Ari
The morning air is crisp, but the sun has that low heat that tells me itâs going to be hot later, once the marine layer burns off. Sunlight filters through the tall windows in the house in thick beams as I step into the kitchen, freshly showered and wearing the same outfit as yesterday. Hannah and Otto are already seated at the dining table, sipping coffee and reading the paper. Asher is nowhere to be found, but thatâs not surprising. He mentioned having a meeting this morning, though I thought heâd at least have breakfast with me before disappearing into work mode.I grab a cup of coffee and make my way toward the study, where I find him exactly as expectedâseated at a large wooden desk, laptop open, phone pressed to his ear.âAsher,â I say softly, stepping inside.He doesnât look up. Instead, he holds up a single finger, signaling me to wait. My stomach twists, the gesture making something small and bitter rise in my throat. Itâs not the first time heâs done this when heâs on an important call, but somehow, here, where I donât know anyone but him, it stings more.I stand there awkwardly, shifting from foot to foot as he continues speaking, completely immersed in whatever conversation heâs having. Minutes pass, and the longer I stand there, the more I feel like an interruption rather than his girlfriend. Finally, he types something into his computer, glances at me, and presses his hand over the receiver.âWhat is it?â he asks, his tone clipped.I swallow the small knot of disappointment in my throat. âI need to go shopping. My clothesââ I exhale, forcing a light chuckle. âLetâs just say they didnât survive the trip.âHis brow furrows, but his attention is already slipping back to his laptop. âCan you take a rideshare?âI blink. âI⦠I donât really know my way around here.ââIâll send you the address of a good shopping center,â he says, already refocusing on his screen. âIâll check in later, okay?âI hesitate, waitingâjust for a secondâto see if heâll change his mind. If heâll look at me properly, see the way Iâm standing here feeling wholly uncomfortable. But he doesnât.I nod, even though heâs barely looking at me. âOkay.âI turn and leave, pressing my lips together as I make my way back to the kitchen. I shouldnât be upset. I know Asher is busy at work. But still, I thoughtâ ââYou need to go somewhere?âThe voice is deep, smooth, cutting through my thoughts like a blade.Maddox.I turn, finding him leaning against the kitchen counter, a mug in his hand, watching me with that unreadable expression. His presence is all-consuming, even when heâs doing nothing but standing there. Heâs broad-shouldered, and though I know theyâre twins, he seems taller than Asher. His build is all lean muscle and coiled restraint. The tattoos along his forearms and hands shift slightly as he moves, making my pulse stutter in a way I donât want to acknowledge.He doesnât smile. He doesnât offer anything other than quiet, weighty observation.For a moment, I donât know how to answer. Something about his attention makes me feel exposed.âIâuhâyes. Shampoo explosion.ââI hate when that happens,â Hannah supplies, glancing up from her paper.Maddox lifts a brow, slow and deliberate, but he doesnât say anything.I cross my arms. âItâs not a big deal.ââYou should take her, Maddox,â Otto interjects, setting his coffee down. âSheâd probably be bored with us.âSomething flickers in Maddoxâs gaze. Amusement. Like he knows exactly what theyâre doing.I shake my head. âThatâs okay. I can justâ âââIâll take you,â Maddox cuts in, his voice leaving no room for argument.My lips part, but no sound comes out. Heâs not asking. Heâs .tellingI hesitate, glancing toward the hallway where Asher is still locked away in his meeting. I should say no. I should insist on finding my own way.But the idea of wandering an unfamiliar city alone isnât exactly appealing.And Maddoxâ¦I exhale sharply. âFine. But Iâm driving.âA slow smirk tugs at his lips. âNo, youâre not.âBefore I can argue, heâs already pushing off the counter, grabbing the keys off the hook by the door.âYou coming?âI donât know why I follow him.But I do, grabbing my purse and sandals from where they sit by the front door.Maddox drives a sleek black SUV, a rental I assume, since I doubt he owned a car after twenty years inside. He doesnât speak much as we pull onto Pacific Coast Highway, and Iâm painfully aware of how quiet the car is. Thereâs no radio, no idle chatter. Just the low hum of the engine and the steady, intentional way he handles the wheel.I glance at him from the corner of my eye. Heâs focused, relaxed in a way that feels unnerving, like heâs completely in control of every moment.