
Escaping His Obsessive Love
Chapter 3
The doorbell rang at precisely 8:17 PM. I was curled up on my new couch, sketchbook in lap, trying to capture the California sunset streaming through my windows. Three months in Los Angeles had begun to heal something inside me—something I hadn't realized was still bleeding.
I wasn't expecting anyone. Callan was in San Francisco for a tech conference, and I'd deliberately kept my circle small since arriving.
When I opened the door, my sketchbook slipped from my fingers.
"Harrison."
He stood in the hallway of my apartment building, immaculate in a charcoal suit despite the cross-country flight. His eyes—those cold eyes that had watched me with indifference for four years—now burned with something else entirely.
"Claire." My name on his lips sounded like a prayer and a command all at once. "We need to talk."
I backed away instinctively. "How did you find me?"
"You think I wouldn't have resources to track my own fiancée?" He stepped forward, uninvited. "This little rebellion has gone on long enough."
"It's not a rebellion." My voice shook, but I forced myself to meet his gaze. "It's my life."
His hand shot out, fingers wrapping around my wrist—the same wrist I unconsciously touched when nervous. The same wrist that bore faint scars from my childhood kidnapping.
"You belong with me," he said, his voice dropping to that dangerous whisper I'd heard him use in business negotiations. "Everything I did—it was a mistake. I know the truth now."
"The truth?" I tried to pull away, but his grip tightened.
"About who saved me that day in the blizzard." His eyes never left mine. "It was you, Claire. Not Everly. It was always you."
Something twisted in my chest—not hope, but fear. "Let go of me, Harrison."
Instead, he pulled me closer. "I'll forgive your indiscretion with Roberts. We'll start fresh."
"This isn't an indiscretion!" I yanked my arm free. "And you don't get to decide when I'm forgiven!"
The door behind me swung open wider as Callan appeared, his expression hardening at the sight of Harrison.
"I believe Claire asked you to leave." Callan's voice was calm but carried an edge I'd never heard before.
Harrison's lip curled. "This doesn't concern you, Roberts."
"Actually, it does." Callan stepped between us. "Claire has made her choice."
Harrison's laugh was brittle. "Choices can be changed."
"Not this one." Callan's hand settled on my shoulder, warm and steady. "Now leave before I call security."
Harrison's eyes narrowed to dangerous slits. "This isn't over."
As he turned to leave, I caught a glimpse of something in his expression—something that made my blood run cold.
* * *
"She's thriving," Dr. Diana Chen said, her kind eyes studying me over her glasses. "The Claire I see now bears little resemblance to the woman who first walked into my office three months ago."
I smiled, watching California sunlight filter through her window. "It feels different here."
"Because you're different." She tilted her head. "The art therapy has helped?"
I nodded, thinking of the canvases filling my new apartment—vibrant colors replacing the muted tones of my New York life. "I forgot how much I needed it."
"And Callan?"
Warmth spread through my chest at the mention of his name. "He sees me. Really sees me."
Dr. Chen smiled. "That's what healthy love looks like, Claire. Not control or manipulation."
I knew she was right. Callan's love was patient, consistent—a stark contrast to Harrison's demands and Everly's calculated sweetness.
Still, old habits died hard. I found myself touching my wrist when anxious, a reminder of a past I was trying to outrun.
* * *
The first package arrived on a Tuesday—a single white rose with a note in Harrison's precise handwriting: "Remember our first date?"
I threw it away.
The second came Thursday—a copy of the book we'd both loved in college, his bookmark protruding from the pages.
The third, fourth, and fifth followed—each more intrusive than the last.
Then came the calls to Callan's investors. The "anonymous" tips to business journals questioning his company's ethics. The private investigator who started appearing at my favorite coffee shop.
"You're being paranoid," Callan said when I mentioned it. But I recognized the signs—Harrison was orchestrating this from afar.
When my phone lit up with Harrison's number for the seventh time that week, I finally answered.
"What do you want from me?" My voice cracked despite my efforts to stay strong.
"Just you, Claire." His voice was silk and steel. "And I always get what I want."
I hung up, but the damage was done. My hand trembled as I touched my wrist—a gesture from childhood trauma now reactivated by adult fear.
Harrison was coming for me. And this time, he wasn't planning to take no for an answer.
You may also like





