Follow
Chapters
Share
The Day I Stopped Loving Him Novel Cover

The Day I Stopped Loving Him

She spent ten years loving the wrong brother. He only needed one night to claim her for good. Ivy has always been Julian’s shadow—fetching his coffee, doing his homework, waiting for him in the rain. But when she catches him kissing another girl on campus gossip forums, something inside her finally shatters. Enter Rowan Vance. Julian’s bitter rival. The cold, brooding architecture genius who never wastes words—or kindness. He finds her broken and soaked to the bone, and without a word, wraps his leather jacket around her shoulders. Rowan doesn’t want her gratitude. He wants her. As Ivy pieces herself back together—ditching the old habits, rediscovering her own fire—Julian panics. He never realized how much he needed her until she slipped away. But every desperate attempt to win her back only pushes her further into Rowan’s arms. And Rowan isn’t the kind of man who shares. “Hold still, Ivy. Unless you want Julian to see exactly who you belong to now.” From rain-soaked heartbreak to a love that rebuilds her from the ground up, Prologue is a scorching, emotional ride about finding your worth—and the man who makes you never want to be anyone else’s shadow again.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

Three days.

That's how long it took for the silence to start making noise.

I didn't plan it as some grand gesture. I just stopped. Stopped picking up his dry cleaning on the way back from the library. Stopped printing out the study guides I used to leave folded on his desk. Stopped answering the texts that came in at odd hours — the ones that always started with what I needed and ended with what he wanted. I put my phone face-down on my desk and let it buzz against the wood like an insect trapped under glass, and I went back to whatever I was doing.

It turned out I had a lot of things I'd been meaning to do.

I finished a reading response that was two weeks late. I reorganized my pigment drawers by color family. I slept eight hours on Tuesday night, which hadn't happened since September, and woke up feeling like a different person — or maybe just like myself, the version that existed before I'd spent two years making myself smaller to fit inside someone else's orbit.

I didn't let myself think too hard about any of it. I just kept moving.

---

I heard about the rest secondhand, the way you always hear things at Harwick — through the particular grapevine that runs through studio hallways and dining hall corners and the group chat I was still technically in but had muted three days ago.

Julian couldn't find his tie for the department mixer on Tuesday. Not the specific one — the dark green one he'd asked me to pick up from the dry cleaner six weeks ago, the one he'd worn to the alumni dinner and liked because a professor had complimented it. He'd apparently spent forty minutes looking before showing up tieless and irritated, which was the kind of thing people noticed because Julian was not the kind of person who showed up to anything looking less than assembled.

The psych paper was worse. He'd had a draft, apparently — a draft I'd helped outline in October, back when his parents' divorce was peaking and he couldn't string two coherent sentences together. He'd built everything on top of that outline. Without me to fill in the gaps he'd been leaving for three weeks, the whole structure had started to show its holes.

And then there was the stomach thing. He got them occasionally — stress cramps, the kind that hit during exam weeks and late nights. I'd always kept a small bottle of antacids in my bag, the specific brand he preferred, the kind that didn't leave a chalky taste. A small thing. The kind of small thing you don't notice until it's gone and your stomach is killing you at midnight and there's no one to text.

I knew all of this and I felt — not satisfied, exactly. Not vindictive. Just clear. The way a window looks after rain washes the dust off.

---

The texts started Monday afternoon.

The first few were his normal register — that particular tone he used when he assumed the problem was temporary and the solution was obvious.

*Don't be dramatic. Bring the psych notes to my room tonight.*

Then, an hour later: *I'm not going to apologize for Friday. Blair was going through something real.*

Then, that evening: *Ivy. The paper's due Thursday.*

I read them the way you read something in a language you used to speak fluently and are now watching yourself forget — understanding each word individually, no longer feeling their pull.

By Tuesday the register had shifted. The confidence was still there but something underneath it had gone tight.

*You're seriously ignoring me over this? Fine. But you still have my annotated copy of the Berger.*

*Can you at least confirm you're not dead.*

*This is getting ridiculous.*

I put the phone back down.

Wednesday was different. I was in the middle of cleaning a brush when the screen lit up with a string of messages that came in fast, one after another, the way they do when someone has been composing and deleting and finally just sends everything at once.

*I've been trying to reach you for two days.*

*I don't know what you want me to say.*

*Ivy, pick up the phone.*

And then, a few minutes later, quieter somehow even in text: *Please.*

I looked at that one for a moment. Just a moment.

Then I set the phone face-down again and went back to the canvas.

