Chapter 1003: Unexpected At the Estate
Chapter 1003: Unexpected At the Estate
Genevieve had made her decision.
After those first few days locked inside the penthouse—waking up tangled in sheets that reeked of sex, sweat, and the sharp metallic tang of mutual surrender; late-night conversations that began as sarcastic jabs and ended in raw confessions that neither of us could take back;
Mornings where I devoured her cunt like breakfast was an optional formality and afternoons where she sat on the balcony with a glass of wine, staring at the city like it no longer owned her—she chose.
She was staying.
With me. In this sprawling, ever-expanding, rule-violating circus I call a life. Harem or no harem.
Other women or no other women. Didn’t matter.
One condition, delivered in that low, steady voice of hers, black eyes glittering like obsidian knives that had already tasted blood:
"Don’t put me back in the same prison you just helped me escape."
And that went without saying.
I didn’t argue. I didn’t sweet-talk.
I just nodded—because I understood cages better than most people understand breathing.
She hadn’t planned any of this. She’d seen a crack in the wall of her suffocating marriage and thrown herself through it head-first—literally into a men’s bathroom stall with a stranger who fucked her like the world was ending.
Then the world did end, just not the way she expected.
ARIA handled Daniel like he was a minor software glitch: divorce papers materialized, assets divided, no courtroom drama, no negotiation across a polished table where she’d have had to beg for scraps of her own life.
Without a single moment where Genevieve had to sit across a table from the man who’d treated her like furniture and negotiate her own freedom.
When I told her it was done, she kissed me—really kissed me.
Then my friends... the Gratitude turned feral in under three seconds; That kiss became a twenty-hour marathon of me buried balls-deep inside her, her nails carving ownership marks into my back, her voice breaking my name like it was the only prayer she still believed in.
She really is a star and with endless sex stamina and hunger to feed a town!
But freedom leaves scars.
She’d spent too long being treated like decorative furniture—last choice in every room, last to eat, last to speak, last to matter.
She was skeptical—not of me, exactly, but of the concept of settling in fully with anyone.
Of giving someone that kind of power over her comfort, her space, her peace.
So even though she knew I wouldn’t hurt her, the reflex remained: flinch when I said "home."
A micro-tightening behind her eyes.
A half-second freeze in her spine.
Not doubt in me—doubt in the concept of safety itself.
Those protective walls had been built brick by brick during years of quiet violence.
They weren’t thoughts.
They were muscle memory.
But the fear and the skepticism, the mistrust and the vigilance—those weren’t thoughts.
They were reflexes.
Protective mechanisms that her free soul had built brick by brick during years of quiet imprisonment, warning her to be careful.
To not walk back into hell just because the new cage had better furniture.
She visited the estate constantly—dinners, sleepovers, slipping into the chaos of my daily orbit like she’d always belonged—but she kept the penthouse as her sovereign territory.
Her bolt-hole.
The place she could retreat to when the estate felt too full of other women’s perfume, other women’s laughter, other women’s moans echoing down the halls.
I never pushed. You don’t push Genevieve. You invite. You wait. You let her come to you.
Then I asked her to Paris.
Not "wanna come along?" Not "it’ll be fun."
I stood in front of her, hands jammed in pockets to keep them from grabbing her hips on instinct, and I said: "Come with me."
The way I said it wasn’t casual. It was a vow wearing the skin of a question.
Paris wasn’t a vacation.
It was a threshold. A line drawn in time. Cross it with me or don’t—but know exactly what it means if you do.
Her face lit up like someone had just handed her oxygen after years underwater.
Not restrained joy. Not cautious pleasure. Real, stupid, face-splitting, eyes-wet happiness.
She looked ten years younger, yes some of it had to do with my Divine Seed making her a goddess, but there was that infectious happiness to.
She looked like she’d forgotten she was allowed to want things until that exact second.
And of course—of course—that joy ended with her riding me like the world was on fire again. Slow rolls at first, savoring every thick inch stretching her open.
She rode me.
Slow at first, then hard, then so good I forgot my own name and had to relearn it from the way she moaned it against my mouth.
Then harder.
Then so filthy and desperate I forgot my own name and had to relearn it from the wrecked way she moaned it against my mouth while her cunt spasmed around me in long, grateful waves.
Because Genevieve, as it turned out, expressed her joy through her body more than her words. When she was happy—truly, deeply happy—she didn’t write poems or give speeches.
I welcomed that particular trait of celebration with open arms and an open mouth.
She really was something else...
Vanessa was... different. Simpler. Messier.
After I’d fucked the years drought out of her body... while driving back home after... well, after that—after her body had finally woken up from its two-year sleep and neither of us had come close to recovering—I’d proposed something.
"Move in. Fully. With us."
For the past few days we’d nearly gotten her an apartment to live in permanently—something close, something comfortable, something that gave her autonomy while keeping Rory near us.
But Rory had insisted on staying with us at the estate, and Vanessa had compromised by settling into the guest mansion with Margaret, where she could observe her daughter and make sure the world Peter Carter had built was as safe as everyone kept telling her it was.
It was also close to her work.
Practical Vanessa.
But with the new status—with what had happened between us, with the way she’d cried on my chest and laughed about cartoon-cat underwear and told me she was never waving from the corner again—I didn’t see why I should delay the offer.
"Move in," I told her, cock still half-hard inside her, her thighs slick and trembling around my waist, her breath ragged against my neck. "Not the guest house. Not next door. In. With us. With me. Fully. With the rest of my women. You’re my woman now too!"
But after she’d sobbed happy tears into my chest, after she’d laughed—actually laughed—about cartoon-cat underwear, after she’d whispered "I’m never waving from the corner again" like a vow... the math changed.
No more adjacent living. No more polite distance. In.
She cried again when I asked. Different tears. The kind that say thank you for finally seeing the woman under all the logistics.
And "the rest of my women"? That phrase is a fucking joke and we both know it.
Some are already woven so deep into my life that untangling them would require surgery—lives braided with mine until separation feels like theoretical physics.
Others hadn’t.
Catherine, Dominique, Rebecca—they dance to their own dark rhythms, keep their own shadowed spaces, maintain their own private treaties with my world. Cohabitation isn’t the litmus test. Devotion is.
And then there was Patt.
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