Follow
Chapters
Share
My Brother's Best Friend's One-Night Rule Novel Cover

My Brother's Best Friend's One-Night Rule

The moment she swiped her keycard and the door clicked open, she was hauled inside by a pair of strong arms. Before she could even gasp, his mouth crashed against hers in a searing, hungry kiss. Finally, after four years of agonizing silence—four years of pining since she was eighteen—she was finally with him. The man who had been her silent obsession, her brother’s best friend, was finally hers. They lost themselves in a feverish blur of skin and shadows, a desperate release of all the tension she had carried for years. But the afterglow didn't last long. As she lay there, breathless and whispering about a "next time," the air in the room suddenly turned frigid. He pulled away, his expression hardening into an impenetrable mask. He didn't just want her to stop talking; he wanted her gone. Standing by the bed, he coldly laid out his three unbreakable rules: No sleepovers. No woman ever spends the night in his bed. No repeats. He never touches the same woman twice. Complete secrecy. No one—absolutely no one—can ever find out. That included her older brother, his best friend. The realization hit her like a physical blow. To him, this wasn't a dream come true; it was a mistake he wanted to erase. Overwhelmed by a wave of shame and heartbreak, she realized he wasn't the hero of her story—he was just a jerk. Tears blurring her vision, she scrambled for her clothes and bolted from the room, leaving her four-year crush behind in the wreckage of his rules.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

Avery

I didn’t give him the phone. A new, sharp anger—cleaner than the heartbreak—flared in my chest. I clutched it to my chest, shaking my head.

“No,” I said, the word coming out stronger than I felt. “It’s nothing. Just… work.”

His eyes narrowed, seeing right through me. “Avery…”

“I’m fine,” I lied, pushing myself off the couch. “I’m going to bed. Please, Mark. Just drop it.”

I didn’t wait for his answer. I fled to my room, locking the door behind me. I leaned against it, my heart hammering. I looked at the screen.

L: We need to talk.

Three words. No apology. No explanation. Just a demand. The anger boiled over. We need to talk? After he’d thrown me out like trash? After his rules? I let out a choked sound, half-laugh, half-sob. My thumb hovered over the keyboard. I could unleash everything. The years of longing. The humiliation. The way my skin still burned where he’d touched me.

Instead, I powered the phone off. The screen went black, taking his demand with it. Let him wonder.

The silence in my room was absolute. I stared at the dark screen for a long time. Then, slowly, I turned it back on. I ignored the notification from L. I opened the thread from Mark.

> Hey Avery. I know it’s late…

He was sweet. He was kind. He looked at me like I was a person, not a secret. He was the antidote. A distraction from the poison Logan had left in my veins.

My fingers trembled, but I typed back.

> Tomorrow night sounds perfect. Thank you for asking.

I hit send before I could overthink it. The decision was a bandage on a bullet wound, but it was something to do. A way to prove, mostly to myself, that I could still function. That my world hadn’t just permanently narrowed to the memory of a hotel room and a pair of cold, hard eyes.

*

The next evening, I stood in front of my mirror, applying a final coat of mascara. My reflection showed a woman in a sleek, emerald green dress, her hair smoothed into soft waves. On the surface, I looked put- together. Confident. The hollow ache in my chest was a secret I tucked away behind a bright smile.

The universe, it seemed, had a cruel sense of comic timing.

The bistro Mark chose was chic and intimate, all soft lighting and murmured conversations. He was already there, rising to pull out my chair with an easy smile. “You look incredible, Avery.”

“So do you,” I said, and I meant it. Mark was handsome in a clean, approachable way. His smile was warm, his eyes crinkling at the corners. He talked about his work, asked about mine, laughed at my stilted jokes. It was… nice. Perfectly, pleasantly nice.

I leaned in, forcing a light laugh at something he said, my hand brushing his forearm in a gesture I hoped looked flirtatious. I was trying. God, I was trying to be present. To feel something other than the ghost of Logan’s hands on my skin.

That’s when I felt it.

A prickle on the back of my neck. A shift in the atmosphere, like a storm cloud passing over the sun. My breath caught. Slowly, almost against my will, my gaze drifted from Mark’s kind face, scanning the dimly lit room.

And I found him.

He was seated at a corner booth across the restaurant, surrounded by three men in suits. A business dinner.

But he wasn’t looking at them. He was looking directly at me.

Logan.

His expression was a frozen mask, but his eyes… they were blazing. Dark, intense, locked on the point where my fingers still rested on Mark’s arm. I saw his jaw tighten, a muscle ticking in his cheek. He didn’t blink. He didn’t look away. He just watched, a predator witnessing a trespass on his territory. The raw, primal jealousy radiating from him was a physical force, a heat I could feel from across the room. It stole the air from my lungs.

