LOGINThe rest of the afternoon dragged by. Mia stayed by the pool in her tiny black bikini, laughing at Jake’s dumb jokes, sipping lemonade, and pretending not to notice how Ethan’s eyes kept finding her. Every time she stretched languidly on the lounge chair, letting the sun kiss her barely-covered skin, she felt his gaze—like a slow caress across her breasts, her stomach, the smooth curve of her ass when she rolled over.
Sarah stayed glued to his side, touching his arm, kissing his shoulder. Mia smiled sweetly through it all, twirling a strand of damp hair around her finger, occasionally “accidentally” brushing her foot against Ethan’s calf under the water when they were all splashing around.
“You’re awfully quiet today, squirt,” Ethan had murmured once when Sarah went inside for sunscreen. His voice was low, teasing, but his eyes had darkened as they traced the way her wet bikini top clung to her hardened nipples.
Mia had only shrugged, biting her lower lip innocently. “Just enjoying the sun, Ethan. Why? Am I distracting you?”
He had chuckled, but the sound was rough. “Why would you distract me?”
Then Sarah had returned, and the moment shattered.
By evening, the group had moved inside. Jake ordered pizza, they watched a movie, and the two couples cuddled on the big sectional while Mia sat curled in the oversized armchair, knees tucked up, pretending to scroll on her phone.
She had changed into soft sleep shorts and a thin camisole—no bra, the fabric thin enough that the cool air kept her nipples tight and visible if anyone bothered to look. Ethan did. More than once.
Around eleven, Jake and his date disappeared upstairs with barely a goodnight. Sarah yawned dramatically and tugged Ethan toward the guest room at the end of the hall—the room that had basically become his over the years because he was family. “Come on, babe. I’m tired.”
Mia waited ten minutes, heart thudding, before she stood. She told herself she was just going downstairs for a glass of water. That was all.
The house was quiet except for the low hum of the air-conditioning. Barefoot, she padded down the hallway toward the stairs. Ethan’s door was slightly ajar—probably from when Sarah had pulled him inside in a hurry. Soft light spilled out, along with sounds that stopped Mia cold.
A low, feminine moan. The unmistakable rhythmic creak of a bed.
Jealousy slammed into her so hard she had to brace a hand on the wall. Her feet moved before her brain caught up. She crept closer, breath shallow, until she could peek through the narrow gap.
Ethan’s room was dimly lit by the bedside lamp. Sarah was on all fours in the center of the big bed, back arched, blonde hair spilling over her shoulders. Ethan was behind her, completely naked, his powerful body gleaming with sweat. One large hand gripped her hip while the other fisted her hair, pulling just enough to make Sarah gasp.
He was hammering into her—deep, steady thrusts that made the headboard tap softly against the wall. Mia could see everything: the way his thick cock disappeared between Sarah’s legs with every snap of his hips, the slick shine of her arousal coating him, the way his muscles flexed and bunched across his back and ass.
“Fuck, you feel good,” Ethan growled, voice low and rough in a way Mia had never heard before. He leaned over Sarah, one hand sliding around to rub between her legs. “Come on, baby. Let me hear you.”
Sarah moaned louder, pushing back to meet his thrusts. “Harder, Ethan—yes, just like that.”
Mia’s face burned. Anger and raw jealousy twisted in her chest like a knife, but underneath it, heat pooled low in her belly. Her thighs pressed together instinctively.
She was throbbing—her pussy already slick and aching, the thin fabric of her sleep shorts growing damp. She watched, unable to look away, as Ethan’s pace quickened. His hand left Sarah’s hair to grip both hips, pulling her back onto him harder. The wet slap of skin filled the room.
Mia’s nipples tightened painfully against her camisole. One of her hands drifted down without thinking, pressing lightly over her shorts, right where she was pulsing. She bit her lip hard to stay silent.
