首頁 / Romance / WEBS OF FORBIDDEN ENTANGLEMENT / Chapter 2: The Best Friend

分享

Chapter 2: The Best Friend

作者: Iris Bloom
last update publish date: 2026-03-15 03:27:08

Mark Coleman knew how to smile without meaning it.

It was a skill he had perfected in the academy.

Across the grand hall, he watched Raymond Stone walk away from the dance floor, posture crisp, expression unreadable.

But Mark had known Raymond for ten years.

He recognised that look.

Interest.

Dangerous interest.

Mark sipped from his glass slowly.

Beside him, Lieutenant Sean Carter followed his line of sight.

“Is that her?” Sean asked quietly.

“Yes,” Mark replied.

“General Watson’s daughter?”

Mark nodded once.

Sean let out a low whistle. “Ray doesn’t play small, does he?”

Mark didn’t answer.

He was watching Tricia.

The way she stood still after the dance.

The way she looked toward the exit where Raymond had disappeared.

Not confusion.

Not politeness.

Something softer.

Something that tightened like a blade beneath Mark’s ribs.

Mark had grown up with Raymond.

Same training camp. Same punishments. Same ambition.

Raymond had always been the better one.

Stronger in combat.

Sharper in strategy.

Promoted faster.

Chosen first.

Mark told himself he didn’t care.

But he did.

And now the General’s daughter?

No.

That would make Raymond untouchable.

Sean nudged him. “You thinking what I’m thinking?”

Mark’s smile returned,  smooth and harmless.

“I don’t think anymore,” he said calmly. “I act.”

Across the hall, Tricia excused herself for air.

Mark watched her leave.

Then he finished his drink and followed.

                  

Outside, the night was cooler.

The base lights glowed against the dark sky.

Tricia stood near the stone railing, arms folded slightly.

“Escaping already?” Mark’s voice was gentle.

She turned.

“Oh. Hi.”

He stepped closer but left respectful space.

“I’m Mark. Raymond’s… best friend.”

There it was.

Her posture shifted just slightly.

“Best friend?”

“For years,” he said easily. “He doesn’t let many people close.”

She studied him.

He was different from Raymond.

Warmer smile. Softer voice.

Less intense.

“Should I be concerned?” she asked lightly.

“About Raymond?”

“Yes.”

Mark chuckled softly. “Only if you enjoy danger.”

That caught her attention.

“Danger?”

“Raymond is… focused. When he wants something, he goes after it.”

Her heartbeat picked up again.

“Am I something?” she asked before she could stop herself.

Mark tilted his head thoughtfully.

“Yes.”

The honesty startled her.

He stepped a little closer.

“But you should know something.”

“What?”

“When Ray decides, he doesn’t consider the consequences.”

There was something subtle in Mark’s tone.

Something that sounded like a warning.

Or jealousy.

“Why tell me that?” she asked carefully.

“Because,” Mark replied smoothly, “I care about him.”

And that was true.

In his own twisted way.

A distant voice interrupted.

“Mark.”

Sean had stepped outside.

His expression,  unreadable.

“Briefing in ten.”

Mark’s gaze lingered on Tricia a second longer.

“It was nice meeting you,” he said politely.

He turned away.

But before leaving fully, he paused.

“Be careful with him.”

And then he walked into the night.

After that  night, nothing was restrained anymore.

There were no cautious glances.

No measured distance.

No pretending.

Raymond and Tricia didn’t fall into love.

They accelerated into it.

She stopped going home regularly.

At first, she would say, “I’ll just stay tonight.”

Then it became, “I left some clothes here.”

Then she had a drawer.

Then half the wardrobe.

Then she didn’t ask anymore.

Raymond didn’t either.

Her laughter filled his quiet house.

Her sandals lived by his doorway.

Her perfume lingered in his sheets.

He had always lived with discipline, structured mornings, ordered nights.

Now she disrupted everything.

And he let her.

They went everywhere together.

Late-night drives with music too loud and windows down.

Coffee shops where she sketched him across the table.

Formal dinners where his hand rested possessively at her waist.

Small roadside restaurants where nobody saluted him,  and he became just Raymond.

