Chapter 6
Chapter Six
River
I don’t remember leaving his office. I don’t remember the hallway. My first conscious thought is the cold, sterile air of the corridor hitting my flushed cheeks. My legs are moving, carrying me away, but I am not in control of them.
My body is a live wire. Every nerve ending is screaming his name. Julian.
My lips are tingling, swollen. I can still feel the pressure of his mouth, the possessive, bruising force of it. It wasn’t a kiss, it was a brand. He marked me. Claimed me. And then he dismissed me.
The books are a dead weight in my arms. I clutch them to my chest, the sharp corners digging into my ribs. They are the only proof that any of this was real. The books, and the ghost of his touch on my wrist, his thumb on my pulse, his hand on my jaw.
My brain, my traitorous, looping brain, is already replaying it;
The click of the door.
The scent of his office.
The shock of his fingers on my skin.
The fall of the books.
The taste of him.
The cold, final cut of his voice: Class dismissed, River.
It’s a puzzle I can’t solve, and the not-knowing is a physical pain. He wants me. He kissed me like he was starving, but then he looked at me like I was nothing. Like I was just another student he was done with. The whiplash is dizzying. I feel sick with it, and with a dizzying, terrifying thrill.
I stumble into my dorm room, slamming the door shut behind me. The sound echoes in the small space. I drop the books on my desk with a loud thud.
I go to the mirror above my dresser. I have to see.
It’s me, but it’s not. My eyes are wide, pupils blown, dark with a mixture of shock and elation. My cheeks are flushed a deep, feverish red. And my mouth… my mouth is a ruin. It’s swollen, red, and looks thoroughly, completely kissed. It looks like his.
I lift a trembling hand and touch my lower lip. It’s tender. I press harder, and a jolt, half pain, half pleasure, shoots through me. I close my eyes. I can still taste him. Whiskey and want.
He broke me a little. In that office, with that kiss, with that dismissal. He cracked me open, and every shattered piece of me sings his name.
This isn’t a crush, it’s not infatuation. It’s what he said in class; it’s a distortion. A beautiful, terrible distortion of love, and I am kneeling before it.
My gaze falls to the books on the desk. I walk over, my legs still shaky, and run my fingers over the titles. The Erotics of Silence. The Architecture of Obsession.
My breath catches in my throat.
This wasn’t him losing control.
This was a lesson.
The supplementary texts, the private discussion, the kiss wasn’t a moment of weakness. It was a demonstration. He was showing me, not telling me. He was making me feel it. The power, the surrender, the exquisite pain of being wanted and then discarded in the same breath.
He’s not just teaching me literature anymore. He’s teaching me him, and the kiss was the first line of the new syllabus.
A slow, shaky smile spreads across my ruined mouth. I look at my reflection again. The fear is gone. The confusion is gone. In its place is a cold, hard certainty.
He thinks he’s in control, he thinks he’s the one setting the terms, conducting the experiment. He thinks he just dismissed me.
But he didn’t.
He just invited me to play, and I have been studying the game for years.
I pick up the first book. The Architecture of Obsession.
“Class has just begun,” I whisper to my reflection.
I don’t hesitate, I don’t spiral.
I pull out my desk chair, the scrape of its legs against the floor the only sound in the room. I sit, placing the book, The Architecture of Obsession squarely in the center of my desk. My fingers trace the embossed letters of the title. This is a key. A map.
I open to the first page, and the world outside my desk ceases to exist. The low hum of the dorm, the distant traffic, the ticking of my own watch; it all fades into a dull, irrelevant murmur.
This is my sanctuary. The deep dive. The fixation that quiets the noise by becoming the only noise that matters.
My OCD isn’t a disorder right now; it’s a superpower.
The text is dense, academic, but the voice is his.
I can hear him in the rhythm of the sentences, in the precise, deliberate choice of words.
I read for what feels like hours, my mind absorbing, dissecting, cataloging.
I don’t just read the lines; I read the space between them, the implications, the unspoken challenges.
Then I find it; A passage I know he wanted me to see. It’s underlined in the PDF version he sent out, but here, in the physical copy, the words feel heavier, more permanent.
“The obsessive gaze is not merely an act of seeing; it is an act of ownership. The subject, once targeted, is no longer a person but a territory to be mapped, claimed, and ultimately controlled. The initial act of being ‘seen’ is mistaken by the subject for recognition, for intimacy. It is, in fact, the first lock being turned.”
My breath hitches. It’s him. It’s his philosophy, distilled into ink. I think of his eyes on me in the classroom, his fingers on my wrist, his thumb pressing against my pulse. He wasn’t feeling my heartbeat; he was mapping my territory.
He thinks he’s the cartographer. He thinks he’s the one holding the map.
A cold, thrilling certainty settles deep in my bones. He doesn’t realize I’ve been drawing my own map of him for years.
I keep reading, and my focus is absolute. I’m not just reading his lesson; I am memorizing his playbook. I am learning the language of his control so I can speak it back to him. He wants a subject? Fine. But a subject can observe, too. A subject can learn, a subject can become a mirror.
A new kind of energy thrums through me, sharp and purposeful. It’s not the frantic, anxious energy of a spiral. It’s the focused, creative hum that comes right before I start a new piece. The need is overwhelming.
I need to draw.
I push the book aside and pull my sketchbook toward me. I flip to a fresh, blank page. The pristine white feels like a declaration.
My charcoal is black, sharp in my hand. I don’t start with his eyes or the curve of his mouth, the way I usually do.
I start with the line of his hand, the way it held my jaw, the tension in his fingers.
The calculated, deliberate pressure that was meant to feel like passion but was, in fact, an act of control.
This time, I’m not drawing a fantasy. I’m not drawing a man I’m chasing.
I’m drawing a subject.
My subject.
And on Friday, when I walk back into his office, he’s going to see exactly what I’ve learned.