LOGINBrooklyn's pov
"Time to feast."I heard Emerson say — cleats still on, grass-stained from soccer practice, heading straight for the kitchen like the fridge owed him something. I stayed on the couch and waited. The silence that followed was deeply satisfying. "What the — " A pause. Then louder. "Why is the fridge locked?" He came back into the living room and found me sitting with my legs crossed, the small key dangling from one finger. I smiled at him. He stared. I stood up, dropped the key into my pocket, and walked upstairs without saying a single word. --- The second punishment came after his shower. I heard him padding down the hall in his towel, still dripping, heading back to his room. Then he stopped. I heard nothing for a full three seconds. "Where is my door?" I was sitting inside his doorless room, toolkit beside me, the removed door leaning flat against the wall next to me. Emerson stood in the open frame, wet hair, jaw dropped, staring between me and the empty hinges. "You — " He pointed at me. Then at the door. Then back at me. "You took my door?" I patted the toolkit. "Privacy is a privilege, not a right. Your father agreed." He opened his mouth. "You have five seconds to walk away before I take the wardrobe door too." He walked away. --- By evening I thought we'd reached a quiet truce. He was on the couch in the living room, controller in hand, completely absorbed in whatever match he was playing online. I could hear his teammates through the headset. I walked in and turned the television off. "Brooklyn. I was about to win. We had them cornered." "Eight-thirty." I tucked the remote under my arm. "Screen time is done." He looked at me with an expression that suggested he was genuinely reconsidering every decision that had led to this moment. I went to bed feeling very good about my day. --- The next morning was calm. Daisy and I were at the dining table, her workbook open between us, pencils out. She was doing better — only two corrections this time. I tapped the page and gave her a thumbs up. She beamed. Footsteps on the stairs. Emerson appeared, hair still messy, school bag over one shoulder. He stopped when he saw us and then, instead of heading for the door, he walked toward me. He stopped again. Exhaled. "Brooklyn. We need to talk." "Whatever you have to say, you can say in front of Daisy." He glanced at his sister. Daisy looked up at him with wide, curious eyes. "Okay. Cool." He pulled out a chair and sat down. "I was just going to say — the rumour. About you and the teacher." He paused, choosing his words. "I actually think — " I was on my feet before he finished the sentence. My hand covered his mouth. His eyes went wide. "Not here," I said quietly. I pulled him up by the arm and pushed him into the hallway, pulling the door halfway shut behind us. "Five minutes." I crossed my arms. "Talk." He blinked at me. "You're kind of terrifying. You know that?" "You spent an entire school year making my life miserable. You don't get to be surprised that I have a backbone." I kept my voice low. "What were you going to say?" "I just — " He ran a hand through his hair, which was the first time I'd ever seen him look anything close to uncertain. "After yesterday. The fridge, the door, the TV — " He let out a short, disbelieving laugh. "That was not normal nanny behaviour." "You told me to punish you. Those were your exact words." "I was being sarcastic." "I wasn't." He stared at me. Then, slowly, he stepped forward. I held my ground as he put one hand against the wall beside me "Let's be honest," he said. "What I did to you in school all year — you thought that was bad?" "It was bad." "No." His voice dropped. "No, that was child's play compared to what you just put me through in twenty-four hours." A beat. "You're an evil genius." "You created me," I said. "You told me to bring it on." "I did." He nodded slowly. "I did say that." He dropped his hand from the wall and took a small step back. "Which is why I'm not here to fight." I waited. "I will never — and I mean never — accept you as my nanny," he said. "That is not changing. But I want to make a deal."Brooklyn's POV"The dinner." I stared at him. "You need me at the dinner.""Not at it." He glanced down the corridor both ways. A few students were moving at the far end but nobody close. He looked back at me and then did something I had not seen him do before — he stepped in and lowered his voice so that only I could hear it.His mouth was close to my ear. Close enough that I felt the warmth of it."I have a meeting tonight," he said quietly. "Seven o'clock. Same time as the dinner. My dad doesn't know about it and he won't approve it." A pause. "I need you to cover for me. Tell him I'm not feeling well or that something came up. Whatever you can make believable. Just get me out of that dining room without him asking questions."He stayed where he was for a second longer than necessary.Then he straightened up and took a step back, watching my face for a reaction.I looked at him.He looked at me.I put both hands flat on his chest and pushed.Not hard. Just enough to move him back a
Brooklyn's POV"I'm actually in the middle of something," I said, gesturing back toward the classroom door. "Can this wait until — "His hand closed around my wrist.Not roughly. Just firmly enough that stopping was the only reasonable option. A few people near the door were already looking. Someone inside the classroom had turned completely around in their seat to watch through the small window in the door. I could feel the stares landing on us like something physical."Emerson." I kept my voice low. "People are watching.""Let them." He was already moving, pulling me with him down the corridor without breaking stride.I could have pulled away. I thought about it. But the grip wasn't hurting me and something about the urgency in how he was moving made me hold the argument back. I matched his pace instead and let him lead us around the corner and further down the empty hallway until the classroom was out of sight and the sound of the lesson behind us faded into nothing.He let go.I t
