Chapter 14
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Owen
The lights blink red, then green. Her sweater's crooked, one shoulder bare. Her hair is a mess, lips parted, and she smiles. That real one. The one I haven’t seen in weeks, maybe longer, as if it surprises her to be happy.
We strung up lights around the windows and found old ornaments in a box marked “trash” that she refused to throw out. One was a one-eyed teddy bear she insisted on keeping. So cute.
And now? She stands between the firelight and the tree, flushed and glowing like some kind of miracle. Like Christmas finally came for me.
“I can’t believe that word count!” she tells me, with this dazed kind of triumph, her eyes glassy from too much focus. She bends her neck like she’s got a crick from sitting in bed too long.
“Must be the sex,” I mumble into my mug of coffee. “Yer Irish cabana boy at your service.”
She rolls her eyes but can’t stifle the giggle.
But she doesn’t walk away.
Snow starts falling again. Fat flakes smear the glass, dulling the world outside into grayscale, and she releases a breath, as if relieved, and I’m not sure why. When she starts rubbing her arms with her hands, I pull her closer.
"You cold, love?”
She nods, but it's a lie. She just wants to be closer, and I’m happy to oblige.
“I love when you say that.”
“Love?”
“Mmm. I know where you’re from that doesn’t mean anything, but—”
“Shhh.” I press my finger to her lips. “It absolutely does. Just because it’s used freely and often doesn’t mean it’s a throwaway word for me.”
Her eyes shine at me. I kiss her cheek.
“You need a break now. It’s dinnertime.”
“Mmm. I’m starving,” she whispers, but doesn’t move.
My hands are warm when they slide under her sweater, my palms rough against the soft swell of her belly, the gentle curve of her bare breasts. Her breath hitches, and she arches, gasping. Holy hell, the sounds she makes.
I press her back against the window, large snowflakes still falling.
"Owen…" Her voice cracks, and fog blooms around her shoulders. I watch it mist the glass behind her, every exhale marking the spot where our bodies push heat into winter.
"No one's out there," I say, nudging her thighs apart. My mouth is on her neck, my voice inside her ear. "But if they were… they'd see who you belong to."
She whimpers, but doesn’t protest.
The tree lights blink red again, then green, casting our skin in color, our reflections twitching across the window—her bare thigh, my knuckles at her waist, her palms flattened to the glass like she needs the cold to stay standing.
She melts into me… ready. When I push into her wet heat, she holds my gaze, daring me to make her mine again.
Each thrust makes the glass shiver—not enough to break—just enough to remind her who she’s with. Where she is. What she means.
She comes with my name on her lips.
After… I hold her. The fire crackles behind us—the window still fogged and the tree still blinking.
And then, quietly, carefully, like it might ruin everything, she whispers, "I could stay."
Could she? Could she stay, knowing she was not just fucking her stepbrother, but a murderer? Would she stay knowing what I do?
My arms tighten around her. She goes on, barely breathing now. “Maybe… this is where I’m meant to be.”
Of course it fucking is. But I don’t answer.
“Let’s get your book finished first, hmm?” I say, rising to my feet and kissing the top of her head. She grabs my hand when I go to bring our empty mugs to the kitchen and kisses my palm.
Christ, she undoes me.
When I come back, she’s staring at her phone, her brows knit in that way that means she’s worried.
“You know. It’s weird…” Her voice trails off.
“What is, lass?” I pick up one of the blankets and fold it, laying it across the back of the chair. We made a right mess in here. I made a right mess of her.
“Haven’t heard from Jake. He hasn’t texted. Usually by now, he’s sending these stupid fucking long-ass apologies. Crying. Telling me he can’t stand being the one on the outside.”
I nod slowly. She needs to talk. I need to tamp down the rage that bubbles inside me.
“It’s just not like him. He’s always tried to come back.”
I settle beside her, my hand brushing her thigh. “That’s the thing with narcissists, right? They always come back until they know they’ve lost all control. Then they disappear. Not because they’re done but because they want to pretend they’re the wounded ones.”
She goes quiet.
I could tell her more. Could explain exactly why Jake isn’t coming back this time. How I made sure of it.
But I don’t. I can’t.
What she can’t know is how far I’d go to keep her here.
She hasn’t moved, not really. She’s still curled beside me on the couch, but her mind’s already gone somewhere I can’t follow. That distant look appears again, like she’s not just remembering but mourning something that never deserved a eulogy.
I watch her fingers tighten around her phone.
“Why do you want to hear from him?” My voice is low, but direct. “You want him to apologize? Again?” Christ, I hate the fucking bastard and hate that she felt obligated to tether herself to him for so damn long.
She doesn’t answer right away, just breathes. “I want closure.”
I shrug. “Maybe closure’s overrated. He was always a spineless prick. Too damn cold for him to come find you.”
She snorts. “I served him divorce papers, and he fell to his knees,” she says bitterly. “Begging.”
I make a face. “Begging, was he? Like some spineless feck.”
She gives me a look, but not the one that means stop. The one that means you’re not wrong.
“Closure?” I scoff, rising, pacing toward the kitchen counter just so I don’t snap. “Bleedin’ Christ, Emma, he already showed you what he is. You want a letter now? A final stamp on what a prick he was?”
“Well, one thing about you hasn’t changed,” she says.
“What’s that?”
“You always did speak your mind, didn’t you?”
“Aye.” And it got me into damn trouble on more than one occasion.
She stands and walks to the kitchen.
All right, maybe I was too harsh, too blunt. But when she busies herself with making hot cocoa, I pull out my phone.
One message:
It’s done.
I read it twice, then swipe away the screen.
Outside, the snowfall is softening, slushier now. The forecast says tomorrow it’ll melt. First time above freezing in weeks.
That’s time slipping through my fingers. That’s the world preparing to thaw. And when it does…
I’ve taken a bit of a break, gone silent and refused all jobs for a short time. But soon, I have to go back to who I am. What I do.
And so does she.
When she comes back, steam curls from two mismatched mugs in her hands. She hands me one with half-melted marshmallows floating on top.
“I was just thinking,” she says, quiet now, curling back beside me as if nothing happened. “It’s Christmas Eve.”
I glance at the tree. The lights blink red and green, and the scent of cocoa and pine hangs in the air.
“It is, isn’t it?” I ask, as if I haven’t been counting down the hours. As if I’m not totally prepared for Christmas.
She sips, then says it with that half smile—that girl still buried under all the years. “Think Santa will come tonight?”
She means it as a joke, but a part of her really hopes, as though she still believes in miracles. Or maybe she just wants to.
I set the mug down and cup her jaw.
“Depends. Were you a good girl or a naughty one?”
Emma bites her lip. “Dear Santa,” she whispers. “I can explain everything… and even if I can’t, I was already spanked for it, so I’m good now.”
I tweak her hair. “For now.”
She goes still. That look in her eyes—hope and grief, trust and confusion—god, it kills me.
But for now, I kiss her and let the night lie.
“Aye, lass, it’s Christmas Eve, and Santa always comes for good girls, doesn’t he?”