LOGINHis large hand wraps around my throat just enough to make my pulse race, pinning me to the rain-slicked cabin wall as thunder rolls outside. “We can’t keep doing this,” he growls, but his hips grind against mine, hard and insistent, while his free hand slips under my skirt to find me already soaked. I whimper, arching into his touch, craving the sharp sting of his palm across my ass, the way he commands me to come for him like I’m his dirty little secret. My father’s best friend, the man who’s been in my life forever finally breaking every rule to claim me roughly, deeply, until I’m trembling and marked by him. What begins as one reckless, forbidden night spirals into an addiction of heated stolen moments, whispered dominance, and raw need… until the truth crashes down, pregnancies and betrayals threaten to shatter us, and everyone we love demands we end it. But how do you walk away when the only person who owns your body and heart refuses to let go?
View MoreBELLA
I was dreaming about him again.
Alex had me pressed against the cool glass wall of his office, the city lights blurring behind me.
His big hand wrapped around my throat not tight, just enough to make my pulse jump. His other hand slid up my thigh, pushing my skirt higher until his fingers found exactly where I was already wet and aching for him.
“You’ve been teasing me for years, Bella,” he growled against my ear, voice low and rough like gravel. “Now you’re going to take what you’ve been begging for.”
I arched into him, gasping as he thrust two fingers inside me, slow at first, then harder, curling them just right.
My hips rocked against his hand, chasing the pressure.
His thumb circled my clit in tight, perfect strokes, and I moaned his name loud, shameless.
“Good girl,” he whispered, lips brushing my neck.
“Come for me. Let me know how much you want this.”
My whole body tightened. Heat coiled low in my belly, building fast, too fast.
I grabbed his shoulders, nails digging in, and then…
I woke up.
My heart hammered against my ribs. My thighs were slick, my panties soaked, and my nipples ached against the thin tank top I slept in.
I pressed my legs together, trying to ease the throb between them, but it only made it worse. I stared at the ceiling of my tiny college apartment, breathing hard.
It wasn’t the first time I’d dreamed about Alex Reed like that. But this one felt different. Sharper. More real.
I rolled over and grabbed my phone from the nightstand. The screen lit up with the time
4:47 a.m. and a photo I’d saved months ago.
Alex at last year’s company holiday party. Dark suit, silver threading through his hair now, that same easy smile he’d always had. Except now, when I looked at it, my stomach flipped in a way it never used to.
I’d seen pictures of him my whole life. Birthday parties, graduations, random family barbecues.
He was always there tall, steady, laughing with my dad like they were brothers. Back then he was just Uncle Alex. Safe. Familiar.
Somewhere between eighteen and twenty-five, that changed.
I dropped the phone and buried my face in the pillow, groaning.
“Get it together, Bella.”
But the ache didn’t listen.
I had a plane to catch in six hours. Seattle was waiting. Home. The firm. And Alex.
I couldn’t decide if I was excited or terrified.
By noon I was dragging my two suitcases through the front door of my parents’ house in Madison Park.
The smell hit me first, fresh coffee, lemon cleaner, and that faint cedar scent from the fireplace my dad always kept stocked even in summer.
“Bella!”
My mom’s voice came from the kitchen before she appeared, an apron dusted with flour, arms already open.
I dropped the bags and let her pull me into a tight hug. She smelled like vanilla and home.
“You’re finally here,”
she said, squeezing harder.
“I was starting to think college swallowed you forever.”
“Four years flew by,” I laughed, hugging her back. “Missed your cooking the most.”
She pulled away, eyes shiny. “You look so grown up. Too grown up.”
“Don’t start crying yet,” I teased. “I haven’t even unpacked.”
Footsteps thumped down the hallway. My dad appeared, still in his button-down from the office, sleeves rolled to his elbows. He looked exactly the same salt-and-pepper hair, warm brown eyes, the same proud grin he’d worn when I graduated high school.
“There’s my girl.” He opened his arms.
I walked straight into them. He hugged me like I was still ten, lifting me an inch off the floor before setting me down.
“Welcome home, kiddo.”