She discovered he laughed more than anyone on base realised.

He discovered she was stubborn when teased.

They argued about trivial things. They made up in seconds.

They couldn’t seem to stay irritated. Or apart.

The chemistry between them wasn’t polite anymore.

It was constant. Charged.

Walking past her meant touching her.

Cooking dinner meant pulling her against him.

Even silence felt intimate.

One night after a charity event, she kicked off her heels the moment they stepped inside his house.

“My feet are at war,” she groaned.

He loosened his tie slowly, watching her.

“You look beautiful when you complain.”

She rolled her eyes, but the air had already shifted.

The kind of shift that neither of them pretended not to notice anymore.

He crossed the room in two strides. Her back met the wall softly.

“Raymond,” she warned,  but her fingers were already gripping his shirt.

“Yes?”

“You’re staring again.”

“Because you’re mine.”

The possessiveness in his voice didn’t frighten her.

It ignited her.

Her answer wasn’t verbal.

She kissed him,  deliberate, demanding.

Everything between them had grown bold.

Their intimacy,  no longer tentative.

It was knowing. Unapologetic.

They moved toward each other like magnets,  unstoppable, inevitable.

When he lifted her, she laughed against his mouth.

When they collapsed into sheets hours later, breathless and tangled, she traced the scar near his eyebrow.

“What are we doing?” she murmured.

“Exactly what we want,” he replied.

There was no fear in it.

No second-guessing.

Just certainty.

                  

Everyone noticed in the base.

They walked into rooms like a unit. Shared glances across crowded halls.

Touched constantly without realising it.

It wasn’t an affair anymore. It was an attachment.

And attachment changed Raymond.

He was still sharp. Still commanding.

But softer around her.

Protective in ways that bordered on territorial.

If she stepped away, his eyes followed.

If she laughed with someone else, he drifted closer.

He trusted her. He didn’t trust the world around her.

And Mark saw every single shift.

One afternoon, while she was barefoot in his kitchen stealing strawberries from the fridge, his phone vibrated repeatedly on the counter.

He ignored it.

She didn’t.

“It’s your commanding officer.”

He stiffened slightly. And took the call.

She knew immediately it wasn’t routine.

His posture straightened.

His tone cooled.

“Yes, sir… Understood… Deployment timeline?... Yes, sir.”

When he hung up, the silence in the kitchen felt heavy.

“What?” she asked quietly.

He looked at her like he was deciding how to say it.

“I’ve been reassigned.”

Her stomach dropped.

“Where?”

“Another state. Internal peacekeeping.”

“How long?”

“Initially, four to six months.”

The words hit harder than expected.

Another state sounded close enough to be manageable.

But far enough to hurt.

“You’re leaving the base?”

“In five days.”

Five.

It felt too small.

Too soon.

She set the strawberries down. Walked toward him.

“You just… go?”

“It’s my job.”

She knew that. She had always known that.

But knowing something and feeling it are different wars.

She pressed her forehead against his chest.

“You hate distance,” she said softly.

“Yes.”

“And I hate not seeing you.”

He exhaled through his nose, jaw tight.

“I’ll come back on leave.”

“It’s not the same.”

“No,” he agreed. It wasn’t.

That night, they didn’t leave the house.

Didn’t answer calls.

Didn’t care about whispers.

They memorised each other in quiet ways.

The sound of breathing.

The rhythm of hands.

The way mornings felt.

They didn’t speak much.

Because neither wanted to admit how much it mattered.

On departure day, she stood beside his car in the early morning light.

No crowd.

No ceremony.

Just the two of them.

“This is temporary,” he said.

“You don’t do temporary.”

“Then I won’t make this temporary.”

Her throat tightened.

He pulled her into him, firm, protective, lingering longer than necessary.

“You’re not replacing me with your paintings while I’m gone,” he muttered near her ear.

She almost laughed through tears.

“Come back,” she whispered.

“I always do.”

He kissed her once more.

Then got into the vehicle.

She watched until it disappeared beyond the gate.

And for the first time since they had begun, the space beside her felt unbearable.

