Chapter 4

1998 Words
Morning came too quickly. Aria woke with the ache of sore feet and the smell of vanilla still clinging to her hair. She had dropped onto her bed the night before without even changing, her black dress wrinkled beyond saving. The envelope of cash Damian’s client had paid her lay on her nightstand, like a reminder of the strange bargain she’d stepped into. She sat up slowly, rubbing her eyes. The café wouldn’t open itself. Rent wouldn’t pay itself. Life never slowed down, not even when your heart was still thudding from the way a certain lawyer had nearly kissed you, or maybe that was just her imagination running away with her. By the time she pushed through the café’s doors, it was way earlier than her opening time, the familiar hum of her second home wrapping around her like armor. She tied on her apron, letting the motions ground her: flour, sugar, eggs, butter. It was always the same, predictable in a way men like Damian Cole never were. The bell chimed just as she slid a tray of scones into the oven. She didn’t even look up. “We open in fifteen...” “I know.” Her head snapped up. And there he was. Again. Damian Cole, in a navy suit this time, tie already loosened like he’d been through a battle before nine a.m. His presence filled the tiny café, his sharp edges clashing with the soft pastel walls and chalkboard menus. Aria’s stomach did a slow, traitorous flip. “Do you enjoy haunting small businesses, or is this a hobby you reserve just for me?” He didn’t smile, but his eyes glinted like he wanted to. “I had a meeting nearby. Thought I’d get coffee.” She blinked. “You... coffee? Here?” He nodded once, as if daring her to say no. Her laugh came out brittle. “You do realize this is Sweet Haven, right? Not Starbucks where you can bark an order and expect the world to bend?” “I’m aware.” His gaze swept the café, landing on the counter. “What do you recommend?” The question startled her more than his presence. For a moment, she just stood there, her mind oddly blank. Damian Cole, the man who could probably recite the fine print of eviction law in his sleep, was asking her, the woman he’d tried to uproot, for recommendations. She cleared her throat. “Cinnamon latte. And…a blueberry scone.” “Fine.” He reached for his wallet. “Two of each.” Her brows shot up. “Two?” His expression didn’t waver. “One’s for me. One’s for you.” The retort on her tongue stalled. Nobody ever bought her coffee in her own café. She was the one who served. Always serving, always giving. And now Damian Cole was standing there, offering her…what? A peace treaty? Or something more dangerous? Against her better judgment, she made the drinks, plated the scones, and set them down at a corner table. He sat without hesitation, like he’d been waiting for her to join him. She hesitated, apron strings clenched between her fingers. “I don’t sit with customers.” “Then consider me an exception.” Something in his tone left no room for argument. She exhaled sharply, tugged the apron over her head, and slid into the seat across from him. For a few seconds, the world outside their table didn’t exist. Just the steam curling from their mugs, the faint jazz humming in the background, and his eyes steady, unreadable, gray like stormy clouds that promises trouble. “You did well last night,” he said finally, his voice low. “Better than well.” Her throat tightened. “If this is pity, don’t bother. I don’t need it.” “It’s not pity.” His gaze flicked to her, sharp and deliberate. “It’s acknowledgment. There’s a difference.” She looked away, torn between annoyance and something that felt suspiciously like gratitude. “Funny. You spend half your time trying to kick me out of my shop, and the other half…what? Playing savior?” The corner of his mouth curved, almost but not quite a smile. “Maybe I’m just…curious.” “Curious?” she echoed, wary. “You don’t fold,” he said simply. “Most people do when they’re cornered. But you…” He leaned back, studying her like she was a case file he hadn’t cracked. “You fight. Even when it costs you.” Her pulse tripped. She wanted to argue, to throw his words back at him. But instead, she sat in silence, the weight of his gaze pressing against her. For the first time, she saw a c***k in his mask. Not the ruthless lawyer. Not the landlord’s enforcer. Just a man, watching her too closely, as though he wanted to see what she’d do next. She didn't like that. It terrified her more than any eviction notice ever could. She pushed back her chair, standing abruptly. “Enjoy your coffee, Mr. Cole.” His eyes narrowed slightly at the formality, but he didn’t stop her. He just watched as she tied her apron back on and disappeared behind the counter, her heart pounding like she’d just escaped a trap she wasn’t sure she wanted to escape at all. Damian Cole sat alone at the corner table of Sweet Haven, drinking the first cup of coffee he hadn’t hated in years. The cinnamon latte was smoother than he expected, the faint spice lingering on his tongue. The blueberry scone was warm, soft, bursting with flavor. He glanced at the counter. Aria was back behind it, sleeves rolled up, her hands busy with the register though no one else was in line. Her movements were sharp, deliberate, the kind of precise rhythm that came from years of doing everything alone. Damianwatched her longer than he should have, his jaw tightening when he realized it. He didn’t sit in cafés. He didn’t linger in small businesses. He had meetings, contracts, deadlines, things that mattered. Yet here