LOGINIris’s POV
The drive home felt longer than it should have. Marcus had the radio tuned to that low jazz station he likes, humming off-key while he scrolled emails at red lights. I stared out the passenger window, watching streetlights smear past, but my brain was still stuck on the terrace. I could still feel Victor’s thumb brushing my wrist slowly like he was testing how fast my heart would race for him. I could still hear he way he said my name like he’d already decided how it would sound when he whispered it in the dark. That single, polite touch at the small of my back as I walked ahead of him, nothing overt, just enough pressure to remind me he was there, and that he knew exactly what he was doing. I pressed my thighs together under my sundress and tried to breathe normally. Marcus glanced over. “You okay, babe? You’ve been quiet since we left Dad’s.” I turned and gave him the soft smile I’ve perfected, the one that says everything’s fine without me having to lie out loud. “Just tired. I've had a long week of revisions.” He squeezed my knee once, quick and sweet. “You work too hard. Maybe take tomorrow off? We could sleep in and order breakfast.” “That sounds nice,” I said, and a part of me meant it. The rest of me was replaying Victor’s voice on loop. How the hell was his father hotter than him? Marcus is attractive, I’m not blind. He is tall and fit from his regular sessions at the gym. He has that boyish smile that makes people instantly like him. He is easy on the eyes, the kind of guy aunties call “a catch” while they pinch your cheeks. But sitting across from Victor today had been like comparing a dependable sedan to a matte-black Aston Martin that growls when you touch the gas. They had the same dark hair, strong jaw and hazel eyes but Victor had twenty extra years of knowing exactly what to do with every inch of it. He had no gray hair, just thick, dark waves that looked like he’d run his fingers through them once and called it styled. There was no softening around the edges, everything sharpened instead. The laugh lines at his eyes were proof he’d lived, laughed, won. And the way he carried himself… Jesus. Like gravity bent around him. Like he walked into rooms knowing every woman in them would notice, and every man would measure himself against him and come up short. Victor had Marcus at twenty. Victor was barely out of his teens when he got his high-school sweetheart pregnant and did the right thing. He married Marcus' mom at twenty-one, built a life and turned a small real-estate hustle into a billion-dollar empire while raising a kid and apparently never letting himself go soft. Marcus told me the story once casually over pizza: “Dad was young, dumb, and in love. Mom got pregnant when they were 19. They made it work until she passed from cancer when I was twelve.” He’d shrugged, like the edges had worn smooth from telling it so many times. I’d felt sorry for them both back then. Now? Now I just felt confused and guilty and way too warm between my legs for a Sunday afternoon. We pulled into the apartment complex. Marcus killed the engine, leaned over, and pecked my cheek. “You were quiet today. Everything okay?” “Yeah,” I lied, smiling too brightly. “Just tired, I've had a long week.” He bought it. He always buys it. That’s the thing about Marcus: he’s sweet, steady and reliable. He remembers anniversaries, birthdays and when there's nothing to celebrate, he still makes me feel special. But never once made me feel like I might combust if he looked at me too long. We met sophomore year at a mutual friend’s twenty-first birthday party. I was the girl in the corner nursing one drink because I didn’t like losing control. He was the guy who noticed, came over, asked if I wanted to split nachos instead of doing shots. We talked until the bar closed. He walked me to my dorm, kissed my cheek, asked for my number like he was afraid I’d say no. We dated two years before he proposed on our anniversary with the ring his mom left him. I said yes because he was kind. Because he never pushed for sex after I told him I was saving myself. Because I’d spent my whole life being the good girl, straight-A student, church volunteer, the daughter who never gave her parents a single gray hair and Marcus fit that version of me perfectly. No drama. No fireworks. Just quiet certainty. And I’d been saving my virginity for our wedding night Not because I was waiting for perfection, but because I wanted the moment to mean something. One perfect night, one perfect man and one perfect beginning. I liked quiet certainty or at least I thought I did. That night I showered longer than necessary, letting hot water pound my shoulders while I tried to scrub Victor out of my head. It didn’t work. Every time I closed my eyes I saw hazel staring back, I felt that deliberate thumb on my pulse, I heard that low “You look flushed” like he was daring me to admit why my skin was hot and my breath was short. I climbed into bed beside Marcus, who was already half-asleep with his phone on his chest. He rolled toward me, flopping his arm over my waist in that familiar, comfortable way. I stared at the ceiling. What kind of woman gets wet thinking about her future father-in-law? What kind of woman keeps the business card instead of tossing it in the trash? I slipped out of bed quietly, padded to the living room, and pulled the card from my purse. It was heavy stock with gold lettering. Just his name, a private cell number, and those three dangerous words 'Anything at all' scribbled in his writing. I should’ve ripped it up. Instead I opened my phone, added the number under “V(Emergency Only)” like that made it less sinful, then deleted the contact immediately after. Then saved it again. I locked my phone and shoved it under a couch cushion like that would stop the temptation. I went back to bed, slid under the covers, and pressed my thighs together hard enough to hurt. Marcus snored softly. I didn’t sleep. Somewhere in the dark, that quiet, resigned voice in my head whispered again: What’s gonna happen gotta happen. And apparently what was gonna happen started with me lying next to my fiancé, heart racing, wondering how long I could pretend Victor’s voice wasn’t still echoing inside my skull like a promise I wasn’t supposed to want. But I already did.Marcus’s POVThe video arrived on my phone at 3:47 in the afternoon while I was reviewing quarterly reports in my study, a task that had become rote and mindless enough to let my thoughts wander. Roland's updates had been coming in all week without anything alarming to report. Iris had gone to the grocery store exactly as she said she would, had met Maya for coffee at the time and place she mentioned, had attended a meeting at her publisher's office with no deviation from the itinerary she volunteered the night before. Every detail checked out, and some small part of me had begun to believe that maybe this could work, that maybe the surveillance and the tracking and the quiet verification of her every move were temporary measures that would eventually become unnecessary.The notification chimed and I opened it without urgency, expecting another routine confirmation of something she had already told me. What I saw instead made me set my phone down on the desk and stare at the wall fo
