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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 4

I told myself it was strategy.

The wrap party had been at a producer's house in the hills — open bar, warm lighting, the kind of crowd that laughed too loud and meant none of it. I'd stayed two hours, which was the minimum required to be seen without being memorable, and then I'd gotten in my car and driven west toward the coast with the windows down and the sketch still living in my phone and the Hargrove role still unresolved in a way I couldn't stop turning over.

Two glasses of champagne. Maybe three. Enough to sand the edges off the voice in my head that was telling me this was a bad idea.

I knew what I was doing. I'd done it before — shown up at Xavier's door with something to offer and a need I couldn't afford to name directly. That was the architecture of us. That was what we were. I'd built it that way on purpose, because a transaction had walls and a relationship didn't, and I needed the walls.

The Malibu estate sat back from the road behind a gate that recognized my car. It always had. I'd never asked why.

I parked and sat for a moment with the engine off, listening to the ocean I couldn't see. The coat I was wearing was a good one — structured, expensive, the kind that looked like a complete outfit until it wasn't. I'd chosen it deliberately. I knew the language of this. I'd been speaking it for three years.

I got out of the car and went inside.

---

The billiard room was at the back of the house, past the kitchen and the long hallway with the art I'd never seen him look at. Light came from under the door. I could hear nothing.

I pushed it open.

Xavier was at the far end of the table, one hand resting on the rail, a glass of Scotch on the side table beside him. Dark shirt, sleeves rolled to the forearm. He looked exactly the way he always looked — like he'd been there for hours and had expected me precisely when I arrived.

I almost didn't see Dawson.

He was standing to the left of the table, a cue held loosely in both hands, and the expression on his face when he turned toward the door was the most unguarded thing I'd seen from him since college. Surprise. Discomfort. Something that moved through his eyes fast and then went carefully still.

I stood in the doorway and understood, in the space of one breath, exactly what this room was.

A stage. Xavier had built a stage and put us both on it and was now watching from the wings with a glass of Scotch and that particular quality of stillness that meant he was paying attention to everything.

"Calliope." Xavier's voice was even. "You're earlier than I expected."

I wasn't early. He had expected me exactly now.

"Dawson." I said his name because not saying it would have been its own kind of tell. "I didn't know you'd be here."

"Xavier mentioned a project." His voice was careful. "A film score. We were just —" He gestured at the table, the cue, the game that had clearly not been the point. "Talking."

"Of course." I stepped into the room and let the door fall shut behind me. The click of it was very loud.

Xavier picked up his Scotch. He didn't drink from it. He just held it, watching me with that level, unhurried attention, and I felt the room the way you feel a current underwater — not visible, but present, moving everything slightly off course.

"Dawson's been telling me about London," Xavier said. "The work. The life he built there." A pause, precise as a cut. "The life he left."

Dawson's jaw tightened. Just slightly. Just enough.

Xavier set his glass down and looked at Dawson with the particular courtesy of a man who has already won and is simply waiting for the other person to understand it.

"She's standing right there," Xavier said. His voice was soft. That was the tell — I knew it now, the softness. "If she's yours, take her. Walk out. Tonight. No consequences from me." He let that sit for a moment. "I won't stop you."

The room went very quiet.

I watched Dawson. I watched him the way you watch something you've been carrying for years, finally held up to real light. He looked at me — and I could see it, the wanting, the genuine pull of it — and then his eyes moved to Xavier, and something in him shifted. Recalculated. The cue turned slowly in his hands.

He didn't move.

The silence stretched. Five seconds. Ten.

Dawson Walker, who had sent me a sketch at eleven o'clock at night and written *I never stopped*, stood in a room where the door was open and the path was clear, and he did not move.

I felt it go out of me. Whatever I'd been carrying — the coffee shop, the gallery, the hand that had closed briefly around mine and then let go. I felt it go, not dramatically, not with any sound. Just a quiet release, like a breath I'd been holding so long I'd forgotten it wasn't normal.

Xavier turned to me.

"Take off your coat."

Not a question. Not a request. Four words in that even, unhurried voice, and the room contracted around them.

I knew what it was. A test. A cruelty. The most honest thing he had ever done in front of me — stripping away every layer of the architecture I'd built, the transaction, the walls, the careful language of negotiation, and replacing it with something that had no plausible deniability at all.

Dawson was still standing there. Still holding the cue. Still not moving.

I looked at Xavier.

His face was unreadable, the way it always was — except for something in his eyes, something I'd seen before in unguarded fractions of seconds and never let myself name. It wasn't cold. It had never been cold. I just hadn't known how to look at it.

I reached up and undid the single button at my collar.

The coat slid off my shoulders and I caught it in one hand and held it, and the room was very still, and Dawson made a sound that wasn't quite a word and looked away.

I crossed the room.

I stopped in front of Xavier — close, closer than the arrangement had ever required — and I looked up at him, and I saw the thing in his eyes that I had been refusing to see for three years, and I put my hand against his chest and kissed him.

Not because of the role. Not because of the arrangement.

Because Dawson had been given every opening and had stood there holding a billiard cue, and Xavier had been standing in doorways and on terraces and at the edges of rooms for three years, and I was so tired of pretending I didn't know the difference.

Xavier went still for one breath — just one — and then his hand came up and closed around the back of my neck, and he kissed me back like it was the only thing he'd ever been patient about.

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