Across the compound, unseen, Mark watched her standing there alone.

And this time…

He didn’t look conflicted.

He looked ready.

                     

One afternoon, while leaving the grocery store, she almost bumped into Mark.

“Oh  sorry,” he said quickly.

She relaxed when she recognised him.

“Mark.”

“How are you holding up?” he asked gently.

It wasn’t intrusive.

It wasn’t smug.

It sounded concerned.

“I’m managing,” she answered.

“Distance isn’t easy.”

“No,” she admitted.

He nodded sympathetically.

“If you need anything… anything at all, I’m here.”

She hesitated.

But Mark had always been kind.

Measured.

Raymond’s best friend.

“Thank you,” she said.

He didn’t push further.

Didn’t linger too long.

Just walked her to her car and left.

That restraint made him seem safe.

Familiar.

Trustworthy.

Later that night, while sitting alone in Raymond’s living room, she found herself replaying the conversation.

Not because she felt something for Mark.

But because he was present.

And presence matters when someone else is miles away.

在 APP 繼續免費閱讀本書
掃碼下載 APP

最新章節

  • WEBS OF FORBIDDEN ENTANGLEMENT   Chapter 210: Home

    A year later. The lake looked exactly the same. Morning sunlight still danced across the water. The surrounding trees still swayed gently in the breeze.The cottage still stood proudly near the shoreline, wrapped in the quiet beauty that had first welcomed them when they needed somewhere to heal.Yet everything else had changed. Laughter echoed across the property. Tiny footsteps raced across the grass.A squeal of excitement shattered the peaceful silence before another followed immediately afterward.General Watson lowered his newspaper. Slowly. Suspiciously. The expression on his face suggested he already knew trouble was approaching.A second later Lily Stone burst around the corner of the cottage like a tiny hurricane. Her curls bounced wildly. Her shoes appeared untied. Her determination remained absolute.The little girl sprinted across the lawn with complete confidence despite possessing only a questionable understanding of danger. Or balance. Or patience."Grandpa!"General W

  • WEBS OF FORBIDDEN ENTANGLEMENT   Chapter 209: What Remains

    "I think your mother would have framed that one." The words lingered quietly in the room.Tricia looked back toward the photograph glowing on the laptop screen. The image filled the display. Sunlight. Lake water. Family. A moment frozen forever.For several seconds she simply stared at it. Then a small smile touched her lips."I think she would have too."Raymond settled into the chair beside her. The cottage had grown silent around them. The twins were asleep. General Watson had retired for the night.Outside, moonlight shimmered softly across the lake, transforming the water into silver and shadow.The peacefulness felt almost unreal. Not because it was unfamiliar anymore. Because it had become familiar.That realization still surprised her occasionally. After everything they had survived, peace had stopped feeling temporary. It had started feeling like home.Raymond reached forward and rotated the laptop slightly. The photograph remained visible between them.His eyes studied it th

  • WEBS OF FORBIDDEN ENTANGLEMENT   Chapter 208: The Photograph

    The idea stayed with Tricia long after she closed the camera screen. Even after Raymond fell asleep beside her. Even after the cottage settled into complete silence.The image remained fixed inside her mind. A photograph from her mother's memory box. A family standing together beside a lake.Her mother smiling. General Watson looked younger and far less patient. A little girl standing between them with windblown hair and grass stains on her knees.The photograph wasn't perfect. Nobody had been looking directly at the camera. The horizon tilted slightly. Part of a tree branch blocked one corner.Yet somehow it felt perfect anyway. Because it captured something real. Something alive. Something worth remembering.Now, years later, Tricia found herself staring at a photograph she had taken only hours earlier. Different people. Different generations.The same feeling. The realization lingered with her as sleep finally claimed her.When morning arrived, the idea remained. Clearer now. Stron

