LOGIN️Warning ️ MATURE CONTENT Zara comes home to Willow Creek and crashes into forbidden heat with her best friend Amina's widowed dad, Elias. ****** Ripping my pants aside ..he slids his finger inside me .. eyes locked on mine ..I let out a gasp as I feels his powerful fingers touching the walls of my womanhood. "Should I stop?, he asked his voice raced with need and a hint of teasing to it.I shuttered, the pleasure overwhelming my sense of judgement and reasoning. I just had one thought in mind," I wanted him to fill me up,and fuck me, destroy my pussy without a care of anyone, not even my best friend." ***** When the pregnancy test turns positive, the secret explodes. Elias wants her and their baby forever. Amina finding out her best friend is carrying her father's child could ruin everything. Raw, unprotected, age-gap obsession with one life-altering surprise.
View MoreThe rain came down in sheets over Sea-Tac Airport, turning the pickup lane into a gray river of taillights and windshield wipers. I huddled under the overhang, phone in hand, waiting for the Uber that would take me the last hour north to Willow Creek. Three years away at college in California had made me forget how relentless Pacific Northwest rain could be—like the sky was personally offended you’d left.
Twenty now, supposedly an adult, I still felt like the same girl who’d spent every summer at my best friend’s house, eating popsicles on the back deck and pretending we were grown-ups. But grown-ups don’t get butterflies just thinking about walking through that front door again.
The Uber finally pulled up. I slid into the back seat, suitcase thumping beside me, and gave the driver the address: 1427 Maple Lane, Willow Creek, WA. Population 8,000 on a good day. One main street with a coffee shop that doubled as the gossip hub, a hardware store run by the same family for three generations, and enough evergreens to make you feel like the forest was hugging the town.
By the time we turned onto Maple Lane, the rain had eased to a steady patter. The house looked exactly as I remembered: two-story Craftsman with navy siding, white trim, wide front porch strung with fairy lights year-round. Amina’s dad had kept it perfect, even after everything.
The porch light glowed warm against the dusk. I paid the driver, dragged my bag up the wet steps, and hesitated at the doorbell. Ridiculous. I’d practically lived here. But three years is long enough to make everything feel new. Or maybe it was just him.
The door flew open.
“Zara!” Amina squealed, launching into me like we were still in high school. She smelled like coconut conditioner and that cinnamon candle she always burned. “You’re actually here! I was convinced you’d ghost me for another internship.”
“Never,” I laughed, hugging her tight. “Missed your drama too much.”
She pulled back, eyes bright. “Get in here—Dad’s in the kitchen attempting grilled cheese without setting off the smoke alarm. Spoiler: he’s failing.”
I stepped inside, shaking rain from my jacket. The house wrapped around me like a memory: faint scent of cedar and coffee, the creak of the hardwood floor, the living room bookshelf still crammed with paperbacks and framed photos. Safe. Familiar.
And then I heard him.
“Zara?” His voice rolled from the back of the house, deep and calm, the kind that always made noise settle. Footsteps. Then he appeared in the hallway.
Elias Carter hadn’t let time dull him. Thirty-five now, maybe thirty-six—I’d done the quick math years ago during one of those late-night gossip sessions with Amina and immediately wished I hadn’t. Tall, solid, with broad shoulders that filled doorways. His dark hair was still short, but silver flecked the sides now, giving him that distinguished edge. He wore a faded navy Henley pushed up to his elbows and jeans that looked lived-in. The sleeves showed forearms dusted with sawdust—he still built custom furniture in the garage on weekends.
He smiled, small and real, crinkling the corners of his hazel eyes. “Look at you. All grown up and back where you belong.”
Heat crept up my neck. He said stuff like that to everyone who’d been away. But hearing it directed at me felt… heavier. Or maybe I was projecting because I’d spent the last three years trying not to think about how his laugh sounded when he was tired, or how his hands looked when he fixed things.
“Hey, Elias,” I said, managing to sound normal. “Still setting off smoke alarms?”
“Only when gorgeous company shows up unexpectedly.” He winked—light, teasing—and stepped forward to grab my suitcase. His fingers brushed mine. A spark. Quick, stupid, undeniable.
Amina groaned. “Dad, ew. Reel it in.”
He chuckled, low and warm. “Come on, both of you. Food’s almost salvageable. Zara, you hungry?”
“Starving.”
