LOGINI’ve loved my best friend’s father for years. Damian Cole is untouchable. A cold, powerful tech billionaire who built an empire from nothing. He’s disciplined. Controlled. Off-limits. And completely unaware that every time he looks at me, my heart forgets how to beat. Until the night he catches me sneaking out with another man. The way he looks at me changes. The way he touches me changes. The rules change. What starts as one reckless kiss turns into a secret we can’t control. A love we shouldn’t want. A betrayal that could destroy the one person we both care about most — his daughter, my best friend. And when I discover I’m pregnant… I realize loving him won’t just ruin a friendship. It might ruin everything. But Damian Cole doesn’t lose what belongs to him. And this time… he’s choosing me.
View MoreAva pov
The first time Damian Cole looked at me like a woman instead of his daughter's best friend, I was halfway into a stranger's car. Chloe's birthday parties were never small. They were events. The kind where fairy lights wrapped around the trees in the garden and expensive champagne flowed like water. Her friends crowded the music near the pool, laughing too loudly, while her father's investors stood in tight circles under the patio heaters discussing numbers and pretending they were not judging everything around them. I had been moving between both worlds all night. Too young for the investors. Too serious for Chloe's wilder friends. Smiling. Laughing. Pretending I did not feel out of place. Daniel chose that exact night to tell me he was not looking for anything serious. He said it kindly. That was the worst part. Soft voice. Gentle smile. Like he was letting me down easily. Like I had imagined something more all on my own. I nodded like it did not matter. It mattered. I told Chloe I needed air. She was already tipsy, blowing out candles for the second time because someone missed recording it the first time. She hugged me and promised we would do brunch tomorrow. I slipped away before anyone could ask questions. The driveway was quieter than the garden. Darker. The music faded into a distant rhythm. The night air cooled the heat in my face. Marcus found me there. He had been orbiting the party all evening, one of Damian's newer investors. Polished. Confident. Slightly too charming. The kind of man who looked at you like you were already an option. "Leaving already?" he asked. "Just getting some air." "You deserve better company than college boys who cannot commit." I almost laughed. He was not wrong. It just sounded different coming from him. "I can drive you home," he offered. I should have said no. Instead I shrugged. "Sure." It felt harmless. It felt like proof that I could move on easily. He walked me to his car. His hand rested low on my back. Not inappropriate enough to cause a scene. Just close enough to remind me he thought he had permission. "I promise I will get you home safe," he said, opening the passenger door. Safe. I stared at the open car door and wondered if I was trying to prove something to myself. I placed one foot inside. Headlights cut across the driveway. Bright. Direct. Unavoidable. Marcus muttered something under his breath. I knew that car. No one else parked that precisely. No one else moved through space with that kind of quiet authority. The driver's door opened. Damian stepped out. He was not wearing his tie anymore. His jacket hung open. His sleeves were rolled once at the wrist. He looked less like the billionaire host and more like the man who built the empire himself. He walked toward us without raising his voice. "Mr. Cole," Marcus said quickly. "I was just taking Ava home." Damian's eyes never left me. Not Marcus. Not the car. Me. I felt the shift immediately. Something in his expression had changed. It was not anger. It was not concern. It was sharper than that. He reached us and removed Marcus's hand from my back. Calm. Controlled. Firm. "She is not going anywhere with you," he said. Marcus forced a polite smile. "She already agreed." "I am aware." The tone was polite. Too polite. Marcus hesitated. Investors knew hierarchy. They could sense when they had stepped into the wrong territory. "I assure you, sir, she is perfectly safe." "Your assurance is not required." Marcus stepped back first. I stepped fully out of his car. "Why do you care?" I asked before I could stop myself. The question hung in the air. Damian moved closer. "And if I had not arrived," he said quietly, "who were you planning to leave with?" "I was not planning anything." "You were getting into his car." "That does not mean anything." "It means everything." There was something beneath his calm. Something restrained. Marcus cleared his throat awkwardly. "I think I will head out." Neither of us looked at him. His car pulled away, leaving only silence and the distant echo of music from the garden. Damian's hand settled at my waist. Not casually. Not protectively. Possessively. "You do not let other men touch what belongs to me," he said. The words did not feel accidental. Belongs to me. The words did not feel careless. They did not feel like something he would regret in the morning. They felt deliberate. Like he had been holding them back for years and had finally decided not to. I searched his face for humor. For a sign that he was exaggerating. For any softness that would make the statement easier to breathe through. There was none. Only control. Only something darker than I had ever seen directed at me. "I am not yours," I said, though my voice was softer than I intended. His thumb pressed slightly against my waist. Not enough to hurt. Enough to make it clear he heard me. "Then stop acting like you are trying to make me forget that." My heart pounded so hard it felt impossible that he could not hear it. "I was not trying to make you do anything." "You were getting into another man's car." "You do not get to