Secrets Between My Step-Brother And Me
img img Secrets Between My Step-Brother And Me img Chapter 1 The bad kind of trouble
1
Chapter 6 I hate my stepbrother img
Chapter 7 Are you judging me img
Chapter 8 This isn't appropriate img
Chapter 9 I hate parties img
Chapter 10 Save me img
Chapter 11 Go somewhere with me img
Chapter 12 You're a spoiled brat img
Chapter 13 And your partner is... img
Chapter 14 It's totally on img
Chapter 15 You like him that much img
Chapter 16 The wanton list img
Chapter 17 You like your stepbrother img
Chapter 18 Understatement of the century img
Chapter 19 Walk away img
Chapter 20 Are you crying img
Chapter 21 Can this get any worse img
Chapter 22 Good girl img
Chapter 23 I'm screwed img
Chapter 24 Do it img
Chapter 25 Kiss a random guy img
Chapter 26 I'm fucked img
Chapter 27 I can't let that happen img
Chapter 28 A rose for a rose img
Chapter 29 It was a mistake img
Chapter 30 Are you with me img
Chapter 31 What is wrong with me img
Chapter 32 I'm a coward img
Chapter 33 It's your mother img
Chapter 34 Opposites attract img
Chapter 35 He's gone img
Chapter 36 I miss him img
Chapter 37 Play with me, good girl img
Chapter 38 Take the leap img
Chapter 39 Missed this img
Chapter 40 Faye smith img
Chapter 41 You're the muse img
Chapter 42 I love you img
Chapter 43 I want you img
Chapter 44 I'm your angel img
Chapter 45 A hopeless romantic img
Chapter 46 I'm a bad friend img
Chapter 47 Your imperfections img
Chapter 48 Please don't leave me img
Chapter 49 Tattoo or not img
Chapter 50 Please let me go img
Chapter 51 Forgive me img
Chapter 52 Prince Charming img
Chapter 53 Shall we img
Chapter 54 Prom king and queen img
Chapter 55 At what cost img
Chapter 56 The fine line between us img
Chapter 57 The secrets between my stepbrother and me img
Chapter 58 Nothing but a memory img
Chapter 59 Letting go img
Chapter 60 I see him img
Chapter 61 How is he here img
Chapter 62 Not as healed as I thought img
Chapter 63 New york img
Chapter 64 One year, one second img
Chapter 65 The past is never really the past img
Chapter 66 I can't breathe img
Chapter 67 Everything will be alright img
Chapter 68 Back into my orbit img
Chapter 69 It doesn't matter img
Chapter 70 I miss you img
Chapter 71 I don't care img
Chapter 72 Just dinner img
Chapter 73 The Loaded table img
Chapter 74 Trying to forget, Failing miserably img
Chapter 75 A date with a twist img
Chapter 76 Trouble moves upstairs img
Chapter 77 He is everywhere img
Chapter 78 The perfect host img
Chapter 79 The Breaking point img
Chapter 80 Eat, Amelia img
Chapter 81 Like glass img
Chapter 82 It's just hormones img
Chapter 83 Let's do some karaoke img
Chapter 84 Maybe I miss you img
Chapter 85 A line we always cross img
Chapter 86 You drive me to madness img
Chapter 87 The reality I keep running img
Chapter 88 I want more img
Chapter 89 A door we can't walk through img
Chapter 90 Nowhere to run img
Chapter 91 Say yes img
Chapter 92 When has it ever mattered img
Chapter 93 I really thought we had a chance img
Chapter 94 Too late to fix it img
Chapter 95 The only lead left img
Chapter 96 I'll take care of you img
Chapter 97 I'm here img
Chapter 98 Just us img
Chapter 99 Why img
Chapter 100 The love of my life img
img
  /  2
img
img

Secrets Between My Step-Brother And Me

Siena Faye
img img

Chapter 1 The bad kind of trouble

Amelia's POV

Wanton. Utterly and truly wanton. That's the word I'd used to describe Miguel Angel Sanchez the first time I met him.