  • WEBS OF FORBIDDEN ENTANGLEMENT   Chapter 207: Through The Lens

    "I knew it."Raymond looked up from the section of railing he had been repairing."Knew what?"General Watson folded his arms with the unmistakable confidence of a man presenting undeniable evidence."That one was born to be photographed."Lily immediately rewarded the statement by producing another delighted smile the moment she spotted the camera hanging around Tricia's neck.The older man pointed triumphantly."There."Raymond glanced toward Lily. Then toward the camera. Then back toward General Watson."Or maybe she's smiling because she likes seeing Tricia happy."General Watson opened his mouth. Paused. Then frowned."That was annoyingly reasonable."Tricia laughed. The sound drifted across the deck along with the gentle breeze coming off the lake.For a moment nobody moved. Nobody rushed. The afternoon unfolded around them with the kind of ease that had once felt impossible.Then Tricia raised the camera again. Instinctively. Naturally. Like a part of herself waking up after a

  • WEBS OF FORBIDDEN ENTANGLEMENT   Chapter 206: The Last Page

    Morning arrived quietly over the lake.Sunlight filtered through the curtains in long golden strips, spreading gradually across the bedroom floor while the cottage remained wrapped in the comfortable stillness that existed only before the twins woke up.For once, nobody was crying. Nobody was demanding food. Nobody was announcing their presence to the entire household.The temporary peace felt suspicious. Tricia lay awake beside Raymond, watching the early morning light creep slowly across the room.The wooden memory box remained on the dresser where she had left it the night before. Closed. Silent. Waiting.Yet somehow different now. Not because anything inside had changed. Because she had. The box no longer felt heavy.For years, memories of her mother had carried an ache she never quite knew how to manage. Every photograph, every story, every reminder seemed connected to loss.But sometime during the previous night, something had shifted.The memories were still emotional. Still pr

  • WEBS OF FORBIDDEN ENTANGLEMENT   Chapter 205: A Love That Remained

    For several seconds, neither Tricia nor Raymond moved. The faded photograph rested in Tricia's hands.The bedside lamp cast a soft golden glow across the image, illuminating details that time had nearly stolen.A younger version of her mother smiled into the camera. Her hair was shorter. Her face softer.Younger than Tricia remembered. Younger than General Watson looked in every photograph from those years.Yet the smile remained instantly recognizable. Warm. Gentle. Alive.The woman cradled a newborn baby carefully against her chest. The infant couldn't have been more than a few weeks old. Tiny fingers. Tiny blanket. Tiny face partially hidden against her shoulder.Tricia stared at the picture. Then slowly turned it over again. The handwriting remained unmistakable.For my future grandchildren, someday.The words blurred through fresh tears."How?"Her voice barely rose above a whisper. Raymond looked at the photograph. Then back at her."What?"Tricia swallowed."How could she know?

  • WEBS OF FORBIDDEN ENTANGLEMENT   Chapter 66: The Quiet Before 

    The room was calm. Too calm.The kind of calm that did not soothe, but unsettled, as though it existed not because everything was fine, but because something had yet to happen, something that had already begun to take shape beyond the walls, beyond her sight, moving steadily toward her whether she

  • WEBS OF FORBIDDEN ENTANGLEMENT   Chapter 65: The Weight of Truth 

    The room did not change.The walls remained the same sterile white, the lighting as sharp and unforgiving as before, the screen still displaying its cold, structured data without emotion or hesitation, but for Raymond, everything had shifted in a way that could not be reversed, as though the ground

  • WEBS OF FORBIDDEN ENTANGLEMENT   Chapter 64: The Edge of Knowing

    The corridor leading into the medical wing carried a different kind of silence, one that did not feel empty, but anticipatory, as though the walls themselves were aware that something irreversible was about to unfold within them, something that would not simply pass through this space, but leave a

  • WEBS OF FORBIDDEN ENTANGLEMENT   Chapter 63: Truth Before Its Time

    The words did not simply land.They detonated.Not with noise, not with chaos, but with a quiet, devastating precision that altered the balance of everything in the room, shifting it from tension into something far more fragile, far more dangerous, because uncertainty had just been replaced with th

更多章節
探索並免費閱讀 優質小說
GoodNovel APP 免費暢讀海量優秀小說,下載喜歡的書籍,隨時隨地閱讀。
在 APP 免費閱讀書籍
掃碼在 APP 閱讀
DMCA.com Protection Status