LOGINChristina’s POV
“Chris, have you reached?” Mom’s voice was warm, but I could hear the faint tremor of worry.
“Yes, Mom. The plane just landed,” I said, trying to sound less exhausted than I felt.
“The house feels so empty without you. Carter misses you too. It’s not even been a day and we’re both already lost without you.”
I smiled, my chest tightening. “Same here, Mom.”
“I’ve texted you my friend’s son’s number—Asher. Call him when you step out of the airport.”
A notification blinked at the top of my screen. Asher. Just a capital letter A for his profile picture—no face, no clue.
After eight long hours in the air, I finally touched down in Auckland—half a world away from my hometown. The moment I stepped into the terminal, the foreign air felt heavier, lonelier.
Bags collected, I stepped out of the airport and dialed Asher twice. No answer.
Great. Perfect start.
I was about to book a hotel when I spotted it—my name written in bold, block letters on a sign.
A tall, broad-shouldered guy stood holding it, the setting sun catching in his dark hair.
“Asher?” I asked.
“Christina?” His eyes lit up like I’d just stepped out of a memory. “Wow… you haven’t changed a bit.”
Before I could respond, he took my suitcase like it weighed nothing and started loading it into his sleek black car.
He seemed a bit shy, but overall, he was really cute.
“I thought you wouldn’t show up,” I said.
“How could I not? We’re childhood friends, after all,” he said with a laugh.
I got into his car. It seemed he already knew me, but I didn't.
“Childhood friends?”
“Yeah…”
He fastened his seatbelt and handed me a photo. It was really a picture of us from childhood, together. I could see the features of his face hadn't changed. He still had that baby face.
“I had no idea I’d even been to Auckland before,” I murmured.
He smiled knowingly, then started the car.
We pulled up to a sprawling Victorian-style house, the kind that whispers old money. Ornate gates, ivy crawling up cream walls, a stone sculpture watching over the front lawn.
Inside, Mrs. Wellington swept toward me with open arms.
“Darling!” she said, crushing me in a hug that smelled faintly of roses. “It’s been years. You’ve grown into such a beautiful young woman.”
“Thank you, Auntie,” I said, smiling.
She was like a blonde version of my mom—same height, same graceful posture, even the same warm-but-commanding tone.
“Good evening, dear,” Mr. Wellington greeted, extending a firm handshake.
When Mom first suggested I stay with them for a week, I’d hesitated. I’d wanted to find a hostel and figure things out on my own. But she insisted. And now, somehow, it didn’t feel as awkward as I’d imagined.
At dinner, the conversation flowed easily. Mr. Wellington asked, “What are you studying?”
“Finance. Final year,” I said.
His brows shot up. “Finance? For a girl? That’s… impressive.”
I forced a smile. “Yeah. My class hardly had three girls for major." I said.
"I must say, you're intelligent." He appreciated.
The truth was, I never liked finance. But I still chose it as major. Just because of him. Just to stay close to him.
Hunter
I accepted things I hated, just because he loved them. Not only Finance, but football, pinapple pizza...
“Asher’s studying finance too,” Mrs. Wellington said brightly. I jumped out of my thought. “Same class, even! You two can go together.”
Asher, ever the quiet one, helped his mom serve food with the focus of a saint. He was the type who followed rules without complaint—nothing like the dominant, rebellious boy I used to know.
“Look at Asher,” Shelly teased. “He’s never helped me like this before.”
“Mom…” He blushed, and she mussed his hair like he was still a kid.
“Want me to show you your room?” Asher asked once dinner was over.
I nodded and followed him upstairs. He stopped in front of a large guest room. “If you want a bigger one, there’s another down the hall.”
“This is fine,” I said.
“Goodnight.”
When the door clicked shut behind him, the quiet hit me like a wave. For the first time, I truly felt how far I’d come—from home, from Mom… from him.
I picked up my phone. My thumb hovered for a second over Hunter’s contact. Then, with a deep breath, I pressed Block.
Something I could never do until I got here.
