Mag-log inJulian’s presence was suffocating tonight, but I couldn’t look away. Every time he smiled at me, it wasn’t just warmth—it was a reminder that I belonged entirely to him. Not just in body, but in thought, in hesitation, in the careful way I moved through the world.
“Maris,” he said, voice soft, almost teasing, as we walked through the private gallery of the mansion, “you look distracted. Are your thoughts somewhere else?”
I swallowed hard, glancing down at my heels. “I… I’m just thinking, Julian.” My voice was careful, neutral. Too much emotion would give him reason to assert more control.
He reached for my hand—not roughly, but just enough that I felt the tether tighten. “Thinking can be dangerous,” he murmured. “Especially when it’s about things that don’t concern you.” His thumb brushed against my skin, soft, deliberate. Every nerve in me screamed that I was already caught.
And yet… from the corner of my eye, I felt it again. That calm, impossible intensity. Adrian.
He was leaning against the doorway to the adjoining library, arms crossed, watching silently. Not staring like a stranger—observing, as he could see past the walls Julian built around me. My pulse quickened, and I felt a flicker of something dangerous—something I wasn’t supposed to feel.
Julian noticed it too. His hand on mine squeezed just slightly, possessive. “Maris?” he asked, voice low, controlled. “Is something catching your attention?”
I forced a smile, letting my gaze linger on his just enough to hide the turmoil inside. “N-nothing, Julian,” I whispered, my heart hammering.
He tilted his head, sharp eyes meeting mine, reading every flinch. “Good. Focus on me, okay? Don’t let your mind wander.”
I nodded, though a part of me wanted to glance at Adrian again. Just once. Just to see if he was still there. And of course, he was—quiet, composed, impossible. I could feel his presence like a shadow pressing gently, daring me to notice.
We moved into the library, Julian leading with a deliberate, smooth confidence. The room smelled of old books, polished wood, and the faint trace of his cologne. Every inch of it felt carefully curated, controlled—just like him.
“Sit,” Julian instructed softly, indicating a leather armchair beside the fireplace. His hand guided me gently, but firmly. I obeyed, my stomach tightening at the warmth of his proximity.
“I’ve noticed you’ve been distant lately,” he said, settling into his own chair across from me. “Your mind wandering, your smiles not reaching your eyes…” His gaze drilled into mine. “Tell me what’s wrong.”
I hesitated. Part of me wanted to tell him everything—the unease, the pull I felt toward Adrian, the suffocating cage of Julian’s control—but words like that were dangerous. Instead, I chose caution. “I’m just tired, Julian. It’s been a long week.”
His lips curved into a faint, almost predatory smile. “Tired? Maybe you need… attention. Focus. Maybe I should remind you where you belong.” His hand brushed against my arm, deliberate, firm enough to make me shiver.
And then I felt it again—the other gaze. Adrian, standing near the doorway, was perfectly still. His eyes held a promise I didn’t understand, a magnetic intensity that made my skin prickle. He didn’t step closer, didn’t speak, but somehow, I felt both watched and seen in a way Julian couldn’t allow.
Julian’s voice snapped me back. “Maris.” The firmness in his tone was enough to make my pulse race again. “Are you listening?”
“Yes… Julian,” I whispered, careful to meet his eyes. My body felt taut, divided—torn between obedience and a forbidden curiosity.
He leaned closer, lowering his voice. “Remember, I control what touches you, what looks at you, what even thinks about you. Do you understand?”
“Yes,” I breathed. The words were shallow, but my mind was racing, spinning with the tension that now included Adrian.
Adrian shifted slightly in the doorway. Just the smallest movement. Just enough to remind me he was still there. And suddenly, the room felt smaller, tighter, as if his presence stretched across the space like a taut wire.
Julian noticed, of course. His jaw tightened imperceptibly, his hand brushing mine one more time—a reminder, a tether. “Do not look at him,” he said softly, dangerously calm.
I didn’t answer; my lips pressed together. But my eyes betrayed me, flicking toward the doorway once more. And there he was, still watching, still quiet, still impossible to ignore. My heart pounded. Why did he make me feel like this—so aware of every heartbeat, every hesitation?
Julian rose suddenly, pacing slowly, deliberately, making sure I followed his movements. “You think too much, Maris. Thoughts are dangerous when they stray. And lately… yours have been wandering into places they shouldn’t.”
I swallowed. “I’ll… focus,” I said softly, my mind screaming with the pull between him and Adrian.
He stopped pacing, standing close enough that I could feel the heat radiating off him. “Good,” he murmured, brushing a strand of hair from my face. “Because I don’t like distractions.” His words were casual, almost intimate—but the possessiveness beneath them was undeniable.
I nodded, though I knew my eyes had betrayed me again. Just for a second, I had looked toward Adrian, toward that quiet, magnetic presence that made my pulse quicken in ways Julian’s controlled dominance never did.
And then, Julian leaned down, voice soft, almost a whisper. “No one touches what’s mine. No one sees you the way I do. Not him. Not anyone.”
My breath hitched. My body felt split in two—torn between the tether of Julian’s control and the invisible pull of Adrian’s presence. I wanted to step back, to escape, to breathe freely, but I couldn’t. Not here. Not now.
The tension stretched longer, a dangerous pause. And then, a subtle sound—a click from the far side of the room. Not Julian. Not a guest. I froze, heart hammering.
Adrian had moved.
I didn’t see him approach, but the shift in the air told me everything. The magnetic weight of his presence was now closer, almost tangible. I could feel it against my skin, against my senses, without a word being spoken.
Julian’s eyes narrowed slightly, but he said nothing, his hand still lightly resting on my arm, claiming me, tethering me, warning me.
I wanted to speak. I wanted to demand answers. I wanted to look—but I was paralyzed, caught in the invisible web of control, attention, and desire spun between these two men.
And then I realized, with a sudden jolt of awareness, that this wasn’t just tension or curiosity anymore. I was standing on the edge of something dangerous—something forbidden. Something I couldn’t stop feeling, even if I wanted to.
Adrian’s presence was no longer subtle. It was a quiet, impossible intensity, a silent interference, a promise of temptation I wasn’t ready for. And Julian—calm, possessive, dangerous Julian—was watching me like a hawk, aware of every heartbeat.
The triangle was set. The tension was taut. And I was the only one caught in the middle, my pulse a wild rhythm against the suffocating cage of control.
A soft whisper reached me from the far corner of the room, though I didn’t know if it was real or imagined:
“You can’t hide from me.”
I froze, my breath catching. Julian’s hand tightened slightly, Adrian’s eyes held me, and I realized—the cracks in my cage had begun to form.
Maristella is trapped between Julian’s escalating control and Adrian’s subtle interference, her heart pulled in two directions. The chapter ends with a whisper of obsession, leaving readers desperate to know what Adrian’s intentions are and how far Julian will go to maintain dominance.
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