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A Problem He Couldn’t Ignore

Author: Berrywrytes
last update publish date: 2026-05-26 19:28:31

Denise hesitated for only a second before she followed him.

That second mattered.

Because the moment she moved, she realized something unsettling—

Liam didn’t walk like a man expecting to be obeyed.

He walked like a man who already knew he would be.

The street behind them felt quieter as they moved. Even the injured man on the ground didn’t make a sound anymore, just watched them with fear as Liam passed.

Denise kept a few steps behind.

Not because she was afraid of him.

At least… that’s what she told herself.

But because being too close to him made it hard to think.

“Why are you here?” she asked finally.

Liam didn’t slow down. “You were being followed.”

“I can handle myself.”

A pause.

Then, calmly:

“No, you can’t.”

Denise frowned at his back. “You don’t even know me.”

“I know enough.”

“That’s not—”

Liam stopped walking suddenly.

Denise nearly bumped into him.

He turned slightly, just enough for his profile to catch the streetlight.

His eyes were darker now than they had been earlier.

Not angry.

Focused.

“You don’t notice things,” he said.

Denise blinked. “What does that mean?”

Liam stepped closer.

Denise instinctively wanted to step back—but the wall of a closed shop was already behind her.

He noticed that too.

His gaze dropped briefly to the space she had no escape from.

Then back to her face.

“You don’t notice when someone is watching you,” he said quietly. “You don’t notice when you’re being targeted.”

Denise crossed her arms, trying to steady herself. “And you do?”

A faint, humorless smile.

“I always do.”

The air between them felt tight again.

Denise tried to ignore the way her pulse reacted when he was this close.

“I’m not your responsibility,” she said.

Liam didn’t respond immediately.

Instead, his eyes traced her face slowly, like he was memorizing it again.

Then:

“No,” he agreed.

A pause.

Denise blinked, slightly thrown off.

Liam leaned in just a fraction.

His voice lowered.

“You’re worse than that.”

Her stomach tightened. “Worse?”

Something flickered behind his eyes.

Like he regretted the word the moment he said it.

But it was already out.

“You’re a problem I can’t ignore.”

Denise scoffed softly. “That’s flattering.”

“It’s honest.”

Silence again.

Then Liam stepped back as if he had just reminded himself of something important.

“Come on.”

They continued walking.

But now the distance between them felt even more loaded than before.

When they arrived at the estate again, the gates opened immediately.

Like they were expecting him.

Like they were always expecting him.

Denise glanced at the guards as they passed.

They didn’t look at her this time.

They looked at Liam.

With something close to caution.

Inside, the mansion was darker now.

Not dim.

Controlled.

Like the entire place responded to his mood.

Denise followed him through the marble hallways again, her footsteps echoing softly.

“This place is… too big,” she muttered.

Liam didn’t look back. “You’ll get used to it.”

“I didn’t say I was staying.”

He stopped at the top of the stairs.

Then turned slightly.

Just enough for his gaze to pin her in place again.

“You came back,” he said simply.

Denise opened her mouth.

Closed it.

Because that was true.

And she hated that it was.

Liam studied her reaction for a moment longer, then continued walking.

“Your room is ready,” he said.

Denise frowned. “My room?”

“You’ll stay here.”

“I never agreed—”

“You will.”

That tone again.

Not loud.

Not aggressive.

Just certain.

Denise followed him down a long corridor, irritation building in her chest.

“This is insane,” she said. “You don’t even know me and you’re acting like—like I’m something you own.”

Liam stopped in front of a door.

Didn’t turn immediately.

When he finally did, his expression was unreadable.

“I don’t own people,” he said.

Denise frowned. “That’s not what it sounds like.”

A brief pause.

Then Liam stepped closer.

His voice dropped slightly.

“You misunderstand me.”

Denise held her ground, even though her heart was reacting far too quickly again.

“Then explain it properly.”

For a moment, something in his face softened.

Just barely.

Like he was considering it.

Then it disappeared again.

“You’re safe here,” he said instead.

Denise laughed once, short and disbelieving. “Safe? After what I just saw you do in the street?”

Liam’s jaw tightened slightly.

“That was protection,” he said.

Denise stared at him. “You almost broke his neck.”

“He shouldn’t have touched what’s mine.”

The words came out too easily.

Too naturally.

Denise went still.

There it was again.

That possessive claim.

She took a small step forward, eyes narrowing.

“I’m not yours.”

Liam didn’t answer immediately.

Instead, his gaze dropped briefly to her lips.

Just a second.

Then back to her eyes.

The silence stretched.

Then:

“Not yet,” he repeated.

Denise felt something shift in her chest at that again—annoying, confusing, persistent.

Liam opened the door.

The room inside was large.

Far too large for one person.

Soft lighting. Clean sheets. A balcony overlooking the city.

Everything felt… prepared.

Like he had expected her to say yes before she even arrived.

“This is where you’ll stay,” he said.

Denise didn’t move inside yet.

“Why are you doing this?” she asked quietly.

Liam didn’t answer immediately.

Instead, he stepped closer again—but stopped just short of touching her.

Too controlled for comfort.

Too restrained for someone who acted so dangerous earlier.

His eyes held hers.

For a moment, the intensity in them shifted.

Something almost human surfaced beneath it.

Then he said:

“Because I don’t want anyone else deciding your life before I do.”

Denise’s breath caught slightly.

“That doesn’t make sense.”

“It does to me.”

Silence.

Then Liam stepped back again, breaking the tension deliberately.

