Chapter 12

Iwrote until all I could focus on was the blur of words I furiously added to the story.

I wrote about fear. Rage. And finally, the moment I realized Kai had weaponized my own fantasies against me, whether she realized it or not.

I wrote about the first time one of them had kissed me like he was claiming territory. Then when the second growled against my throat right before he bit down. Or when the third man looked at me when he slid deep inside and whispered I was his like he prayed to a god for.

I wrote until the document was pure, filthy, and unadulterated truth. My truth.

And then I walked into the kitchen carrying the laptop like a loaded gun. They were all in there. Waiting patiently. I set the laptop on the dining table and turned it toward them.

“Read it,” I said. My voice didn’t shake anymore, not since I poured my heart and soul into my book, purging myself of it.

The Black Mask pulled it toward him first. The other two leaned in, shoulders brushing. The only sounds were the crackle of the fire and the occasional scrape of a chair.

I kept busy—cleaning, stoking the fire, and even showering. When I finally stepped back into the kitchen, The Skull looked up first. Something raw and unguarded flickered in his eyes.

“Jesus, Gwen.”

The Stag’s jaw flexed. “You named us.”

In my book, they were Roman, Tag, and Pope. I’d used their authentic speech patterns, their real scars, and ink that covered their enormous frames. I put them on paper—so to speak.

I lifted my chin. “You wanted the truth. There it is.”

The Black Mask shut the laptop with a soft click.

“We’re not actors, Gwen. Kai hired us through our private security firm for ‘immersive psychological intervention.’ Her exact words.

Ironclad NDA. Explicit no-sex clause.” His eyes locked on mine, unflinching.

“We lasted less than an hour before we torched it.”

The Skull snorted. “Try twenty minutes.”

The Stag leaned in, elbows on his knees.

“We’ve faked kidnappings for jaded billionaires.

Stalked starlets who paid us to make their pulses race.

Never once broke protocol.” His gaze dragged over my mouth like a promise.

“Then you looked at us like you were begging to be wrecked. So we wrecked you.”

I swallowed hard. “And now?”

The Black Mask let the silence stretch until it felt like a hand around my throat. “Now we stay until you look us in the eye and tell us—truly tell us—to leave.”

My heart punched my ribs. “And if I say it? If I mean it?”

The Skull’s grin was slow, filthy. “You won’t.”

The Stag’s voice dropped to a growl. “Because we all know what you really want.”

“So, fuck it,” The Black Mask said, almost gentle.

“Let’s burn this whole thing down together,” The Stag added.

I drew a breath that tasted like smoke and sin.

You know what?

Fuck it.

I stepped toward them, the robe slipping from my shoulders to pool at my feet, and walked straight into the fire they’d been stoking all night. Their roles were now nothing but ash.

Whatever came next, we’d face it the same way we’d faced everything else since they broke into the cabin and answered my unspoken fantasy.

Together and unrepentant.

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