Inside the room, Sarah’s moans turned sharp and desperate. “I’m close—don’t stop—”
Ethan groaned, deep and guttural. “That’s it. Come for me.” He slammed into her a few more times, hard and fast, then buried himself deep, hips grinding as Sarah cried out, her body shaking through her orgasm.
Mia’s own core clenched in sympathy, a fresh gush of wetness soaking her panties. She was so turned on it hurt—jealousy and need warring inside her until she felt dizzy.
Ethan pulled out, flipped Sarah onto her back, and stroked himself twice before coming with a low curse, thick ropes landing across her stomach and breasts. Sarah laughed breathlessly, reaching up to pull him down for a kiss.
Mia stumbled back from the door, chest heaving. Her legs felt weak. Mia was angry—so fucking angry that it was Sarah in there getting what she had wanted for years. But more than anger, there was a fierce, possessive determination settling in her bones.
She would make him see her. She would be the one who made his breath catch, who made him lose control, who gave him that pleasure next. Not Sarah. Not anyone else. Her.
Quietly, Mia retreated to her own room, closing the door with a soft click. She leaned against it, breathing hard, one hand slipping inside her shorts before she could stop herself. Her fingers found her swollen, dripping folds and circled her clit.
The image of Ethan—sweaty, powerful, thrusting—played behind her closed eyes. She came fast and hard, biting her pillow to muffle the whimper, but it wasn’t enough. It only left her hungrier.
When the aftershocks faded, Mia lay on her bed staring at the ceiling, skin still flushed, heart racing with fresh resolve.
Tomorrow she would turn up the heat. A little more skin. A little more “accidental” closeness. Innocent touches that lingered just a second too long. She would smile sweetly and call him by name in that soft voice she knew affected him. She would remind him, without ever saying it outright, that she wasn’t his “little sister” anymore.
And when the moment was right, when Sarah was distracted or gone, Mia would make sure Ethan couldn’t look away. Couldn’t pretend. Couldn’t stop thinking about her.
She smiled into the darkness, fingers still lightly teasing between her thighs.
Two weeks. Plenty of time to seduce her brother’s best friend completely.
Game on.
Dear Readers,We made it.One hundred and thirty chapters.As I sit here writing this, I honestly don’t know where to begin. What started as an idea in my head became a journey I shared with thousands of people I may never meet, yet somehow feel connected to.First of all, thank you.Thank you for giving Mia and Ethan a chance.Thank you for spending your time, your energy, and your hard-earned money to unlock chapter after chapter. In a world where everyone is busy and life keeps demanding more from us, the fact that you chose to spend a part of your day with my characters means more than I can ever put into words.Thank you to every reader who left a comment.Whether you laughed, cried, screamed at Ethan, wanted to drag Sophia by her red hair, threatened to fight Sarah, defended Mia, or simply shared your thoughts after reading a chapter—I read your comments. They made me smile on difficult days. They encouraged me when I doubted myself. They reminded me that these characters had bec
Two years later Mia stood in the lavender reading nook she had built with her own hands, running her fingers along the spines of books she wouldn’t be taking with her. The past two years after graduation had been a steady climb: full-time work at the university counseling center, graduate courses in the evenings, weekends spent strengthening the roots Aunt Lisa had once reminded her to keep. She had grown into herself—twenty-three now, confident, grounded, no longer the girl who needed chaos or validation to feel alive. But she had never stopped wanting Ethan. The job offer in Los Angeles had come through three weeks ago—a clinical psychology position at a respected practice with ties to the league’s player wellness program. It was perfect. After four years of long-distance flights, late-night calls, and carefully scheduled visits, the distance was finally closing. Her parents and Ethan’s mother were in the living room helping with the last boxes. Jake and Nora had driven in
