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Chapter 3 - Chapter 3

There's something about an

idle mind—it comes up with the worst ideas. 

 

I'm supposed to be a genius,

but there was nothing smart about what I was doing. 

 

Sure, maybe hacking into

street security footage, watching daily life unfold on my screen, was

impressive. But watching her —Professor

Alina—was something else entirely. 

 

Her home address had been too

easy to find. Way too easy. 

She should be more careful about what she tosses in the trash. 

 

And why had I gone through her

trash in the first place? Because I'm losing it. That's why. 

 

At first, I thought it was

just a crush—something I could ignore, push aside, let fade over time. I figured if I stayed close enough, the

fascination would wear off, and I'd go back to normal. 

 

But that wasn't

happening. 

 

I had to

see her. Every day. 

 

The need kept growing, gnawing

at me no matter how much I fed it. 

Seeing her wasn't enough anymore—I had to know everything about her. 

 

Apparently, knowing everything about Professor Alina meant snooping through

her trash, tracking her online info, and hacking into the security cameras

around her home. 

 

And around her husband's

office. 

 

There he was—the lucky bastard

who got to be her husband. Right there on my screen. At least ten years older

than Alina. Thinning blond hair. Fit build. Average height. Looked pretty damn

clueless—except he was rich. Drives-a-Lamborghini rich. Their house sat on one

of the most expensive streets in Brooklyn—fancy gates, upscale neighbors, a

pristine swimming pool. 

 

Is that what Alina likes? Rich

men? I couldn't see what made him special. Why he got

to have her. Why he got to leave his mark on her. 

 

I bit my fingernail, watching

as he drove past the last of the security cameras on his street.

I switched feeds. Tapped into

the cameras near his office. Sinclair Enterprises. A banking giant controlling

massive national and international investments. His whole family was drowning

in wealth. Lucky bastard. 

 

I tested my luck—trying to

worm my way into their system. They were locked down tight. Somebody on their

end knew what they were doing. I glanced at the other screen—firewalls

dissolving, defenses breaking down—but still, dead ends. 

 

I bit my finger again. Not

like hacking their servers would do me any good. My interest wasn't in the company.

It was in the man . 

 

Studying him. Figuring out

what kind of person he was. All of it—just an excuse to satisfy my curiosity.

And with my skills, that was far too easy. 

He walked up the steps with

purpose—head high, shoulders back, like a man who knew exactly what he was

worth.

Probably worth millions,

honestly.

More than what I've got in my

bank account right now. But give me time—enough time—and I could catch up.

 

Only thing is, time's the one

thing I don't have.

Waiting years to build a

fortune just to maybe impress Alina? That's not fast enough. Not when she's

still married to him in the meantime.

I paused, leaned back in my

chair, my bloodshot eyes drifting toward the ceiling.

 

What the hell am I even

thinking?

 

It's like something's taken

over my brain—a bug, a virus. Like she'd ever leave her husband for me.

 

No. No, Alina's not that kind

of woman. She's not shallow. She's graceful. Intelligent. She carries herself

with this calm confidence, and you can tell she's got her own dreams.

I know because she told me.

 

"You call me professor, but

I'm not that yet," she said once, her smile gentle but not quite reaching her

eyes. "I'm a research associate right now. A teaching assistant, technically."

She gave a little laugh. "I'll be a real professor once my publications go

through. Fingers crossed."

 

That smile—It wrecks me every

time.

 

And when she's close? Close

enough that I can smell her hair? That soft scent of flowers—roses, maybe.

Roses are the only flowers I know. My heart races. Every glance she throws my

way, every word she speaks, it sends my pulse into overdrive.

I feel drunk around her. So

yeah… it makes sense. It has to make sense, that I'm trying to find a way to

have her.

 

Except—

I'm really sitting here,

thinking about taking another man's wife.

 

God. Morty was right.

I'm losing it.

The

door swung open without warning, and I scrambled to click away the screen

showing the front steps of Professor Alina's house.

Rebecca

strolled in like she owned the place—gum snapping in her mouth. She gave me a

look, blew a bubble, and popped it without blinking.

"Watching porn?" she said casually.

I

shot her a death glare and turned back to the monitor. "Get lost."

"Ouch,"

she laughed, then dropped into the seat next to me like it was hers. She kicked

her legs up, skirt riding so high I couldn't not

notice the lemon green and white striped underwear she didn't seem to care

about showing off.

I

let out a long, slow sigh. Already tired.

Pop—another gum bubble. My patience was wearing thin."What do

you want?"

"Nothing,"

she said with a shrug. "Just wondering what you were up to. Thought maybe you

wanted some company."

She

reached for my keyboard.

I grabbed her wrist before her fingers touched a key.

"You

bored? Go find Benson. I'm sure he'd love the attention."

I

flung her hand away and scowled at the screen in front of me, trying to

refocus.

