
ENTANGLED
Chapter 1
"I HATE YOU!" Sophia's scream tore through the house like a siren as she hurled her phone against the wall. It exploded into fragments, mirroring the wreckage of everything she'd once held dear.
Ethan filled her doorway, fury etched into every line of his face. "Go ahead! Take your anger out on me! But you're done with Kent, that's not up for debate!"
"You can't control my life!" Sophia snatched the framed photo from her dresser, the one of her and Ethan at Christmas, when they'd still been a family, and sent it crashing to the floor. Glass scattered like her shattered hopes. "I'm not your prisoner!"
"You're living under my roof!" Ethan stepped through the debris, closing the distance between them. "Mom and Dad trusted me to protect you, and I won't let some thirty-year-old predator destroy everything you could become!"
"Kent isn't a predator, you maniac!" Sophia shoved hard against Ethan's chest, her hands trembling with rage. "And even if he were, I'd rather take my chances with him than rot away here with you!"
Ethan caught her wrists, his grip firm but careful. "You don't mean that."
"GET OFF ME!" Sophia wrenched free, her eyes wild with desperation. "You're just jealous because someone actually wants me around!"
"Wants you?" Ethan's laugh was bitter as winter wind. "He's thirty, Sophia! What does a grown man want with a nineteen-year-old? Think!"
"Maybe he wants someone who doesn't make him feel worthless every single day!" Sophia's voice cracked as tears carved paths down her cheeks. "Unlike you, who treats me like I'm some kind of burden you can't wait to get rid of!"
The accusation hung between them like a blade. Ethan's face drained of color, then flushed crimson.
"A burden?" His voice dropped to a dangerous whisper. "I sacrificed everything for you, Sophia. I turned down my dream job in Seattle. I ended things with Rachel because she couldn't handle having a teenager around. I've spent four years of my life making sure you had everything you needed."
"I never asked for any of that!" Sophia screamed, her voice breaking. "I never begged you to give up your precious life! You did it to play the martyr, not because you actually give a damn about me!"
Ethan stared at her as if she'd physically struck him. For a heartbeat, the room held nothing but Sophia's ragged breathing and the echo of her cruel words.
"Fine," Ethan said finally. His voice had turned arctic, empty of all warmth. "You want to throw away everything I've sacrificed? Be my guest. But when Kent breaks your heart and leaves you with nothing, don't expect me to pick up the pieces."
He turned toward the door with military precision.
"Where are you going?" Sophia called after him, suddenly terrified by the deadly calm in his voice.
Ethan paused without looking back. "To pack your things. You're so desperate to be an adult? Congratulations. You can figure out where adults live."
The door slammed with the finality of a coffin lid.
Sophia collapsed to her knees, her legs giving out as reality crashed over her. What had she done? The sound of Ethan violently opening and closing drawers carried through the walls, each bang driving spikes of dread deeper into her chest.
Twenty minutes later, heavy footsteps echoed in the hallway. When Ethan reappeared, he carried two large suitcases like they contained everything she'd ever been worth to him.
"Ethan, wait..." Sophia scrambled to her feet.
"I called Kent," Ethan said without meeting her eyes. "He'll be here within the hour. I told him if I ever see him on this property again, I'm calling the police."
"You can't just throw me out! This is my home!"
"Not anymore." Ethan set down the suitcases and finally looked at her. His eyes were bloodshot, but his expression was carved from stone. "You made your choice, Sophia. You chose him over family. Now live with it."
Before Sophia could respond, the rumble of an engine cut through the tension. But it wasn't Kent's beat-up Honda. A sleek black pickup truck pulled into the driveway, and Sophia's heart lurched with equal parts relief and terror.
Marcus Kane emerged from the truck, and at thirty, he commanded attention without effort. Tall and broad-shouldered, with dark hair and piercing steel-gray eyes that seemed to see straight through pretense, he took one look at Sophia's tear-streaked face and the packed suitcases. His jaw tightened dangerously.
"What the hell is going on here?" Marcus's voice was deadly quiet as he strode up the walkway, his presence filling the space like the calm before a storm.