Brooklyn's POVI should have gone to bed.Instead I was still standing in the hallway outside my bedroom door, telling myself I was just waiting for my eyes to adjust to the dark, while Patrick's voice carried faintly back to me from around the corner where he had stopped to say one more thing to Emerson."She's exactly the kind of girl you should be spending time with." His voice was low but the hallway carried sound well. "Intelligent, well-mannered, comes from a good family. Her father and I go back a long way, Emerson. This dinner is important."Emerson said nothing."I'm not asking you to make any decisions. I'm asking you to show up and be present." A pause. "Can you do that?""I said I'd be there.""I know what you said. I'm asking if you can actually be present. Not just in the room. Present."Another silence. Longer this time."Yes," Emerson said flatly."Good." The sound of Patrick moving. "Get some sleep. Tomorrow needs to go well."Footsteps came back in my direction and I
Brooklyn's POV"You don't have to do that, you know."I turned to look at him. "Do what?""Daisy." Emerson leaned against the wall and crossed his arms, keeping his voice low enough not to carry through her door. "You don't have to be everywhere she is. You don't have to insert yourself into every moment.""Insert myself?" I kept my voice equally low but the edge in it was immediate. "She was alone in the dark crying with both hands over her ears. What exactly was I supposed to do? Walk past?""I'm just saying you don't need to force it.""I'm not forcing anything.""You've been with her every evening this week.""Because she comes to find me." I held his gaze. "Every single time, Emerson, she comes to me. I don't go looking for it. She knocks on my door, she sits next to me at the table, she slips drawings under my door in the morning." I paused. "I'm not forcing my way into her life. She's letting me in."Something shifted in his expression. Just slightly. He looked away from me tow
Brooklyn's POV"Thank you," I said quietly.But he was already gone.I stood there alone in the kitchen staring at the doorway he had just walked through. Then I picked up the glass and drank the whole thing in one go. Every drop. Cold and clean all the way down.I set the empty glass in the sink, wiped my face properly with the back of my hand, and went back to the kitchen table where Daisy's workbook was still open.I sat down, picked up my pen, and kept going like nothing had happened.---The rain started an hour later.It didn't ease in gently. It arrived all at once — heavy, loud, and relentless against every window in the house. The kind of rain that made the whole building feel smaller. I was in my room going through my notes when the first crack of thunder rolled through the sky so hard I felt it in my chest.I put my pen down.I sat still for a moment and listened to the rain hammer the windows. Then I got up.Daisy's room was at the end of the hall. I knocked once softly be
Brooklyn's POV"Daisy, that's wrong." I tapped the page gently. "Try it again."She looked at the math problem, erased her answer slowly, and started over. I sat beside her at the kitchen table and watched her work, one hand wrapped around my mug, the evening quiet around us.That was how the last two days had gone. Quiet. Steady. Uncomplicated.Emerson had not spoken to me once since the hallway outside Daisy's room. Not at home, not at school, not even an accidental glance in the corridor. He moved through spaces I occupied like I was furniture. At school he sat across the classroom and looked through me. At home he came in, went upstairs, and stayed there. Our deal was holding perfectly and it felt exactly like what it was — two people doing a very convincing job of pretending the other one did not exist.I told myself it was fine. It was what we had agreed to.I focused on Daisy instead and found it was not difficult at all. She was easy to be around in the way that only very quie
Brooklyn's pov"Teacher f***er."I heard it the second I walked through the doors of Westfield Academy. Nobody said it to my face. They never did. Just loud enough for me to catch it, quiet enough for them to deny it.I kept walking.Two weeks. That's how long this rumour had been following me arou
Brooklyn's pov "Here is the deal." Emerson leaned against the hallway wall, arms crossed, voice low enough that Daisy couldn't hear from the dining room. He looked completely relaxed, like he negotiated truces every morning before breakfast. "I stay out of your way," he said, "so you're free to
Brooklyn's pov "I'm really sorry, Mr. Weston. I can't work for you."The words came out before I could stop them. Patrick turned from the hallway and looked at me slowly, the way someone does when they're deciding how serious you are."Brooklyn." His voice was calm. "You are contracted through th
Brooklyn's pov "Move!"Emerson shoved past me before I could even process what was happening. He threw himself over Daisy and me, arms spread wide, taking the full weight of the branch across his back.The crack was loud. Then silence.I scrambled to my feet, heart hammering. "Emerson — ""I'm fin







