The estate gates opened before I reached them.
No delay. No hesitation. Just the same quiet precision the place always had.
The car rolled up the drive, tires whispering over stone, and I watched the house settle into view like it hadn’t changed at all in seven months.
Graduation felt farther away than it should’ve.
So did everything that came after it.
The car stopped.
The door opened.
Cold air met my skin as I stepped out, adjusting my bag as I moved toward the entrance.
The front door opened before I reached it.
The butler gave a small nod. “Miss Alina.”
Like I hadn’t been gone long enough to matter.
“Welcome back.”
I stepped inside.
The house was quiet in its usual way—polished floors, soft light, the faint sound of movement somewhere deeper in the estate.
I turned toward the hall leading off the main corridor, distracted, shifting my bag higher on my shoulder.
The strap slipped.
I bent quickly to catch it before it dropped fully.
And hit something solid behind me.
Not a wall.
A person.
I straightened fast and turned.
Damon Arden.
Too close.
White shirt, sleeves rolled to his forearms, collar loosened like he hadn’t bothered with it after work. Still. Controlled. Like he didn’t move unless he meant to.
His eyes dropped once—to the bag in my hand—then lifted to my face.
Stayed there.
I swallowed. “Sorry. I didn’t see you.”
A pause.
He didn’t step back.
“Seven months,” he said.
Not a question.
I nodded slightly. “Yeah.”
His gaze moved over me—slow, measured, stopping where it shouldn’t have lingered.
“Does your father know you’re dressed like that?”
“It’s just a dress.”
That earned a quiet look. Not quite a reaction. More like restraint.
“Just a dress,” he repeated.
Still watching.
The space between us didn’t shift.
Then—
“Alina!”
Isla.
She came down the hall fast, all energy and noise, pulling me into a hug before I could fully reset.
“Oh my god, you’re here.”
She was already talking, laughing, filling the silence.
I almost forgot he was still there.
Almost.
When I looked up, Damon hadn’t moved.
But his attention had.
From Isla.
Back to me.
Then both of us.
Isla stepped back. “We’re going out tonight.”
“It’s obvious,” he said.
A pause.
“I assume you think you’re old enough for that now.”
“We are,” she said.
His gaze shifted between us once.
“You should change before you go out like that.”
“No,” Isla said immediately.
He didn’t react right away.
Then, flatly—
“Then don’t be surprised when someone else says it less politely.”
Isla rolled her eyes. “It’s just a party.”
I didn’t look away from him.
We moved toward the door.
His voice followed, quieter now.
“Don’t be late.”
And I felt it again as we left.
Not the words.
The attention behind them.
Still there.