Mia's senior graduation day arrived under a sky so perfectly blue it almost felt mocking. She stood in line with her classmates outside the main quad, black gown fluttering in the light breeze, and the mortarboard slightly crooked no matter how many times she adjusted it. From the bold, reckless nineteen-year-old who had seduced her brother’s best friend to this moment—twenty-one, grounded, roots firmly planted. The house waited for her a short walk away, now fully hers in every way that mattered. But today, one chair in the family section would be noticeably empty. Ethan wasn’t coming. He had apologized again two days ago over a crackling video call, exhaustion clear in his voice after back-to-back games and travel. “The schedule got locked in last minute. I’m so sorry, baby. I wanted to be there more than anything. I’ll make it up to you. Promise.” She had told him she understood. And she did. His career was rising—consistent minutes, scout attention, the kind of development
That week wasn’t about passion burning hot and fast. It was about the quiet romance of ordinary days shared. They cooked together in the kitchen he had planned for her—simple meals, laughter over spilled sauce, his arms around her waist as she stirred pasta while he kissed the side of her neck. Mornings started with coffee on the small back porch, wrapped in a shared blanket, talking about everything and nothing. He helped her study for an upcoming exam, quizzing her from flashcards while she sat cross-legged on the couch, his hand resting on her knee. One afternoon they walked the neighborhood hand-in-hand, the early autumn air crisp. Ethan pointed out small improvements she’d made to the house—the flower beds she’d planted with her mom, the reading lamp in the lavender nook positioned just right for late-night studying. “You’ve turned this into a real home,” he said, squeezing her hand. “Every time I come back, it feels more like ours. I love seeing what you build while I’m g
Three months later. Mia stood barefoot in the kitchen, late afternoon light pouring through the window above the sink as she stirred a pot of soup. The lavender reading nook was now a lived-in sanctuary—shelves overflowing with psych textbooks, novels, and a growing collection of houseplants she’d named after group members (Sophia’s was dramatic and needed constant attention). The living room had a comfortable couch they’d picked out together during one of Ethan’s visits, throw blankets Nora had sent as a housewarming gift, and photos on the walls: the whole group at the lake house, Jake and Nora’s new apartment, Sarah’s gallery opening, and a candid shot of her and Ethan laughing on the porch the day they’d first seen the house. It was home. The past nine months hadn’t been easy, but they had been real. Long distance had taught her resilience in ways she hadn’t expected. She thrived in her junior-year classes, volunteered consistently at the counseling center, and built
Mia closed her laptop with a satisfied click, the final draft of her abnormal psychology paper submitted fifteen minutes before the deadline. She leaned back in the desk chair in the lavender reading nook, stretching her arms overhead as late afternoon light poured through the window. The house was quiet except for the soft hum of the refrigerator and the distant sound of neighborhood kids playing outside. It still felt new—hers in a way that made her chest warm with quiet pride.Roots, Aunt Lisa had said during that last lake house weekend, pulling her aside on the dock while the others laughed around the fire. You’ve got them here, Mia. Don’t let anyone’s dream, no matter how bright, pull you out of the soil before you’re ready to move with it.Those words had stayed with her through the first brutal month of long distance. She wasn’t waiting. She was building.Lena had become a daily constant. They met three times a week for “survivor club” st
Ethan sat on the old wooden bench at the back of the neighborhood park, the one hidden behind overgrown trees and far from the streetlights. It was 10:45 PM. The night air was cool against his bruised skin, but the ache in his jaw and ribs barely registered. His eyes kept flicking toward the dire
The dining room had gone deathly silent after Jake’s accusation. Everyone stared at him, then at Ethan, then at Mia. The air felt thick enough to choke on.“Jake, what the hell are you talking about?” their father demanded, voice low and dangerous. “Explain yourself. Right now.”
Ethan couldn’t stay away any longer.The email from Mia had been burning in his mind all morning. She was trapped, fighting alone, and he was the reason. After rereading her words for the tenth time, he made a decision. He would go to the house. Not to cause a scene — just to see her face, even fo
Ethan sat on the edge of his bed, the bruise on his jaw throbbing in time with his heartbeat. Every pulse sent a fresh wave of pain radiating across his face. The cut on his lip had finally stopped bleeding sometime in the early hours, but every time he swallowed, the metallic taste of blood mixed