We followed him to the kitchen. The table was set simply: gooey grilled cheeses stacked on a plate, tomato soup steaming in bowls, a bowl of cut apples because he always insisted on “balance.” Nothing fancy, but it screamed home.
Amina talked nonstop while we ate—about her graphic design internship downtown, the barista who kept writing his number on her cup, how she’d finally convinced her professor to accept a late project. I laughed in the right spots, nodded along, but my eyes kept drifting to Elias.
He listened to her with that quiet intensity, chin resting on his hand, nodding thoughtfully. When she complained about the barista ghosting after one date, his jaw flexed—just a flicker. Protective. Always protective. But when his gaze met mine across the table, it softened. Curious. Like he was seeing me for the first time in years.
“So,” he said once Amina dashed upstairs to grab her phone for some TikTok she had to show me, “how’s college really treating you, Zara? No sugarcoating.”
I shrugged, swirling my spoon in the soup. “It’s… okay. Overwhelming sometimes. I switched majors—communications to environmental science. Figured I should pick something that matters.”
“You’ve always cared about things that matter.” He leaned back, arms crossed loosely over his chest. “Remember when you were sixteen and organized that whole neighborhood cleanup after the big storm? You had half the block out there with trash bags.”
I smiled, surprised he remembered. “Someone had to make sure Amina didn’t ditch for the mall.”
Quiet settled between us, comfortable but electric. Rain tapped the kitchen window like it was eavesdropping.
Amina burst back in. “Movie night! Zara, you pick. Dad, no history docs.”
He groaned theatrically. “One time. One time I suggested a Ken Burns marathon.”
“Trauma,” Amina declared, pulling me toward the living room.
We piled onto the oversized sectional—me in the middle because Amina sprawled across one end with popcorn, Elias on the other side, feet kicked up, pretending he wasn’t watching the cheesy rom-com she’d chosen. Halfway through, Amina yawned dramatically.
“I’m out,” she announced. “Jet lag’s hitting you hard too, Z. Guest room’s ready—same bed, fresh sheets.”
She hugged me tight, pecked her dad on the cheek, and vanished upstairs.
The house fell quiet except for the rain and the soft glow of the TV credits.
I should have gone to bed. I knew it.
But I stayed, curled under the throw blanket, knees drawn up. Elias didn’t move either.
After a long minute, he muted the TV. “You okay?”
I glanced over. His face was half-shadowed, eyes steady on me.
“Yeah. Just… strange being back. Everything’s the same. I’m not.”
He nodded slowly. “That happens. You leave a kid, come back a woman.” He paused. “It looks good on you.”
My breath hitched. The words weren’t overt. But the quiet way he said them, the way his gaze lingered, made my heart thud against my ribs.
“Thanks,” I whispered.
He shifted, leaning forward, elbows on his knees. Closer. The air between us thinned. “Zara… if you ever need to talk—school, guys, whatever. Door’s always open. Has been since you were ten.”
Guys. The word felt wrong. Because right now, staring at him—the faint lines from years of smiling through grief, the steady strength in his frame—I didn’t want to talk about college boys.
I wanted to talk about him.
“I know,” I said, voice too soft. Too raw.
His eyes dropped to my mouth. Just for a second. Then back up. Something raw flickered there—surprise, maybe. Or recognition. Or the same dangerous spark I felt.
The rain slammed harder, like the sky was warning us.
He cleared his throat. “You should get some rest.”
“Yeah.” I didn’t budge.
Neither did he.
Then he reached over—slow, careful—and brushed a damp strand of hair from my cheek. His fingers lingered, warm and rough from years of building things. His thumb grazed my skin once. Barely. Enough to make my pulse roar.
“Goodnight, Zara.”
I stood on unsteady legs, mumbled goodnight, and escaped upstairs before I could do something irreversible.
In the guest room, I leaned against the door, heart racing.
This was Elias. Amina’s dad. The man who’d driven us to prom, taught me how to change a tire, held his sobbing daughter through the worst year of her life after her mom’s accident eight years ago.
And I’d just let him touch me like I was someone he could want.
Worse—I wanted him to.
I slid to the floor, hugged my knees, and listened to the rain.
Wondering how I’d survive the summer without stepping over a line that was already blurring.
And deep down, terrified I didn’t want to stay on the safe side anymore.