he was, on a Wednesday morning, wasting thirty minutes just to watch a woman who had called him a shark to his face. A woman who made coffee taste like something more than caffeine. Aria felt his stare. She didn’t have to look up to know his eyes were on her; she could feel it. Like static under her skin, humming low and distracting. Her whisk clattered against a metal bowl louder than it should have. She cursed under her breath. Why was he still here? Men like him weren’t supposed to linger. They were supposed to come in, drop bad news, and vanish into glass towers and expensive cars. Instead, he was sitting at her table like he belonged. Like he wasn’t the one holding the rope that could tighten around her neck any second. The door chimed. Aria exhaled in relief, grateful for the distraction. A couple entered, an older woman with silver hair and a younger man carrying a laptop. She slipped into hostess mode, greeting them warmly, pouring coffees, handing over menus. Her shoulders loosened. This was her world. This was what she knew. But even while she worked, her eyes kept darting back to the corner table where Damiansat, perfectly composed, sipping coffee as if he did this every day. When the couple settled at their table, Damianspoke again, his voice cutting through the quiet like a blade. “You’re not going to sit back down?” Aria stiffened, glancing at him. “I told you, I don’t sit with customers.” “You already broke that rule once,” he said smoothly. “What’s one more?” Her laugh was short, humorless. “You really don’t give up, do you?” “No,” he admitted. His tone was flat. She turned away, busying herself with the milk frother, though her hand trembled slightly. “Then I guess I’ll just have to be the one who does.” Damian didn’t push, though part of him wanted to. Instead, he leaned back, watching her work. Every movement she made was efficient, focused, but there was a stubbornness in the set of her shoulders. She was a fighter. He hadn’t been wrong about that. His phone buzzed against the table. He glanced at the screen. A message from his associate: Cole, meeting pushed to 11. Gives you time to prep. Prep. Right. That's what he's meant to be doing. He should be reviewing the Peterson file, not sitting in some pastel-colored café pretending he liked cinnamon. He pocketed the phone without replying. When the couple finally left, Aria wiped down their table, her head down, avoiding his gaze. The silence between them stretched, heavy, until Damianfinally spoke again. “You ever think about expanding?” Her head snapped up, eyes narrowing. “Expanding?” “This place. It’s good. Better than good. With the right marketing, right investors, you could open another location. Maybe two.” Aria stared at him, incredulous. “Is that your idea of a joke? You serve me an eviction notice, then sit here talking about expansion like I’m some…some franchise?” Damian ’s jaw tightened. “I wasn’t joking.” She barked out a laugh, harsh and disbelieving. “Do you even hear yourself? I’m barely keeping the lights on. I don’t have investors. I don’t have backup. All I have is this shop, and thanks to you, even that’s slipping away. Something flickered in his expression, regret? He masked it quickly. “Sometimes desperation is the best fuel for growth.” Her eyes flashed. “Or the quickest way to burn.” The air between them sharpened, heated, neither willing to look away first. And that was when the door opened again. “Aria?” She froze. She knew that voice all too well. Slowly, she turned. A man stood in the doorway, rain dampening his dark hair, a worn leather jacket hanging off broad shoulders. A man she never would have thought she'll see anytime soon. His warm hazel eyes, too knowing, locked on hers. “Ethan,” she whispered. Damian ’s gaze flicked between them, his expression unreadable, though his grip on the coffee cup tightened. Ethan smiled faintly, stepping inside. “It’s been a while.” Aria’s pulse stumbled. Ethan Hayes. Her ex. The man who had left three years ago with promises of chasing bigger dreams. The one who had taken pieces of her heart with him when he walked away. Damianstood slowly, his towering presence filling the space. “And who's this?”, directing the question to Aria bit his gaze never leaving the intruder. Ethan’s eyes flicked to him, then back to Aria. “A friend.” His emphasis on the word was deliberate, pointed. Aria’s stomach twisted. This was the last thing she needed. Damian’s expression didn’t change, but his gaze sharpened, cold and assessing. “Friend. Right.” Aria swallowed hard, heat crawling up her neck. The tension in the café was thick enough to choke on, the two men studying each other like opposing players on a chessboard. “I should...” she began, but her voice faltered when Damian’s eyes met hers. For the first time, she saw something dangerous there. Not just control, not just curiosity. Possession. And the terrifying part? A small, traitorous piece of her didn’t hate it. The bell above the door jingled again, snapping the moment apart as another customer walked in, oblivious to the storm brewing inside Sweet Haven. Aria’s hands clenched into fists. She had survived eviction notices. She had survived heartbreak. But she wasn’t sure she could survive the collision of these two worlds, the past that had broken her, and the man who threatens her present. One thing was certain; nothing about her life was simple anymore. And it was about to get a whole lot more complicated.
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