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