Claimed Episode

1164 Words
Maya had always been the good girl. The responsible one. The predictable one. The woman who did the right thing even when no one was watching. She built her life carefully—measured decisions, steady relationships, a respectable job at a firm where hard work mattered more than charm. She believed in loyalty. In timing. In patience. She also believed in boundaries. For three years, Julian had been one of those boundaries. They met on her second week at the company. He was charming without trying, observant in a way that made her feel seen, and annoyingly good at his job. What started as polite teamwork slowly turned into shared coffee breaks, inside jokes during meetings, and long conversations about everything except the one thing that lingered unspoken between them. The attraction. It was subtle at first—a pause that lasted a second too long, a brush of hands over printed reports, the way his eyes softened when she laughed. But Maya was careful. She was always careful. There were partners involved at different times. Career goals. The fear of ruining something steady for something uncertain. So they became “work friends.” The kind who knew each other’s coffee orders by heart. The kind who texted memes during painfully long presentations. The kind who felt the weight of something more but never named it. Until night, the pretending became heavier than the truth. It was a rainy Tuesday when the office lights dimmed one by one, leaving only their corner illuminated. They had stayed late to finish a project, the building hollow and echoing around them. Outside, rain tapped insistently against the glass like a countdown. Maya told herself it was just another late night. Just another boundary. But when Julian stood a little too close while reviewing the final slides, when his voice dropped from playful to quiet, something inside her shifted. Not reckless. Not careless. Just honest. And honesty, she was beginning to realize, could be far more dangerous than desire. “Come back to my place?” he asked. It wasn’t smooth. His voice betrayed him, cracking slightly at the end, as though the weight of three restrained years had settled in his throat. Maya didn’t hesitate this time. “Yes,” she breathed, her pulse thundering. “Finally, yes.” Julian’s apartment felt nothing like the office. It was dim, warm, lived-in. Books stacked carelessly on the coffee table. A jacket thrown over the back of a chair. The faint scent of cedarwood and something distinctly him—clean skin and worn cotton. The door clicked shut behind them, and the silence changed. For a second, they simply stood there. Three years of restraint. Of glances. Of almost. He stepped closer, slowly, as if approaching something sacred. “You can still change your mind,” he murmured. Maya shook her head. “I’ve been changing my mind for three years.” That was all it took. They didn’t make it past the kitchen. Her back met the cool granite counter, the temperature shocking against the heat building under her skin. Julian’s hand hovered at her waist like he was afraid to touch her too quickly—as if she might disappear. “You’re overthinking it,” she whispered, her fingers sliding into the front of his shirt, gripping the fabric. She could feel the steady rise and fall of his breathing beneath her knuckles. “I’ve wanted this since the Christmas party in 2022,” he confessed, voice rough. “I don’t want to ruin it.” “You won’t.” Her hip bumped the counter as she tugged him closer, and he nearly lost his balance over her sneakers. They both laughed—soft, breathless, nervous. The laughter dissolved when his hand finally settled firmly at her waist. Skin to fabric. Heat through layers. He leaned in slowly this time, giving her space to pull away. She didn’t. Their lips met—not frantic, not desperate—but deep. Searching. The kiss tasted faintly of spice and sweet coconut from the takeout they’d shared, familiar and intimate. It wasn’t fireworks. It was warmth spreading outward, slow and consuming. His fingers traced the curve of her hip, tentative at first, then surer when she arched slightly into him. She felt the tremor in his hands, the effort he was making to stay steady. “Julian,” she whispered against his mouth. That was the breaking point. His hands moved with more certainty, sliding beneath the hem of her blouse, fingertips brushing bare skin. The first touch made her inhale sharply. Warm palm against the small of her back. His thumb tracing the sensitive line just above her waist. Skin to skin. Real. She pushed his jacket off his shoulders, fingers moving to the buttons of his shirt. It wasn’t graceful—one button slipped from her grasp, another stuck—but neither of them cared. When the fabric finally parted, she pressed her palm flat against his chest. He was warm. Solid. Real in a way she had only imagined. The air thickened as layers disappeared. Fabric sliding over shoulders. The soft sound of denim against tile. The quiet, shaky exhale when her bare skin met his fully. He looked at her then. Not hungrily. Reverently. She felt exposed—not just physically—but completely. The stretch marks she usually hid. The softness she sometimes criticized in the mirror. Under his gaze, none of it felt flawed. His hands traced her slowly, like he was memorizing her. “You’re…” He didn’t finish the sentence. But the way he touched her said enough. They moved down the hallway in a blur of kisses and laughter, bumping into walls, hands exploring with growing confidence. In the bedroom, the energy shifted again—quieter now. Slower. More intentional. When they fell onto the mattress, it wasn’t about urgency anymore. It was about closeness. Foreheads pressed together. Fingers intertwined. The steady rhythm of breathing syncing. The first true press of their bodies together sent a wave of heat through her. No more pretending. No more boundaries. Just the weight of him, the warmth of him, the reality of finally crossing a line they had drawn and redrawn for years. It wasn’t perfect. There were tangled sheets. A stubborn zipper that made them both laugh again. His hands still shaking slightly—not from inexperience, but from caring too much. And that was what made it intimate. Every touch felt earned. Every kiss layered with history. Every whispered breath heavy with the knowledge that this wasn’t casual. This was three years of restraint finally exhaling. When he pulled her close, skin against skin, the world outside his apartment disappeared. There were no meetings. No rules. No almosts. Only this. Only them. And for the first time, Maya didn’t feel like the good girl making the safe choice. She felt like a woman choosing what she wanted—and being chosen back.
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