It had been the night of my mother's engagement to his father, Emilio Sanchez; millionaire real estate developer who lived in a mansion on the outskirts of Evergreen, beautiful little town in Colorado.

My town.

Emilio had moved back into town three years ago after leaving with his mother when he was a kid, when his parents divorced (I know this because people gossip a lot in Evergreen), and in no time had established himself as one of the affluential and influential voices in the town, unlike his father who'd left the town not long after the divorce and was never heard of again.

I'd never met him personally, only seen glimpses of him as he drove past town (make that as his driver drove past town), so it came as a shock, albeit an unwelcome kind of shock when my mother, an elementary school teacher, who I'd have never thought crossed paths with that kind of man, came home one night, sat me down and said she'd been seeing Emilio for a couple of months and had agreed to marry him.

I'd expected her to move on at some point–dad died when I was ten– and she'd never spoken about another man, at least not to me, for the past six years, so I couldn't bring myself to be unhappy that she'd found love again. So like the good daughter I'd been since I was old enough to know what was right or wrong, I braved a smile and supported her.

I'd swallowed all my words the next day when she warily announced that we'd be selling the house and moving to the mansion. I mean, what exactly was I expecting?

That the engagement would flop, that's what.

I didn't even put up an argument, plastering a sickly sweet smile on my face that my mother saw right through but didn't dare question, thank God, and we'd moved into the property two weeks later.

The road to the property was long and almost never ending, trees on either side. The house, no not a house, the mansion where we'd be staying for the rest of our lives, no, where I'd be staying till I went to college-which was give or take, still more than a year away, because I was close to finishing junior year-, had a security gate that didn't need to be explained– it told outsiders to keep out. There was a water fountain with benches surrounding it in front of the house. The garden behind the house stretched from one edge of the property to the other, more trees painting a picturesque backdrop so beautiful, it made me almost feel happy about who my mother was marrying. Almost. I'd never be completely glad about whoever my mum chose the second time. It sounded selfish and cruel but at least I was that honest with myself. The sitting room was large enough to hold a party, so thankfully there was a smaller room for attending to guests, which had it's own restroom. Like the sitting room, there were two dining rooms, the extremely large and the small table that could accommodate six people. There was one kitchen and guess the size?

There were also three bedrooms on the ground floor, each having it's own bathroom and adjoining toilets, a pantry, a laundry room, a library, a music room which housed a large piano and a store. There were two doors, the front door which led to the small living room first and the back door beside the store which led to the back of the house.

The stairs, which was located in the large living room area, led upstairs to two sides, left and right.

On the left were about four bedrooms, all on one side, the other side just wall which held very few paintings. On the right was five rooms, one was the library, two were bedrooms, one was the study that Emilio used as a home office and the last was the master bedroom. Where my mum would definitely be rooming with her fiance.

Choosing the most anterior room in the left wing, I plopped on the bed and allowed the reality of what was happening to hit me.

And then I'd learnt about him.

The son Emilio Sanchez had had with his first wife before they'd divorced, who happened to be a big time model in Los Angeles, Faye Smith.

Miguel Angel Sanchez.

Emilio, his father was handsome for his age, dark brown hair and honey eyes with tan skin that hailed his Latino roots. His mother, Faye Smith-model and actress- was another story. Blonde hair, blue eyes and the palest of skins, she still looked ageless and not like a mother of an eighteen year old, probably why she was still famous in the industry. She was based in Los Angeles, with her son.

Bianca, my best friend had joined me to "stalk" Miguel on social media, it wouldn't be bad to at least see the face of my stepbrother to be- her words, not mine.

It wasn't even hard to find him. With almost three hundred thousand followers on Instagram, he was akin to an Instagram celebrity. Even had a fan base, who called themselves Angels. And that was before I clicked and saw his face.

He'd inherited his father's hair, skin and eyes but that smile from his mother. The brown of his eyes reminded me of a brand of chocolate my best friend was obsessed with. Soft rosy lips and a smile that I was sure had gotten girls to drop their panties for him-Bianca's words, not mine- A lean body that didn't lack a bit of muscle; a model's body. Like his mother, he'd been modelling since he was ten.

