LOGINI woke up drenched in sweat.
Not the kind from a warm blanket or a bad nightmare that fades the moment you sit up. No, this was the clingy kind that glued my shirt to my skin and made me feel like my own bed was trying to suffocate me. My sheets were twisted around my legs like I had been wrestling with an invisible enemy all night. My chest rose and fell too fast, and the pounding in my head matched the racing beat of my heart. I didn’t need to ask why. I already knew. The dream. It was fuzzy around the edges, but certain fragments stayed behind, sharp as broken glass: the glow of my wrist, a dark alley, a man with eyes like carved crystal, lips too close to mine. The kind of dream that didn’t feel like a dream at all, more like a memory replaying itself in cruel high definition. And the humiliating part? My body had liked it. My pulse still hadn’t calmed down. My lips tingled like they’d been almost touched. My thighs pressed together on instinct, and I hated myself for it. I groaned and shoved my face into the pillow. “Absolutely not. Nope. Brain, you’re fired. We are not crushing on Mr. Doom-and-Gloom.” The mark on my wrist pulsed hot under my skin, like it found me amusing. I yanked the blanket over my head, praying the night would give me peace. Maybe I could force myself back to sleep, dream of anything else, cats, chocolate, taxes, literally anything. But then I felt it. The air in my room shifted. Heavier. Denser. Like someone else was in it. My skin prickled, every nerve awake. I froze. My heart sprinted. There was breathing in the dark. And it wasn’t mine. Slowly, too slowly, I peeled the blanket down from my face and opened my eyes. And there he was. Damian. He stood in the far corner of my room, shadows wrapping around him like they belonged to him. His arms were crossed over his chest, his posture relaxed, but his presence filled every inch of space. The room was too small for him, or maybe he was too much for the room. My stomach dropped, and my first instinct wasn’t even fear. It was outrage. “What the actual hell? Do you gods not knock?” His lips curved, but not in a smile. More like a razor slicing across his face. “Knocking is for mortals. And I’m not here for your comfort.” “Oh, trust me, I noticed.” I yanked the blanket tighter across my chest like it was armor. “Creeping into women’s bedrooms in the middle of the night, super classy. Do you always stalk your victims, or am I just lucky?” He tilted his head, and his voice came sharp, cold. “Victim. Finally, a word you use correctly.” My sarcasm stuck in my throat. He stepped forward, unhurried, like a predator who knew there was no escape. The mark burned hotter with every step. Then his scent reached me. Sharp, clean, storm-soaked air mixed with smoke and something warmer underneath. It hit me like a drug, sinking into my chest, pulling at something I didn’t want pulled. He smelled unfairly good, and I hated myself for noticing. By the time he stopped at the foot of my bed, I couldn’t move. His gaze pinned me like an insect under glass. “You’re burning faster,” he said flatly. “The mark is spreading.” “Fantastic,” I snapped, forcing my voice not to shake. “So you broke into my room to give me a progress report? Thanks, Doctor Doom. Do I get a bill for the house call?” He arched an eyebrow, unimpressed. “You think joking will make this easier?” “It makes me less likely to scream,” I shot back. “You’re not screaming.” His voice was calm, which somehow made it worse. Then his mouth curved again, crueler this time. “You’re thinking things you shouldn’t be.” My breath caught. “Excuse me?” He moved closer, shadows clinging to him like smoke. “Your thoughts are loud, Nanya. You’re wondering why I smell the way I do. You’re cataloging every detail of me while pretending you despise me. And you loathe yourself for it.” Heat flamed across my face. My lips parted, but no denial came out. My pulse betrayed me, racing harder. “I am not” “Yes, you are.” His voice cut clean and final. His knee brushed the mattress as he closed in. My heart stuttered. His hand reached out and caught my wrist, tugging it free of the blanket. His grip was strong, unyielding, but not cruel. Almost careful, as though my skin might shatter. The mark blazed to life, glowing silver under his touch. Heat surged up my arm, spread across my chest. I gasped, but it wasn’t a scream, it was a soft, helpless sound that sounded far too much like a moan. His lips curved, and this time it was smug. “Pathetic,” he murmured, voice laced with contempt. “You hate me, yet you burn for me.” Anger and shame tangled inside me. I wanted to slap him. I wanted to shove him away. I wanted him closer. He leaned in, his mouth hovering a breath from mine. “You want me to kiss you.” My chest heaved. “You’re insane.” “You’re lying.” His breath ghosted against my lips, hot, deliberate. “But a kiss won’t save you.” The mark pulsed violently, light spilling across the room like lightning. Pain stabbed through me, sharp and blinding. I cried out, my body folding forward. Before I hit the floor, his arms wrapped around me. Strong, steady, unyielding. My face pressed against his chest, hard muscle beneath soft fabric. His heat surrounded me, his scent flooding my senses until thinking was impossible. “You don’t understand, Nanya,” he murmured against my hair. His fingers skimmed over the mark, and the fire inside me surged. “The more you want me...” His voice dropped lower, cruel and intimate. “...the faster you burn.” I clutched his shirt, half from pain, half from something I couldn’t name. My body trembled against his, betraying me in every way possible. And then the darkness dragged me under, his words echoing like a curse I couldn’t escape."Come in," Ryan ordered calmly.The front door opened almost immediately and another young man dressed in the same black suit stepped inside. He walked straight to Ryan, leaned closer and whispered something into his ear.I couldn't hear a single word.Ryan's expression didn't change.Not even slightly."Excuse me for a moment, ma'am," he said politely before following the young man outside.I watched them leave.Even that made me anxious.Every movement.Every whisper.Every unfamiliar face.Everything suddenly felt suspicious.The mansion that had felt so warm last night now felt impossibly cold.Almost empty.Almost...Lonely."Would you like anything for breakfast, ma'am?" Evelyn asked softly.I didn't even look at her."No."My voice came out much colder than I intended."I'm not hungry."She
