Share

4

Author: Tessa Marlowe
last update publish date: 2026-07-13 20:57:30

Cute. The word made her feel about twelve years old.

  

  "That's kind of you to say."

  

  "I'm just being honest." He leaned forward again, closing the distance between them. "I noticed you the moment I walked in. You were sitting here all alone, looking so serious with your book. I thought, now there's someone interesting."

  

  Amelia's hands were trembling slightly. She pressed them flat against her thighs under the table where he could not see.

  

  "I should probably get going," she said.

  

  "Already?" Daniel glanced at her still-full glass. "You've barely touched your drink."

  

  "I know, I'm sorry. I just remembered I have some things to do tomorrow morning."

  

  It was a weak excuse and they both knew it.

  

  "Come on," he said, his smile taking on a slightly harder edge. "Stay for one drink. I bought it for you."

  

  And there was the unspoken expectation. The invisible debt she now owed him.

  

  "I appreciate that," she said carefully. "But I really should go."

  

  "Five more minutes," he said. "That's all I'm asking."

  

  It was not a request. His tone had shifted into something firmer. More insistent. Amelia felt her chest tighten.

  

  "I don't think—"

  

  "Look," Daniel interrupted, his voice taking on a slightly wounded quality. "I'm just trying to have a conversation. I thought we were getting along."

  

  "I'm sure you're very nice," she said. "But I came here to be alone."

  

  "Then why did you let me sit down?"

  

  "I was trying to be friendly," she said instead.

  

  His tone had shifted again. Less friendly. More accusatory. Amelia felt her pulse quicken.

  

  "I just want to go home."

  

  "After one drink." He gestured toward her glass. "You haven't even finished it. It seems rude to waste it, don't you think?"

  

  She was being manipulated. She knew that. But knowing it and being able to do anything about it were two entirely different things.

  

  "I don't know what you want me to say."

  

  "I want you to relax." He reached across the table as though to touch her hand.

  

  Amelia pulled back instinctively. His expression darkened.

  

  "I'm just trying to be nice," he said. "There's no need to be like that."

  

  Like what? Uncomfortable? Trapped? Frightened?

  

  "I think there's been a misunderstanding," she said, forcing her voice to remain steady. "I appreciate you buying me a drink, but I'm not interested in—"

  

  "In what?" he interrupted. "Having a conversation? Meeting new people? Or are you just one of those women who leads men on for free drinks?"

  

  The accusation hit her like a slap.

  

  "That's not fair."

  

  "Isn't it?" He leaned back, crossing his arms. "I've been nothing but polite. I bought you a drink. I've been sitting here making conversation. And you've been looking for an excuse to leave since the moment I sat down."

  

  "Because I wanted to be alone," she said, her voice rising slightly despite her best efforts to remain calm. "I told you that."

  

  "After I'd already bought it." "You didn't say no."

  

  Her hands were shaking. She pressed them harder against her legs.

  

  "I'd like you to leave," she said quietly.

  

  "I'm not finished with my drink."

  

  "Then I'll leave."

  

  She started to stand. Daniel's hand shot out, not quite touching her but hovering near her wrist in a way that made sitting back down feel less like a choice and more like a necessity.

  

  "Don't be like that," he said. His voice had softened again, back to that false friendliness that made her skin crawl. "I'm sorry if I came on too strong. Let's start over, yeah? I'm Daniel. You're Amelia. We're just two people having a drink."

  

  No. They were not. A man who refused to accept rejection. A woman too frightened to make a scene. She was alone. Trapped.

  

  He had not touched her. He had not threatened her. He had simply refused to leave her alone. And somehow, that felt like her fault.

  

  "Please," she said quietly. "I just want to go home."

  

  Daniel studied her for a long moment. Then he smiled. It was not a kind smile.

  

  "Fine," he said. "But you're making a mistake. I'm a nice guy. You're not going to find better than me in a place like this."

  

  She did not respond. Could not respond. Her throat felt tight and her eyes burned with tears she absolutely refused to let fall. Daniel finished his pint in three long swallows and stood.

  

  "Your loss," he said.

  

  Then he walked away. Amelia sat frozen in her chair, watching him disappear into the crowd near the bar.

  

  Her heart was racing. Her hands were still shaking. She felt angry.

  

  She reached for her glass and took a long drink, willing her heartbeat to slow. She only needed a minute to steady herself before she left. When she looked up again, Daniel had not gone after all. He was standing near the bar with another pint in his hand, speaking to someone she could not quite make out through the crowd.

Then his head turned. His eyes found hers once more. The knot in Amelia’s stomach tightened.

She had the uncomfortable feeling that he was waiting. Waiting for her to leave. Waiting for another chance to speak to her.

She looked away, hoping that if she ignored him long enough, he would eventually lose interest.

He did not.

What Amelia could not have known was that Daniel’s were not the only eyes following her that evening.

From the opposite side of the bar, another man had witnessed the entire exchange in complete silence. He had watched Amelia’s polite smile slowly disappear beneath mounting discomfort. He had seen every subtle attempt she made to end the conversation without causing embarrassment. He had seen Daniel ignore every one of them.

Setting his untouched drink carefully onto the bar, the stranger straightened to his full height. His gaze never left Amelia.

