*. Breathing the same air. Existing in the same space.Arlo lay in the enormous king-sized bed, the Egyptian cotton sheets cool and impossibly soft against his skin. He stared at the ceiling, arms crossed tightly over his chest as if that could somehow anchor him. His mind replayed the day on an endless loop—the chaotic flood at the dorm, Niko
Chapter 18: Nikolai’s POV – engineered fracturesNikolai had always preferred control through preparation. He didn’t wait for opportunities—he manufactured them with the same precision he applied to everything else in his life. The apartment building on Maple Street had been under quiet surveillance for weeks. The building manager, a man with gambling debts and a weakness for cash envelopes, had been easy to persuade.A single late-night call had set everything in motion.“Stress test the third-floor plumbing tomorrow morning,” Nikolai had instructed, voice cool over the encrypted line. “Make it look natural. Burst pipes, water damage, the works. I want the tenant in 3B displaced for at least six weeks. Insurance paperwork delayed. Mold concerns. You understand.”The manager had understood perfectly. Money had a way of clarifying priorities.Now Nikolai sat in the back of his black SUV two blocks away, watching through tinted windows as chaos unfolded. Fire trucks. Neighbors spilling
Chapter 17: Nikolai’s POV He didn’t follow him out. That would’ve been obvious. Unnecessary. Nikolai stayed exactly where he was, watching the space Arlo left behind like it still held something worth studying. Three years. And Arlo still walked away the same way. Controlled. Deliberate. Like distance was a decision, not instinct. Nikolai exhaled slowly, adjusting his sleeve. No rush. There was never a need to rush. Because now— He knew where to find him. The next day is quieter. Structured. Predictable. Nikolai arrives early. Not because he needs to. Because timing matters. He takes a seat near the back of the lecture hall, posture relaxed, attention casual. Students filter in. Voices rise. Settle. Then— Arlo walks in. No hesitation. No searching. Straight to his usual seat. Bag down. Notebook out. Pen ready. Routine. Nikolai watches him for a moment. Still disciplined. Good. He moves then. No announcement. No hesitation. Just crosses the space and
Chapter 15: Arlo’s POV — Off Balance“You’re still thinking about it.”“I’m not.”“You are.”Arlo doesn’t look up from his laptop.Kevin leans back in his chair, studying him like he’s a sketch he hasn’t decided how to finish.“It’s a party, not a contract,” he says. “You don’t need to analyze it.”
Chapter 9: Nikolai’s POV – DisciplineNikolai’s knuckles split on the third hit.He didn’t stop.The impact of bone against leather echoed through the training room, sharp and controlled. Again. Again. Again.“Focus.”The command came from across the room. His uncle didn’t raise his voice. He never
Chapter 8: Arlo’s POV – Lines You Don’t CrossArlo woke before the bells.He didn’t usually. Not this early.But sleep had been thin, restless—broken by fragments of yesterday that refused to settle. A voice. A pause. The way the air had felt too tight to breathe in.Careful doesn’t mean correct.H
Chapter 6: Arlo’s POV – A Weight in the AirArlo moved through the hallways like a shadow, careful and silent, yet he couldn’t shake the feeling that the house had changed overnight. Every step he took seemed heavier, every breath measured. He could feel it before he even saw him: the weight of blu







