Mag-log inThree years ago, Roman Reed was the boy I would have died for. Then he broke my heart and disappeared, leaving me to piece my life back together while I climbed to Hollywood stardom. Now I am the nation's rising star, and my mother has finally found her happy ending with a tech billionaire. But when I walk into our new Malibu estate, the man standing there is not a stranger. It is Roman. My ex-lover. My new stepbrother. At Northcrest, he is the Blacklisted King. Cold, ruthless, and feared. He hates my fame, he hates my face, and he tells me to stay out of his sight. But under the same roof, the air between us changes. He watches me from the shadows. He judges my red-carpet gowns with a dark possessiveness that feels like a threat. He warns me, "Do not start something you cannot finish, Scarlett." The paparazzi wait for me to slip. My parents watch our every move. As the hate begins to melt back into the fire that once burned us, the biggest scandal is not my past. It is the man I am living with.
view moreThe emerald velvet was a second skin, and right now, it was suffocating me.
"Stop fidgeting, Scarlett," Chloe muttered, her knees hitting the hardwood as she pinned the hem. "This dress is the difference between a 'rising star' and an 'A-lister.' The back is the selling point. It’s supposed to look like you’re wearing nothing but a prayer."
I looked in the triple-mirror. The front was high-necked and regal, but when I turned, the gown vanished. It scooped down to the very base of my spine, exposing every inch of my pale skin to the cool air of the dressing room.
"I feel exposed," I whispered.
"You feel like a fantasy," Chloe corrected, standing up and grabbing her phone. "Stay. Do not move. I need to grab the body tape from the kit in the hallway. One slip and the tabloids get a show they didn't pay for."
She disappeared, the heavy oak door clicking shut.
The silence of the Reed mansion always felt heavy, but today it felt electric. I stared at my reflection, tracing the line of my collarbone, when the door didn't just open—it was shoved.
I didn't have to turn around. The scent hit me first. Cedar, expensive leather, and a hint of smoke. Roman.
He didn't stay by the door. He walked in, his heavy boots thudding against the floorboards until he was standing right behind me. In the mirror, he looked like a shadow looming over a forest. His dark eyes didn't go to my face; they went straight to my bare back.
"They really are selling you off piece by piece, aren't they?" His voice was a low, dangerous grate.
"Get out, Roman," I snapped, my heart hammering against my ribs. "Chloe is coming back any second."
"Chloe is in the kitchen gossiping with the maid," he said, stepping closer until I could feel the heat radiating off his chest. He reached out, his long, calloused fingers hovering just an inch above my spine. "Is this the 'pure' image Marcus is so proud of? This strip of fabric?"
"It’s fashion. You wouldn't understand."
"I understand a come-on when I see one." He finally let his fingers drop. He traced a slow, agonizing line from my neck down to the base of the V. A violent shiver racked my body. "Your skin is cold, Scarlett. Are you scared? Or is it something else?"
"I hate you," I breathed, my eyes fluttering shut against the sensation. It had been three years, but my body remembered his touch like a language it was desperate to speak again.
"Liars don't get invited to the gala," he whispered, leaning down. His breath hit the shell of my ear, sending a fresh wave of heat through me. "You want me to touch you. You’ve wanted it since the day I moved into this house. Admit it."
"I don't—"
"Admit it, and I’ll leave."
"I want you to leave," I lied, my voice breaking.
"Wrong answer."
He grabbed my waist, his hands bruising against the velvet, and spun me around. He slammed me back against the cold glass of the mirror. The contrast—the freezing glass on my back and his burning body in front—made me gasp.
"Do not start something you cannot finish, Scarlett," he warned, his face inches from mine. His eyes were predatory, dark with a hunger that matched my own.
"Then finish it," I challenged, my hands flying to his hair.
He didn't hesitate. His mouth crashed onto mine, punishing and desperate. It wasn't a kiss; it was a reclamation. I groaned into his throat, my legs instinctively wrapping around his waist, pulling him into the cradle of my thighs. The emerald dress bunched up, the delicate silk straining against the force of our movements.
He lifted me, his hands sliding under the hem of the gown, finding the heat of my skin. He hiked the dress up until it was around my waist, his thumb grazing the lace of my underwear.
"Roman," I whimpered, my head hitting the mirror with a dull thud.
"Mine," he growled against my neck, his teeth grazing my pulse point. "You were always mine."
He didn't waste time. He fumbled with his belt, his movements frantic. When he pushed into me, it was a blunt, shocking intrusion that stole the breath from my lungs. It was fast, hard, and fueled by three years of resentment. I gripped his shoulders, my nails digging into the leather of his jacket, as he pinned me to the glass and took everything I had been trying to hide.
The mirror rattled with every thrust. The "pure" actress was gone; there was only the girl who loved a monster.
Just as the world began to blur into white heat, a faint click sounded from the corner of the room. Neither of us noticed. We were too busy drowning in each other.
