LOGINCallum Blackwood closed the door to the conference room with a quiet click, the weight of the final handshake still lingering in his palm. Viktor Langford’s team had pushed hard, but the deal was his. Another nine-figure agreement sealed without raising his voice or losing control. That was how he operated—deliberate, observant, always three steps ahead. Today, though, the satisfaction felt muted. Distant.
He walked down the wide corridor toward his private office, the city skyline visible through the glass walls like a kingdom he had already mapped and claimed. His mind wasn’t on quarterly projections or the next acquisition. It was on a simple apartment listing he had refreshed obsessively for days.
Jax Donovan was waiting inside, lounging in the leather armchair by the window with his tablet balanced on one knee. He looked up as Callum entered, offering a casual nod.
“Back already? I figured Langford would keep you tied up until dinner.”
Callum crossed to the sideboard and poured himself a glass of water, bypassing the whiskey. “It wrapped efficiently. They needed the capital more than they let on.” He took a sip, the cool liquid grounding him. “Numbers don’t lie.”
Jax studied him for a long moment, then set the tablet aside. “You’re distracted. That’s rare. Usually after a win like that, you’re already outlining the integration plan.”
Callum leaned against the edge of his massive oak desk, arms loosely crossed over his chest. The tailored fabric of his shirt pulled slightly across his shoulders. “Not distracted,” he corrected quietly. “Focused.”
Jax’s eyebrows rose. “On what? Because that expression usually means you’ve already decided the outcome of something, and the universe just hasn’t caught up yet.”
Callum stared out at the glittering buildings, the late afternoon sun turning steel and glass into something almost warm. He thought of Mia—her soft voice in that last conversation, the way she had looked at him when she said it was over. Not angry. Not cruel. Just… overwhelmed. Like he had become too much, his care too encompassing, until she no longer recognized her own life in the spaces between his gestures.
“I found a way back in,” Callum said at last, his voice low and steady.
Jax straightened in the chair. “Back in with Mia?”
A single nod. “She posted for a roommate after Chelsea moved out. Rent pressure. She’s rejected every male applicant so far.” He paused, the corner of his mouth tightening almost imperceptibly. “So I didn’t apply as myself.”
The silence that followed was heavy.
Jax leaned forward, disbelief etching his features. “You’re telling me you created a fake female profile to become your ex’s roommate?”
“Her name is Aubrey Miller,” Callum replied, as if the details made it logical. “Mid-twenties. Student nurse. Clean background, verified references. Quiet, reliable. Needs a place immediately.” He met Jax’s gaze without flinching. “She accepted the deposit and terms thirty minutes ago. Three months paid in full.”
Jax rubbed a hand over his face, half-laughing, half-stunned. “Callum, this is… next-level. Even for you. Catfishing your ex? Pretending to be a woman named Aubrey?”
Callum didn’t smile. He rarely did these days. “It was the only door she left open. She wants independence. She doesn’t want my money solving her problems or my presence filling her space. But she needs a roommate. So I’ll be the roommate she chose.”
He pushed off the desk and walked to the window, hands sliding into his pockets. The city below moved in its endless rhythm—cars like blood cells, people like fleeting thoughts. Mia was down there carrying the weight alone because she refused to lean on him.
“She left because she felt like she was disappearing beside me,” Callum continued, almost to himself. “I fixed things before she could ask. Anticipated needs she hadn’t voiced. I thought I was loving her. She thought she was losing herself.” His jaw tightened. “Six months. I gave her space. No demands. Just messages. Small ones. Reminders that I was still here. That I hadn’t accepted an ending she forced on us both.”
Jax exhaled slowly. “And this is your solution? Move in under false pretenses and hope she doesn’t lose her mind when ‘Aubrey’ turns out to be you?”
“I’ll explain once I’m inside,” Callum said. “Once the lease is binding and the money is transferred. She won’t have to choose between pride and survival. I’ll be there—every day, in her space—without the pressure of being the man she left. Just… proximity. Time. A chance to remember.”
He turned back to his friend, eyes steady and dark with resolve. “I don’t accept endings that feel like lies, Jax. She said she wanted this. But her silence, the way she reads my messages without replying… that’s not closure. That’s fear. Of us. Of how much she still feels.”
Jax studied him for a long beat. “You still love her that much? Enough to risk her hating you for this?”
Callum’s answer came without hesitation, quiet and absolute. “I never stopped.”
The words settled between them like a vow.
Jax shook his head, a mix of concern and reluctant admiration on his face. “This could explode spectacularly. You know that.”
“I do.” Callum straightened his cuffs, already moving toward the door. “But doing nothing has been worse. I’m moving in this weekend. Don’t call unless it’s urgent.”