The rest of the date passed in a blur. I smiled. I nodded. I pretended to listen. All the while, I was hyper- aware of that searing gaze pinning me to my seat. Mark, thankfully, seemed oblivious. When he walked me to my car parked a block away, he was a perfect gentleman.

“I had a really great time, Avery,” he said, his hand resting lightly on my lower back for a brief, guiding moment.

“Me too,” I whispered, the lie ash in my mouth.

He leaned in, and for a terrifying second, I thought he might try to kiss me goodnight. I flinched, just barely, and he pulled back, his smile faltering only slightly. “Can I call you?”

“Sure,” I said, my voice faint. I just needed to be alone.

He nodded, gave me one last warm smile, and turned to walk back toward the bistro. The moment he disappeared around the corner, the brave face I’d been wearing shattered. I sagged against my car door, fumbling in my clutch for my keys. My hands were shaking.

I never found them.

A hand shot out of the shadows, a vice clamping around my wrist. I yelped, a sound of pure shock, as I was wrenched backward, away from the car, away from the streetlight.

“Hey!” I managed to gasp, but a hard palm covered my mouth, stifling the rest. I was hauled bodily into the narrow, dark alley beside the restaurant. My back slammed against cold, rough brick, knocking the wind from me.

And then he was there.

Logan. Looming over me, his body caging me in. The scent of rain and that same expensive, devastating cologne filled my senses. The faint light from the street painted the hard angles of his face in stark relief—the furious set of his mouth, the dark storm in his eyes.

He didn’t speak. He just looked at me, his chest rising and falling with ragged breaths. Then, he moved.

His mouth crashed down on mine.

It wasn’t like the hotel room kiss. That had been hungry, passionate. This was punishing. Desperate. A furious, territorial claim. His lips were hard, demanding, his tongue invading my mouth with a possessive fury that made my knees buckle. One hand fisted in my hair, tilting my head back, while the other pressed flat against the brick by my head, his forearm a barricade. I moaned into his mouth, a helpless sound of shock and undeniable, traitorous arousal. My body, the stupid, betraying thing, arched into him of its own volition.

He tore his mouth from mine, his breath hot and harsh against my wet lips. “What the hell are you doing?”

he growled, his voice a low, dangerous rasp.

The sound of it, the sheer audacity, broke the spell. Fury, bright and cleansing, surged through me. “I’m on a date,” I snapped, my own voice trembling. “Or did you forget Rule Number Two? ‘No repeats.’ You made it very clear I was a one-time mistake.”

“That guy is a nobody, Avery.” His words were clipped, dripping with contempt. “He’s my subordinate. You don’t belong with him.”

The claim, the arrogance, lit a fuse. “I don’t belong to anyone,” I hissed, shoving against his solid chest. It was like pushing a wall. “Especially not my brother’s best friend who treats me like a secret he’s ashamed of. If you don’t want me, stay out of my way while someone else tries.”

His eyes darkened, the simmering rage in them mixing with something else—something that looked painfully like regret. He leaned in closer, his body heat scorching me through the thin silk of my dress. “You think I can just stand there and watch him touch you?” he breathed, his lips a hair’s breadth from mine. “You have no idea what you’re doing to me.”

My heart was a wild, frantic drum against my ribs. Tears, born of frustration and longing, welled in my eyes.

“Then break your rules,” I challenged, the words a whisper. “Or let me go.”

For a long, suspended moment, he didn’t move. He just stared at me, his gaze dropping to my lips, then back to my eyes. The conflict in his face was a raw, open wound. The air between us crackled, thick with unsaid words and four years of pent-up want.

His head dipped, his forehead coming to rest against mine. His breath shuddered out. “Avery.”

