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Chapter 16 - The Room Between Us

CHAPTER 16 — THE ROOM BETWEEN US

Night folded over the mansion like a velvet curtain, muting the edges of everything. Mara stood alone on the balcony of her room, fingers laced around the cold railing, watching the distant lights of the estate flicker like faint stars. The air carried a crisp chill, but it wasn't enough to distract her from the knot of questions twisting in her chest.

She had survived the confrontation with Clarissa. She had survived the humiliation, the whispers, and the probing stares from people who were still trying to figure out why a man like Damian Frost would marry a woman like her.

Yet none of that troubled her as deeply as the silence that now stretched between her and Damian.

Ever since he had walked out earlier, she hadn't seen him. No knock on her door. No message. No explanation.

Just absence.

She exhaled slowly, letting the night air push against her lungs. She hated how much space he took up in her thoughts. She hated how she kept replaying his voice—low, guarded, almost pained—when he demanded to know who had been behind Clarissa's cruel stunt.

She hated how much she cared.

"Mara?"

She jerked around, startled. Damian stood in the doorway of the balcony, his tall frame outlined by the dim golden light from the room behind him. He wasn't in a suit anymore. Just dark trousers and a loose shirt with the sleeves rolled up, revealing forearms that looked far too tired for a man known for being carved from steel.

"Didn't mean to scare you," he said quietly.

"You didn't," she lied.

He stepped closer—not too close, but close enough that she could sense the tension radiating from him.

"You're cold," he murmured.

"I'm fine."

His jaw tightened, like he wanted to argue but held himself back. He rubbed the back of his neck, something he only did when he was unsure. Damian Frost, unsure. The thought alone was almost absurd.

"I owe you an apology," he said.

Mara blinked. "For what?"

"For earlier. For letting Clarissa get to you. For not being fast enough. For… everything."

"You didn't do anything wrong, Damian."

His eyes narrowed slightly. "You always defend me, even when you shouldn't."

"And you always take the blame, even when it isn't yours."

Silence settled again. But this time it didn't sting. It softened between them, almost fragile.

Damian stepped beside her, resting his palms on the railing. Their arms didn't touch, but the space between them felt intentional—like he was giving her the freedom to move closer or step back.

She didn't step away.

"You're stronger than they realize," he said after a moment. "Stronger than even you realize."

Mara scoffed softly. "I don't feel strong."

"You are." His voice dipped lower, quieter. "I've never met someone who could face humiliation with their spine straight and their dignity intact."

She looked down at her hands. "I didn't feel dignified."

"I did," he said simply.

The words caught her off guard. Warmth unfurled in her chest, faint but steady.

Damian inhaled deeply, as though gathering courage. "Mara… earlier, when I left the room—it wasn't because of you."

"I know."

"No," he said, turning toward her fully, "I don't think you do."

The intensity in his eyes made her heart stumble. She swallowed.

Then Damian said something she was not prepared to hear.

"I left because if I stayed, I would have done something I shouldn't."

Her breath hitched. "What do you mean?"

He didn't blink. Didn't waver. "I wanted to hold you. And it terrified me."

Heat rose to her cheeks. "Damian…"

He exhaled sharply and took a small step back, as if giving her space to process. The night air seemed to thicken.

"I'm trying to respect the boundaries we set," he continued. "Trying not to complicate things. Trying not to make this arrangement harder than it already is."

"But?" she whispered.

His voice deepened, rough around the edges. "But every time someone hurts you, I lose my restraint. And tonight… I came very close to crossing lines I promised myself I wouldn't."

Her heart tumbled in her chest, wild and dissteady. "Why tell me this?"

"Because hiding it would be a bigger mistake." He dragged a hand through his hair. "And because I don't want you to think my distance means I don't care."

Care.

One small word. Too heavy for what she felt in her chest.

"Damian," she said gently, "I don't need you to protect me."

He met her eyes. "I know. But I want to."

Those four words unraveled her more than all the insults Clarissa had ever thrown.

Damian's voice softened. "Mara… tell me to stop, and I will. Tell me to stay, and I will. Just—tell me what you want."

The world stilled.

The wind paused.

Her heartbeat drowned everything else.

She didn't know if she leaned toward him or if he leaned toward her, but suddenly the distance between them felt unbearably small. His breath brushed her cheek. His hand hovered near hers—not touching, but waiting.

Waiting for her choice.

Mara's lips parted.

"I want you to stay," she whispered.

Damian's breath shuddered out, like he had been holding it all night. His shoulders relaxed—only slightly, but enough to reveal the relief he tried to hide.

He moved beside her again, close but not overwhelming. Not forcing. His presence alone warmed her more than the night breeze ever could.

They didn't speak again for several minutes. They just stood there—two souls tangled by accident, bound by a marriage neither expected but both were beginning to feel in dangerous, unspoken ways.

And for the first time since the wedding, the silence between them held promise instead of distance.

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End of Chapter 16

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