
After My CEO Forced a Kiss on Me
Chapter 4
The city blurred past the passenger window. I sat in Elliot’s car, surrounded by the faint smell of cedar and rain. The heater hummed quietly. It was Friday night. We were heading toward the Brooklyn Bridge, leaving the crowded Manhattan streets behind. The East River looked like a sheet of black glass below us.
I felt safe. It was a rare, fragile feeling.
Then I looked in the side mirror.
A pair of bright halogen headlights stayed right on our bumper. They didn't pass. They didn't slow down. It was a sleek black SUV. I knew that car.
"He's behind us," I said. My voice felt tight, squeezing through my throat.
Elliot glanced in the rearview mirror. His jaw hardened. A tiny muscle feathered near his temple. "I see him."
Castiel. He couldn't handle my survival in the boardroom. He couldn't handle seeing me drink coffee with another man. He needed to remind me he was still there. He was always there, an invisible leash around my neck.
We merged onto the bridge approach. The traffic slowed to a crawl. The yellow bridge lights washed over the hood of the car.
Then, the headlights in the mirror surged forward.
Smash.
The violent jolt threw me forward against the seatbelt. My teeth clicked together hard. The tires screeched against the asphalt. The ugly crunch of metal echoed in the cold air.
My heart slammed against my ribs. The world spun for a terrifying second. Then it stopped. The smell of burnt rubber seeped through the vents.
"Mira," Elliot said sharply. His large hand grabbed my shoulder. His fingers were warm and firm. "Are you hurt?"
"No," I breathed. My hands were shaking. "I'm okay."
I looked in the side mirror again. Castiel’s SUV was pressed right against our rear bumper. He had hit us deliberately. Hard enough to rattle my bones, but controlled enough to deny it. A slip of the foot. Plausible deniability. It was his classic move. Break my world, create chaos, and then wait for me to crawl to him for safety.
I watched him open his door. He stepped out into the freezing night. He wore a dark wool overcoat. He looked perfectly calm. He was waiting for me. He expected me to scramble out of the car, shaking and crying. He wanted the frightened girl who used to beg for his approval. He wanted to see my confidence shatter on the pavement.
I closed my eyes. I took a deep breath. The cedar scent in Elliot's car filled my lungs.
"Stay here," Elliot said softly. He reached for his door handle, his body tense.
"No," I said.
I unbuckled my seatbelt. I pushed my door open.
The wind off the river whipped my hair across my face. The bridge cables hummed above us. I stepped onto the asphalt. My legs felt incredibly heavy, but I didn't shake. I planted my feet.
Castiel stood by his crushed bumper. He tilted his head. A smug, expectant look settled on his handsome face. He was waiting for my panic. He was ready to play the concerned boss, the dominant ex.
I didn't look at him.
I walked around the back of the car. Elliot was stepping out of the driver’s side. The yellow streetlights caught the sharp, rigid angles of his face. He looked at me, his dark eyes wide with a silent question.
I didn't hesitate. I walked right up to him. I reached out and grabbed the thick lapels of his coat. I pulled him down to me.
And I kissed him.
I didn't just press my lips to his. I kissed him slowly. Deliberately. I poured every ounce of my defiance, every year of my suffocated anger into it. I felt his surprise for a fraction of a second. He went completely still. Then, his arms wrapped around my waist. He pulled me flush against his chest.
His mouth moved against mine, firm and incredibly warm. The cold wind disappeared. The noise of the traffic faded into a dull hum. There was only the solid, heavy heat of him. It wasn't a punishing kiss like Castiel's. It didn't feel like a trap. It felt like an anchor.
It was supposed to be a show. A staged moment to break Castiel's grip. But as Elliot’s hand slid up to cradle the back of my neck, my chest tightened. My breath caught in my throat. It felt too safe. It felt dangerously real.
I pulled back slowly. My lips tingled. I kept my hands flat against Elliot's chest, feeling the steady, heavy beat of his heart.
Then, I turned my head.
I looked past Elliot’s shoulder at the SUV. Castiel was still standing by his open door. But the smug look was entirely gone. His face was ashen. His eyes were wide and black with shock. He was gripping the top of his steering wheel through the open door. His knuckles were bone-white. His chest heaved up and down.
He looked like he was suffocating.
For the first time in my life, I had taken all the air out of his lungs. I had rewritten the rules. I didn't say a single word. I just turned back to Elliot, let go of his coat, and got back into the passenger seat.
The drive back to my apartment was dead silent.
The adrenaline slowly drained out of my blood, leaving me hollow and exhausted. The quiet in the car felt heavy. The rain started to fall, tapping softly against the windshield. Elliot kept his eyes on the road. His hands were relaxed on the steering wheel. But the air between us was thick. Charged with something unspoken.
My lips still felt the ghost of his kiss. I pressed my hands into my lap. I was terrified. I had spent years curling inward to survive. I pushed everyone away because being chosen always meant being used eventually. But Elliot wasn't using me. Was he? He was my therapist. This was a strategy. I couldn't let myself confuse a shield for a home.
He pulled up to the curb outside my apartment building. He put the car in park. The wipers swished back and forth.
I didn't move to open the door. I stared at the glowing green numbers on the dashboard clock.
"You did exactly what you needed to do," Elliot said quietly. His voice was smooth. He was slipping right back into his calm, composed therapist tone. "He won't forget that."
I swallowed hard. I turned my head to look at him. The streetlights painted long, dark shadows across his face.
"Was it just a show?" I asked. My voice was a fragile whisper.
Elliot stopped. He didn't look at me right away. He stared out the windshield into the dark, rainy street. The professional distance vanished. The calm, untouchable therapist disappeared, leaving a man who looked suddenly very tired.
He turned his head. His dark eyes locked onto mine. They were deep, intense, and impossibly sad.
"Mira," he said softly.
"Tell me the truth," I pleaded. My chest ached with a sudden, desperate need. "Is any of this real for you?"
The silence stretched tight like a wire. I heard the steady rhythm of his breathing. He didn't look away.
"More than you know," he said.
It wasn't a line. It wasn't a strategy. It was a confession. It hit me like a physical blow. My breath hitched. I didn't know what to do with that truth. It was too big. It was too dangerous. It meant tearing down the walls I had spent my whole life building.
I grabbed my purse. I opened the door and stepped out into the freezing rain.
"Goodnight, Elliot," I whispered.
I shut the door. I stood on the wet sidewalk and watched him drive away. The red taillights blurred in the rain until they disappeared around the corner.
I stood there in the cold. My heart pounded a frantic rhythm against my ribs. I pressed my thumbnail deep into the center of my palm. I pushed until the sharp pain grounded me. But this time, I wasn't trying to hide from Castiel's power.
I was trying to hide from the terrifying realization that I wanted Elliot to stay.
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