Christina“Hunter… Are you crazy? What are you even doing?”Before I could push him away, his large, wet hand slid down my arm.His fingers wrapped around my wrist in an iron grip and dragged my hand downward through the rushing water.I tried to pull back but he was too strong.He forced my palm flat against his throbbing cock.I froze.That shift in my face —the way my breath hitched, the way my fingers instinctively curled around him — he noticed it immediately.He was rock-hard, thick and pulsing violently against my fingers.The sheer size filled my hand completely — a terrifying reminder of exactly how he used to ruin me.After five long years, I was touching the one thing I used to crave like nothing else.And then my fingers brushed against it.The cold, hard metal.He still had that piercing right through his dick.The familiar, wicked ring that used to ruthlessly rub against my inner walls.Hitting the deepest, most sensitive spot inside me until I was sobbing his name.The
ChristinaMy brain stopped working.His broad, muscular shoulders flexed as water cascaded down his back.The lean lines of his body glistened under the steam.I couldn’t look away.My eyes tracked the heavy droplet sliding over the perfect curve of his ass, his strong thighs.He looked even more dangerous than I remembered.More masculine.More lethal.My heart slammed against my ribs so hard I could barely breathe.I should turn around.I should walk out.I should do anything except stand here frozen, staring at the man I had spent five years trying to forget.But my body was paralyzed. My feet refused to move.“Do you still like what you see?” Hunter asked.His voice was low. Dark. Dripped with sarcasm.The sound jolted me.He hadn’t even turned around fully but he knew I was there.Of course he knew.“What?” I choked out, my voice barely a whisper.Hunter slowly turned his head.Hot water streaming down the sharp angle of his jaw.His lips curved into a knowing smirk — like he had
ChristinaI must have made the biggest mistake of my life coming back to this mansion.I told myself I was doing it for Kai — that he needed security.For his safety.And the kind of protection only Hunter’s world could provide.But the cost was becoming unbearable.I sat on the edge of the cab’s passenger seat and opened the rental app on my phone, desperately searching for any available house in the city.Something small.Something safe.Something far away from him.Nothing.Not a single decent listing.Every promising option was either “already rented” or mysteriously removed within minutes of me viewing it.Then suddenly a blank page.Nothing.I refreshed the page.I changed the filters.Still, nothing came up. Not a single property was listed for rent.How is this possible?I tossed the phone aside in frustration.I needed to get out of here.Back to the hotel.Back to some semblance of control, no matter how temporary.I muttered to myself as I headed downstairs, “I should tell
ChristinaMany things had happened at once.Just a month ago, Hunter didn’t even exist in my world.I had no idea where he was, what kind of monster he had become, or how ruthlessly he had built his empire.I had convinced myself I was finally safe.Now?I was living under the same roof as him again.Breathing the same air. Sleeping just doors away from the man who once ruined me.And the most humiliating part?Sitting here like a pathetic spectator, third-wheeling his lunch date with Lisa.I was sitting directly across from them, forced to watch every little interaction.Lisa’s perfectly manicured hand rested possessively on Hunter’s arm as she looked over the menu.The way she leaned into him when she laughed.Like he was already hers.But Hunter…He wasn't looking at his fiancée.He wasn't listening to whatever she was saying.His dark eyes were locked entirely on me. Tracking the nervous pulse in my throat.Like he wanted to see the jealousy I was trying so hard to hide.“Hunter…
HunterThe ride to the school was silent and thick with tension.We arrived at the elite kindergarten. Christina took the admission form with visibly shaking fingers.She started filling it out at a small desk near the entrance while I stood behind her.Close enough that I could feel the heat of radiating through her body.My eyes never left the tip of her pen.She wrote the fake birth date without hesitation — smooth and practiced. Like she had done it a hundred times before.Each letter felt like another slap across my face.Then her pen hovered over the medical history section.I leaned down slowly.My chest brushed against her back. My lips hovered near the shell of her ear.“Oh… What a coincidence… He has O-negative blood group too,” I murmured carelessly. Until my breath brushed the shell of her ears.Christina froze completely.Then she slowly turned her head, her eyes sharpening into daggers.“There are millions of people with O negative blood, Hunter,” she hissed under her br
HunterChris’s eyes flicked up to mine.Guarded and beautiful.She looked like she wanted to bolt from the table.Like she could feel the weight of my stare stripping her bare right in front of everyone.I leaned back in my chair, never breaking eye contact.I should hate her.I should want to destroy her for hiding my son from me.For writing another man’s name on my child’s birth certificate.For stealing the years I could never get back.Years that belonged to us.But I couldn’t.The anger always melted the second I looked at her.No matter how much she lied.No matter how much she ran.No matter how badly she hurt me.I could never stay angry at Chris for long.That was my weakness.And she knew it.It had happened the moment I saw her again in that hospital hallway — her eyes red and swollen from crying. When her body trembled with exhaustion and fear.Every ounce of that anger had vanished the moment I saw her standing outside the ICU.She looked completely broken the second she
ChristinaThe admission process was finally done. Papers signed, forms filled, reality sealed. Now came the real part—finding a place to live.“Asher, I’ll manage on my own. Don’t worry,” I said, clutching my bag tighter than I needed to.He gave me that easy smile, the kind that always made him lo
ChristinaIt had only been a week since Hunter vanished from my life, and yet his ghost still clung to me like a second skin.“Chris…” Shasha’s voice broke through the fog. The door smacked open. I quickly wiped my mouth and rushed out.She and Lena were standing with grocery bags in their arms. T
It had been a week since Hunter left.A week since his shadow stopped chasing me.A week since I tried to convince myself I could finally breathe again.That’s what I felt after his disappearance from the cafe.I loaded my bags into the back of the taxi and forced my hands not to tremble.“Chris, I
“Alright, if there’s any problem, you can call me.” Asher’s voice was warm. He gave me that boyish smile before disappearing into his room.I thought I wanted to be alone. I thought I needed silence.But the second the silence wrapped around me, my chest cracked open. Tears slipped down before I e