---

The painting had started as an accident.

I'd come into the studio Monday morning with no real plan — just the need to put something between myself and the static in my head. I'd pulled out the largest canvas I had, primed and waiting for months, and I'd started mixing without thinking. Dark grays. Deep blue-black. A greenish undertone that showed up in storm clouds right before they broke.

By Wednesday evening it had become something. Rain — not the soft, romantic kind but the real kind, the kind that hits pavement hard enough to bounce, that turns the air white, that makes the world feel both dangerous and clarifying at once. I was working on the foreground now, the place where the water hit the ground and shattered into a thousand small explosions, each one its own brief, violent bloom.

I hadn't painted anything like this in two years. I'd been doing careful things — still lifes, figure studies, the kind of controlled, technically competent work that got good grades and no real attention. Safe work. Work that didn't ask anything of me.

This asked everything.

I was so deep in it that I didn't hear the door.

I heard the footstep.

One, and then another, unhurried. I knew it wasn't anyone from my cohort — they knocked, or they called out, or they came in already talking. This was someone who moved through space like they owned the silence in it.

I turned around.

Rowan Vance stood just inside the door, his coat still on, his hands in his pockets. He looked at the canvas first — really looked, the same way he'd looked at my ruined dress on Friday night, with that quiet, thorough attention that felt less like an appraisal and more like reading.

Then his gaze dropped to my phone, sitting on the stool beside my paint rags, screen lighting up for the fourth time in twenty minutes.

He crossed the room in a few even strides, reached past me without asking, and pressed the power button until the screen went dark.

The silence that followed was immediate and total.

I stared at the blank screen. Then at him.

"You can't just—"

"Tonight." He said it like the sentence had already started somewhere before I was listening. His eyes moved back to the canvas, and something shifted in his expression — brief, controlled, but there. "My studio. I need a figure model for a sketch series. Two hours, maybe three."

He looked at me.

"Three hundred an hour. Or—" A slight pause, something almost dry in it. "I owe you a favor. Your call."

The studio was quiet around us. The rain painting dripped faintly at one edge where I'd been working wet-on-wet. My phone sat dark and silent on the stool, and the absence of its buzzing felt like the absence of a sound you hadn't realized was constant until it stopped.

I looked at Rowan.

He was already looking at the door.