He was a prodigy, having one of his paintings displayed in one of the most famous art galleries in Los Angeles at fourteen, his focus shifting to photography a year later. Bianca had swooned. I'd kept my face stoic, refusing to become a fan girl to a boy I'd have never met if his father hadn't decided to remarry. That's when we saw the other parts that made Emilio cringe everytime he talked about his son. He'd dropped out of high school in senior year, flunking his final exams. And cue the eye popping parties he managed to find time to attend on a regular basis.

Did I mention the parties?

The look on Emilio's face when he'd gritted out that his wayward son would be showing up for the engagement party had told me everything I needed to know.

Even though Miguel Angel Sanchez looked like an angel, he was a wanton.

It was a night in July that my mum chose to have the engagement party. He'd walked into the house like he owned the place, looking far older than eighteen years old, wearing a burgundy tux, an unlit cigarette on his lips.

His pierced lip, because on the right side of his lower lip was a snake bite piercing, (Bianca had googled it the moment he walked in), and right where his left brow ended was another piercing. Both little glittery silver rings. On his ears were silver studded earrings. His hair was gelled back, not one of his normally curly strands out of place, his chocolate eyes enchanting for all who dared to look. And everyone looked. He looked older in real life. And even though I hated to admit it, devastatingly handsome. Even women old enough to be his mother sent him coy glances as he smirked and walked past. I told myself that watching him had nothing to do with how he looked but everything to do with the fact that his dad was wary of the reasons his estranged son had decided to attend his engagement. He was to be my stepbrother, after all, even though he'd clearly decided to ignore my mother and me, only grabbing his father in a pretentious hug and speaking to him in Spanish before throwing my mother and I a cursory glance and disappearing into the party.

But that's not what I remembered most about Miguel Angel that night.

I wished I'd never tried to look for him when he disappeared, trying to broker peace and introduce myself, even though I had no doubt he knew who I was. I wish I'd just walked past the music room where a gigantic piano and some other instruments that Emilio sometimes liked to play were kept.

I wished I'd never pushed the door open and stumbled on Miguel lounging on the seat beside the piano, a woman riding him with enough fervor to break the chair. Because he was facing the door when I came in, his gaze trapped me in place and my mouth dried as the woman -whose face I couldn't see because her back was to me- bounced, up and down, moans almost animal like as she chased her orgasm. And as she rode him, he watched me, whispering words in Spanish that seemed to turn her on even more as her movements became frantic.

My throat bobbed, my mouth dry as I looked, unable to tear my gaze away, unable to close my ears to her moans and when she cried out, finally reaching orgasm, my thighs clenched involuntarily in my floor length black dress.

I wasn't a stranger to sex. I was a virgin, but I'd read enough and heard enough about Bianca's sexcapades to know what the act was. I'd never watched porn, at least not until this moment. I squirmed under his gaze, as if he could read my inexperience from my eyes and I just wanted to enter the ground and die.

You're Amelia Hart for goodness sake, you do not crawl away.

So I cleared my throat, loud enough that the woman finally realized someone else was in the room and jumped off him like he was fire. She shouldn't have, because now I was staring at my stepbrother's dick in a condom. And it was the first penis I was seeing that wasn't randomly on the internet but attached to a living person not more than ten feet from me. I barely registered the woman-Mrs Hathaway, who had a son in my class and had come with her husband tonight-rushing out, leaving me still staring at my handsome stepbrother's genitals. It was soft now, yet it was big, how would it even look when hard? How did that thing fit into someone's body?

That was when I heard his voice, mocking and amused, "Like what you see, Mia?"

Like a bucket of cold water dumped over my head, the rarely used short form of my name, almost spoken as if in endearment, snapped me out of my trance.

I hurried out of the room, hearing his laughter as I slammed the door shut.

I came to a conclusion that night.

Miguel Angel was trouble. And not the good kind.

            
            

COPYRIGHT(©) 2022