Rebecca

didn't budge. She spun slowly in the chair beside me, chewing lazily.

"You're not still

hung up on that professor, are you?" she said, watching me sideways. "No one

sees you around here anymore."

She

twirled again, upside down now, those green eyes still on me.

"Mariam said she saw you lurking around her building. So what is it—are you

that desperate? Or do you just have a thing for older women?"

That

was it.

I

shot up from my seat, pointing straight at the door.

"Rebecca, I swear to God—get. Out."

She

snapped her gum extra loud before standing up. "The guys and I are hitting the

pub. When you're done jerking off to Professor

Ailina,"—she dragged the name like it tasted bad—"you can come find

us."

I

stared her down as she sauntered out. She didn't slam the door, but it came

close.

My

friends are great—when I only see them once in a while. But ever since we

started sharing this place, it's been a whole different story. Rebecca lived in

the attic. Benson, Morty, and I took the rooms below. Privacy? Gone. Secrets?

Harder to keep. And I had plenty.

One

of them was already back on my screen.

Professor

Ailina was stepping out of her house, heading to her car. She was on her way to

work.

I'd give it twenty minutes. Then I'd go see

her.

 

She

had a lecture today—thirty minutes. I waited by the hallway, just out of sight

but close enough to watch her through the open door. I could see her talk, hear

her laugh with the students. Like all her classes, this one was packed. First

years.

She

really could teach. I'd never noticed that before, not until I actually started

listening. And it wasn't just the way she explained things—it was the way she

cared. You could see it.

With

the kind of money her husband made, any other woman would be off vacationing in

France or shopping for designer handbags, not wasting time in a classroom full

of wide-eyed college kids. But not Ailina.

Ailina

was quiet. Reserved. Friendly enough to talk to, but sharp about her

boundaries. I learned that the hard way a few days ago—when I saw the hickey on

her neck.

I

don't know what I'd been thinking before—back when I first found out she had a

husband. Maybe I'd let myself believe their marriage was cold, something

convenient or strained. But seeing that mark on her neck… the way her husband

looked at her… Nah. There was passion there. Real passion. They were probably

still in love.

Ailina

stepped out of the lecture hall and spotted me. She smiled—that smile. The warm one

that actually touched her eyes. But before I could say anything, a wave of

students swarmed around her. Questions, papers, all of them wanting something.

I

noticed a few guys hanging back, staring at her with the kind of look I knew

too well. I recognized their intentions. As soon as the crowd thinned out, they

started to move in.

I

got there first, slamming shoulder-first into one of them.

"Sorry,

watch where you're going," I said flatly, locking eyes with him. I wasn't much

bigger than him, but I had the seniority—and the look.

He

blinked, muttered, "Sorry," but his eyes kept flicking toward Ailina.

They

stepped forward again, and I shoved a hand against one guy's chest.

"Keep

it moving," I said, tilting my head toward the hallway.

They

looked at me like I'd lost it.

"What's

your deal, man?"

"My

deal?" I said, voice low. "I don't like when people who can't watch where

they're going try to talk back."

If

Morty saw me now, his jaw would be on the floor. I'm not the type to get into

it with people—never have been. But here I was, acting like a nightclub bouncer

on a power trip.

They

exchanged glances, shook their heads, and walked the other way. Relief washed

over me, and I let out a shaky breath, my heart pounding in my chest. "Can't believe that worked." 

 

 "What was that about?" 

 

Her

voice came from behind me, light and amused. I turned, startled, and realized

Alina had excused herself from her adoring fans to come stand right there. 

 

I

froze. 

 

 "Uh... Just some guys," I mumbled, sniffing as if that explained

anything. I was a mess. 

 

 "Ash," she laughed, her voice warm and teasing, "did you just stop them from coming to

talk to me?" 

 

Her

eyes sparkled with mirth, and my stomach tightened with that familiar ache—a

mix of longing and a burst of happiness. She loved it. 

 

 "They didn't look like they wanted to ask

about ethics and technology, so... yeah. I thought it might bother you." 

 

She

covered her mouth, nodding as she stifled a laugh. "I enjoy answering questions about the

course, but not that kind of attention. Thanks, Ash." 

 

I

was blushing furiously, my chest swelling with pride. I wanted to hug

something, high-five someone—anything to release the overwhelming joy bubbling

inside me. Instead, I clenched my fist and pressed it to my mouth, trying to

keep my smile contained as I looked away. 

 

What

 is this feeling? 

 

It's

new—different from the raw desire that always clawed at me like a vice whenever

I saw her, whenever I was near her. 

 

This

was something else entirely. This made me eager to do anything for her. I would act as her bouncer forever if she'd

let me. 

"Are

you done with classes?" I asked, quickly shifting the subject so she wouldn't

notice how stoked I was.

 

"Yes,

that was the last one. I saw you waiting for me. Need something?"

