Wind snaps through the trees. Lightning cleaves the horizon in jagged ribbons, illuminating the estate in stuttering flashes. Thunder follows seconds behind, loud enough to shake the windowpanes. Rain lashes against the stone walls and pelts the slate roof in waves that sound like fists.
Then the lights go out.
Grace doesn't flinch. She just sets her book aside and stands, barefoot on the cool wood floor, heart already drumming in anticipation. Somewhere in the dark, Julian is alone. She imagines him lighting candles, checking the fuse box, moving through the house like a ghost trying to stay grounded.
She moves quietly. No flashlight, no phone. The house is old enough to know her steps by heart. She can navigate its turns by scent, by memory-the warm, familiar musk of the linen closet; the citrus tang of the hallway diffuser her mother insists on using; the darker, deeper pull of tobacco and cedar that means Julian is nearby.
The light comes from the library.
A soft, flickering glow. One candle, maybe two. She slips closer, careful not to creak the boards, not out of fear but out of hunger. She wants to see him before he sees her. Wants to watch the way he moves when he thinks he's alone.
She peers around the doorway.
He's sitting in one of the armchairs, elbows on his knees, face lit from below by candlelight. It throws shadows across his jaw, makes his cheekbones seem sharper, his eyes darker. He looks... undone. Like he's been fighting something internal and losing.
His shirt is unbuttoned. His sleeves rolled up. There's a tumbler in his hand, a half inch of whiskey sloshing with each movement. The candle sits on the small table beside him, its wax already dripping over the edge in slow rivulets.
She steps into the room.
He doesn't startle. He must've heard her.
"Power's out," she says, unnecessarily.
"Obviously."
There's silence. She crosses the room and sits on the low chaise across from him, knees drawn up, nightgown settling like water around her legs. The candlelight flickers against her skin. Julian watches it flicker.
"You're not reading," she says.
"Can't concentrate."
"Because of me?"
His eyes lift slowly. "Because of everything."
She leans back against the armrest, tilts her head. "You always do that."
"Do what?"
"Speak like you're not saying what you mean. Like there's a layer you expect people to dig through."
"Maybe I don't want to be understood."
"Too late."
He drains his glass in one swallow. Sets it down.
"Why are you here, Grace?"
She blinks. "What do you mean? I'm staying for the summer."
"You could've gone anywhere. Taken an internship. Found your own place."
"You sound like my mother."
"I sound like someone who knows you're playing with fire."
She shifts, the nightgown slipping off one shoulder. Her skin catches the candlelight like silk.
"I'm not playing," she says. "And I'm not scared."
"You should be."
"No," she says, voice quiet. "You should be."
There's a beat of stillness so sharp it feels like a snapped wire between them. Then he rises. Slow. Controlled. He crosses the room and stops in front of her, hands at his sides like he doesn't trust them not to touch her.
She looks up, breath caught.
"I keep trying to stay away from you," he says. "And you keep making it impossible."
"Maybe it's not supposed to be possible."
He exhales hard through his nose. His hands flex. "This isn't a joke."
"I'm not laughing."
"I'm your stepfather."
"Not really," she whispers. "You're just the man who married my mother."
He closes his eyes. Breathes. "Grace..."
"I think about you every night," she says, and her voice doesn't shake. "I think about your hands. Your mouth. The way you looked at me the first night I got here. Like you wanted to tear me apart and hated yourself for it."
"Goddamn it," he mutters, stepping back.
She stands.
Steps toward him.
"You think I don't feel it?" she asks. "The way you watch me? Like you're counting how many steps it would take to ruin me?"
"I am," he snaps. "Every second you're in the room, I'm calculating how much I can take before I snap."
Her breath catches. She takes another step. They're toe-to-toe now. The storm roars outside, thunder crashing like something divine slamming its fists into the ground. Rain lashes against the windows. The candle wavers.
"You don't have to hold back anymore," she whispers.
"I do."
"Why?"
"Because once I touch you," he says, voice shredded, "I'm never going to stop."
She doesn't answer. Just lifts her hand to his chest, lays it over his heart. It's racing. He stares down at her hand like it's a fuse waiting to be lit.
Then she rises onto her toes and kisses him.
He breaks.
His hands are in her hair before he even realizes it, pulling her in like a man drowning. Their mouths crash together, heat flooding every point of contact. She gasps into him, and he devours the sound. His tongue parts her lips, deep and claiming, tasting the defiance, the need, the months of slow-burn torment that led them here.
Her back hits the edge of the chaise. He lifts her effortlessly, lays her down, his body following hers. The candlelight throws them into motion-shadow and gold and tangled limbs.
His mouth trails down her neck, hot and desperate. She arches beneath him, fingers digging into his back.
"Oh my God," she whispers. "Julian-"
He groans. A sound from the base of his spine. "You don't know what you're doing to me."
"I do," she says, breathless. "I want to."
Their hips grind, slow at first. She can feel him through his pants-hard, thick, pressed against her where she's already wet and aching. She rolls her hips up, grinding against him with a moan.
"Fuck," he mutters. "You're soaked."
"I've been wet since you kissed me," she gasps. "Every time you look at me-"
He captures her mouth again, tongue dragging hers into rhythm. She wraps her legs around him, pulling him closer, the thin nightgown riding up to her waist.
One hand slips between them. Finds her heat.
He curses again. "No panties."
"I wanted to feel everything," she whispers.
And he does. Two fingers slide into her, slow and deep. She gasps, biting his shoulder, her body arching. His thumb finds her clit, rubs slow, steady circles as he fucks her with his hand.
"Julian-Jesus, yes-"
Her moans echo off the bookshelves, swallowed by thunder. Her thighs tremble. She's so close-
But he stops.
She whimpers, eyes flying open. "What-?"
He pulls back, breathing hard. His chest rises and falls like he's been sprinting.
"This is wrong."
Her hands reach for him. "Don't stop. Please don't stop."
"I want to fuck you so badly it hurts," he growls. "But not like this. Not half-lit and desperate. You're not some mistake I make in the dark."
She sits up, hair wild, eyes burning. "Then take me like you mean it."
He grabs her wrists, kisses her hard-teeth and tongue and fire-then shoves away from the chaise like it's on fire.
"I can't," he says, voice hoarse. "Not yet."
He walks out.
Leaves her soaked and pulsing on the chaise, heart thundering louder than the storm.