You may also like

Husband's Fury for Lost Family Novel Cover
9.0
I woke before dawn, the excitement in my chest feeling almost foreign after so many mornings of quiet resignation. Today was special—Lily's fifth birthday. My fingers traced the edge of the handcrafted ceramic mug I'd spent weeks perfecting in my little garage studio. The glaze was the exact shade of Ryan's eyes, a detail he'd never notice but that mattered to me nonetheless. The house was silent as I slipped out of our bed—my side rumpled, his pristine. He hadn't come home last night. Again. Amanda's boutique opening preparations, he'd texted. I pushed away the familiar ache and focused on transforming our living room with pastel balloons and streamers. "Is Daddy coming home for my party?" Lily appeared in the doorway, her princess dress already on despite the early hour, her beloved stuffed lamb clutched tightly to her chest.
My Fiancé Proposes But Not to Me Novel Cover
7.8
The video loaded. The stream counter showed 47,000 viewers and climbing. The camera angle was perfect—professional lighting, the marble lobby serving as a backdrop, the company logo subtly visible on the wall behind. Someone in production knew what they were doing. The frame centered on a figure kneeling, and my breath caught. Alan. My Alan, in his charcoal Tom Ford suit, the one I'd helped him pick out last month. The overhead lights caught the silver at his temples, making him look distinguished, powerful. In his hands, he held a small velvet box, open to reveal a diamond that threw prismatic light across the polished floor. Pride swelled in my chest for a moment. He'd actually done it. He'd eventually prepared so delicately to propose— The camera panned up. Not to me.
Reborn To The Wife of a Billionaire with Disabilities Novel Cover
9.0
Eileen woke up in a trashed hotel room, her head pounding with the pathetic memories of a despised Hollywood actress. Outside the window, paparazzi were already screaming about her manufactured cheating scandal, but the real nightmare was waiting at her door. Her paralyzed, billionaire husband, Carlisle Vinson, looked at her with pure disgust while his butler shoved a divorce settlement at her chest. "Mr. Vinson is offering a severance package of fifty million dollars, provided you sign immediately and vacate the premises." The original owner had left her an absolute mess. Her trusted assistant had sold her room number to the press to frame her, and a playboy had scammed her out of her entire two million dollar life savings. If she signed those papers and lost the Vinson family's protection, the breach of contract fees and her enemies in the industry would swallow her alive in days. Eileen felt a cold fury override the original owner's lingering panic. Why should she take the fall and be thrown out on the streets while the parasites who set her up lived out their wealthy fantasies? She had died once, and she wasn't about to waste her second chance playing the victim. Eileen slammed the heavy divorce folder shut right against the butler's chest. "I'm not signing," she said with a terrifying, absolute calm. She stepped behind her husband's wheelchair, ready to shield him from the cameras, secretly cure his dead legs, and make everyone who betrayed her bleed.
Secret Triplets: The Billionaire's Second Chance Novel Cover
9.8
I stood at my mother's open grave in the freezing rain, my heels sinking into the mud. The space beside me was empty. My husband, Hilliard Holloway, had promised to cherish me in bad times, but apparently, burying my mother didn't fit into his busy schedule. While the priest's voice droned on, a news alert lit up my phone. It was a livestream of the Metropolitan Charity Gala. There was Hilliard, looking impeccable in a custom tuxedo, with his ex-girlfriend Charla English draped over his arm. The headline read: "Holloway & English: A Power Couple Reunited?" When he finally returned to our penthouse at 2 AM, he didn't come alone-he brought Charla with him. He claimed she'd had a "medical emergency" at the gala and couldn't be left alone. I found a Tiffany diamond necklace on our coffee table meant for her birthday, and a smudge of her signature red lipstick on his collar. When I confronted him, he simply told me to stop being "hysterical" and "acting like a child." He had no idea I was seven months pregnant with his child. He thought so little of my grief that he didn't even bother to craft a convincing lie, laughing with his mistress in our home while I sat in the dark with a shattered heart and a secret life growing inside me. "He doesn't deserve us," I whispered to the darkness. I didn't scream or beg. I simply left a folder on his desk containing signed divorce papers and a forged medical report for a terminated pregnancy. I disappeared into the night, letting him believe he had successfully killed his own legacy through his neglect. Five years later, Hilliard walked into "The Vault," the city's most exclusive underground auction, looking for a broker to manage his estate. He didn't recognize me behind my Venetian mask, but he couldn't ignore the neon pink graffiti on his armored Maybach that read "DEADBEAT." He had no clue that the three brilliant triplets currently hacking his security system were the very children he thought had been erased years ago. This time, I wasn't just a wife in the way; I was the one holding all the cards.
She Died Once: Now The Mafia Kneels Novel Cover
9.3
I was the Mafia Princess of the Wolfe family, engaged to Daniel Marino to unite our powerful syndicates. But during a hit at a speakeasy, we were both gunned down. As my chest was torn apart by a Tommy gun, I looked at my fiancé, expecting him to reach for me. Instead, there was no despair in his eyes, only a twisted, selfish terror. We both died on that floor, but the devil sent us back to the day of my hospital discharge. Instead of finalizing our wedding, Daniel stormed into my father’s study. "I won't marry Isabella. I want Celine." He demanded to break our engagement, claiming he wouldn't be collateral damage in a Wolfe family war, and declared his true love for my sweet, orphaned adopted sister. He thought shedding me would save his life, completely unaware that the assassination was orchestrated by his precious Celine. In my past life, I didn't know she was a rat who sold our patrol routes to rivals and plotted my murder just to take my place. If I hadn't died once, I would have believed her manufactured tears and comforted her. But this time, I remembered everything. I buried the vengeful woman I had become and let my face pale as I pushed open the heavy oak doors. "Daniel? You... you want Celine?" I whispered, forcing a heartbroken tear to fall. This time, I would play the fragile victim, just so I could orchestrate their absolute ruin.
SNOWBOUND DESIRES: A CHRISTMAS SEDUCTION  Novel Cover
8.1
This holiday collection is pure, uncut sin under the mistletoe. Step-siblings tangled in tinsel and sweat. Best friends betraying vows on the Christmas rug. Stranded guests double-stuffed by the hosts. Secret Santas delivering creampies instead of gifts. No safe words. No condoms. Just raw, bed-breaking, screaming-orgasm holiday hookups.🔥 Kinks include: daddy kink, age-gap, cheating, Double Penetration, squirting on the Christmas tree, caught masturbating, and marital-bed breeding while the spouse sleeps downstairs. If Christmas makes you wet for the wrong reasons-this blizzard will drown you in it. Strictly 18+.🔞🔞🔞 Grab a blanket... you'll need it to hide the stains.🔥🔥