Tonight, two pairs of eyes were fixed upon her.

One belonged to the man who refused to leave her alone.

The other belonged to the man quietly walking towards her.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • The Things I Can't Do To You   12

    "Because she stayed polite.""Exactly."Evelyn sighed quietly."How many women have found themselves in that position?""Too many."Jake looked into his coffee."I couldn't just watch.""So you stepped in.""I pretended to be her boyfriend."His mother smiled."I did wonder where your dramatic streak came from.""It worked.""I'm sure it did."Jake found himself smiling too."Then what?""For a second she thought I was making things worse."Evelyn laughed softly."Reasonable.""But the moment she realised what I was doing..."His voice faded."What happened?" Evelyn asked gently.Jake hesitated."I don't know."She waited."There was this feeling.""What sort of feeling?""I've never experienced it before."He searched for the right words."It was like..."His brow furrowed."...like every instinct I possess suddenly focused on one person."His mother didn't interrupt."I couldn't stop watching her."Jake rubbed a hand across his jaw."Not because I wanted anything from her.""No?""N

  • The Things I Can't Do To You   11

    Jake barely remembered the drive home. The streets of Birmingham blurred beyond the windscreen while the engine purred beneath him, every familiar junction passing almost unnoticed. He drove the route so often he could have managed it with his eyes closed, yet tonight his concentration drifted back to the same pair of blue-green eyes every few seconds.It made no sense.He had spent years building a life around control. Control over his business. Control over the pack. Control over himself. Tonight, for the first time in years, he felt as though something inside him had ignored every rule he'd ever lived by.Kade refused to settle. Normally, once danger had passed, the restless energy faded within minutes. The instinct to protect eased until it became little more than a quiet awareness beneath his skin.Not tonight. Every instinct screamed that he had left something important behind. Someone. Jake tightened his grip on the steering wheel."Enough."The single word disappeared into the

  • The Things I Can't Do To You   10

    Amelia stared at the question. It should have been easy to answer.Amelia:No.He just...Wouldn't leave.Lucy replied almost immediately.Lucy:Sometimes that's worse.Amelia found herself staring at the words. There had been no shouting, no threats, no grabbing her arm, nothing dramatic enough that anyone else in the pub had looked twice. And yet somehow she'd felt smaller with every passing minute. As though she had slowly lost permission to say no.Amelia:Exactly.I felt stupid for feeling uncomfortable.Lucy:Don't.A moment later another message appeared.Lucy:If you felt uncomfortable, that was enough.You didn't owe him your evening because he bought you a drink.Or because he was "being nice."Or because you smiled.Amelia stopped typing. Her fingers rested motionless above the screen. Those last three words caught in her chest.Amelia stopped typing. Her fingers rested motionless above the screen. Those last three words caught in her chest.Amelia:That's exactly what he s

  • The Things I Can't Do To You   9

    Amelia found herself sitting perfectly still on the sofa with her eyes closed. She had intended to make herself a cup of tea, curl up beneath a blanket and forget the evening had ever happened. That was usually how she dealt with difficult days. A hot drink, a romance novel and an early night could fix almost anything.Tonight, none of it seemed to work.The tea sat untouched on the coffee table, slowly cooling in its mug. The book lay open in her lap where she had abandoned it after only a few pages. The television hummed quietly in the background, though she couldn't have said what was on.Instead, the evening replayed itself.Daniel smiling as though she owed him her time. The scrape of the chair as he'd sat down without permission. The casual confidence with which he'd answered questions directed at her. The growing knot in her stomach every time she'd tried to end the conversation, only for him to steer it somewhere else. The horrible realisation that nothing he was doing seemed

  • The Things I Can't Do To You   8

    She did not know why disappointment touched her. She barely knew him. Yet something about his presence had felt grounding in a way she could not explain.“Will I see you again?” she asked before she could stop herself.Jake’s expression shifted. Something warm. Something pained. Something she did not understand.“I hope so,” he said.He stepped back, giving her space. For a moment she thought he might say something else, but instead he offered her a gentle smile and turned away. He walked through the bar with the same quiet confidence she had noticed earlier. When he reached the door, he paused. His shoulders lifted slightly, as though he were taking a breath.Then he left.Amelia stood alone beside the four chairs, her pulse steadying at last. She should have gone home immediately. Instead she found herself staring at the door he had just walked through. She did not know his surname. She did not know anything about him. Yet she felt as though something significant had just happened.

  • The Things I Can't Do To You   7

    Amelia followed the tall stranger through the soft glow of the bar, her hand still held gently in his. She had not expected him to keep hold of it, yet she found herself grateful for the steady warmth of his palm. Her pulse had not yet recovered from the encounter with Daniel, and the stranger’s presence felt like the only solid thing in a room that had tilted dangerously off balance.He guided her towards a quieter corner where four wooden chairs surrounded a small round table. The lighting here was softer, the noise gentler, the atmosphere calmer. It felt like a pocket of safety carved out of the crowded room. Amelia lowered herself into the nearest chair, her handbag resting against her leg, and tried to steady her breathing.The stranger took the seat opposite her. He did not sit in the one beside her, nor the one that would have blocked her view of the exit. Instead, he chose the chair that allowed him to face the room while still giving her space. It was a small detail, yet it m

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status