The house was supposed to be empty.Lila was on a thirty-six-hour call shift, and I had only come by to drop off the lasagna I’d made for them. But Marcus was there — shirtless in the kitchen after a workout, sweat still glistening on his broad chest and carved abs. His gray sweatpants hung low on his hips, leaving nothing to the imagination.“Elena,” he said, voice low and rough when he saw me standing in the doorway. His eyes darkened as they dragged over my sundress. “You shouldn’t be here right now.”I knew I should leave. Instead, I set the dish on the counter and stepped closer.“I can’t stop thinking about you,” I whispered, the confession spilling out like a sin I was tired of hiding. “Every time I see you with her… every time you call her your wife… I get so fucking wet it hurts.”Marcus’s jaw clenched. In two strides he had me pinned against the fridge, one thick thigh pushing between my legs as his big hand wrapped around my throat — not squeezing, just holding. Possessing.
mouth moved down my neck, sucking and biting hard enough to leave faint marks that would fade by morning. I arched into him, fingers threading through his hair as he worked his way lower. When he reached my breasts, he took one nipple into his mouth, sucking deeply while his hand kneaded the other, pinching and rolling the tight peak until I was whimpering.“Elias…” I breathed, hips rolling against the hard length of him.He dropped to his knees in front of me, hands sliding my pants and underwear down in one smooth motion. He looked up at me, eyes dark with hunger and that familiar clingy need.“Spread your legs for Daddy,” he said, voice filthy and low. “Let me taste how wet you still are from carrying my cum all day.”I widened my stance. He leaned in immediately, his tongue dragging slowly up my slit, savoring the taste of us mixed together. A deep, satisfied groan rumbled from his chest as he found my clit and sucked it gently into his mouth. My knees buckled. He gripped my hips
The house was quiet after Amina went to bed. The kind of quiet that pressed against the skin, heavy with everything unsaid during the day. Elias and I moved through the familiar motions of closing up — locking the front door, turning off the porch lights, checking that Lila’s monitor was on in the nursery. But there was a current running beneath it all tonight, something sharper and more urgent than the usual exhaustion after a long visit.When we finally stepped into our bedroom and closed the door behind us, Elias didn’t speak. He simply turned me against the wall, one large hand sliding up to cup the back of my neck as his mouth found mine. The kiss was deep from the start, slow and claiming, like he had been holding himself back all day and could no longer.His other hand moved down my body, possessive and sure, slipping under my shirt to palm my breast. I gasped into his mouth as his thumb brushed over my nipple, already tight and sensitive. He groaned low in his throat, the soun
Fifteen Years LaterLila was twenty when she left for college.She chose a school four hours away — the same distance Amina had once traveled. Elias had tried very hard not to make a big deal about it, but the night before she left, I caught him sitting in her empty room at two in the morning, just staring at the walls.“She’s ready,” I told him, leaning in the doorway.He didn’t look at me. “I know. That doesn’t make it easier.”Amina had come home for the weekend to help Lila pack. She was thirty-six now, married to Noah for eight years, and working as a therapist specializing in grief and family transitions. She had built a quiet, steady life two towns over. They didn’t have children yet. She had told us, privately, that she wasn’t sure if she ever would. We had told her that was okay.On Lila’s last night home, the five of us sat on the porch one final time before she left. Lila was sprawled across the swing with her head in Amina’s lap. Noah sat on the steps. Elias and I shared t
The days between Christmas and New Year’s moved slowly, the way winter days in Willow Creek always did. The snow stayed on the ground, and the town felt hushed under its white blanket. Amina had decided to stay through the first week of January instead of going back right after Christmas. She hadn’
before had left everything outside soft and muffled, and the only sounds in the house were the occasional creak of old floorboards and the low hum of the furnace. Elias and I woke early, as we always did on Christmas. He made coffee while I warmed the cinnamon rolls Mrs. Delgado had dropped off the
The days blurred together under the constant Pacific Northwest drizzle, but the tension in the house on Maple Lane only sharpened. Three weeks. That was how long we had before Amina brought Noah home for the weekend. The name alone had become a trigger for Elias — a spark that turned every touch in
The house on Maple Lane felt both emptier and fuller the morning after Noah left. The guest towels were folded and put away, the porch cushions had been straightened, and the faint scent of the lilac soap he’d brought still lingered near the front door. Elias and I stood in the kitchen with fresh c












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