“Thanks, Dad.” My voice cracked just a little. I hadn’t realized how much I’d missed this.
He held me at arm’s length, studying my face.
“You look tired. Long flight?”
“Red-eye. I’ll survive.”
“Come on,” Mom said, already tugging me toward the kitchen. “I made your favorite cinnamon rolls. Sit. Eat. Tell us everything.”
I followed them, kicking off my sneakers by the door. The kitchen island was covered with food cinnamon rolls, fresh fruit, and a pitcher of iced tea. Classic Mom.
I slid onto a stool and grabbed a warm roll, tearing off a piece.
“So what’s new here? Still saving the world one tech contract at a time?”
Dad chuckled and poured himself coffee. “Business is good. Busy. Which brings me to your first day.”
I paused mid-bite. “Already?”
“Monday,” he said. “Nine sharp. You’re starting in marketing, just like we talked about. Digital campaigns, client presentations and the works.”
My stomach did a weird little flip. Not just from nerves. But from knowing exactly who else would be in that office.
“That’s… fast,” I said, trying to sound casual.
“You’re ready,” Dad replied. “And we need fresh eyes. Alex has been complaining the campaigns are getting stale.”
There it was. His name dropped so easily.
I swallowed hard. “Alex is still…?”
“Partner. Best friend. Pain in my ass sometimes.” Dad grinned. “He’s excited to have you on board.
Said you’ve got a good head for this stuff.”
My cheeks heated. I hoped it looked like it was from the cinnamon roll.
“That’s nice of him,” I mumbled.
Mom leaned against the counter, smiling. “He’s coming to the barbecue tomorrow, by the way. Whole family thing. Emily too. She’s ten now, can you believe it?”
Ten. God. The last time I’d seen Emily she was probably six, chasing me around the backyard with a water gun.
“Sounds fun,” I said, forcing a smile.
Dad reached over and squeezed my hand.
“We’re proud of you, Bells. Really. Coming home, jumping into the firm… It means a lot.”
I squeezed back. “It means a lot to be here.”
Mom started clearing plates. “Go unpack. Your room’s exactly how you left it. I even washed the sheets.”
I laughed. “You didn’t have to do that.”
“Of course I did. My baby’s home.”
I stood, grabbed my suitcases, and headed upstairs. My old room still had the pale blue walls, the bookshelf crammed with paperbacks, the window overlooking the backyard and Puget Sound in the distance.
I dropped the bags and flopped onto the bed, staring at the ceiling fan spinning lazily.
Tomorrow.
The barbecue.
Alex.
I closed my eyes, and just for a second, the dream came rushing back his hand on my throat, his voice calling me good girl, the way my body had clenched around his fingers like it was starving.
My thighs pressed together again. Heat bloomed low in my belly.
I sat up fast, heart racing.
No.
I was not going to spend my first day home fantasizing about my dad’s best friend.
I unzipped the first suitcase and started unpacking jeans, tops, and a few dresses I’d bought senior year.
Practical stuff mostly. But at the bottom was the red bikini I’d thrown in at the last minute. I’d told myself it was for the beach trips that always happened in summer.
Now I wondered if I’d packed it hoping he’d see me in it.
I shoved the thought away and hung the dress I planned to wear tomorrow simple, navy, fitted just enough to feel good without screaming for attention.
But I knew the truth.
I wanted him to look.
I wanted him to notice.
And that scared me more than anything.
Because once he did…
I wasn’t sure I could pretend anymore.
I finished unpacking, showered off the travel grime, and changed into soft shorts and a tank. Downstairs, Dad was on a call in his study, Mom humming in the kitchen.
I stepped onto the back deck, leaned against the railing, and breathed in the cool Seattle air. The water glittered far below, ferries cutting slow paths across the sound.
Tomorrow I'll see him.
Not in a picture. Not in a dream.
In real life.
And I had no idea what I was going to do when that moment came.