Iris's POVThe call from my publisher came on a Tuesday morning, three weeks after Marcus had opened the front door and given me a choice. Eleanor Vance herself was on the line, which was unusual. Eleanor didn't make personal calls to authors. She had assistants for that, layers of them, a whole bureaucracy designed to insulate her from direct contact with the people who wrote the books that kept her company afloat."Iris, I have an extraordinary opportunity for you," she said, her voice crackling with the enthusiasm of someone who thought she was delivering good news. "There's a potential collaborator who's been asking about you specifically. Very interested in the next book. Very interested in your process. I think a meeting could be extremely beneficial for your career.""What kind of collaborator?""A private investor with significant resources. He's been following your work closely and he has some ideas for expansion into other media. Film ri
Iris's POVThe first thing I did after Marcus went to bed that night was delete every message Victor had ever sent me. I sat on the bathroom floor with my phone in my hand and my back pressed against the cold tile, and I went through every thread, every text, every voicemail from every unknown number he had used to reach me. There were dozens of them, stretching back months, a digital record of an obsession that had consumed my life and destroyed my marriage and very nearly cost me everything I had left.My phone buzzed while I was deleting the last thread. A new message from a number I didn't recognize. "You've been silent for three days. Call me. Now."I deleted it without responding and blocked the number. Another message came through ten minutes later from a different number. "Iris, this isn't a game. Pick up your phone."I blocked that number too. Then another. Then another. He kept creating new accounts and new numbers and new ways to reach
Marcus's POVI watched her stand in the doorway with the afternoon sun framing her like something out of a dream I had once believed in, and I waited to see which way she would fall. The silence stretched between us, heavy with everything I had said and everything she hadn't yet decided, and I found myself studying her face the way I had studied the pages of her book, looking for clues, looking for truth, looking for something that would tell me whether the woman I married still existed inside the woman who had betrayed me.She didn't move toward the door. She didn't move toward me either. She just stood there with her hands trembling at her sides and her eyes fixed on some point between the threshold and the living room, and I realized she was waiting for me to take the choice back. She expected me to slam the door and lock the deadbolt and tell her the offer had expired. She expected cruelty because she had been living with cruelty for so long she had forgotten what mercy looked lik
Iris's POVHe left me alone with my confession for hours. I stayed on the couch because I didn't know where else to go, my legs drawn up beneath me and my eyes fixed on the study door that had clicked shut behind him with a finality that echoed through the empty rooms. The house was silent except for the occasional creak of the floorboards overhead and the distant hum of the refrigerator in the kitchen, and every minute that passed without him emerging felt like a small eternity. I had spilled every secret I had been carrying for months, every terrible choice and every weak excuse, and he had given me two words before walking away. The waiting was unbearable. Not knowing what he was thinking or what he planned to do, not knowing if he was calling a lawyer or packing my bags or simply sitting in that study with his head in his hands, was worse than any punishment he could have devised. I’ve spent two days trapped in this house with his silence, and thought that was the worst thing he
Iris's POVI must have fallen asleep at some point during the night because I woke to gray light filtering through the living room curtains and the sound of a book closing. This was not the soft rustle of a page turning, but the final, deliberate thump of a cover being shut. I sat up so fast my head spun, my neck aching from the awkward angle I had been slumped on the couch.Marcus was standing in front of his armchair with the book in his hand. He had finished it. The remaining pages that had been clustered in his right hand were now all on the left, and the cover was closed, and he was looking at me with an expression that made my blood run cold. It was not anger or grief or even the flat calm I had grown used to over the past two days. It was something more resolved, something that looked almost like peace, and I understood with a clarity that made my stomach drop that the waiting was over.He set the book down on the coffee table between us, placing it carefully in the center as i
Iris’s POV "Jealous ex?" Victor repeated the words like he was tasting them, deciding whether to spit them out. "Is that what I am to you?" I didn't answer. The parking garage hummed around us, the fluorescent lights casting long shadows across the
Iris's POV The phone felt like a brick in my hand. I stared at the screen, at those three lines from an unknown number that wasn't really unknown because I knew exactly who it was. I always knew. Victor had a way of making himself known even when he wasn't supposed t
Iris’s POV He was standing near the counter, waiting for his order, looking like he had just stepped out of a business meeting and also somehow a magazine photo shoot at the same time. Dark blazer, crisp shirt, that effortless composure that made everyone around him look sli
Iris’s POV I walked out feeling accomplished. I was capable of deciding without turning it into theatrics But as we passed a watch store, I stopped walking. Maya kept going for a few steps before she realized I wasn't beside her. She turned around and saw me staring through the window. "No, abs







