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After My Protector Kissed Me in Front of My Ex Novel Cover

After My Protector Kissed Me in Front of My Ex

The corset was killing me. Not metaphorically. The wardrobe department had laced it two inches tighter than the fitting, and every time I drew a full breath, the boning bit into my ribs like a reminder that beauty in this industry was always a little bit punishment. I stood at the edge of the soundstage in full period costume — ivory silk, hair pinned up with about forty pins I could feel individually — and ran my lines in my head for the fourth time that hour. This role mattered. I needed it to matter in the right way, the kind that had nothing to do with who was backing me or what I'd traded to get here. Director Elliott Shaw had made it clear from the first table read that he didn't think I could carry the emotional weight of the third act. He'd said it with a smile, the kind that comes with plausible deniability. I'd smiled back and gone home and worked until two in the morning for six weeks straight. So I was focused.
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Chapter 1

The corset was killing me.

Not metaphorically. The wardrobe department had laced it two inches tighter than the fitting, and every time I drew a full breath, the boning bit into my ribs like a reminder that beauty in this industry was always a little bit punishment. I stood at the edge of the soundstage in full period costume — ivory silk, hair pinned up with about forty pins I could feel individually — and ran my lines in my head for the fourth time that hour.

This role mattered. I needed it to matter in the right way, the kind that had nothing to do with who was backing me or what I'd traded to get here. Director Elliott Shaw had made it clear from the first table read that he didn't think I could carry the emotional weight of the third act. He'd said it with a smile, the kind that comes with plausible deniability. I'd smiled back and gone home and worked until two in the morning for six weeks straight.

So I was focused. I was composed. I was exactly where I needed to be.

Then I looked up.

He was standing at the far edge of the set, just past the lighting rigs, in the soft industrial shadow where the crew kept their equipment cases. Jeans. A worn canvas jacket. A sketchbook tucked under one arm like it had always lived there.

Dawson Walker.

I felt it before I processed it — a pull in my chest, low and sudden, like a string being plucked on an instrument I thought I'd put away. Three years. He'd been in London for three years, and now he was just standing there, watching me with that same unhurried expression, the one that had always made me feel like he had nowhere else in the world he'd rather be.

I looked back down at my script.

My hands were completely steady. I was proud of that.

---

They called a thirty-minute break after the next setup, and I was halfway to my trailer when I heard him say my name.

"Calliope."

Just that. Like no time had passed at all.

I turned around slowly. Up close, he looked the same — a little more settled, maybe, the way people get when they've spent time somewhere that agreed with them. He had a new scar on his chin, small and pale. His eyes were the same warm brown I'd spent two years of college memorizing without meaning to.

"Dawson." My voice came out even. Good.

"You look incredible in that costume." He said it simply, no performance in it. "The whole thing. You look like you belong in it."

"That's generally the goal."

He smiled. "Still take your coffee black with one sugar?"

The fact that he remembered that — the specific, useless fact of how I took my coffee — landed somewhere it shouldn't have. I kept my expression neutral. "Sometimes."

"I've been back two weeks," he said. "I kept trying to figure out the right way to reach out. There wasn't one, so I just —" He gestured at the soundstage around us. "Showed up. I heard you were shooting here."

"You could have texted."

"I could have." He didn't apologize for not doing it. He just looked at me, steady and open, and said, "How's the role? Is Shaw giving you room to work?"

And that was the thing about Dawson. He always asked the right question. Not *how are you* or *you look great* — he asked about the work, the specific thing I cared about, and he asked it like the answer genuinely mattered to him.

I told him it was going well. I kept it brief. I excused myself before the break was over and walked the rest of the way to my trailer, sat down in the makeup chair, and stared at my own reflection for a long moment without doing anything at all.

---

The gala was at a rooftop venue in West Hollywood, all warm light and the kind of crowd where everyone was performing a version of themselves they'd workshopped in advance. I arrived alone, which was standard. My arrangement with Xavier Kennedy had exactly one non-negotiable rule: in public, we were nothing. I was an actress under the general umbrella of his entertainment holdings. That was the story. I'd told it so many times it almost felt true.

I took a glass of champagne from a passing tray and found a position near the edge of the room where I could see the whole space without being the first thing anyone noticed when they walked in.

That's when I saw him.

Xavier was already there — of course he was, he was always already there, positioned like he'd been part of the architecture before anyone else arrived. Dark suit, no tie, the particular stillness he carried that made every room feel like it was arranged around him rather than the other way around. I'd been in his orbit for three years and I still hadn't gotten entirely used to the way he occupied space.

Danna Moreno was on his arm.

She was radiant. That was the honest word for it — there was no point in being ungenerous about it. She was in something deep green that made her look like she'd been poured into it, and she was laughing at something Xavier had said, her hand light on his sleeve, her whole body angled toward him with the ease of a woman who had decided she belonged there and was simply waiting for the world to catch up.

I took a sip of champagne.

The feeling in my chest was not rational. I knew that. Xavier and I had an arrangement, not a relationship — I'd been clear about that distinction from the beginning, I'd been the one to draw that line, and I had no standing to feel anything about who he brought to a gala. None.

I felt it anyway. Something tight and hot that I refused to name.

---

From across the room, Dawson found my eyes.

His gaze moved — just briefly, just once — to Xavier and Danna. Then back to me. His expression didn't change dramatically. It didn't need to. There was just a quiet, unmistakable quality to the way he looked at me that said: *I see it. You deserve better than this.*

It was exactly what some part of me had always wanted someone to say.

I set my champagne glass down on a nearby table, excused myself from a half-conversation with a producer whose name I'd already forgotten, and walked out to the terrace.

The city spread out below — all that light, all that distance. I wrapped both hands around the railing and held on.

I didn't hear him approach. I never did.

"Shaw has been making inquiries about the morality clause in your contract." Xavier's voice came from just to my left, even and unhurried, like we were continuing a conversation we'd already started. He wasn't looking at me. He was looking at the city. "Specifically whether it gives him grounds to recast if there's tabloid coverage he deems damaging to the production. It doesn't. But you should know he's looking."

I kept my eyes on the lights below. "How long have you known?"

"Two days."

Two days. He'd sat on it for two days and chosen this moment, this terrace, to tell me. I didn't ask why. I didn't ask about Danna. I didn't ask about any of the things pressing against the inside of my ribs alongside the corset boning.

"Thank you," I said.

He nodded once. Then he left.

I stood there alone for a while, the city glittering below me, and tried to figure out which of the two men I'd just spoken to tonight I understood less.

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