Total pages in book: 98
Estimated words: 95046 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 475(@200wpm)___ 380(@250wpm)___ 317(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 95046 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 475(@200wpm)___ 380(@250wpm)___ 317(@300wpm)
Except this man isn't my Master.
He's my Heroic Kidnapper.
My Saint, apparently, according to the part of my brain that short-circuited the second his hand wrapped around my throat back in Giovanni's hallway.
That's the moment it happened. The exact second my nervous system tagged him as "Safe Authority Figure" and filed him away in the same mental folder as Giovanni and Jino. The throat grab did it—that confident pressure, the way he pinned me against the wall with just enough force to make my body go liquid and compliant.
My traitorous, thoroughly-reconditioned body looked at that grip and thought: Oh good. A Master. We know what to do with Masters.
Which means I'm "safe" with him.
Which isn't true.
Obviously.
But knowing and feeling remain two separate countries, and my body has already chosen which passport to carry.
So, to recap… my new life—my self-contained, perfectly scheduled fresh start filled with delicious edging and perfect demerits that earn out in orgasmic spankings—apparently comes with consequences such as limited ability to think in life-or-death situations.
This realization came to me during the hours-long ride in some beat-up car trunk that smelled so much like gasoline, I was almost certainly high on fumes.
Because I… blacked out.
Not the trunk part. I remember the trunk part with crystal clarity—every bump in the road, every turn, the way the spare tire dug into my calf, the chemical taste coating my tongue.
No. The blackout happened before that.
The memory tries to surface like something drowning in molasses. I can see Heroic Kidnapper's face—sharp jaw, those unsettling gray eyes, the kind of bone structure that belongs on Renaissance paintings of tortured saints. His hand on my throat. The wall against my back. His accent doing something complicated to my nervous system that I absolutely do not have time to process.
He said something.
What did he say?
"Won't let him kill another woman."
That part I remember. And then—
Nothing.
Clean cut. Total blackout. My brain just… stopped recording.
One frame: pinned against Giovanni's hallway wall, Heroic Kidnapper's fingers pressing into my pulse points with professional precision.
Next frame: trunk lid slamming down, darkness absolute, gasoline fumes thick enough to taste.
Everything between those two moments? Deleted. Corrupted file. Content unavailable.
I should be terrified by this. The lost time, the missing memories, the fact that my brain apparently decided to take an unscheduled vacation during what was objectively a crisis situation.
I'm not.
That's worse.
I waited for panic to arrive like I was checking train schedules. Okay, fear should be pulling into the station any minute now. Adrenaline's running late but it'll get here. Survival instinct is probably stuck in traffic.
Nothing came.
Just me and the darkness, and the gasoline smell, and my body arranging itself into position three—knees spread, bowed over, hands stretched out, forehead touching the grimy carpet—like I was waiting for Jino to inspect my form rather than, you know, actively being kidnapped.
The realization doesn't hit me all at once. It seeps in gradually, like water finding cracks.
My reactions have been modified.
Not just the physical stuff—the way my nipples tighten when Master uses that particular tone of voice, or how my thighs automatically spread when I hear "wider," or the Pavlovian wetness that floods between my legs the second Giovanni grips my hair.
No. This goes deeper.
Giovanni and Jino have rewired my actual threat assessment protocols. The fundamental operating system. The part of my brain that's supposed to differentiate between "authority figure who trains me" and "stranger who shoved me in a trunk."
I should have been clawing at the trunk release. Kicking the roof. Making noise. Any noise. Something that signaled distress rather than patience.
Instead I knelt there in perfect fucking form and wondered if my posture would make my Master proud.
My Master.
Not Heroic Kidnapper.
Giovanni. Or Jino. One of the men who actually owns me, not the hot, shirtless Irish guy on a "rescue mission."
The self-flagellation begins with enthusiasm.
Let's review my credentials, shall we?
Bachelor's degree in Literature. Incomplete, but still. I made it through three years of critical theory. I can cite Foucault on biopower, and Sartre on bad faith, and Butler on performative identity.
75,000 BookTalk followers. Okay, had. Past tense. But still—I built that audience through thoughtful analysis and cultural commentary.
Scholarship winner. I wrote poetry that made coffee-shop judges cry. Or, at the very least, hand over five-thousand dollars to help pay for tuition.
Daughter of academics. I was raised on dinner table debates about epistemology and narrative structure.
Reader of big books with complicated ideas. Kant. Nietzsche. Yeats. Eliot. The goddamn Iliad in three different translations because I wanted to compare the violence.
Except.
I'm none of those things anymore.
I'm a woman who defaults to submission positions when kidnapped.
A woman whose survival instinct has been replaced with muscle memory—the kind that makes you kneel before you consciously decide to, spread your legs before anyone asks, tilt your chin up to expose your throat because that's what Position One requires and Position One is safe.