“Rest,” he said.

Denise hesitated.

Then finally stepped inside.

But as she turned slightly, she noticed something through the half-open door behind her.

Liam hadn’t left yet.

He was still there.

Watching her.

Like he was making sure she didn’t disappear.

And in the quiet corridor behind him…

his hand curled slightly into a fist.

As if restraining something beneath his skin.

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  • Liam’s Obsession    Territory

    By noon, the mansion felt different again. Denise noticed it first in the staff. Not what they did. What they didn’t do. No one spoke to her unless spoken to first. No one met her eyes for longer than a second. And whenever she entered a room, conversation didn’t just pause— it reorganized. Like she was a variable they hadn’t been trained to account for. She walked through the east wing slowly, watching it happen. A maid stepped aside too quickly. A guard shifted his stance without looking at her. A door that had always been open was now closed. Not locked. Just… denied. Denise stopped in front of it. “This is new,” she murmured. Behind her, a voice answered immediately. “You’re not supposed to be here.” She turned. Liam stood at the end of the hall. Still. Watching her like he’d been there the entire time and only just allowed himself to be seen. Denise tilted her head. “That’s becoming your favorite sentence.” He didn’t respond to

  • Liam’s Obsession    The Marking

    Denise woke before sunrise. Not because she was rested. Because something was wrong with the air. The mansion no longer felt like a structure. It felt like a presence breathing around her. Slow. Measured. Aware. She sat up in bed and immediately noticed it— The silence wasn’t empty. It was waiting. A soft knock came at her door. Once. Then again. Too controlled to be staff. Denise didn’t answer. The door opened anyway. Liam stood there. But not the version she was used to. He looked… wrong. Not injured. Not weak. Restrained in a way that felt physical. Like something inside him was pressing outward against his skin. “Get away from the windows,” he said. Denise frowned. “Good morning to you too.” He didn’t react to her tone. That was new. He stepped inside, closing the door behind him immediately. Click. Lock. Denise noticed that too. “You’re locking me in now?” she asked. Liam exhaled slowly. “It’s not for you.”

  • Liam’s Obsession    What the house remembers

    Denise didn’t sleep that night. Not because she couldn’t. Because the mansion wouldn’t let the night feel like night. There were no sounds of settling wood, no distant hum of normal buildings winding down. Instead, there was a kind of quiet that felt curated. Like everything inside the house had agreed to be still. And was waiting for someone to break the agreement first. Denise stood at her window for a long time. The courtyard below was empty now. No cars. No movement. No sign that anything unusual had happened at all. Except she knew better. Because the house felt… satisfied. That was the only word her mind offered her. Satisfied in a way that made her skin uneasy. Behind her, the door clicked. She didn’t turn around. “You’re up late,” Liam said. “I didn’t realize the house enforced a curfew.” A pause. Then his voice, closer. “It doesn’t.” Denise finally turned. He stood just inside the doorway, hands relaxed at his sides. Too relax

  • Liam’s Obsession    Guests of the Mansion

    Denise noticed the cars before she saw the women. Black, identical, silent as they rolled through the gates of the mansion like they belonged to it more than she did. She was on the upper gallery when the first one arrived. From there, she could see everything—the long drive, the polished stone steps, the staff moving too efficiently, too rehearsed. Like they had done this before. Like it mattered. Denise leaned forward slightly. “Of course,” she muttered. The first woman stepped out of the car. Tall. Poised. Perfect in a way that looked curated rather than natural. Her hair didn’t move in the wind. Her heels didn’t hesitate on the stone. She smiled the moment she saw the house. Not nervous. Not impressed. Familiar. Denise felt something tighten in her chest, though she refused to name it. A second car arrived. Then a third. Each time, another woman stepped out. Different faces. Different styles. Same composure. Same certainty that they were exp

  • Liam’s Obsession    Something in the house noticed her back

    Denise didn’t go to her room. Not this time. She moved through the mansion like she already knew it was watching her. Because it was. The difference was subtle at first—so subtle she almost convinced herself she was imagining it. A pause in staff movement when she entered a hallway. A camera adjusting slightly too late. A door that clicked after she passed it, not before. Like the house was reacting instead of anticipating. Denise slowed her steps. “That’s new,” she murmured. She stopped near a junction of corridors. Two directions. Both unfamiliar. Both wrong in different ways. She chose the one with fewer guards. Or what looked like fewer guards. Halfway down, she noticed something else. Footsteps. Behind her. Matching hers. Not close enough to be threatening. Not far enough to be accidental. Denise didn’t turn around. “Of course,” she muttered. She kept walking. The footsteps kept pace. Patient. Controlled. Familiar. She

  • Liam’s Obsession    The rules change when you break them

    Denise woke up to silence that felt deliberate. Not peaceful. Controlled. The kind of silence that wasn’t absence of sound, but absence of permission. She sat up slowly in bed. Waited. Nothing. No footsteps outside her door. No staff passing in the hall. No distant movement of a house that used to feel alive in its own careful way. Denise swung her legs off the bed. Barefoot. Cold marble greeted her again, but this time it felt different. Like it had been waiting. She opened her door. It wasn’t locked. That was new. And worse. Because it meant she was supposed to walk out. Denise frowned slightly. “What did you do?” she muttered under her breath. She stepped into the hallway. Immediately, she noticed it. The difference wasn’t obvious at first. But then she saw it. Doors that used to be open were now shut. Curtains drawn where they hadn’t been before. Security cameras she hadn’t noticed until now—angled differently. Watching dif

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