âHow are you allowed to drive?â I blurt before I can stop myself. âI mean⦠legally?âHis lips twitch, like heâs trying not to smile. âI got my license back a week after I got out.âI nod, unsure what else to say. âWell⦠thanks for taking me.âHe finally glances at me, his gaze sharp. âYou sound like you had a choice.âI freeze for a second before forcing a small, awkward chuckle. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?âHe doesnât answer. Just smirks, turning his attention back to the road.Minutes pass before we pull up to an outdoor shopping plaza. He parks without asking where I want to go, cutting the engine and stepping out before I can process that weâre already here.I scramble to keep up, stepping onto the sidewalk as he heads toward one of the higher-end boutiques lining the plaza.âI donât usually shop in places like this,â I say, eyeing the designer labels on the windows. âI was thinking something moreâ âââThisâll do,â he interrupts, holding the door open for me.Something about the way heâs looking at me makes my breath hitch. Like he already knows Iâll listen.I hesitate but step inside, the cool air-conditioned space washing over me.And Maddox? He follows right behind me.The store is elegant, quiet, with racks of carefully curated pieces hanging several inches apart from each other. fancy I scan the shelves, already knowing Iâll have to be careful not to spend too much.Oh, this place is fancy.Maddox walks past me, plucking a dress off the rack and holding it up. âTry this.âI blink. âWhat?âHis eyes meet mine, and before I can ask if heâs joking, he continues. âItâll complement your eyes.âI let out a soft laugh, caught between amusement and pure disbelief. âAre you serious? You donât even know my style.âHis eyes drag lazily down my body, and the way heâs looking at me should be illegal. I feel the trail of electricity his gaze leaves on my skin, and I squirm uncomfortably under his gaze.âI know whatâll look good on you.âThe way he says it makes my stomach flip. I should argue. I should roll my eyes and brush him off. Asher would pick clothes out for meâhe hardly notices what Iâm wearing on a good day.never Instead, I take the dress, stomping to the dressing room as he chuckles.Asshole.The boutique is quiet, save for the soft hum of instrumental music and the occasional rustle of hangers sliding along racks. When I pull the dress over my head, I study it with a frown. Itâs a sleek, black slip dress, something far more fitted than what I usually wear. And yetâ¦And yetâ¦Fuck him. I love it. And it bring out my brown eyes, dammit.does Letting out a low growl, I open the dressing room door just enough to pop my head out and tell him to his face, but heâs holding an armful of hangers.right there, I snatch them out of his hand without saying a word.One outfit turns into seven, and soon Iâm standing at the register with more than I intended to buy. He knew my size⦠something I remind myself to ask him about later, because itâs weird. And except for a revealing skirt, Iâm buying everything he picked out for me. Itâs all high qualityâsilks and cashmere, thin cotton that feels like butter, linen fabric that feels way too expensive, and a pair of jeans that somehow hugs my ass and hips in all the right places.very I reach into my bag for my wallet, but before I can pull it out, Maddox steps forward and hands the cashier his card.âWaitâMaddox, no.âHe doesnât even look at me. âDonât waste your breath.âI see the cashier throw some lacy underwear and matching bra sets into the bag as well, and I roll my eyes. The transaction is done before I can fight him on it, and the total makes my eyes bug out. Thatâs a very high, four-figure numberâmore than Iâve spent on⦠anything. The cashier hands over the bags, and Maddox takes them without a word. My fingers twitch at my sides.ever âI couldâve paid for my own clothes,â I murmur as we step outside.âYou couldâve,â he agrees easily, carrying the bags toward the car. âBut you didnât.âI scowl. âBecause you didnât give me a choice.âHe pauses at the passenger door, glancing at me, his gaze steady. âYou couldâve fought harder.