She rinsed her hands under freezing water and stared at her reflection in the mirror. Hair matted to her forehead. Mascara smudged under her eyes. Lips cracked. Hoodie two sizes too big-it was Nathan's, smelled like his cologne and sex. And yet, she couldn't take it off. It felt like the last thing tying her to him. To the idea of him. The version of him she kept in her head-gentle, grateful, hers.
But he was never hers.
Her phone buzzed against the bathroom floor. A text from Zara:
Don't forget your shift in the morning. Rent's due. Don't fuck this up.
Tessa sighed and pushed herself up. Her knees ached. Her chest was heavy.
Nathan was passed out on the couch, face-down, arm dangling, mouth open. He didn't even know she'd been in his room for the past two hours. Didn't ask how she got home. Didn't know she'd stayed up all night the night before helping him write a paper he wouldn't read.
She picked up her heels, cradled them in one hand, and walked out the door barefoot.
The porch creaked under her weight. Her toes curled against the cold concrete. She took a deep breath. It was humid. Sticky. Like summer was trying to suffocate her.
She started down the sidewalk, eyes on the grass, heart somewhere behind her, probably still sitting on the bathroom floor.
That's when she nearly slammed into the parked black sedan.
The passenger-side window rolled down slow. Tinted glass slid back like it was waiting for her.
Inside was a man. Not a boy. A man.
He wore a suit, black-on-black, with his collar open. Salt-and-pepper stubble along a sharp jaw. And eyes-gray, unreadable, a storm barely held together.
He looked at her like he knew her. Like he saw her. Not the invisible girl Nathan dragged around. Not the emotional maid. Not the disposable helper.
"You shouldn't cry for a boy who doesn't know how to hold onto a woman," he said, voice smooth and deep and dangerously calm. "Especially not when his father does."
Tessa froze.
His father?
She blinked,looked again. And suddenly, the resemblance hit. Same jawline. Same brows. Just sharper. Older. Colder.
Dorian Cross.
She'd seen pictures. Nathan didn't talk about him much, but when he did, it was with venom. She'd assumed he was long gone, out of the picture. Clearly, she was wrong.
"I-" she started, but nothing came out. Her throat was too dry.
He stepped out of the car and stood beside her, tall and silent. He didn't touch her. Didn't move too close. But the energy between them shifted like gravity had chosen sides.
"You look exhausted," he said quietly.
"I'm fine."
"No," he replied. "You're loyal. Not fine."
Her eyes flicked up to his.
He was calm. Too calm. The kind of man who didn't speak unless he meant every word. The kind who didn't need to raise his voice to make you listen.
She wanted to say something-anything-but her voice was trapped in the back of her mouth.
He opened the car door. "Come with me. Just for a drive."
Tessa's head screamed no. Her feet didn't move.
"I'm not trying to fuck you," he added, almost lazily. "I'm just offering you a moment away from the mess."
She hesitated, then nodded once and slid into the passenger seat.
The leather was cool against her thighs. The car smelled like tobacco and expensive cologne. She kept her hands in her lap, trying to keep her heart steady.
He drove smoothly, one hand on the wheel, the other resting on the console like he had nowhere better to be.
They didn't speak for a while. Just silence and streetlights flashing past the windows.
"Why do you stay?" he asked.
Tessa looked at him.
He didn't look at her back.
"I don't know," she said. "Maybe I'm stupid."
He shook his head. "You're not stupid. You're starving."
Her throat tightened. He wasn't wrong.
"I thought if I stayed long enough," she whispered, "he'd eventually see me."
"And did he?"
She shook her head.
Dorian pulled into a quiet side road, turned off the engine, and let the silence hang heavy.
"You deserve more than crumbs, Tessa."
Her name sounded strange in his mouth. Intimate.
She stared at the dashboard, too afraid to look at him.
"What if I offered you more?" he asked, voice low and thick.
Her chest stuttered.
"I'm not asking you to answer now," he continued. "Just think about it."
He handed her a card. Silver, heavy, embossed.
Dorian Cross. CEO. Cross Industries.
And his number.
He started the car again and drove her back. Smooth. Unbothered. Like nothing had happened. Like he hadn't just turned her whole chest inside out.
He parked in front of Nathan's house, glanced at her one more time.
"Good night, Tessa."
She stepped out without a word. Watched him drive away.
She stood in the driveway, barefoot, heart racing, card clutched in her hand.
Inside, Nathan snored on the couch. Oblivious. As always.
She dropped the card on the kitchen counter beside his empty bottle. Took off his hoodie. Left it there, too.
By the time she stepped into the shower, her body was shaking-not from fear, not from shame-but from something else.
Something darker.
Something that whispered,
> You don't have to wait anymore.