LOGINWoke up feeling like I’d been dragged through fire. My entire body ached in places I didn’t want to name, my lips were sore, and my wrist... God... my wrist was still glowing faintly in the morning light.
For a long moment, I lay there, staring at it, daring the silver shimmer to fade. But it didn’t. It pulsed in rhythm with my heartbeat, alive, taunting me with the memory of last night. For a second, I tried to tell myself it wasn’t real. That I had dreamt it up, maybe from exhaustion, maybe from the stress of juggling too many responsibilities. People didn’t just wake up with glowing tattoos from mysterious, rude gods who kissed like sin. Right? Except my body betrayed me. The soreness, the heat lingering under my skin, the ghost of his touch, all of it screamed reality. Every shift of my legs reminded me I hadn’t imagined Damian, or the way he had pinned me like he owned me. The way he whispered the thoughts I was too afraid to say out loud. Damian. Even thinking his name made my chest clench. He wasn’t supposed to save me. He wasn’t supposed to want me. And yet, last night… I pressed my face into the pillow and groaned. I hated how much I remembered. The sound of his voice when it dropped low, the press of his lips against my throat, the way his eyes devoured me even as his words cut me down. He had warned me I’d die faster because of him, and yet some traitorous part of me was already wondering when he’d come back. Pathetic. That’s what I was. Completely pathetic. Of course, that’s when my phone started blaring. I didn’t need to check the caller ID. I knew. Only one person had the impeccable timing to call me when I was trying to convince myself not to cry. Mom. I hesitated, staring at the screen, but ignoring her would only make things worse. So I swiped to answer. “Hey, Mom.” “Well, look who finally picked up,” she said, her voice sharp enough to cut. In the background I could hear the familiar soundtrack of her house: dishes clattering, kids shouting, a TV blasting a cartoon theme song. “I’ve been calling since seven. Do you even bother checking your phone?” I closed my eyes, rubbing at my temple. “Good morning to you too.” “Don’t get smart with me, Nanya. I’m up before sunrise trying to get your siblings out the door and you sound like you just rolled over in bed. Your brother is throwing a fit because he can’t find his sneakers, your sister dumped orange juice all over the table, and I’m two seconds away from losing my mind. But sure, sleep in.” I rolled onto my back, staring at the ceiling. Same chaos, different day. “I wasn’t sleeping,” I muttered. “Then what were you doing? Because it wasn’t helping, that’s for sure. Do you realize I had to cover the grocery bill last night? Again? You promised me you’d send money. Do you know how humiliating it is to stand in line and realize your daughter flaked? Again?” Her words stabbed in time with the throbbing pulse in my wrist. If only she knew. If only she knew I had bigger problems than groceries, like the fact that I had apparently become a god’s mistake. But how could I explain that? “Sorry, Mom. I’ll send it today.” “You said that last week,” she snapped. “Do you want me to keep a list? Because I can.” My throat tightened. The sound of her voice faded into the background as Damian’s voice overlapped in my mind: The more you want me, the faster you die. And I hated how my stomach twisted at the memory of his lips on my skin when he said it. Mom’s voice yanked me back. “Honestly, Nanya, sometimes I wonder what’s going to become of you. You can’t keep avoiding responsibility. You’re not a kid anymore.” I sat up, clutching the blanket to my chest. “I know, Mom. I said I’ll handle it.” She let out a sharp sigh. “You always say that. Look, I don’t have time to argue. I need to get the kids to school and somehow make it to work without losing my mind. Just… try not to screw up today, okay?” “I’ll try,” I whispered. “Good. Because I can’t carry everyone by myself. You need to get serious about your life.” Her words hit harder than I wanted to admit. As if I wasn’t already painfully aware that my life was a mess. As if I wasn’t already struggling to keep my head above water. “Mom, I have to go,” I cut in quickly, my voice cracking more than I wanted. “I’m already running late for work.” A pause. Then another sigh, softer this time. “Fine. Go. Call me later.” And just like that, she hung up. I dropped the phone onto the bed and laughed bitterly, though my chest felt tight. This was my reality. A family that always needed more from me. A boss probably waiting to chew me out for being late again. A life I was barely holding together with duct tape. And now, layered over all that chaos, was Damian. The mark on my wrist pulsed again, hot and insistent, like it knew I was thinking about him. My fingers hovered over it, trembling. I hated him. I wanted him. I wanted to forget last night, but every nerve in my body remembered. His mouth, his hands, his control. The way I gave in when I should have fought harder. “God, what am I even doing?” I whispered into the silence. I dragged myself out of bed, stumbling toward the bathroom. My reflection in the mirror didn’t look like me. My hair was a tangled mess, my eyes ringed with shadows, my lips still swollen. And that mark — glowing faintly like a secret tattoo I couldn’t erase — mocked me from my wrist. I touched it gently, almost reverently. The heat curled low in my stomach, unwelcome but impossible to deny. No matter how much I wanted to pretend otherwise, last night was real. Damian was real. And he wasn’t done with me. Not by a long shot. I touched the glowing mark gently, almost reverently. Heat curled low in my stomach, unwelcome but impossible to deny. No matter how much I wanted to pretend otherwise, last night was real. Damian was real. And he wasn’t done with me. Not by a long shot. I dropped my hand, forcing myself to breathe. To focus. To remember I still had a job, a life, a million responsibilities waiting to crush me. But then... The air shifted. Soft, subtle, like a shadow brushing against my skin. The hairs on the back of my neck stood straight, my breath catching in my throat. The bathroom suddenly felt too small, too heavy, like someone else was in there with me. My heart thundered. “Damian…” I whispered, barely a sound. No answer. Only silence. "Damian..." I called again this time, looking around"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
“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
When I walked into my apartment that evening, I half expected him to be there. It was ridiculous, honestly. The way my heart lifted just a little before crashing right back into my chest like a stone in water. The room was empty. Too empty. The kind of empty that echoed. I’d never realized silence