“Good luck, man,” Jax called after him. “You’re going to need it when she realizes Aubrey is six-foot-two with a custom wardrobe and a habit of buying entire buildings.”
Callum’s lips curved faintly—the closest he came to a smile. “She will. But by then, she’ll have to look me in the eye.”
Callum left the office earlier than usual, the driver navigating the familiar route through the city streets. His penthouse waited downtown—sprawling, minimalist, filled with art he rarely noticed and furniture chosen for function rather than comfort. It had always felt efficient. Tonight, it felt empty.
He stepped inside, the door clicking shut behind him with finality. The floor-to-ceiling windows offered the same glittering view as his office, but here it felt more personal. More isolating. He loosened his tie and poured a single measure of whiskey, standing at the window as the liquid warmed in his hand.
Memories surfaced unbidden. Mia in his kitchen, laughing softly as she burned toast because she refused to let him take over. Her head on his chest late at night, fingers tracing idle patterns on his skin while she whispered fears about losing herself in their intensity. The way she had pulled away, eyes bright with unshed tears, saying she needed to stand on her own.
He hadn’t fought her then. Not with words. He had simply watched her go, the single question—“Is this really what you want?”—hanging between them like smoke. Her “yes” had been the hardest thing he’d ever accepted.
Now, he wouldn’t accept it anymore.
Callum set the glass down and moved to his study. The laptop screen glowed as he opened the messaging thread with Mia. Under the alias Aubrey Miller, the conversation was brief but binding. Her relief had been palpable even through text. She needed this. Needed him, even if she didn’t know it yet.
He typed a final message before closing the laptop.
Aubrey: Looking forward to meeting you tomorrow evening, Mia. I’ll be there around 6. Thank you again for this.
Simple. Polite. Nothing that would raise alarms. He closed his eyes for a moment, imagining her face when the door opened. Shock. Anger. Maybe even a flicker of that old pull she tried so hard to bury. He would weather it. He had spent months preparing for it.
The rest of the evening passed in quiet preparation. He packed lightly—a suitcase of essentials, clothes that wouldn’t immediately scream “billionaire CEO.” Jeans. Simple shirts. Items that fit the image of Aubrey’s modest student-nurse life, at least on the surface. The rest could come later, once the bridge was crossed.
He ate dinner alone at the marble island—grilled salmon and vegetables prepared by the housekeeper—his thoughts drifting to Mia’s apartment. The cozy living room with its mismatched cushions. The small kitchen where she insisted on making her own coffee. The bedroom he had only glimpsed, soft and personal in ways his own space never was.
He wanted to be in that world again. Not as the man who fixed everything, but as the one who simply stayed. Who listened. Who let her breathe while refusing to disappear.
Sleep came slowly that night, his mind replaying their last real conversation. The way her voice had trembled when she admitted she missed herself. He understood now, in a deeper way than before. Love wasn’t possession. But distance wasn’t love either. Not for them.
The next evening arrived with a crisp edge to the air. Callum stood outside Mia’s building at precisely 5:55, suitcase in hand, the weight of the moment settling over him like a second skin. He had messaged her as Aubrey fifteen minutes earlier to confirm. Her reply had been warm, if slightly nervous: Great, see you soon!
He took the stairs instead of the elevator, giving himself those final moments to center. Controlled. Observant. Ready.
At her door, he paused, hand raised. Then he knocked—three steady raps.
Footsteps approached from inside. Soft. Familiar. The lock turned.
The door opened, and there she was.
Mia Brooks, in a simple sweater and leggings, her hair loosely tied back, eyes bright with polite expectation. “Hi, you must be Aub—”
The words died on her lips.
Her gaze lifted to his face—really lifted—and recognition slammed into her like a physical force. The color drained from her cheeks. Her hand tightened on the doorframe until her knuckles whitened. Those soft, emotionally aware eyes widened in disbelief, then shock, then a flash of something deeper—hurt, confusion, the ghost of longing she had tried to bury.
“Callum?” Her voice came out barely above a whisper, cracking on his name. “What… what are you doing here?”
He stood there, tall and composed in his dark jacket, suitcase at his side, the alias crumbling between them in an instant. No smirk. No grand gesture. Just the steady, deliberate gaze that had always seen too much of her.
“Mia,” he said quietly, voice low and even, carrying the weight of months apart. “We should talk inside.”
