LOGINEvery time I closed my eyes, I heard his voice. If I don't get away from her soon, I'm going to ruin everything.
Her. Me. He was talking about me. I replayed the conversation a hundred times. I've spent ten years watching her. She looks at me like I'm furniture. Mason Chen had been watching me. For ten years. While I'd been watching him right back. The sun came up eventually. I watched it through the pool house windows and tried to figure out what to do. I couldn't tell Sloane. I couldn't confront Mason. So I did what I always did. I pretended nothing had happened. By noon, I'd convinced myself I'd imagined it all. I was standing in the main house kitchen when Mason walked in. Shirtless. Wet hair. Droplets still clung to his shoulders. "Lucy." He grabbed a protein shake from the fridge, not looking at me. "You're in my way." I stepped aside. "Sorry." He leaned against the counter and drank, eyes fixed somewhere across the room. Not on me. "How was the gala?" I asked. "Fine." "Why are you here at the main house?" He finally looked at me. Bored. Dismissive. "The gala's over. You got paid." "I was just getting water." "Get it faster next time." He left. I stood there gripping my glass, trying to breathe. The next two days were worse. Mason was everywhere. The garage. The backyard. The kitchen. And every time, he looked through me like I was glass. Then Tuesday night. Midnight. A woman's laugh trailed up the stairs. I pressed my pillow over my head. Wednesday morning, I ran into her outside. Blonde. Tall. Wearing one of his button-downs. "You must be the pool house girl," she said, looking me up and down. "Mason said you were his sister's charity case." Before I could respond, Mason appeared in the doorway. "Inside," he said to her. "Now." She pouted but left. Mason looked at me. "Stay out of my personal life." "I wasn't in it. She came out here." "Then walk faster." He closed the door. I stood in the backyard and didn't cry. Sloane came by Thursday. She dropped onto my bed and studied my face. "You look awful." "Thanks." "What did he do?" "Nothing. That's the problem." She sighed. "I told you that you could stay with my parents, Luce. Their guest room is huge." "I know." "But you chose to stay here." She turned her head. "Why?" I didn't answer. Sloane had offered me her parents' mansion the night I got robbed. She'd also offered her apartment but her boyfriend Derek practically lived there. Three's a crowd. The Chens' guest room was a real option. Comfortable. Far from Mason. I'd said no anyway. "I like the pool house," I lied. "Bullshit." Sloane propped herself up. "I've seen the way you look at him. You're not subtle." My heart stopped. "You do." Her voice was gentle. "He's a disaster, Lucy. He'll break your heart." "He doesn't even see me." She was quiet. Then: "Are you sure about that?" I didn't answer. "You could still leave," she said. "Go to my parents'. I'll help you pack." "No." Too fast. "I have interviews. It doesn't make sense to move now." Sloane studied me. Then sighed. "Don't say I didn't warn you." She left. I sat alone and admitted the truth: I couldn't walk away from Mason. Even when he was rude. Even when he brought home blondes. Even when he looked at me like nothing. """""" Friday night. Dinner at the Chen mansion. Mrs. Chen hugged me at the door. "You look thin. Is Mason feeding you?" "Not really." Sloane grabbed my arm in the living room. "He's in a mood. Showed up twenty minutes ago, hasn't said a word to anyone." Mason sat across from me at dinner. Dark blazer. Sharp jaw. He didn't look at me once. "So, Lucy," Mr. Chen said. "Sloane tells me you're looking for work. Have you considered the foundation? You'd be working with Olivia." Mason's fork stopped halfway to his mouth. "I don't have much experience," I said carefully. "You have common sense and a pulse. That's more than half our applicants." "She's not qualified," Mason cut in. Everyone turned to look at him. He set down his fork, expression bored. "Lucy doesn't have the experience for foundation work. She worked a check-in table for three hours. That doesn't make her event coordinator material." The table went quiet. "He's right," I said, forcing a smile. "But thank you for the offer." Dinner continued. I didn't look at Mason. But I felt his eyes on me the whole time. I found him on the back patio after dessert. Alone by the pool. "That was cruel," I said. He didn't turn around. "It was honest." "You humiliated me in front of your parents." "I saved you from a job you would have hated. You'd hate taking charity from my family. And you'd definitely hate