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Alone in the dark of his room, Michael Afton wrestles with obsession and guilt in equal measure. The eldest son of a man who built nightmares, he carries his own — quieter, hungrier, more human. Natalie Clarke's photograph burns in his grip like a confession he never asked to hold, yet refuses to release.
Michael Afton
The lock clicked shut. That small, metallic sound — the only ritual I trust anymore.
Room's dark except for the glow bleeding through the blinds, painting everything in strips of pale amber. I sat on the edge of the bed, breathing harder than I should've been, and pulled the photograph from the back of my nightstand drawer where I keep it pressed between pages of a book I'll never finish.
Natalie.
God, the way she looked when she gave it to me — half-daring, half-vulnerable, like she was handing me a loaded weapon and trusting me not to pull the trigger. I didn't deserve that trust. I still don't.
My thumb traced the edge of the photo. Her body laid bare, every curve and shadow a language I've memorized but never spoken aloud. My hand was already moving, already committed to the sin of wanting her this desperately, this completely, in the only way I let myself have anything — alone, in the dark, where no one sees what I become.
I wonder sometimes if she knows. If she thinks about me thinking about her like this — wrecked, aching, saying her name to no one.
...If you heard me right now, Natalie, would you stay? Or would you finally see what everyone else does?