You may also like

After My Husband Switched Our Babies, I Destroyed His Legacy Novel Cover
9.6
My child had just been born when he was rushed to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit due to a congenital disorder. While others urged me to give up, only my husband, Matheo Washington, stood by my side. “This is our child, a little life. No matter what, we can't abandon him.” However, when I went to the ICU to visit my baby, I accidentally overheard a conversation between Matheo and the doctor. “Mr. Washington, aren’t you worried that your wife will find out about the baby switch?” “If I don’t switch the babies, do you think Livia would agree to let her child donate bone marrow to Stephanie’s child?” “If she hadn’t ended up in my bed, Stephanie would have been Mrs. Washington. Let her child atone for her own sins!” Later, during the bone marrow donation surgery, the child tragically passed away. I left behind divorce papers and walked away, never expecting Matheo to lose his mind afterward. --- “Miss Tucker, based on the biological samples you provided, we can confirm that this child has no genetic relation to you.” Hearing the doctor's words felt like being struck by lightning; I stood frozen in shock, my face going ghostly pale.
Broken Engagement, Berlin Escape Novel Cover
7.6
I flew to London with a custom engagement ring, ready to surprise my boyfriend for our anniversary. Instead, I found him wearing a matching "couple's bracelet" with his "anxious" female best friend, Britney. He even ditched our anniversary dinner because she had a "panic attack" over a chipped nail. Realizing I was the third wheel in my own relationship, I quietly transferred to a university in Berlin to escape. But Graham wouldn't let go. He followed me across the continent, dragging my mother along to guilt-trip me into coming back. When that didn't work, he handed me a "farewell gift." As I opened the box, a sickly sweet smell hit me-he was trying to drug me to kidnap me back to New York. My legs gave out, but I didn't hit the floor. I fell into the arms of Harrison McKee-Britney's terrifyingly powerful uncle and my new professor. "Find another side chick, Graham," Harrison growled, pulling me close. "This one is taken."
From Basement to Engagement Novel Cover
8.7
The basement had become my tomb. Six months of darkness, of cold concrete beneath my knees, of Noah's footsteps overhead that made my heart stop every single time. Six months of needles piercing my already anemic veins, drawing blood I couldn't spare, all for her. For Esmeralda. But it was his words today that finally killed whatever fragile hope I'd been clinging to. "I'm taking Esmeralda to the Maldives," Noah had announced through the basement door, his voice carrying that excited lilt I hadn't heard in years. Not for me. Never for me anymore. "Two weeks. The resort where we talked about honeymooning, remember?" I remembered.
His Affair, Her Heartbreak Novel Cover
7.9
I woke to the soft California light filtering through our bedroom curtains, my hand automatically reaching across the sheets to find Ryan's warmth. The space beside me was empty, the sheets cool to the touch. For a moment, I lay still, eyes fixed on the ceiling, trying to ignore the hollow feeling in my chest. Today was my thirty-fifth birthday. No good morning kiss. No breakfast in bed. Not even a hastily scrawled note. My phone buzzed on the nightstand, the screen lighting up with notifications—messages from acquaintances I barely knew, people from Ryan's world offering perfunctory birthday wishes. None from him. "He's probably planning something special," I whispered to the empty room, hating the desperate edge in my voice.
His Unwanted Wife: The Genius Perfumer Novel Cover
7.0
For three years, Breanna gave up her brilliant career as a top-tier perfumer to be the perfect housewife for her billionaire husband, Hartwell. But when he finally returned from a three-month business trip to Paris, he didn't even glance at the dinner she had carefully prepared. Instead, he threw a divorce agreement on the table. He gave her thirty days to move out and offered a ridiculously low settlement. When she cried and asked if there was someone else, he looked at her with absolute disgust. "You used to smell like ambition and possibility. Now you smell like cooking oil and the desperation of a woman who has nothing outside her husband. You're a trap." He threatened to bury her in legal fees if she didn't sign. Heartbroken and confused, Breanna forced his assistant to reveal what really happened in Paris. The truth was humiliating. Hartwell had been spending all his time with a twenty-six-year-old genius perfumer—a girl who was the exact mirror image of who Breanna used to be before she sacrificed everything for him. He didn't just want a new woman. He wanted a younger, untainted replacement of her past self. Wiping away her tears, Breanna's grief instantly hardened into cold, calculated rage. She tore up his insulting settlement and prepared to fight back, completely unaware that her cruel husband was currently hiding in a hotel room, coughing up blood, deliberately playing the villain to force her to survive his impending death.
I Faked Amnesia to Destroy My Sister’s Stolen Wedding Novel Cover
9.1
I stood at the altar of the Bellevue Estate in Beverly Hills, surrounded by cascading white orchids and blush-pink roses that cost more than some people's monthly rent. The late afternoon sunlight streamed through the arched windows, casting a golden glow across the marble floor. This should have been the happiest day of my life—the rehearsal for my dream wedding to Ryan Mitchell, heir to the Mitchell real estate empire. Instead, my chest felt tight, constricted by something far heavier than the delicate silk of my ivory dress. Ryan stood across from me, six feet of tailored perfection in his charcoal suit, his expression blank and distant. His hazel eyes kept drifting past my shoulder, focusing on something—or someone—behind me. I didn't need to turn around to know who commanded his attention. Victoria. My sister. "Isabella, could you please move slightly to your right?" The wedding planner's voice cut through my thoughts.