working with Olivia." "Why would I hate working with Olivia?" "I made sure you didn't get stuck somewhere you couldn't walk away from." He stepped closer. "You want to hate me? Fine. Hate me. At least you'll still have your pride." He walked past me toward the house. At the door, he paused. "For what it's worth, you would have been great at that job. Better than Olivia. Better than anyone." Then he was gone. Sloane found me by the pool. She handed me a glass of wine. "You could still go to my parents'," she said quietly. "I feel terrible that you're stuck at his place. Derek's always at my apartment, so you can't stay with me, but my parents' guest room is empty." "I know." "Then why won't you go?" I stared at the water. "Because I'm an idiot." Sloane sighed. "Yeah. You kind of are." She didn't push. That was Sloane. She let me make my own mistakes. My phone buzzed. Don't read too much into what I said. I'm still an asshole. I typed back: I know. Another buzz. Good. See you at home. At home. He'd called the pool house home. I stared at the screen until it went dark then I stood up. I didn't go back to the pool house. The main house door was still unlocked. The living room was dark. Mason stood by the window, whiskey in hand. "Lucy." My name sounded different at midnight. Softer. "You shouldn't be here." "Then why did you text me?" He set down his glass. Crossed the room in three strides. "Because I'm weak," he said. "Because you're under my skin and I can't scratch you out." "Then stop trying." His hand cupped my face. Rough. Demanding. "If I kiss you right now—" "Then kiss me." He did. Ten years of want and denial. His mouth crashed into mine like he was starving. I fisted my hands in his shirt and kissed him back like I'd been waiting my whole life. Because I had. Then he pulled away. Forehead pressed to mine. Both of us breathing hard. His expression became cold. "This was a mistake," he said. He walked upstairs without looking back. I stood in his dark living room, lips still burning, and realized I'd been played. I wasn't the girl he couldn't resist. I was just another blonde's replacement.Mason came home the next morning.I heard the front door open. His footsteps in the foyer. The sound of him setting down his bag.I was in the living room, waiting. He walked in. Took one look at me and stopped "Lucy.""Mason."He looked tired. Dark circles under his eyes. His jaw was tight. "We need to talk," he said.I felt my stomach drop. He sat down across from me. Rubbed his hands over his face."I've been thinking," he said. "About everything. Vincent. The danger. The way my life has been putting you at risk.""Mason—""Let me finish." He looked at me. "I can't do this anymore."I stared at him. "Do what?""Us." His voice was flat. "I can't be with you."I felt like I'd been punched. "What are you talking about?""Vincent was just the beginning. There's always going to be someone. My family. My business. My enemies." He shook his head. "I can't protect you from all of it.""You don't have to protect me from all of it.""Yes, I do." His voice cracked. "That's the problem. I can'
Mason and I couldn't talk because the following day, he was out of town. Some business thing he hadn't bothered to explain. And I was tired of waiting. Tired of hiding. Tired of being the damsel in distress Then a tip came through Sloane. A man named Silas. He'd been Vincent's associate once. Now he was willing to talk. For a price. "He says Vincent has been staying at an old warehouse on the east side," Sloane told me over the phone. "Silas can get us in. But he wants protection." "Protection from what?" "From Vincent. He's scared." I was quiet for a moment. "It could be a trap," I said. "It probably is." Sloane's voice was steady. "But it's the only lead we have." I thought about it. Vincent had been quiet for days. No texts. No threats. Nothing. It was too calm. "Okay," I said. "I'll meet Silas. Alone." "Lucy—" "He won't talk if there are other people. You know that." Sloane was silent for a long moment. "Fine," she said finally. "But I'm going to be nearby. With Liam
It was my day off.No work. No Mason hovering. No security detail following my every move. Just me, alone, finally breathing.I needed toothpaste. A new toothbrush. Maybe some real food that wasn't delivered by Mason's chef.I walked to the corner store three blocks from the house. It was a nice day. Sunny. Warm. The kind of day that made you forget everything terrible in the world.I was halfway back when a black car pulled up beside me."Need a ride?"I froze. The window rolled down. Vincent's face smiled back at me."Vincent.""Lucy." He opened the door. "Get in.""No.""I wasn't asking." His voice was calm. Pleasant. "Get in. Or I'll make you."I looked around. The street was empty. No cars. No pedestrians. No one to help me.I got in.The car was clean. Expensive. Leather seats. The smell of cologne. Vincent drove with one hand on the wheel, the other resting casually on his thigh."You know," he said, "I've been watching you for a long time. Longer than you know.""I figured tha
