Chapter Twenty-Two
Alex
Time became meaningless as minutes blurred together in a haze of his hands on my skin, his voice in my ear, his presence filling every corner of the room until there was nothing else. No past. No future. Just the endless present where Nano existed, and I existed only in relation to him.
This is wrong. The thought came less frequently now. Quieter. Easier to ignore.
Because for the first time in my life, I felt wanted. Not as a body to be used, not as a means to an end, but as something precious. Something worth caring for. He looked at me like I mattered, like every breath I took was important to him, like my comfort was his sole purpose.
And I was drowning in it.
I found myself watching him when he moved around the room, cataloging the way his shoulders shifted beneath his shirt, the way his hands—those brutal, violent hands—could be so impossibly gentle.
I memorized the sound of his voice when he spoke to me in the dark, so low, rough, and intimate.
I craved the weight of his attention like a drug, felt myself leaning into his touch before he even made contact, as my body anticipated his care with a desperation that should have horrified me.
It did horrify me. But not enough to stop.
“Come here,” he would say, and I would go. Every time. Without hesitation. Without thought.
He would pull me into his lap, and I would curl against his chest, breathing in the scent of leather and smoke and something uniquely him.
His fingers would trace patterns on my skin, my arms, my back, my thighs, and I would feel myself melt, as I dissolved into sensation until I couldn’t remember why I had ever wanted to resist.
“Good girl,” he would murmur, and his praise would light me up from the inside, warm and golden and so addictive, I started seeking his approval.
Started watching his face for signs of pleasure when I did what he wanted.
Started feeling a sick twist of anxiety when I thought I had disappointed him, followed by a rush of relief when he smiled at me, when he touched me, when he told me I was doing well.
He’s breaking you down. He’s remaking you into something compliant. Something that belongs to him.
I knew. God, I knew.
Logically, rationally, I understood exactly what he was doing.
I had read about it, even seen it happen to other girls.
Stockholm syndrome. Trauma bonding. Conditioning.
All the clinical terms that described the systematic destruction of someone’s autonomy, the careful cultivation of dependence and need.
But knowing didn’t help. Because none of it mattered anymore.
Not the money. Not his threats. Not the violence I knew was coming, the promises he made about what he would do to me if I didn’t comply.
None of it could compete with the way he made me feel when he held me, when he whispered my name like it was something sacred, when he looked at me like I was the only thing in the world that mattered.
For the first time in my life, I felt loved. Protected. Cherished. Desired in a way that had nothing to do with my body and everything to do with me. The broken, damaged, fucked-up parts of me I spent years trying to hide, he saw them all, and he didn’t flinch. Didn’t turn away.
He just... stayed. He took care of me. He made me feel like I was worth taking care of.
It was a lie. I knew it was a lie. But it was the most beautiful lie anyone had ever told me, and I wanted to believe it so badly I could taste it.
So I let him touch me. Let him hold me. Let him feed me and bathe me and dress me as if I were something precious, something fragile that needed protection.
I let him break down every wall I spent years building, let him dismantle my defenses piece by piece until I didn’t know where I ended and he began.
I was eager to please him. Desperate for it.
The realization should have terrified me, but instead it felt inevitable, like this was always where I was headed, like every choice I made had led me here, to this room, to this man, to this moment where I finally stopped fighting and just.. . surrendered.
This is what you wanted all along, a voice whispered in the back of my mind. Someone to take the choice away. Someone to make you feel safe enough to stop running.
Maybe it was true. Maybe I had been looking for this my whole life.
Looking for someone strong enough to hold me together when my life fell apart, someone who wouldn’t let me destroy myself, someone who would care for me even when I didn’t know how to care for myself.
Or maybe I was just so fucking broken that I mistook captivity for love.
I didn’t know anymore. I couldn’t tell the difference. I didn’t want to.
I stopped counting how long I had been here, stopped trying to plan my escape, stopped thinking about the money or the life I had left behind. There was only Nano. Only this room. Only the endless present where I was safe and wanted and his.
Until he sat me down in front of his computer.
I didn’t think anything of it at first. He had been working on something for the past hour, his attention focused on the screen while I curled up on his bed, watching him with that same desperate need for his attention that had become second nature.
