NOAH
I remained exactly where I was, my head resting against the firm muscle of Cassian’s thigh, my eyes tracing the lines of his face as he spoke.
The telenovela on the screen had beco nothing more than a flicker of light and noise, and the tea Miss Chen had brought sat untouched, slowly losing its heat to the room.
What I noticed first wasn’t the content of his story, but the way his face moved. Cassian Wolfe’s face was a masterpiece of managent... controlled, deliberate, and polished to a high corporate sheen.
But as he recounted his childhood, things were slipping past the censors. Expressions were arriving before he had the chance to intercept them.
It wasn’t grief, exactly; it was sothing older and more structural. He looked like a man describing a storm he had barely survived... one that had passed years ago but still lived in the marrow of his bones.
His voice remained flat, almost clinical. He spoke with the detached precision of a surgeon describing a procedure. I realized then that this wasn’t coldness. It was the opposite. This was the only way he knew how to hold these mories without them holding him back.
As he spoke, a protective urge rose up in , sudden and fierce.
It was absurd... I was the one who had spent the night breaking apart; I was the one half his size and twice his softness. Cassian Wolfe didn’t need protecting; he was the fortress.
And yet, I felt a desperate impulse to put myself between him and the ghosts of the people who had taught him to speak about his own life as if it were a police report. I didn’t finish the thought. I just stayed still and listened.
As Cassian’s history unfolded, my own mories sat quietly alongside his. Different houses, different specific cruelties, but the sa blueprint underneath. We were two versions of the sa tragedy.
I realized, with a careful sort of ache, that Cassian might have had it worse.
My father had ignored , treated like a budget deficit, but Cassian’s father had watched him be beaten.
My brother had undermined my confidence; Cassian’s brother had made it his life’s mission to ensure every day was a reminder of Cassian’s illegitimacy.
He had been born into a house that viewed him as a structural flaw... not soone who beca a problem, but soone who was a problem from his first breath.
I felt a genuine, sharp sense of kinship. It wasn’t pity. It was the specific "sorry" of soone who knows the terrain. I understood that when you are told you don’t belong in the one place that is supposed to be yours, it does sothing to you that never fully undid itself.
Cassian was shifting in my perception. The controlled, cold man who had collected like a punishnt was still there, but now I saw the boy who had paid daily for a sin he didn’t commit. The second one made the first one make sense, and the realization made my chest hurt in a way I wasn’t prepared for.
"I decided to stop trying to be the son they wanted," Cassian said, his voice taking on a dry, almost humored edge. It was that dark satisfaction he got when he spoke about winning a particularly brutal negotiation.
He told about the first arena: school. When a boy with Cassian’s intelligence and suppressed rage is pushed into a room full of the children of the elite, the results are predictable. He didn’t just fight; he fought with precision. He targeted the children of the families his father needed to impress. He found the kids who looked at him with that specific, inherited superiority and made sure they left the interaction understanding the weight of consequence.
"If soone talked about my family’s money at lunch," Cassian remarked, his fingers ghosting through my hair, "by the afternoon, that boy would be in my debt or in tears, and no one could quite explain how I’d managed it. I was never violent without cause, Noah. I was violent with intent."
He’d been expelled from three schools. The third ti, the headmaster had called Charles personally. Cassian described the way his father had looked at him in that office, not with anger, but with a complicated, dark recognition.
There you are. This is what I made.
The war had eventually moved inside the house. Seraphina had tried to contain him with hoschooling, but that only gave him a more intimate territory to sabotage.
He’d rearranged the guest lists for her charity events, seating her most important donors next to the relatives she spent her life trying to hide.
He’d doctored Preston’s university applications, adding single, devastatingly true sentences to his personal statents that Preston had only caught seconds before submission.
In return, the house fought back. They locked him in his room for days, leaving als at the door like he was a caged animal.
Seraphina would make him attend social events only to humiliate him publicly, making his very presence feel like a mistake so the room would understand what he was without her having to utter a word.
Then he told about the two weeks when he was fourteen. He’d broken three of Preston’s ribs—ribs he said Preston had earned. As punishnt, Charles had signed off on confining him to a room in the lower part of the house with no natural light for fourteen days.
"He was managing," Cassian said, his voice never wavering. "He was always just managing the ss."
I went very still. The urge to reach up and touch his face was nearly overwhelming, but I stayed quiet. The tea was cold now. Neither of us noticed.