The invitation came on a Thursday. A real invitation. Cream-colored paper. Gold embossed lettering. Hand-delivered to the bookstore while I was at lunch.I found it on the counter when I got back. My name written across the front in elegant script.Inside was a single line.You're invited to the Russo Gallery Opening. Friday, 8 PM. I'll be waiting.I felt sick.I called Mason immediately."He sent me an invitation," I said. "To a gallery opening. He's not hiding anymore.""Don't go.""I'm not going to.""Good.""But—""Lucy. Don't."I took a breath. "I'm not going. But this changes things. He's not just lurking anymore. He's putting himself out there. He wants to be seen.""I know." His voice was tight. "I'll have someone there. Watching.""Okay."We hung up. I stared at the invitation.Vincent was escalating. And this time, he wasn't hiding.Sloane called later. "Liam showed me the invitation," she said. "Did you tell Mason?""Yes. And he said I shouldn't go""Good." She paused. "But
Sloane dragged me out of the house the next morning before I could even finish my coffee."Up. Now. We're going.""Going where?""To get your mind off everything." She grabbed my arm. "You've been cooped up in this house for weeks. You need air. You need fun. You need to remember you're a person.""I am a person.""Then act like one."I let her pull me out the door.She drove us to a farmer's market downtown. Rows of colorful stalls. Fresh produce. Homemade bread. The smell of flowers and coffee and something sweet."This is nice," I admitted."I know. I'm brilliant."I laughed. For the first time in weeks, I actually laughed.We walked through the market, Sloane buying anything that caught her eye. A jar of honey. A bundle of lavender. A loaf of sourdough that she insisted was "life-changing.""You're going to eat all of this yourself?" I asked."No. I'm going to share with you." She shoved the bread into my hands. "Consider it a gift. An apology for being a terrible friend.""You're
We set the trap that night.Mason's security team surrounded the warehouse on 5th. Four men. Two cars. Cameras on every corner.I wasn't supposed to be there.But I'd insisted."I'm the bait," I told Mason. "If I'm not there, he won't show.""I don't care. You're staying here.""No.""Lucy—""I'm not going to let you do this alone." I met his eyes. "We're in this together. Remember?"He stared at me for a long moment. Then he swore under his breath."Fine. But you stay behind me. You don't move. You don't speak. You don't even breathe.""Deal."The warehouse was cold. Dark. Empty. I stood in the center of the room, heart pounding, waiting.Mason was hidden behind a stack of crates. His security team was scattered throughout the building.I tried to breathe. Tried to stay calm.Then I heard footsteps. "Lucy."Vincent's voice. Smooth. Confident.I turned. He was standing in the doorway. Dark jacket. Hood down. His face was exactly like the photo Mason had shown me. Hard eyes. Cruel smil
I didn't sleep that night because every time I closed my eyes, I saw Mason's face. The way he'd looked at me in the coffee shop. The way he'd said I'm done running. The way his fingers had wrapped around my wrist like he was afraid I'd disappear. And then Sloane's voice in my head. Broken people b
I didn't sleep that night because every time I closed my eyes, I saw Mason's face. The way he'd looked at me in the coffee shop. The way he'd said I'm done running. The way his fingers had wrapped around my wrist like he was afraid I'd disappear.And then Sloane's voice in my head. Broken people br
Sloane cornered me the next morning.She showed up at my apartment before I'd even finished my first cup of coffee. No warning. No text. Just a sharp knock on my door and that determined expression I knew too well."Good morning to you too," I said, letting her in."Don't good morning me." She drop
It's been three days since Mason's lips had been on mine. Three days since he'd smiled that cold smile and walked away like I was nothing. Three days since I'd stood in his dark living room and realized I'd been played.I hadn't left the pool house since.Not for food. Not for air. Just lay in bed







