Denise didn’t sleep again.
Not after checking the lock three more times.
Not after sitting with her back pressed against the headboard, staring at the door like it might breathe.
By morning, exhaustion sat heavy behind her eyes.
But the mansion was already awake.
Too awake.
Footsteps echoed faintly in the distance.
Doors opened and closed somewhere far below.
Life continuing as if nothing strange had happened last night.
Denise got up slowly and walked to the balcony.
The city outside looked normal.
That was the strangest part.
Everything looked normal.
But nothing felt normal anymore.
A soft knock interrupted her thoughts.
She stiffened instantly.
“Denise.”
Liam.
Her chest tightened slightly at the sound of his voice again.
She opened the door just enough.
He stood there like he hadn’t left at all.
Same calm expression.
Same controlled posture.
But his eyes…
They were more focused than usual.
Like he had already been awake for hours.
“You didn’t sleep,” he said.
Denise frowned. “You were monitoring that?”
A faint pause.
“I can tell.”
She crossed her arms. “That’s creepy.”
“It’s accurate.”
Denise exhaled sharply. “What do you want?”
Liam didn’t answer immediately.
Instead, his gaze shifted briefly into her room again.
Then back to her.
“You’re coming with me,” he said.
Denise blinked. “Where?”
A pause.
“Downstairs.”
“That’s not an answer.”
Liam’s eyes held hers for a second longer than necessary.
Then:
“Something happened last night.”
Denise felt her stomach tighten.
“I already know that,” she said. “You broke into my room—”
“I didn’t break in.”
“You keep saying that like it changes anything.”
Liam stepped slightly closer.
His voice lowered.
“It wasn’t me who entered your room first.”
Denise froze.
The hallway suddenly felt colder.
“What… does that mean?”
Liam studied her face carefully.
Like he was deciding how much truth she could handle.
Then:
“There was a breach in the east corridor,” he said. “Someone got past three security layers.”
Denise felt her throat tighten. “And they came into my room?”
“They tried.”
Silence.
Denise’s voice came out quieter. “Tried?”
Liam nodded once.
Then added, calmly:
“They didn’t leave the hallway.”
That made her stomach drop.
“What happened to them?”
A pause.
Too long.
Then Liam said:
“They left.”
Denise frowned. “So they escaped?”
Liam’s expression didn’t change.
“No.”
The word landed heavily.
Denise stared at him.
“What are you not saying?”
Liam didn’t answer immediately.
Instead, he stepped past her into the room.
Not invading.
Just… present.
Then he looked at her properly.
“You’re not going to like this answer,” he said.
Denise’s heartbeat picked up slightly. “Try me.”
A long silence.
Then Liam said, very quietly:
“They were afraid of me.”
Denise blinked. “That’s it?”
“No.”
Another pause.
Then:
“They didn’t fear what I am supposed to be.”
That sentence made something uneasy shift inside her.
“What are you supposed to be?” she asked carefully.
Liam didn’t respond immediately.
Instead, he walked toward the balcony doors.
And for a moment, Denise noticed something odd.
The way he moved…
like he was measuring every sound in the room.
Like he was listening to things she couldn’t hear.
“I should’ve explained this earlier,” he said finally.
Denise stayed still. “Explained what?”
Liam turned back to her.
And this time, the air around him felt different.
Heavier.
More contained.
“You’re not the only one who changes things when they’re near you,” he said.
Denise frowned. “That doesn’t make sense.”
“It will.”
A pause.
Then Liam stepped closer again.
Not aggressive.
Not rushed.
But deliberate.
“You feel it,” he said quietly.
Denise hesitated. “Feel what?”
His eyes locked onto hers.
“That the house reacts to you.”
A small silence.
Denise laughed nervously. “That’s ridiculous.”
But even as she said it…
she remembered the locked door.
The missing light.
The silence that didn’t feel natural.
Liam watched her carefully.
Then:
“You’re not imagining it.”
Denise shook her head slightly. “No, I think I am.”
Liam stepped closer again.
Too close.
But not touching.
Never touching unless he chose to.
“That’s the problem,” he said softly.
“You keep trying to explain things like they belong in your world.”
Denise’s voice dropped. “And what world do they belong in?”
A pause.
Then Liam said:
“Mine.”
The word hung between them.
Heavy.
Unfinished.
Denise stared at him.
Something inside her didn’t want to believe him.
But something else—
something quieter—
was starting to pay attention.
Liam finally broke the silence.
“You’re coming downstairs,” he said again.
Denise frowned. “Why?”
“Because I need you to see something.”
Her stomach tightened. “That’s not reassuring.”
“It’s necessary.”
Denise hesitated.
Then slowly followed him.
—
The lower level of the mansion was colder.
Not temperature-wise.
Atmosphere-wise.
Denise noticed it immediately as they descended the grand staircase.
Even the staff moved differently here.
Quieter.
More cautious.
Like they were avoiding something they couldn’t name.
Liam led her through a long corridor until they reached a heavy steel door.
Denise stopped.
“This looks like a vault.”
“It is.”
Her eyes narrowed. “Why are we here?”
Liam turned slightly toward her.
His expression was unreadable again.
“Because last night,” he said quietly, “someone didn’t come here by accident.”
Denise frowned. “You already said that.”
“I didn’t finish.”
A pause.
Then he placed his hand on the biometric lock.
The door clicked.
Slowly opened.
Cold air spilled out.
Denise stepped closer instinctively, then stopped herself.
Inside the room—
there were monitors.
Screens.
Live feeds.
Every angle of the mansion.
Every hallway.
Every exit.
Denise’s breath caught.
“You’re… watching everything,” she whispered.
Liam didn’t deny it.
“I have to.”
Her voice tightened. “That’s insane.”
Liam finally looked at her fully.
“You were almost taken last night.”
Denise froze slightly.
“Taken?”
“Yes.”
Silence.
Then Liam stepped closer.
His voice lowered.
“And if I hadn’t been in the house…”
He stopped.
Didn’t finish the sentence.
Denise swallowed. “Why are people targeting me?”
A pause.
Then Liam said something that made the air feel like it stopped moving.
“Because you’re near me.”
Denise shook her head slightly. “That still doesn’t explain anything.”
“It explains everything.”
He stepped closer again.
Now there was no space left between explanation and reality.
“You think you met me randomly,” he said quietly.
Denise frowned.
“I didn’t plan it either,” Liam continued.
“But the moment I saw you…”
He paused.
Something flickered behind his eyes.
Not weakness.
Not softness.
Something older.
Stronger.
“…it wasn’t random anymore.”
Denise’s voice came out quieter. “What does that mean?”
Liam held her gaze.
And for the first time since she met him…
he looked like he was standing on the edge of something he couldn’t fully control.
“You don’t belong in a world where you can be ignored,” he said softly.
A pause.
Then, even quieter:
“And I don’t belong in a world where I can ignore you.”
The silence that followed wasn’t empty.
It was loaded.
Denise stood very still.
Because for the first time…
she wasn’t sure if Liam Dawson was protecting her.
Or if something about her was already trapped in him.