Mia woke to the sound of rain. It had been pouring through the night, but by morning it had settled into a steady, gentle rhythm against the windows. The apartment felt cooler than usual. A soft breeze slipped through the crack in her bedroom window, carrying that fresh, earthy smell that always came after heavy rain. She pulled the blanket higher around her shoulders for a moment, enjoying the warmth, the way her body instinctively wanted to curl into something — or someone — to chase away the chill. She lay there a little longer, listening to the rain, letting herself feel the quiet comfort of the moment before the day started.Eventually she got up. She pulled on a loose, baggy top and soft shorts, the kind of comfortable clothes she liked to wear at home when she just wanted to feel relaxed. The fabric was thin, and the cool air from the rain made her nipples harden visibly against it. She didn’t think much of it as she walked out into the living room.She went straight to the kit
Callum left the office earlier than usual. The drive to his mother’s house took nearly an hour in the evening traffic. He kept one hand on the wheel of his black Mercedes, the engine purring smoothly beneath him. The car was luxurious without being flashy — soft leather seats, tinted windows, the kind of quiet power that matched the life he lived. Outside, the sky was turning that deep orange-pink that only happened in the city at this time of year. The road stretched ahead, lined with tall buildings giving way to wider streets and gated neighborhoods as he got closer to the upscale part of town where his mother lived.His mind kept drifting. Elena Blackwood was not the type to let things go. She had always been resilient, even after his father passed away five years ago. She ran her own social circle with the same sharp efficiency she expected from everyone else. She cared about him deeply — that much he knew. But she also believed she knew what was best for the family name. And she
Mia stirred when she heard movement outside the spare room. She lay still for a moment, eyes half-open, before pushing herself up. The apartment was quiet except for the low sound of the coffee machine in the kitchen. She pulled on a robe and walked out barefoot.Callum was already dressed. Dark trousers, button-down shirt with the sleeves rolled once at the cuffs. He stood at the counter, pouring coffee into two mugs. A few of his things were already mixed in with hers — a spare shirt draped over the back of a chair, his watch on the small table by the door. He had been moving things over slowly, without asking, the way he did everything.He looked up when she came in. “Good morning.”“Morning,” she answered, voice still soft from sleep.“I made coffee. Want some?.” He slid one mug toward her without waiting for a reply.Mia wrapped her hands around the warm mug and took a sip. It was exactly right. She noticed the way he moved around the kitchen like he already knew where everything
Mia stood in the doorway. Her hand gripping the frame. Callum filled the space in front of her, tall, dark-haired, suitcase at his side.“Callum,” she said again, voice soft. “What are you doing here?”His eyes stayed on hers. “Let me come in please.”She didn’t move at first. Then she stepped back. “Fine.”Callum walked past her. His arm brushed hers. He set the suitcase near the couch and turned to face her. The apartment felt smaller.Mia closed the door and crossed her arms. “Explain. Now.”He ran a hand through his hair. “Aubrey Miller doesn’t exist. I made the profile. Paid the deposit.” He paused, jaw tight. “I know it was wrong, Mia. I crossed a line. But you needed a roommate. I needed to be here. You weren’t going to let me help any other way.”She stared at him. Heat rose in her cheeks. “You lied. You pretended to be someone else just to force your way back into my life?”Callum took a slow breath. He stepped closer but kept his hands at his sides. “I’m sorry. I should have
Callum Blackwood closed the door to the conference room with a quiet click, the weight of the final handshake still lingering in his palm. Viktor Langford’s team had pushed hard, but the deal was his. Another nine-figure agreement sealed without raising his voice or losing control. That was how he operated—deliberate, observant, always three steps ahead. Today, though, the satisfaction felt muted. Distant.He walked down the wide corridor toward his private office, the city skyline visible through the glass walls like a kingdom he had already mapped and claimed. His mind wasn’t on quarterly projections or the next acquisition. It was on a simple apartment listing he had refreshed obsessively for days.Jax Donovan was waiting inside, lounging in the leather armchair by the window with his tablet balanced on one knee. He looked up as Callum entered, offering a casual nod.“Back already? I figured Langford would keep you tied up until dinner.”Callum crossed to the sideboard and poured h
Mia Brooks slipped into the café with an apologetic smile, shrugging off her coat as she spotted Chelsea already waiting at a table by the window. She made her way over, dropping her bag onto the empty chair beside her before sinking into the seat opposite.“Hi,” she said, slightly out of breath.Chelsea smiled. “Hi. I ordered for you already. Latte and a bagel.”Mia glanced at the steaming cup that had just been set in front of her. “Thanks.”Chelsea studied her for a moment. “So, what’s up? You look a little worn out.”Mia let out a tired breath.“I feel worn out. I still haven’t found anyone to replace you, and rent’s due in, like, a week.”Chelsea frowned. “Still? I thought you already put the room up. You didn’t get any candidates?”“I did. Three, actually.” Mia reached for her coffee. “But they were all men. I’m not sharing my apartment with a random man I don’t know.”Chelsea nodded in understanding.“I’m sorry you’re having to deal with this.” She offered Mia a sympathetic smi