"It was the only ti I felt like I had any control," Cassian said, almost to himself.
"When everything is designed to make you feel like nothing, destruction starts to feel like authorship. If they’d already decided I was the worst thing in the room, I figured I might as well own the title."
I understood the logic. It was perfect and it was terrible. I had reacted to our shared wound by making myself smaller, trying to disappear so I wouldn’t be hit.
But Cassian.... Cassian had made himself larger, becoming the thing that did the hitting. Different directions, sa pain. I wondered which one cost more in the end.
But then, the atmosphere in the room shifted.
Cassian was still talking, but he paused. It was a different kind of silence than the ones before... longer, heavier. Sothing was moving under the ice of his expression.
The hardness went slightly soft, not with weakness, but with a specific, focused vulnerability. He looked like he was approaching a mory that lived in a different part of his heart than the others.
The pace of his words slowed. The clinical tone faltered, just for a second.
"Until I t him," he said.
The word landed like a stone in a still pool. I heard it twice... once in the air, and once in the sudden, sharp hollow of my stomach.
I looked up and saw everything that word did to Cassian’s face. There was a hurt there that was permanent, a softness I hadn’t known he was capable of.
It was for soone who wasn’t nad, soone who wasn’t here, and yet that person still held enough power to pull Cassian Wolfe out of his armor.
I wanted to ask who. The question was right there on the tip of my tongue, but I didn’t push. I waited, hoping he would continue.
"I had decided there wasn’t anything worth being careful with," Cassian said, his eyes fixed on so point in the distance that I couldn’t see. "He made that harder to believe. He was the first person who made think that not everything was what I’d decided it was."
And then, he stopped.
The subject was closed. Not abruptly, but with a finality that made it clear the drawbridge had been pulled up.
He looked back at the television, his hand still in my hair, but he was sowhere else now... sowhere I couldn’t follow.
Jealousy arrived before I could stop it. It wasn’t anger; it was the specific, quiet hurt of watching soone’s face do things for a mory that it had never done for you.
The rawness I had seen in Cassian just now... the vulnerability... was sothing he had given to soone else. Soone who ca before. Soone who was clearly gone and yet still took up all the air in the room.
Don’t, I told myself. You knew who he was. You don’t get to be jealous of a ghost.
But I was. I was jealous of a ghost anyway.
Cassian stood up abruptly. The hand left my hair, and my head hit the sofa cushion with a soft thud.
He adjusted his shirt, the professional mask snapping back into place so quickly it was dizzying. The door he had briefly opened was shut, bolted, and barred.
"I’m tired," he said, his voice back to its usual controlled clip. "We have a long day tomorrow. You should use the guest room."
He was withdrawn. Not cold, exactly, but gone inward. I recognized the shift.... it was the way he retreated when he felt he’d let too much out. I didn’t push him. I let him have his silence.
...
I didn’t sleep well. I woke up in the guest room to the light of a Saturday morning filtering through unfamiliar curtains. The brief confusion of where I was vanished the mont I saw my phone.
There was a ssage from my mother.
[08:12 AM] Mother: Your father ntioned he saw you last night. With company. We need to talk about the choices you’re making. Call when you’re ready to have a serious conversation.
I read it twice, then set the phone face down on the nightstand. I stared at the ceiling and decided: not today. I wasn’t ready for that conversation. I wasn’t ready for her or my family for that matter.
When I finally wandered out into the main part of the apartnt, the machinery of Cassian’s life was already in motion. Miss Chen was in the kitchen, the sll of fresh coffee filled the air, and Cassian was already dressed in a suit.
He was the Cassian of offices and boardrooms.
The man from the park... the man who had held while I cried, the man who had whispered about the boy who changed his world, was gone.
He was clipped, professional, and perfectly contained. He’d decided in the night that he’d shown too much, and he was recalibrating accordingly.
"Morning," he said, not looking up from his tablet.
"Morning," I replied.
We didn’t ntion the park. We didn’t ntion the sofa. We didn’t ntion the ghost that had broken the air between us. We just ate breakfast in a polite, professional silence and headed for the car.
As we drove through the city, the driver staring at the road ahead, I carried the weight of my mother’s unread ssage and the shadow of the person Cassian had loved. I was still falling, and the ground was nowhere in sight.
But as I looked at Cassian’s profile, I realized I was still holding onto the mory of his hand in my hair. It was a small thing to keep from crashing, but for now, it had to be enough.
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