When he finally pulled away, his breathing was ragged, his forehead resting against mine. He looked at me—really looked at me—and for a second, the "Blacklisted King" mask slipped.
"Fix your dress," he said, his voice returning to that icy, distant tone. He tucked himself back in and walked toward the door without a backward glance. "The car is waiting."
I collapsed onto the vanity stool, my legs shaking, my soul exposed. I reached for my phone, my hand trembling as I tried to call Chloe.
That's when I saw the notification.
An anonymous message had been sent to my private inbox. It was a video file. I clicked it, my heart stopping.
It was us. In the mirror. My back arched, his hands on my skin, the emerald dress ruined.
Underneath the video, a single sentence: "The world loves a fallen angel. Ready for your premiere, Scarlett?"
My legs were shaking so badly I could barely find the steps as I walked down from the stand. The room felt like it was spinning, the faces of the reporters blurring into a wash of pale skin and flashing lenses. But then a hand caught my elbow—thick, warm, and solid. Roman didn't wait for the bailiff to clear the path. He stepped right into the well of the court, pulling my arm over his shoulder and guiding me through the heavy wooden gate before the press could even stand up.We didn't go to the public hallway. We pushed straight through the side exit Miller had left unlatched, into the concrete maintenance tunnel that ran behind the utility rooms. The moment the heavy steel door slammed shut behind us, cutting off the sudden roar of the courtroom crowd, my knees completely gave out.Roman caught me before I hit the floor, his back hitting the concrete wall as he slid down with me, pu
"Just breathe, Scar. Just remember to take a breath after every sentence."Roman was kneeling in front of me in the tiny, windowless side room, his hands firmly gripping my bare knees. The morning sun was trying to bleed through the frosted glass of the transom window, but it just looked like gray static. My chest was so tight it felt like someone had wrapped a steel band around my ribs, and every time I tried to swallow, my throat clicked. The court bailiff had already knocked once. The fifteen-minute recess was over. It was time for the real thing."I feel like if I open my mouth, the wrong voice is going to come out," I whispered, my fingers knotting into the rough wool of his jacket. "I keep hearing the scripts he wrote for me. The ones from the charity galas. 'Reed Global stands for integrity, family, and future.' I can still recite them by heart, Roman. What if my brain just defaults to the lie because it’s safer?""The lie isn't safer anymore," Roman said, his voice dropping in
The room was completely silent, waiting for me to falter, waiting for the "Angel" to break down and cry about how hard it was to be rich. I took a deep breath, feeling the air in my lungs, feeling the warmth of the diner we’d just left, the reality of the small cabin in the mountains where nobody cared what I wore."The dress didn't belong to me," I said, my voice sounding flat and steady in the large room. "Marcus bought the dress because he was presenting me as a billboard for his company. If I didn't wear the dress, he told the security team at the gate that my car wasn't allowed to leave the property. If I didn't use the credit cards he gave me at the specific stores he chose, he turned off the electricity in my mother's cottage in upstate New York. The money wasn't an allowance. It was a leash. Every dollar he spent on me was a receipt he kept to remind me exactly what it would cost if I ever tr
"They aren't calling it a family feud anymore, Roman. Look at the screen," I said, my thumb hovering over the glass of my phone as we sat in the dim, cramped corner of a diner three blocks from the courthouse.The television mounted above the grease-stained counter was flickering with the midday news feed. Usually, the anchors had that bright, gossipy bounce in their voices when they talked about the Reed family—the kind of tone people used when they were talking about a reality television show or a messy divorce among the wealthy. But today, the woman on the screen wasn't smiling. The background graphic behind her head didn't show a picture of me in a gala dress next to Marcus. It showed a giant, stark block diagram of the offshore network Roman had exposed yesterday, with a thick, red banner across the bottom that read: THE SYSTEM OF REED GLOBAL.
"Do you think they can smell the mountain air on us, or do we just look like two more people waiting for a car crash?"I leaned my forehead against the cool glass of the SUV’s window. Outside, downtown Manhattan was a sea of moving bodies. It wasn't just the press; it was a circus. People were hold
"Miller is here, Marcus. You can hear them, can't you? That’s not the sound of a rescue party," Roman said, his voice flat and cold as the sirens began to scream against the quarry walls.Marcus didn't move at first. He stayed hunched over on that wooden crate, his fingers still digging into his sc
"She looks like she’s aged ten years in a single night," Roman muttered, his thumb tracing the play button on the tablet.I sat between his knees, leaning my head back against his chest. The air in the shack was thick and still, the only sound the distant whistle of wind through the quarry. "She’s
"It’s not just a leak anymore, Scar. It’s a flood. The London mirror just dumped the audio from the night he sent me to Switzerland," Roman said, his voice thick with a dark, gravelly triumph.I pulled the blanket tighter around my shoulders, my body still humming from the heat of him, but my mind












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