LOGINIris’s POV
We ate slowly, trading bites back and forth while our conversation drifted over nothing particularly important, the kind of lazy morning talk that felt like an extension of sleep itself. Every so often he leaned across the small space between us and kissed the corner of my mouth, his tongue flicking out to catch a stray drop of syrup before it could slide down my chin. I leaned into him each time, opening my lips so he could feed me another soft date, feeling the gentle pressure of his thumb as it brushed across my lower lip, lingering just long enough to send a quiet shiver through me. When the plates were finally empty he gathered them without a word, stacked them neatly on the nightstand, and pulled me firmly against his chest. I rested my head there and listened to the steady, reassuring rhythm of his heartbeat beneath my ear, letting it anchor me for a few more peaceful minutes. “I should probably get dressed,” he murmured after a while, his voice low and reluctant against the top of my head. “Dad’s back in town, which means the office is going to start remembering that I actually exist and have responsibilities.” I tilted my head up so I could look into his eyes. “You sure you cannot stay a little longer?” He pressed a soft kiss to my forehead and let his lips rest there for a moment. “I wish I could, more than anything. But there is a meeting at three that I absolutely cannot skip. I will be home by seven though. We can order Thai food, put our feet up, and finally watch that documentary you have been nagging me about for weeks.” “Deal,” I agreed immediately, already picturing the evening ahead. He rolled out of bed with a quiet groan, stretched his arms overhead until his spine popped, then padded barefoot toward the bathroom. I stayed propped on one elbow and listened to the familiar sequence of sounds that followed: the faucet turning on, the shower curtain sliding along its rod, water hitting tile, the faint scent of his cedarwood body wash drifting out when he opened the door again later. When he finally emerged he was dressed in dark tailored slacks and a crisp white shirt with the sleeves rolled neatly to his elbows, every detail polished and deliberate. He looked exactly like what he was: the confident heir apparent, ready to walk into any boardroom his father had already cleared the path for, carrying the quiet authority that came with knowing exactly how the game was played. He leaned down over the bed, captured my mouth in a slow deep kiss, his tongue brushing mine one last time in a way that felt like a promise he intended to keep later. “Love you,” he said against my lips, the words soft but certain. “Love you too,” I whispered back. He straightened, grabbed his keys, phone, and wallet from the dresser in one practiced motion. At the bedroom door he paused, turned back, and let his gaze linger on me where I remained tangled in the sheets, hair mussed and skin still flushed from the morning. “You look incredible like that. I am going to be thinking about this view all afternoon.” I smiled teasingly up at him. “I will make sure to give you something even better to look forward to when you get home.” He groaned dramatically, adjusted himself with exaggerated discomfort as though the mere thought was torture, then disappeared down the hallway with one last lingering glance over his shoulder. A moment later the front door clicked shut behind him. Silence settled over the apartment like a heavy blanket. I stayed in bed for another few minutes, deliberately letting the warmth of his body fade from the sheets around me, reluctant to move until the last trace of him had vanished. My skin still tingled everywhere he had touched me, nipples still peaked and sensitive beneath the thin fabric of my tank top, core still slick and swollen with lingering arousal. Eventually I sat up, swung my legs over the side of the bed, and padded barefoot across the cool hardwood floor to my office. I had to put this passion to good use. I sat at my seat staring at my manuscript the cursor was blinking on the last sentence I'd written three days ago. Before the brunch. Before Victor. I read the line: "He looked at her with gentle eyes, the kind of eyes that promised forever, and she knew she was home." I stared at the words. They were fine, they would have been perfect days ago but now, they seemed dead. What had I been thinking? This hero, this sweet dependable hero named Daniel, was basically Marcus in fictional form. A man who would never hurt anyone, never want anyone too much and never look at a woman like she was the only meal in a starving world. I had written twelve books with heroes like Daniel. They had sold well, readers loved them, my editor Linda loved them and I had enjoyed writing them. But now, staring at those words, I felt nothing. I felt like I was reading a foreign language, a story written by someone I used to be. My phone buzzed with a message from V(Emergency Only): "Writing something dangerous today?" My heart skipped a beat. It was Victor, I had deleted his text yesterday and the day before and the day before that, but I had read every single one first. The first day he’d sent: "Hope you slept well. I didn't. Couldn't stop thinking about our conversation. —V" This was the fourth. Four days, four messages but I hadn't responded to any of them. I shouldn't respond to this one either. My fingers typed before my brain could stop them: "Who is this?" Delete. Obviously delete. I knew who it was. I typed again: "How did you get my number?" Delete. I don’t know how he got my number but I don’t want to keep this going. I typed: "Stop texting me." My thumb hovered over send. That was the right response but I deleted that too. Instead, I stared at his message. "Writing something dangerous today?" He remembered I was a writer. He remembered I wrote romance. He had asked me about it at brunch, leaning close, his voice low, asking if I had ever actually felt the kind of desire I wrote about. My phone buzzed again. "I'll take your silence as a yes. Write something dangerous today, Iris." I deleted it. Then I opened my laptop, deleted the last three pages of my manuscript, and started over. Work will keep me grounded. I am definitely not letting Victor ruin what I have with his son.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 The mall was way too loud for a Tuesday afternoon. Music blasted from three different stores at once, a baby was screaming somewhere near the food court, and a teenager walked past me yelling into her phone about someone named Derek who had apparently "liked her story but didn't text ba
Iris’s POV The alarm rang relentlessly like it had something personal against me. I groaned, reaching out blindly until my fingers found my phone and silenced it. For a second, I stayed there, staring at the ceiling, trying to remember why I had willingly chosen to be awake at this hour. Then
Iris’s POV Marcus did not rush the question. He moved through the kitchen with the same steady rhythm he always had, rinsing the last plate, setting it aside, drying his hands with a kind of quiet focus that would have looked ordinary to anyone else. To me, it felt like he was giving himself t
Iris’s POV I sat on the couch with Maya across from me, her eyes fixed on my face as if she could pull a solution out of me by sheer focus alone. I wished it worked like that. I wished there was something inside me to pull out that wasn’t fear dressed up as logic. “We need something that makes