“Alexandra,” he said, and something in his tone made my stomach clench. “Come here.”
I went. Of course, I went. My body moved before my mind could process his command, drawn to him like gravity, like I didn’t have a choice anymore.
He pulled me onto his lap, positioning me in front of the keyboard, as his arms bracketed me on either side. His chest was warm against my back, his breath stirring my hair, and I felt myself relax into him automatically, as my body recognized his touch as safety, as home.
The screen in front of me showed an international banking site. Professional. Secure. The kind of interface I had seen before, in another life, when I had been someone else, and my heart pounded.
“Return the money, Alexandra.” His voice was calm. Reasonable. Like he was asking me to pass the salt, not demanding I give up the only leverage I had, the only thing keeping me alive.
I stared at the screen, my hands frozen above the keyboard.
The cursor blinked at me, patient and expectant, as it waited for me to type in the account numbers, the passwords, the authorization codes that would transfer seventy-five million dollars back to the club. Back to the Brotherhood of Bastards.
Move, I told myself. Just do it. Give him what he wants.
He’ll keep taking care of you. He’ll keep making you feel safe.
Just do what he says. But my hands wouldn’t move.
Because somewhere beneath the haze of contentment, beneath the desperate need for his approval and the addiction to his touch, a small voice screamed, If you do this, you’re dead.
If you give him the money, you have nothing left.
No leverage. No protection. Nothing to stop them from putting a bullet in your head and dumping your body in a ditch.
The silence stretched as my heart hammered against my ribs. My fingers trembled above the keys, caught between the overwhelming need to please him and the primal instinct for survival that I couldn’t quite silence.
Please, I thought desperately. Please don’t make me choose. Please don’t make me.
I heard him sigh.
The sound was soft. Almost disappointed, and it sent ice flooding through my veins, cutting through the warm haze of safety and contentment like a knife.
My head whipped toward him, and what I saw made my breath catch in my throat. The man who held me so gently, who fed me and bathed me and whispered sweet things in my ear, was gone. In his place was something else.
Something dark and cold, and utterly terrifying.
His eyes had changed. The warmth I had grown addicted to had vanished, replaced by a darkness that made my skin crawl. His expression was calm, almost pleasant, but there was something wrong about it, something predatory that set every instinct screaming.
And then he smiled.
It wasn’t the smile I craved, the one that made me feel cherished and wanted. This smile was sharp. Hungry. The smile of something that had been waiting patiently for exactly this moment.
“Thank you,” he whispered softly, leaning close.
His breath was hot against my cheek. His hand cupped the side of my face, holding me still, as my entire body went rigid with a fear so profound it eclipsed everything else.
And then his tongue, wet, slow, and deliberate, dragged up the side of my face from my jaw to my temple. “Thank you for misbehaving.”
His words sent a shiver of pure terror down my spine.
Because I understood exactly what I had done.
Exactly what he had been waiting for. He gave me everything I had ever wanted.
Safety, care, affection, love, and God forgive me, I believed it was real.
And the second I refused him, the second I showed him I still had some small piece of myself that he didn’t own, he dropped the mask.
This was what he wanted all along.
Not my compliance.
Not my surrender.
My defiance.
Because the man who had been taking care of me, the man I fell for, had been an illusion.
A carefully constructed fantasy designed to make me feel safe enough to lower my defenses, to make me crave his approval so desperately that refusing him would feel like tearing out my own heart.
And when I refused anyway, when I chose survival over his approval, I gave him exactly what he needed.
An excuse. A reason to stop being gentle.
To stop pretending. To finally, finally do all the things he’d promised since the moment he caught me.
All the things he had been holding back.
Oh God.
My hands shook as the warmth I had felt moments ago evaporated, replaced by a cold so profound I thought I might shatter. He pulled back just enough to look at me, his hand still cupping my face, as his thumb brushed across my cheekbone in a mockery of tenderness.
“I’ve been so patient with you,” he said quietly. “So careful. Waiting for you to trust me. Waiting for you to feel safe.”
His smile widened, and I saw something in his eyes that made my stomach drop.
Anticipation.
“Now you get to learn what happens when you defy me.”