LOGINSeth opened the door before I finished knocking.
He took one look at me standing on his doorstep with my bag and my ruined mascara and the particular expression of someone who has just walked out of a war they'd been losing for three years, and he stepped aside without a word. No questions, no careful arrangement of his face into something sympathetic, no performance of concern. That was the thing about Seth that I had always taken for granted and only now understood was rare. He had never once in fifteen years asked me to explain myself before he let me in. I made it as far as his kitchen. I set my bag on the table and stood there with both hands flat against the surface and my eyes fixed on the grain of the wood and tried very hard to hold onto the steadiness I had maintained for the past forty minutes. The drive over. The dark streets. The way I had kept my breathing even and my hands on the wheel and not let myself think about any of it until I was somewhere safe. I didn't manage it. It came out of me the way things do when you've been holding them too long, not gradually but all at once, a single ragged breath that broke open into several, that became something I hadn't allowed myself in three years of a marriage that had required me to be smaller and quieter and more grateful than I was. It wasn't elegant. It wasn't the quiet dignified grief of someone who has things under control. It was the ugly, exhausted kind that comes from a body that has simply run out of places to put things. Seth put his arms around me and didn't say anything at all. I cried until I was empty. It took longer than I expected. At some point we had ended up on the kitchen floor with our backs against the cabinet doors, the way we used to sit in high school when the world felt too large for the rooms we were in. He handed me water when I needed it. He didn't offer perspective or silver linings or the reassurances people reach for because silence makes them uncomfortable. He just stayed, which was the only thing I needed and the thing I had not had in a very long time. By the time the windows began going pale with early light I had stopped crying. I sat with my knees pulled up and my back against the cabinet and noticed that something had changed, not dramatically, not the way things change in stories, but quietly. A door closing from the inside. A decision settling into place without needing to be announced. "I'm leaving the country," I said. Seth turned his head to look at me. "Okay." "I need to be gone before he thinks to look. Before anyone does. I need distance and I need time and I need to be somewhere no one knows my name." "I know what you mean." He was quiet for a moment. "I'm coming with you." "Seth—" "I have a lease ending next month. I work remotely. I have a bag I never fully unpacked from the last time I moved." He said it the way he said most things, evenly, as though the decision had already been made and he was simply informing me of the relevant facts. "So. Where are we going?" We sat on his kitchen floor and built a plan as the city woke up outside. It was a practical exercise, deliberately so, because practicality was the only register either of us could manage at five in the morning after the night we'd had. Money, documents, what could be liquidated quickly and what couldn't be replaced. Travel routes. The medical care I would need over the coming months. What the next year would require if I was going to do this properly and not just run and fall apart somewhere unfamiliar. We didn't talk about what it meant. There would be time for meaning later, in some other city, when there was enough distance to think clearly about any of it. At half past six I used Seth's laptop. The first document I printed was medical. Clinical language, correct letterhead, a procedure recorded in careful administrative detail that had not in fact taken place. Seth had made a call the night before, quietly and without explaining more than was necessary, to someone who owed him more than a favor and who understood that some things are better left undocumented. I read the form twice. I felt nothing about what it was, only about what it would accomplish, which was to close the one door that might otherwise give Darius a reason to come after me. Let him believe I had complied. Let him think he had won that too. It cost me nothing to give him that, because it wasn't real, and I was done spending real things on him. The second document was the divorce papers. I had signed them in a parking lot under a street light on the way over, the pen moving steadily across every line, every page, because I had already made that decision in the hallway of my own house when I looked at him and saw nothing worth fighting for. I didn't cry while signing them. That had surprised me. I thought I would. I drove back to the house alone. Seth offered to come. I told him no, because some things need to be done by the person they belong to, and this was mine. The street was empty. The house was dark, every window unlit, the same facade it had always presented to the world, clean and large and giving nothing away. I walked to the front door and crouched down. I slid the fake medical form through the mail slot and heard it land softly on the other side. Then I took the divorce papers and fed them under the gap at the bottom of the door, heard them whisper across the hardwood of the foyer, traveling further into the house than I would ever go again. I stood up. I looked at the house for a moment. Just looked at it, the dark glass and the stone steps and the life I had tried, genuinely and completely, to build inside its walls. Then I walked back to my car, started the engine, and drove toward whatever came next.Madame Loretto's cane tapped against the floor.Tap. Tap. Tap.Ava remained in third position in the center of the studio, arms extended, while the other dancers moved toward the barres along the walls. The afternoon light filtered through tall windows, illuminating dust and the accumulated residue of rosin and sweat. The air tasted like pine and exhaustion.Tap. Tap. Tap."Your landing, Ms. Chen." Madame Loretto didn't raise her voice. Her voice never rose. That was what made it worse. "The fouetté itself was adequate, your extension acceptable. But the landing." She tapped her cane once more against the hardwood. "The landing was imprecise."Ava kept her arms in position. Her muscles were screaming. Lactic acid burned through her calves and thighs, the kind of burn that came from six hours of repetition, six hours of trying to perfect something that still wasn't perfect."Odette does not tolerate imprecision," Madame Loretto said. "You will remember this when you perform the role, i
