Chapter 2: The First Supper

1131 Words
The silk lay across Elena’s hands like a dare. Midnight blue and impossibly soft, the fabric caught the light as she lifted it, sliding through her fingers with a sensual weight that made her stomach tighten. It wasn’t just a dress it was a statement. A provocation. Something meant for candlelit rooms and secrets whispered too close, not a formal dinner table shared with her best friend and her father. Julian Vance had chosen it deliberately. That knowledge settled low in her body, heavy and unsettling. Outside the windows, snow fell in thick, relentless sheets, blurring the world into shades of white and gray. The estate felt sealed off, insulated from consequence. Every flake that struck the glass seemed to erase another line she shouldn’t cross. You’re here for Chloe, Elena told herself. You’re here to study. This is temporary. But the dress waited. Disobedience would not go unnoticed. She sensed that instinctively, the way prey senses the attention of something watching from the dark. Julian didn’t issue commands lightly, and he wouldn’t tolerate being ignored. With a slow breath, Elena undressed. Her sweater and jeans fell away, replaced by the whisper of silk against bare skin. The dress clung where it shouldn’t have, skimmed where it could have hidden. It bared her shoulders, the vulnerable line of her throat, the delicate hollow just above her collarbones. When she faced the mirror, she barely recognized herself. The girl looking back wasn’t a scholarship student or a careful planner. She looked older. Sharper. Like someone standing on the edge of a mistake she already knew she would make. A soft knock broke the spell. “Elena?” Chloe’s voice carried easily through the door. “Dad hates being kept waiting.” “Coming,” Elena replied, steadying her tone. She reached for the silver chain her grandmother had given her a small, familiar weight and fastened it around her neck. It felt like armor. Or maybe a reminder of who she was before she stepped into this house. When she opened the door, Chloe froze. “Oh my God,” she breathed. “El… you look insane. In a good way. Since when do you own something like that?” Elena smiled faintly. “Holiday gift.” Chloe grinned. “Well, whoever gave it to you has taste.” If only she knew. --- The formal dining room was already set when they arrived. A long mahogany table stretched beneath a crystal chandelier, candles flickering softly along its center. Julian sat at the head, relaxed and composed, a glass of amber liquid resting loosely in his hand. He looked up as Elena entered. The moment stretched. His gaze moved over her slowly not openly lewd, not hurried. Assessing. Appreciative. Possessive, in a way that made her skin prickle. “Well,” he said at last, rising slightly. “You look beautiful, Elena.” The word beautiful landed heavier than any compliment should have. Chloe dropped into her seat with a satisfied sigh. “See? I told you she’d be worth the wait.” Julian’s eyes never left Elena as he gestured to the chair at his right. Her chest tightened. She took the seat, acutely aware of the narrow distance between them. Heat radiated from his body, subtle but undeniable, carrying that familiar scent sandalwood, smoke, something darker beneath it. Dinner began smoothly. Staff moved silently, serving course after course with practiced precision. Chloe filled the space with easy chatter, recounting campus gossip and holiday plans. Elena nodded and smiled at the right moments, though her focus fractured every time Julian shifted beside her. He ate with deliberate restraint. Every movement was measured. When he spoke, it was never over anyone else he waited, listened, chose his moments carefully. “So,” he said at one point, setting his fork down. “Constitutional Law, is it?” “Yes,” Elena replied, grateful for something solid to hold onto. “It’s challenging, but rewarding.” Julian studied her. “Law is never just about justice. It’s about leverage. Influence. The ability to define reality.” His gaze sharpened. “You’ll learn that power doesn’t announce itself. It insinuates.” Elena felt the words sink beneath her skin. Chloe laughed lightly. “Daddy, you make everything sound ominous.” Julian smiled, but it was thin. Knowing. “Experience tends to do that.” As dessert was served, the air thickened. He leaned back slightly, adjusting his posture, and his fingers brushed Elena’s thigh beneath the table. The touch was brief. Intentional. Her breath caught sharply before she could stop it. Heat flared where his skin had met hers, spreading outward in a way that made her pulse race. Julian didn’t look at her. He continued speaking calmly, discussing something inconsequential with Chloe, his expression unreadable. Only the faint tightening of his jaw betrayed him. Elena stared down at her plate, heart hammering. That wasn’t an accident. It was a test. The rest of dinner passed in a haze. Every shift of his arm, every brush of fabric, felt amplified. She was hyper-aware of her own body how close she sat, how exposed the dress left her, how her reactions betrayed her no matter how hard she tried to contain them. When Julian finally stood, Elena exhaled a breath she hadn’t realized she’d been holding. “I have calls to make,” he said evenly. “You’re free to enjoy the house.” His eyes met Elena’s. “Make yourself comfortable.” The words followed her as he left the room. --- Later, alone in the quiet corridor of the East Wing, Elena paused outside her door. The house was silent now, the snowstorm muffling even the wind. Just across the hall, Julian’s door remained closed. She went inside and crossed to her bed, reaching into the drawer beside it, fingers frantic. “Where is it?” she groaned impatiently, until her fingertips finally brushed what she’d been searching for. She climbed onto the bed and hurriedly stripped out of the dress. Her hands moved over her breasts, kneading gently as a soft moan escaped her lips Julian’s name slipping from her mouth before she could stop it. Her right hand drifted lower, circling her c**t, while her left continued to work her breasts. Desperate for release before someone walked in, she grabbed the vibrator beside her and pressed it against herself. “Julian,” she gasped, throwing her head back. She kept the pressure hard and steady until release finally tore through her, leaving her collapsing back against the headboard, panting. She pressed her spine to the wood, heart pounding. This wasn’t infatuation. This was something darker. Slower. More dangerous. And somewhere deep inside her, beneath the fear and guilt, something answered it.
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