 

I

shrugged, trying to act casual. "Thought we could continue our discussion from

the other day." We had been talking about hacking and whether or not ethical

hackers really existed.

 

She

hesitated for a second, then said, "Yes, but I'm starving. I didn't eat much

today."

 

I

knew that, but I didn't point it out.

 

"Okay,

I'll let you eat."

 

"Would

you like to join me?"

 

The

offer took me completely by surprise. I stood there, mouth slightly open.

 

"I

know you've been standing around waiting for me," she added with a grin. "You

did help me with… whatever that was."

 

The

way she looked at me, her eyes sparkling with that playful mirth, gave me the

courage to say what came next.

 

"Only

if it isn't cafeteria food. That's all I get to eat these days."

 

It

wasn't uncommon for students and professors to eat together on campus, but

off-campus? That might raise a few eyebrows.

 

"I'm

actually a very picky eater," she replied casually, "so I never eat anything

from the school."

 

I

tucked that away for later, then nodded. "Then where should we go?"

"Somewhere

fancy," she said, her smile playful as she pulled off her scarf while

walking ahead.

I

froze for a moment, caught by the way she moved. Her waist swayed, her

hips—perfect hips—moved with an unintentional sensuality. I knew enough about

her after a month of knowing her to understand she didn't welcome male

attention. She dressed for comfort, not to turn heads—skirts that didn't hug,

shirts that didn't reveal—but damn, she was blessed in so many ways.

No

matter how much she tried to hide it, her body was the kind that models would

kill for: a small waist, slim arms, and a full chest.

"Are

you coming?"

I

blinked, realizing I'd spaced out, then hurried after her.

We

rode in her car, the air heavy with the musky scent of cologne. I couldn't help

but think it was her husband's—like he sprayed it in the car to mark his

territory.

What

a knobhead. A controlling piece of work. I get it, though. If I were married to

Ailina, I'd probably be paranoid too, but I wouldn't make her uncomfortable

like that. It was pathetic.

"Do

you like Japanese? I'm craving some for lunch today." Her voice was soft, the

scent of her husband's cologne overwhelming any trace of her own fragrance. But

from memory, I knew her breath was clean and sweet.

"I

love Japanese," I told her, though, to be honest, I'd never tried it before.

We reached the restaurant, and

I was all too happy to be freed from the car. 

 

Inside, the place was

cozy—traditional Japanese decor, soft lighting, a warm, inviting scent drifting

through the air. We were shown to a private room with a tatami floor, and at

the entrance, we had to take off our shoes. 

 

"When you said Japanese,

I didn't know you meant this Japanese," I said, eyeing the setup with

mild surprise. 

 

She laughed, unwinding her

scarf as she stretched to hang it on the rack nearby. 

 

That's when I saw it. 

 

Her dress lifted slightly, and

flawless white skin caught my eye—but so did something else. The deep, red

imprint of what looked like fingerprints. 

 

My smile faded instantly. 

 

That looked painful. Whoever

had grabbed her had done so with force. 

 

"What's wrong? You've

gone quiet," she asked, turning to look at me, completely unaware that I

had seen it. 

 

I shoved the thought down.

Pushed it aside. 

 

"Nothing, I'm just

wondering how I'm going to eat with chopsticks," I said, shifting

gears. 

 

She choked out a laugh.

"They'll give us proper spoons and forks if you ask them." 

 

"Will you use proper

spoons and forks?" I teased, flirting—burying what I had just seen deep in

the back of my mind. 

 

"No, I've been eating

with chopsticks for years." 

 

"Thought as

much." 

 

"What?" she grinned.

"I just like the ambiance it adds to the food. That's why I had to

learn." 

 

"Ambiance? I didn't know

that could affect taste." 

 

"It's kind of like

computers and screens—some things are just better on smaller

displays." 

 

"Got it. Well, you can

teach me then. I want ambiance in my food from now on." 

 

She laughed, shaking her head.

"Stop teasing me." 

 

"I'm not.

Really." 

 

 

We laughed, talked about

everything and nothing, the conversation flowing effortlessly. The food

arrived, and I was surprised by how much I enjoyed it, more than I expected.

Each bite was a new experience, but my mind kept drifting back to that

bruise—the red marks, the fingerprints.

 

I couldn't stop glancing at

her, trying to catch another glimpse of the injury. My curiosity turned into

something deeper, a tightening sensation in my chest. How could I ask her about

it? What could I say without sounding intrusive, or worse, like a creep?

 

The thought of someone hurting

her gnawed at me, an anger that burned in my gut, barely kept at bay. The idea

that someone had laid hands on Ailina…

 

Who did this to you?

 

I watched her, her face calm,

her smile as warm and genuine as always, and wondered how it was possible for

her to hide so much. How could something so painful leave no trace on her

expression?

 

 

 

 

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