AlexI woke up slowly the next morning, the soft mountain light filtering through the cabin windows, casting a warm glow across the bed. Bella was still asleep beside me, her hair spread across the pillow like dark silk, her face relaxed in a way I hadn’t seen in months. My chest tightened with a love so fierce it almost hurt. I lay there for long minutes, just staring at her the gentle rise and fall of her chest, the faint scar on her lower stomach that I had kissed so reverently the night before, the way her lips parted slightly in sleep. She was beautiful. Strong. Resilient. The woman who had walked through fire with me and come out the other side still fighting for us.I couldn’t believe she was mine. After everything the accident, the loss of Avery, the hospital scares with Amie, the distance we had both fought through she was here, in my arms, trusting me again. My heart swelled with gratitude. I had almost lost her. I had almost lost us. But we were here. Healing. Loving. Buil
Bella The afternoon sunlight filtered through the curtains, warm and golden, painting our bedroom in soft hues. I woke slowly, stretching lazily in the bed, my body still humming from the night before. It had been a few weeks since Alex and I had truly reconnected not just physically, but emotionally, in the way that mattered most.The hospital scare with Amie had shaken me to my core, but it had also forced me to confront how much I had been pushing him away out of fear. Therapy had helped. His patience had helped. And slowly, I was learning to trust again in him, in us, in the future we were building.I turned to find Alex already awake, propped on one elbow, watching me with that soft, loving look that always made my heart skip. His fingers traced lazy patterns on my bare hip under the sheet.“Good afternoon, beautiful,” he murmured, leaning in to kiss me. The kiss was slow and deep, full of quiet promise. I melted into him, my hand sliding up his chest, savoring the warmth of his
BellaThe days after Amie’s latest hospital visit had been a quiet kind of healing. The fear that had gripped me so tightly began to loosen its hold, not because it disappeared, but because I was learning to sit with it without letting it consume me. Alex had been my anchor through it all holding me when the panic rose, reassuring me with gentle words and steady hands, reminding me every night that we were in this together. His love felt like a safe harbor, and for the first time in a long while, I felt truly seen.Guilt still lingered in the quiet moments, but it no longer drowned me. I could hold both the grief and the joy of Amie’s presence without breaking.One evening, as we lay in bed after putting the girls down, I turned to Alex, my head on his chest, listening to the steady rhythm of his heartbeat.“I think I need to go back to individual therapy,” I said softly. “Just for me. I want to keep working on this the anxiety, the fear of losing Amie, the guilt. I want to be strong
BellaThe morning had started like any other. Emily had gone to school with Alex, chattering excitedly about a science project she was working on. I stood in the kitchen, sleeves rolled up, chopping vegetables for an early dinner. The rhythmic sound of the knife against the cutting board was soothing. Life had settled into a gentle rhythm these past weeks therapy sessions, wedding planning whispers with Alex and my parents, and the beautiful chaos of caring for our two girls. It wasn’t perfect, but it was ours.Amie was in the living room on her play mat, babbling and cooing to herself, her little legs kicking happily. She had been doing so well since coming home from the hospital gaining weight, smiling more, her breathing steady and strong. I smiled as I listened to her soft sounds, my heart full. We had come so far. Amie was thriving. The pneumonia scare felt like a distant memory, even if the fear still lingered in the background.Then it happened.A small cough. Then another. He
BellaI woke up slowly, wrapped in warmth and the familiar scent of Alex. Sunlight streamed through the curtains, casting a golden glow across our bed. For the first time in months, there was no heavy fog of grief weighing me down the moment consciousness returned. Instead, a deep, buzzing contentm
The arrest of Lauren sent ripples through the family that no one could have fully prepared for. It happened on a crisp morning three weeks after Alex presented the evidence at Robert’s house. Police arrived at Lauren’s residence with a warrant, cuffing her in front of neighbors as she protested lo
BellaThe days after Alex came home felt like stepping into sunlight after a long, dark winter. I was still fragile the guilt over Avery hadn’t vanished, and the revelation about Lauren still lingered like a shadow but therapy was helping me build something real to stand on. Dr. Ramirez had become
Alex The drive away from the cafe felt longer than it should have. My hands gripped the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles turned white. Bella’s face kept flashing in my mind her tear-filled eyes, the desperate way she had grabbed my hands, the raw apology in her voice as she begged me to come






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