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img img Modern img Shattered Innocence: My Brother's Dark Desire
Shattered Innocence: My Brother's Dark Desire

Shattered Innocence: My Brother's Dark Desire

img Modern
img 150 Chapters
img Felix Turner
5.0
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About

I lived in the shadow of the Randolph estate, a scholarship girl who spent years calling the heir of the family "brother." I thought the cold distance between us was my protection, a boundary that would keep me safe in a world of wealth and power. Then I woke up on the thick Persian rug of his private study, my body aching and my mind fractured by disjointed, violent memories of whiskey and his scorching touch. Panic flooded my chest as I scrambled to cover myself with a discarded blouse, desperately stammering that it was a mistake, a drunken lapse in judgment. But Hunter sat on the sofa, unbothered and terrifyingly sober. He watched me with eyes that lacked any hint of the haze that clouded my own. "I wasn't drunk, Herminia." The air left the room. He had been fully aware while I was lost in the smoke. Before I could flee, he caught me, his fingers digging into my waist with a grip that felt more like a claim than a rescue. A dark purple bruise bloomed on my neck-a mark of possession that meant my life was over if our mother, Barbara, ever saw it. Instead of letting me go, Hunter used my terror to tighten the noose. He manipulated Barbara into moving me to the East Wing, his private sector where no staff were allowed and every door was a dead end. I became a prisoner in a silk-lined cage, watched by bodyguards he hired to "protect" me from the very scandal he created. At breakfast, I had to sit in silence as Barbara planned his marriage to a wealthy heiress, all while his foot pressed possessively against my leg under the table. He wanted a perfect wife for the cameras and me hidden in his wing as his "common distraction." He even tasted the blood from my wounded finger, whispering that I was his. I looked at the high lace collar hiding my shame and the bars on my beautiful windows. My "brother" was a predator who had bought everyone I trusted, from the maids to my own assistant. As the florists began delivering lilies for his engagement party, I realized I was standing on the edge of a bottomless abyss, and the only person holding the key to my cage was the monster who wanted to consume me.

Chapter 1 1

"Stop."

The word scraped against Herminia's throat, dry and cracked, but the movement of her own body betrayed the protest. She woke up not in her bed, but on the thick, Persian rug of the main study, the fibers scratching against her bare skin. Her head throbbed with a dull, rhythmic ache, a souvenir from the whiskey decanter that now sat nearly empty on the mahogany desk above her.

She tried to push herself up, but a sharp, stinging pain in her inner thighs made her gasp. The sound was too loud in the morning silence. Memories flashed in disjointed, violent bursts. The clinking of ice. The taste of oak and smoke. Hunter's hand, large and scorching, wrapping around her throat. Her own voice, begging him not to stop.

Panic, cold and immediate, flooded her chest. She scrambled backward, her hand knocking into the leg of the leather sofa.

Hunter was there.

He wasn't asleep. He was sitting on the sofa, legs spread, his white dress shirt unbuttoned halfway down his chest, exposing the hard lines of his torso. He was watching her. His eyes were clear, terrifyingly sober, devoid of the haze that clouded her own mind.

Herminia grabbed her discarded silk blouse from the floor, clutching it to her chest as a pathetic shield. Her heart hammered against her ribs like a trapped bird.

"Hunter... brother," she stammered, the title tasting like ash. "This... last night. We were drunk. It was a mistake."

Hunter didn't blink. He slowly buttoned his cuff, the gold link clicking into place with a sound that seemed to echo in the cavernous room.

"I wasn't drunk, Herminia."

The air left the room. Herminia stared at him, her knuckles turning white as she gripped the blouse. He had been sober. He had known.

"You..." She choked on the accusation. She tried to stand, but her legs were gelatin, refusing to hold her weight. She stumbled.

Hunter moved with the speed of a predator. He caught her before she hit the floor, his fingers digging into her waist, stabilizing her with a grip that felt more like a claim than a rescue. He pulled her close, the heat of his body seeping into hers.

"Let me go," she whispered, tears stinging the corners of her eyes. "If Barbara finds out... she'll kill us. I'm your sister."

"You aren't my sister," Hunter said, his voice low and vibrating against her ear. "And last night, when you were screaming my name, you didn't seem confused about our family tree."

Heat rushed to her face, burning her neck and cheeks. The shame was a physical weight, crushing her. She tried to push him away, but his arm was a steel band.

Footsteps echoed in the hallway outside. Heavy, rhythmic thuds. The morning cleaning crew.

Herminia froze. Her breath hitched. If anyone opened that door, her life at the Randolph estate-her scholarship, her trust fund, her very existence-was over.

Hunter felt her stiffen. Instead of releasing her, he pulled her flush against him, his hand sliding up her spine. He was enjoying her terror.

The footsteps paused, then faded down the corridor.

Herminia sagged against him, sweat trickling down her back. Hunter tilted her chin up, forcing her to look at him. His thumb traced her lower lip.

"Get dressed," he said, his tone shifting instantly to cold indifference. He released her and walked toward the window. "Barbara will be downstairs in five minutes."

Herminia scrambled behind the heavy oak desk, her hands shaking so badly she couldn't align the buttons of her blouse. She pulled her skirt on, zipping it with a jagged motion. She felt dirty. Used. And terrifyingly, she felt a lingering electric hum where he had touched her.

Hunter pulled back the velvet curtains. The grey morning light sliced through the room, illuminating the dust motes dancing in the air.

Herminia smoothed her hair and walked toward the door, desperate to flee. She caught her reflection in the glass of the bookcase.

She stopped dead.

A dark, purple bruise bloomed on the side of her neck, stark against her pale skin. It was undeniable. A mark of possession.

"Hunter," she whispered.

He turned. She pointed a trembling finger at her neck.

Hunter looked at the mark, his expression unreadable. He didn't look sorry. He walked to the desk, opened the top drawer, and pulled out a small, silver tin.

"Come here," he ordered.

"No. I need to leave."

"You can't hide that with makeup," he said, unscrewing the lid. "Come here. Unless you want the entire staff to know exactly what you were doing on my rug."

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