I fell asleep at my desk again.I knew it even before I fully woke up, the way your neck tells you before your brain catches up, that dull ache spreading from the base of my skull down between my shoulder blades. My cheek was pressed against the corner of a fabric swatch book, and the imprint of it was probably going to stay on my face for the next twenty minutes. I'd knocked over my pencil cup at some point and a dozen colored pencils had rolled across the blueprints I'd been trying to finish since eleven.It was past two in the morning. The loft was quiet except for the hum of the city seven floors below, that low constant sound that Los Angeles never fully turned off, and the desk lamp I'd forgotten to angle away from my eyes was throwing a warm yellow circle across the scattered fabric samples and paint chips and almost empty coffee mug that had been full when I sat down.I didn't move yet.I knew what was waiting in that place just before full waking, the tail end of the dream I'
Project R4 C1-C6Chapter 1 She Couldn't Be PregnantLin Shiyan pushed open the door to the private room and went in. She saw Feng Xingzhi sitting lazily on the sofa, with a young and charming girl nestled softly in his arms.When the girl saw Lin Shiyan walk in, she grabbed a document and threw it at her, saying arrogantly, "I'm three months pregnant, and I've already had the fetal sex determined at the hospital. It's a boy. Lin Shiyan, if you know what's good for you, you should take the initiative to divorce me."Lin Shiyan grabbed the test results and glanced at them; she was indeed pregnant."Let's go," Lin Shiyan said to the young woman. "It's still early; we can still go to the hospital for an abortion.""Lin Shiyan, you are incredibly audacious! How dare you abort the eldest grandson of the Feng family!" The woman's expression changed drastically. She stood up abruptly and slapped Lin Shiyan.Lin Shiyan grabbed the woman's wrist and forcefully flung her away.Looking at
The soap burned the small cut on my knuckle as I scrubbed the last plate in the massive pile the household staff had deliberately left for me.Three years of this and you’d think I’d be used to it by now, but the casual cruelty still managed to sting in ways I didn’t want to examine too closely.I rinsed the plate and set it carefully in the drying rack, my hands moving with the efficiency of someone who’d done this hundreds of times before, then dried my hands and headed upstairs to tackle the next task on my invisible list of duties.Aurelia’s laundry sat in a delicate heap on our bedroom floor, silks and cashmeres that required hand washing because the dry cleaners could never get them quite right according to her exacting standards.I filled the basin with cool water and special detergent, working the fabric gently between my fingers while my mind drifted to the dinner I’d planned for tonight.Today was our anniversary. Three years since her grandfather had asked me to marry into
“You’re hurt.” He says walking up to me.“It’s just a scratch,” I told myself to be unfazed that he just fought off three men without even shifting to his wolf form, but I couldn’t help being impressed.He takes my forearm to examine the back of it where the bastard had attacked me from behind. Once again I was affected by him. He stood so close to me I could see the flecks of green in his amber eyes, his proximity had my thoughts in shambles.“I’m fine.” I swallowed nervously and tried to pull away but his grip was firm. I’ve never been so aware of anyone like this and it scared the shit out of me.“So much for being able to take care of yourself.”He said referring to what I said to him the first time we met and I reddened.I barely noticed when he pulled out a handkerchief from his pocket and used it to stifle the bleeding. I was still high on adrenaline and this wasn’t my first time being beaten up so I was able to marginally keep it together when he tied the handkerchief around m
She was awake at the crack of dawn, earlier than he usually woke up for his prayers. She searched, all her bags, every inch of her room even under her bed, as though she might have sleep walked and kept it there.After turning her room insude out she went out to the car, creeping like a thief in the darkness.She rummaged through the seats praying she hadn’t left it in her apartment, but it wasn’t there. She opened the boot of the car and saw a brown package there.She knew that couldn’t be it because it wasn’t wrapped but deeperatioj made her tear it open.She stepped back when red fabric fell to the good of the car.She picked it up what seems to be a garter and unfolded the rest of it.Lingerie. Her husband’s possibly ex paramour gifted her lingerie. Huh.She gave up the search making a mental note to call her former landlord the next day and went back to sleep.When she wone up, It was as if the previous events had never happened, if there wasn’t a missing plate in the set of 12
Brynn povI knew he was exaggerating. I had spent fifteen years learning how to read performance, how to identify the seam between what a person was feeling and what they were choosing to show, and what I was watching from the doorway of Darius's recovery room on the third evening was a man who was
The doctor’s instructions were clear and medically sound. Two weeks of limited activity, no stairs, no stress, nothing that would compromise the surgical site or delay healing. I followed these instructions with military precision for exactly four days. On day five I woke up to the smell of coffe
(Darius’s POV)I woke up to the steady sound of a monitor and a dull, pulling pain in my side. It took a moment for things to settle into place, for memory to catch up with the present.The surgery.Jake.I turned my head slightly, ignoring the discomfort. “Jake.”The nurse glanced up from where sh
The waiting room became its own kind of world, one where time stretched and warped until it barely made sense anymore.At first, I tried to keep track of it.I noticed the clock on the wall, the steady sweep of the second hand, the quiet shuffle of nurses passing through, the occasional murmur from