be jealous." His jaw tightened. "I do not get jealous." "Then what is this?" Silence stretched between us. The kind of silence that changes things. He opened the passenger door of his car. "Get in." This time, I did. The interior smelled like leather and something distinctly him. Clean. Controlled. Familiar. He closed the door and walked around to the driver's side. For a moment I considered running back inside. Pretending none of it had happened. He got in. Started the engine. Neither of us spoke as he pulled away from the house. Streetlights passed over his face in brief flashes of gold and shadow. His hands were steady on the wheel, mine were not. I did not know whether I was more afraid of him being angry or of him not being.I found it by accident.I was in the study looking for a charger — the kind of errand that had become unremarkable over months of coming and going through this house, when I opened the wrong drawer.It was near the back. A photograph, not framed, just loose between two folders like it had been placed there quickly and not moved since. I almost closed the drawer without looking properly.I didn't.The man in the photo was Damian, unmistakably, but a version of him I had never seen. Younger — not dramatically, just enough to show in the set of his shoulders, the slight looseness around his jaw. He was laughing. Properly, genuinely, the kind of laugh that didn't know it was being observed. The kind I had never once seen on his face in all the months I had known him as something more than Chloe's father.Beside him was a woman.She was turned slightly toward him, her hand on his arm, her expression warm in the particular way of someone completely at ease with the person beside them. She w
It happened at the gallery.The Meridian show was the kind of event Chloe had been excited about for two weeks — she had texted me about it four separate times, sent a photo of the outfit she was planning, and arrived twenty minutes early to walk the first room before the crowd filled in. By the time Damian and I arrived separately, she had already identified three pieces she wanted to discuss at length and one artist she was prepared to argue about."You came," she said when she saw me, immediately linking her arm through mine."You asked me four times.""Because I wasn't sure you'd actually come." She pulled me toward a large canvas on the far wall. "Look at this one. Tell me what you see."I told her what I saw. She disagreed with most of it, which was exactly what she had been hoping for."No, no — see the way the light falls on the left side? That's not accidental. He's doing something with the asymmetry." She tilted her head. "You're looking at the surface.""Most people look at
He texted on a Wednesday afternoon. Not about the evening or the suite or anything that required a coded answer.Just: *Saturday morning. Early. I know somewhere quiet.*I read it twice.Then: *Okay.*He picked me up two streets from my building at seven-thirty, before the city had properly woken up. I got in the car and he glanced at me once and pulled back into the road without ceremony, which I appreciated. No preamble. No checking whether I had changed my mind.We drove for about twenty minutes, out of the central streets and into a quieter neighbourhood I didn't know well — wide roads, old trees, the kind of area that felt like it belonged to a slower pace of life.He parked outside a small place on a side street. The kind of café that didn't have a sign you could read from the car, just a window full of warm light and two tables outside that nobody was using yet."You've been here before," I said."Occasionally. They don't know me." He opened the door. "That was the point."Insi
Chloe cried once, properly, about twenty minutes after I arrived.Not dramatically. She wasn't that kind of person. It was just one moment where something she was saying about the boy — what he had said, how he had said it, the particular cruelty of someone who knew exactly which words would land — caught up with her, and her voice broke, and she pressed her hand over her eyes and said *sorry* twice in quick succession."Don't apologise," I said."I'm not even that upset about him," she said, which was what people always said when they were more upset than they wanted to be. "It's just—" She exhaled. "I let myself think it was going somewhere. That's the embarrassing part.""That's not embarrassing. That's just hoping.""Same thing sometimes.""No," I said. "It really isn't."She looked at me. Her eyes were red at the edges but she had composed herself again, the way she always did, quickly and without fuss. "When did you get so wise?""I've always been wise. You just don't listen."S
He didn’t apologise. That was the first thing. He looked at me across the quiet of the car park and waited for whatever I was going to lead with, and when I didn’t speak immediately he said, simply and without preamble: “I didn’t want to share your attention tonight.” I stared at him. “That’s y
His message came at 11:47 in the morning.One word.*Tonight.*I read it once. Put my phone face-down. Picked it up again. Read it a second time like the meaning might have changed.It hadn’t.Andre rolled his chair back and looked at me over the top of his monitor. “You’ve gone very still.”“I’m t
Chloe made coffee like nothing had happened. That was the first thing I heard when I came downstairs. The clatter of the cupboard. The grind of the machine. Her humming something under her breath, off-key and unbothered, the way she always did on mornings when she was in a good mood and had nowhe
By the time I got home, the quiet felt heavier than usual.The kind of silence that leaves too much space for thoughts you would rather not sit with.I dropped my bag on the chair and stood there for a second longer than necessary, still in my heels, still in the same dress












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