[Evelina’s POV—Vinter Mansion—Midnight After the Ambush]
The mansion didn’t sleep.
It never did.
Even past midnight, even after blood had dried and bodies were burned out of existence, the halls humd with quiet vigilance—guards changing shifts, footsteps asured, weapons checked twice.
War doesn’t announce itself when it arrives.
It settles in.
I stood at the window of my room, fingers resting lightly against the glass, watching the city breathe below. Lights flickered. Cars passed. People lived.
As if tonight hadn’t happened.
As if Cassian Vinter hadn’t drawn the first real line in blood.
Behind , Alina slept curled into the pillows, clutching the edge of my sleeve like it was a lifeline. She hadn’t cried again. Children who grow up around violence rarely do. They adapt.
That thought made sothing cold coil in my chest.
Theo sat on the couch across the room, shirt half-buttoned, a glass of untouched liquor in his hand. He hadn’t said much since we returned. When Theo went quiet, it ant he was planning sothing irreversible.
"You’re thinking too loudly again," he said at last.
I didn’t turn. "So are you."
A low huff of amusent escaped him. "Fair."
I finally faced him, folding my arms. "Then I wonder," I said coolly, "why you’re in my room, Mr. Vinter."
His gaze lifted—slow, deliberate—and his lips curved into that infuriating smirk. "I enjoy the feeling."
I frowned. "The feeling?"
He rose then. Not abruptly. Not hurried.
Each step toward felt calculated and predatory. He stopped at the edge of the mattress, then sat—too close. Far too close. The bed dipped beneath his weight, and with it, sothing unsteady shifted inside my chest.
He leaned in. Very slowly. So slowly I could count my breaths between the inches.
"The feeling," he murmured near my ear, "of being your husband."
I stared at him dumbfounded. "I wonder when we got married to have you enjoy such a delusional feeling?"
"From the mont I decided you’re mine," he said.
THUMP.THUMP.
My heart slamd violently against my ribs, traitorous and loud.
I shoved him back, palms flat against his chest. "Stay in your line, Theo. I don’t tolerate assault. Cross it, and I will kick your ass."
Instead of retreating, his smirk deepened.
"I’m ready," he said softly, leaning in again, voice velvet-dark, "to be kicked by you, Evelina."
I swallowed hard and turned my face away. "Ugh...seriously. You should go to—"
He didn’t let finish. Two fingers lifted, gentle but commanding, pressing lightly against my lips.
"Shh, babe."
The word curled through like smoke.
"Do you even realize you look so beautiful," he continued, eyes dragging over my face unashadly, "when I’m this close?"
His fingers traced the outline of my mouth—slow, deliberate—smudging my lipstick, leaving heat in their wake. I froze, breath shallow, every nerve screaming.
Then—He withdrew his hand.
And without breaking eye contact, he brought those fingers to his lips.
A slow lick.
Unhurried. Intentional.
As if he wanted to understand exactly what he was doing to .
His eyes darkened. ?
I stared at him dumbfounded. "What the hell is this perverted behavior?"
Theo’s smirk didn’t soften. If anything, it sharpened.
"Pervert behavior?" he repeated lazily, like the words amused him rather than offended him. "That’s cruel, Babe."
He leaned back just enough to give a fraction of air—not space. Never space.
"I was only tasting the lipstick," he continued calmly, rolling the word on his tongue like a sin he intended to repeat, "that had the honor of touching your lips."
His eyes never left my mouth.
Not for a second.
"And honestly?" he added, voice dipping lower, slower, "it feels like a cri to let sothing that tempting exist... without claiming it."
My pulse slamd against my ribs.
THUMP.THUMP.
I hated that he noticed.
Of course he did.
I forced my chin up, refusing to retreat even as my body scread awareness. "You’re crossing lines again, Theo."
He humd thoughtfully. "No."
He leaned in—close enough that I could feel his breath, warm and steady, brushing my skin. "I’m standing right on them."
My fingers curled into the mattress. "Move," I said sharply. "Before I remind you I’m not soone you get to toy with."
His gaze flickered—briefly—to my clenched hand.
Then back to my eyes. That smile returned. Slower. Darker.
"I know," he said quietly. "That’s why this is interesting."
He lifted his hand—but stopped inches from my face. Didn’t touch. Didn’t need to.
"You don’t freeze," Theo murmured. "You don’t submit. You don’t beg."
His thumb hovered near my jaw, heat radiating without contact.
"You threaten," he finished. "And you an it."
I didn’t look away.