Before Sophia could answer, Ethan appeared behind her. "She chose her boyfriend over her family. I'm giving her exactly what she asked for."
Marcus's gray eyes flashed with something dark and predatory. "You're kicking her out? Have you completely lost your mind?"
"Stay out of this, Marcus. This is between me and my sister."
"Like hell it is." Marcus moved closer to Ethan, and Sophia could feel the tension crackling between them like live wire. "She's nineteen years old, you can't just abandon her because you disapprove of her boyfriend."
"I can when the guy she's dating is bad news!"
"So you put her on the street?" Marcus's voice rose, and Sophia had never heard such controlled fury. "What kind of brother does that?"
"The kind who's tired of being disrespected in his own house!"
Sophia watched her brother and his best friend square off, her pulse hammering against her throat. They'd been inseparable since college, closer than brothers. Now they faced each other like enemies preparing for war.
"You're making a mistake," Marcus said, his voice low and threatening.
"No," Ethan replied coldly. "I'm correcting one."
Marcus's eyes found Sophia's, and something shifted in his expression, something that made her breath catch and her skin flush with unexpected heat. "Get your things. You're coming with me."
"Marcus, no." Ethan stepped forward. "Don't get involved in this."
"I'm already involved." Marcus lifted both suitcases effortlessly, his movements controlled but violence simmering beneath the surface. "Sophia, get in the truck."
"But Kent's coming for me..."
"Kent can go to hell," Marcus said flatly, his steel-gray eyes boring into hers. "You're not going anywhere with him tonight."
"You can't tell me what to do either!" Sophia's anger flared again, but it felt different now, charged with something she didn't understand.
Marcus stepped close to her, so close she could smell his cologne and see the silver flecks in his dangerous gray eyes. "Sophia, listen very carefully. You can come with me willingly, or I can carry you over my shoulder. But you are not getting in a car with some guy tonight. Not while you're upset. Not while you're vulnerable."
There was something in Marcus's voice she'd never heard before, something protective and fierce and possessive that made her stomach flutter and her pulse race.
"Why do you care?" she whispered.
Marcus's eyes searched her face, and Sophia saw something raw flickering there, something that made her breath catch and her skin burn with awareness.
"Because," Marcus said quietly, his voice rough with emotion, "someone has to."
Behind them, Ethan made a sound of frustrated disbelief. "Marcus, don't do this. Don't choose her over me."
Marcus turned slowly, and Sophia saw something lethal in his expression. "Is that what you think this is? Choosing sides?"
"Isn't it?"
"No, Ethan." Marcus's voice was steady, but fury rumbled underneath like distant thunder. "This is me stopping you from doing something you'll regret for the rest of your life. Sophia is your sister. Your only family. And you're throwing her away over some guy who probably won't last a month."
"She made her choice..."
"She's nineteen!" Marcus exploded, and Sophia had never seen him lose control like this. "Nineteen-year-olds make catastrophic choices! That's what they do! But you don't abandon them for it!"
The silence that followed was deafening. Sophia could hear her own heartbeat, could see the way Marcus's hands were clenched into fists.
"Fine," Ethan said finally, his voice bitter as poison. "Take her. But when she breaks your heart the way she broke mine, don't come looking for sympathy."
Ethan turned and walked back into the house, slamming the door so hard the windows shuddered in their frames.
Sophia stared at the closed door, tears streaming down her face. "He hates me."
"No, he doesn't," Marcus said softly, his anger melting into something gentler. "He's hurt and scared and acting like an idiot. But he doesn't hate you."
Sophia looked up at Marcus through her tears. "Why are you helping me? Ethan is your best friend."
Marcus was quiet for a long moment, his gray eyes intense on her face. When he spoke, his voice was different, rougher, more intimate than she'd ever heard it.
"Because you're like a younger sister to me," he said quietly. "And I'm not going to stand by and watch family get thrown out on the street."
The words should have felt comforting, but something in Marcus's voice, something rough and conflicted, made Sophia's pulse quicken. The way he was looking at her now felt different, charged with an awareness that made her breath catch.
"Okay," she heard herself say. "Just for tonight."
Marcus nodded and shouldered her backpack effortlessly. "Come on. Let's get out of here."
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