The moment I realized Damian wasn't beside me, every trace of sleep disappeared.I sat upright so quickly that the blanket slipped onto my lap. My eyes immediately searched the room, expecting to find him standing by the window or walking out of the bathroom.Nothing.The room was quiet.Too quiet."Damian?"No response.A strange feeling settled in my chest.It wasn't just worry.It was fear.The kind that arrives without permission and refuses to explain itself.I quickly climbed out of bed, barely taking the time to throw on a robe before rushing downstairs."Damian?"My voice echoed through the enormous mansion.Still nothing.I searched the living room.The dining area.The kitchen.Every room I could think of.Nothing."Damian!" I called again, louder this time.The silence answered me."No... no, no, no..."I immediately turned and ran back upstairs, checking every room one after another even though I knew how ridiculous it was. There weren't that many places he could possibly
"What's wrong?" Damian asked calmly as he wrapped a large towel around my shoulders before I could even process what had happened. The calmness in his voice almost made me believe he had been expecting this reaction all along."It's gone, Damian!" I exclaimed, my voice echoing through the bathroom. My hands instinctively searched the place where the mark had always been. "It's gone... it vanished!""What vanished?" he asked, tilting his head with an innocent expression that fooled absolutely nobody.I narrowed my eyes at him."You know exactly what I'm talking about."He remained silent."The mark, Damian." My voice trembled as I looked at him again. "The mark is gone. I'm free... we're free."A soft laugh escaped him.It wasn't mocking.It wasn't even surprised.It was the quiet laugh of someone watching a long awaited moment finally arrive.Then, without warning, every bit of excitement inside me disappeared.A cold feeling spread through my body.The smile slowly slipped from my fa
When we were done with dinner, Damian drove us away from the restaurant without saying much. The drive back was surprisingly quiet, but it wasn't an uncomfortable silence. It was the kind of silence that settled naturally between two people who had already said everything that needed saying for the day.I rested my head against the window, watching the city lights streak past. Every now and then I'd steal a glance at him.His eyes remained on the road.One hand rested confidently on the steering wheel while the other occasionally found mine, intertwining our fingers for a few seconds before returning to the wheel. It was such a simple gesture, yet it made my heart flutter every single time.A part of me still couldn't believe this was my life.Just this morning I had quit my job.Confronted my mother.Watched my ex publicly humiliate himself.And somehow, I was ending the day beside a man who made all those painful memories seem... smaller."You've been staring at me for the last five
After our dishes had been served and everyone had settled in, I genuinely thought maybe, just maybe, we would all eat in uncomfortable silence.I should have known better.Because Lara clearly didn't come here to eat.She came to perform."So, Nanya," she began, lifting her glass delicately like she was hosting some expensive interview, "Michael here told me he ran into you recently."I looked up from my food."Oh?""Yes." She smiled smugly. "You work in a café, don't you? What happened?"There it was.The insult.Freshly plated alongside dinner.I swallowed calmly and smiled. "Well, it's a lot more peaceful there than corporate drama.""Peaceful?" she repeated before letting out a laugh that was honestly too loud for a human being.Michael chuckled too.Annoying pair.For a brief moment, I wondered if they had practiced this before coming here. Maybe they sat in front of a mirror together rehearsing ways to sound superior. If they did, I had to admit the effort was impressive.Then M
Following my gaze, Damian turned slightly toward the entrance.I truly tried.Honestly tried.Tried not to think anything at all because I knew fully well he would hear every single thought that crossed my mind, and right now my thoughts were not exactly holy.But guess what?I couldn’t help it.Because standing there was Michael.The Michael.Not some random Michael.Not another Michael.The Michael.The same man who had once convinced me that love was a beautiful thing only to personally turn around and beat that belief to death with emotional bricks.Of all the expensive restaurants in all the city, this man chose this one?Tonight?With me here?And with her?Because apparently life enjoyed creative suffering.There seemed to be an issue with their reservation because the receptionist kept apologizing while Lara kept talking with exaggerated hand gestures like the world was ending simply because she couldn’t get immediate access to overpriced food.Good.Let her suffer.Let her su
As if the name unleashed something in me, I was immediately overpowered by a flood of emotions I couldn’t even separate properly. First, fear. Cold. Sharp. Immediate. Then Something else. Courage. It was Strange, unfamiliar. But there. I turned to him slowly, my brows pulling together.
“Go ahead and pick the call,” he said. “I don’t want to,” I replied, my voice tight as I switched off my phone. The silence that followed felt heavy, like the past was standing right in front of me, waiting to be acknowledged. Damian didn’t argue. He simply reached for the phone, his movement
I walked into the store, the smell of roasted coffee beans and pastries hitting me like a memory I didn’t want. I should’ve felt comforted, but today, it only reminded me of the calm I no longer deserved or maybe never did. Claire appeared almost instantly, her usual bright energy a jarring contra
Just then, I saw him.He stood across the street, half in shadow, half under the streetlight—like the world itself hadn’t decided whether he belonged to it or not. Damian always did that. Appeared quietly. Never announced himself. Never rushed. As if he knew exactly when I was about to break and st