"Then act like it, Theo," I said, voice steady, eyes locked on his. "Don’t forget—I still have a gun beneath my pillow. And my bodyguard is one order away. So step back before your open seduction earns you a death that doesn’t co from your brother... but from ."
For a beat—Then he smiled.
Slow. Lethal. Proud.
"There it is," he said softly. "That spine."
His gaze dragged over my face, not hungry—evaluating. Like a general assessing a battlefield, he intended to conquer, not rush.
"So dangerously beautiful," he continued, voice dropping into that low, calm register that carried executions like casual decisions. "Don’t worry, babe. I won’t touch those blessed lips... not yet."
He straightened, but his presence didn’t retreat. If anything, it expanded.
"After Cassian is dead," he said evenly, the words landing with finality, "I’ll make you mine. Completely."
The air went cold.
"But until then—" his eyes darkened, all warmth draining away, "understand this."
He leaned closer—not to touch, but to ensure every syllable carved itself into .
"If anyone dares get closer to you," Theo said quietly, "they die."
No hesitation. No flourish.
"Doesn’t matter who they are. Doesn’t matter how loyal they pretend to be." A pause. Razor-thin. "Even your bodyguard."
My breath caught.
"I will end him," Theo finished, calm as stone, "before anyone else gets the chance."
He stepped back at last, the threat hanging between us like a signed contract.
"Not jealousy," he added, almost thoughtfully. "Ownership."
His eyes t mine—no apology there. No doubt.
"Sleep well, Evelina," he said. "You’re safest when everyone knows you’re mine... and most afraid of what that ans."
Then he turned and left.
And this ti—I didn’t tell myself I was safe.
I told myself I had just been warned. And the most dangerous n?
They don’t raise their voices.
They make promises.
***
[Evelina’s POV—Vinter Mansion—The Next Day]
Morning didn’t ease the tension.
It sharpened it.
Sunlight poured through the tall windows like nothing had happened—like threats hadn’t been carved into the air last night, like ownership hadn’t been declared in a voice calm enough to pass for love. I dressed slowly, deliberately. Black slacks. A crisp blouse. Hair tied back.
By the ti I stepped into the corridor, the mansion was already awake. Too awake. Guards repositioned. New faces. New routes. A subtle shift in the air told Theo had made decisions before dawn—and the world was rearranging itself to obey.
Rowan waited near the staircase.
He looked... different. Sharper. Tired in the way soldiers get when they’ve slept with one eye open.
"Miss," he greeted.
"Report," I said.
His jaw tightened. "Security protocols have changed. Effective imdiately."
I stopped mid-step. "Changed how?"
"No one approaches you without clearance," he said evenly. "No one follows you without my knowledge. And no one—" he paused, choosing his words carefully, "—speaks to you privately unless Mr. Vinter permits it."
Ah.
There it was.
Theo’s answer from last night.
I smiled faintly. "And you?"
Rowan t my gaze. For a second, sothing unreadable flickered there. Then it was gone.
"I’m still your bodyguard," he said. "Until you tell otherwise."
Good.
We reached the main hall just as Theo descended the opposite staircase. He was already dressed for work—tailored coat, sleeves rolled once, watch catching the light. He looked composed. Untouched.
Like a man who slept well after making promises he intended to keep.
His eyes found instantly.
They always did.
"Morning, wife," he said casually.
I didn’t miss a step. "Try again."
He smirked. "Soon, you will be."
The servants pretended not to hear. The guards pretended not to react. Everyone pretended this was normal.
It wasn’t.
We walked side by side toward the entrance. Close—but not touching. The space between us felt intentional. Charged.
"You didn’t answer last night," Theo said, tone conversational. "About what you want to do to Cassian."
"I did," I replied. "You just didn’t like how calmly I said it."
His smile sharpened. "I liked it very much."
We stopped at the door. He turned to face fully now, eyes scanning my face like he was committing it to mory again.
"Today," he said, "you stay where I can see you."
"That sounds familiar."
"Because it’s non-negotiable."
I leaned in just enough for him to hear —and only him. "Then make sure you can keep up."
For a mont—just a mont—sothing wild flashed through his eyes.
Then he laughed. Low. Dangerous. Delighted.
"God," he murmured, opening the door for , "you’re going to ruin ."
No.
You already are ruined.
And as the doors closed and the convoy pulled forward, one truth settled cold and clear in my chest:
Theo wasn’t waiting to claim anymore.
He was clearing the world first.
And I was walking beside him—not because I was trapped—
—but because I wanted to see what would happen when a man like him finally lost everything he was holding back.
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