âHeat prickles along my skin. I donât know what to say to that, because the worst part isâ âHeâs right.I shouldnât have enjoyed that as much as I did, the way he took control, the way he decided things without hesitation. It should bother me. It bother me.doesI let him do it.And I donât know why.âAlso, the underwear is totally inappropriate.âHe smirks, unlocking the car. âExactly why I picked it.âAsshole.With a scowl, I go to reach for the handle before remembering the midsummer gift. âOh, wait. I need to get a present,â I say quickly.He arches a brow, and damn, that shouldnât be so hot. Itâs unfair, really, how attractive he is. His face is so much like Asherâs, yet nothing like it at all. The same sharp jawline, the same striking blue eyes. But where Asher is polished like stone, Maddox is roughly worn down by granite or lava⦠which makes him seem more dangerous because of it.My stomach flips when he lets his gaze wander down to my feet briefly, and itâs like my body recognizes him before my mind can catch up, like some twisted version of muscle memory. Like a trick played on me by my own instincts, lulling me into a false sense of familiarityâof safety because heâs my boyfriendâs twin and I recognize Asher in his features.Because no other explanation makes sense.Nothing else explains why my pulse jumps when he takes a slow, deliberate step closer, so close that my back presses against his car. I feel cornered, but Iâm not entirely sure I want to run.âOkay. Iâll wait here,â he murmurs, smirking as he gives me a knowing look.I push past him and walk to the plant shop next to the boutique we just cleared out, and a minute later, Iâm walking back to the car with a small snake plant wrapped in plain brown paper. I figure whoever I get for the present exchange will appreciate a plant thatâs hard to kill and easy to maintain.I glance at him as I approach the car. His expression is unreadable, but thereâs something beneath itâconfidence, or arrogance, maybe?Maddox opens the passenger door for me, waiting. Not offering, not suggestingâ. Like he already knows Iâll listen. I hesitate, just for a second. The sharp scent of leather and faint traces of cologne linger in the air between us, something familiar tugging in the back of my mind. I shouldnât like how expectant he looks, like he knows Iâm going to obey.waitingI swallow and step inside.He loads the trunk with my bags, and I shift in my seat, arms crossed loosely over my chest and the plant safely at my feet. He doesnât turn on the radio once we pull out of the parking lotâagain. Doesnât fill the silence with idle conversationâagain.He doesnât have to.The drive back to the house is quiet, almost eerie. Maddox grips the wheel with an ease thatâs almost lazy, but thereâs control in his posture, in the way his fingers flex against the leather. The quiet stretches, thick and oppressive. My skin prickles.Finally, once weâre a few blocks from the vacation house, he speaks. âYou liked that.âMy head snaps toward him. âWhat?âHis lips twitch at the corner, not quite a smile. âDonât play dumb with me, Ari.â My pulse spikes, and I suddenly feel hot all over. âYou liked relinquishing control.âI scoff, but I canât deny the flush spreading down to my chest. âYouâre insufferable.ââIâm right.âI exhale sharply, turning to stare out the window. I hate that I donât have a retort. I hate that my face feels like I got too much sun, that thereâs a kernel of truth in his words I donât want to acknowledge.Maddox shifts gears effortlessly, his fingers flexing around the wheel.I swallow, keeping my eyes fixed on the road ahead. âYou donât know me.âHe lets out a low hum of amusement. âNo?âI donât answer.When we pull into the driveway, Asher is already outside. He watches as we park, his jaw hardening when he sees Maddox open my door.âYou let him take you?â Asher asks, his voice edged with something sharp.I bristle at his choice of words. âIt was your parentsâ idea,â I say, brushing past him and heading inside.I donât have the energy to fight about something that isnât even worth arguing over.But just as I reach the doorway, I glance back.Maddox lingers behind, his presence stretching the moment just long enough to make Asher uncomfortable. He already has my bags in his hands, and he winks once at Asher, whose face turns a bright, purple-ish red with rage.Well, this should be fun.I donât look back again, but I can feel itâthe tension crackling between them, an invisible war waged in silence. I donât want to be a witness to whatever the fuck kind of family drama theyâre involved in.