His Dirty Little Secret

His Dirty Little Secret

What's that supposed to mean?

Ava's POV

The day my mother got remarried was a whirlwind of silk dresses, forced smiles, and the faint scent of lilies that clung to the air like a promise I wasn't sure I wanted kept. It was one of those picture-perfect afternoons in late spring, the kind where the sun filters through the leaves of the old oak trees lining the garden venue, casting dappled shadows on the white folding chairs arranged in neat rows. My mother, Elena Sinclair, looked radiant in her ivory gown, her laughter bubbling up as she exchanged vows with Daniel Kim, a man she'd met at some corporate gala six months prior. He was handsome in a polished, executive way—tall, with salt-and-pepper hair and a smile that screamed stability. The kind of stability we'd been craving since my father walked out when I was twelve.

I stood there in my bridesmaid dress, a soft lavender number that hugged my curves a bit too tightly for comfort, clutching a bouquet of peonies that matched the blush on my cheeks. The ceremony was intimate, just family and a handful of close friends, but my eyes kept drifting to the boy standing behind Daniel. He was positioned like a shadow, hands buried deep in the pockets of his tailored black suit, his posture relaxed yet somehow alert. His hair was dark and slightly tousled, as if he'd run his fingers through it one too many times, and his eyes—God, those eyes—were sharp, unreadable, like polished obsidian catching the light.

Kim Taehyung.

That was his name, whispered to me by my mother the night before in a hurried conversation over packing boxes. "Daniel's son from his first marriage," she'd said, her voice laced with excitement. "He's about your age, Ava. Nineteen. Quiet type, but smart. Studying business at the university. You'll get along great." But as I stole glances at him during the vows, I wasn't so sure. He didn't fidget like the other groomsmen; he didn't chat or crack jokes. He barely spoke, barely blinked, barely smiled. Instead, he stood there, exuding this quiet intensity that made the air around him feel thicker.

When the officiant pronounced them husband and wife, and the small crowd erupted in applause, Taehyung's gaze shifted. Not to his father or my mother, but straight to me. It was fleeting, just a moment, but it pinned me in place. Like he was studying me. Learning me. Memorizing me. I felt a shiver race down my spine, chalking it up to the breeze or the nerves of the day. I told myself I was imagining it. After all, what could a stranger possibly want with me?

The reception blurred into a haze of champagne toasts and awkward small talk. My mother pulled me aside at one point, her arm linked with Daniel's, beaming like she'd won the lottery. "Ava, honey, come meet Taehyung properly," she said, her voice a little too bright, as if she could sense the undercurrent of unease rippling through me.

Taehyung turned toward us, pulling his hands from his pockets. Up close, he was even more striking—tall, easily over six feet, with broad shoulders that filled out his suit jacket perfectly. His features were sharp: high cheekbones, a defined jawline, and lips that curved into the faintest hint of a smirk when our eyes met again.

"Taehyung, this is my daughter, Ava," my mother introduced, squeezing my shoulder. "She's starting her sophomore year in college this fall. Art major, right, sweetie?"

I nodded, forcing a smile. "Yeah, graphic design mostly. Nice to meet you."

He extended a hand, his grip firm but not lingering. "Likewise," he said, his voice deep and smooth, with a subtle accent that hinted at his Korean heritage—something Daniel had mentioned in passing. "Ava Sinclair. I've heard a lot about you."

"Really?" I replied, tilting my head. "Can't say the same. Dad—uh, Daniel—kept you under wraps."

His lips twitched, but it wasn't quite a smile. "I'm not much for the spotlight." His eyes held mine a beat too long, that same assessing gaze from earlier. It made my stomach flip, not unpleasantly, but in a way that set off alarm bells I couldn't quite explain.

Daniel chuckled, clapping Taehyung on the back. "My boy's modest. Top of his class, interns at my firm during breaks. You'll have plenty of time to get to know each other now that we're all under one roof."

The words hit me like a splash of cold water. One roof. Right. The move. My mother and I were packing up our cozy apartment to join Daniel in his sprawling suburban house, complete with a pool and a home office that screamed success. And now, Taehyung would be there too. My new stepbrother.

As the evening wore on, I tried to shake off the weird vibe. I danced with my cousins, laughed at Daniel's bad jokes during his speech, and even snuck a glass of wine when no one was looking. But every time I glanced around, Taehyung's eyes found me. From across the dance floor, from the buffet table, from the shadows by the bar. Studying. Learning. Memorizing.

By the time the night ended, with my mother and Daniel driving off in a limo for their honeymoon, leaving Taehyung and me to head back to the house with a hired driver, I convinced myself it was all in my head. Paranoia from the big changes. Nothing more.

But two years later, that conviction had crumbled into dust. Two years of living in the same house, sharing the same space, breathing the same air. Two years of Taehyung's quiet presence weaving itself into the fabric of my life, like a thread I couldn't pull without unraveling everything.

He was still the same: reserved, brilliant, effortlessly commanding attention without trying. He'd graduated top of his class, landed a high-profile job at a tech firm, but he stayed home, commuting instead of moving out. "Family first," he'd say with that half-smile when anyone asked. But I knew better. There was something else there, something unspoken that simmered beneath the surface.

Our interactions were always polite, surface-level. "Pass the salt" at dinner. "Good luck on your exam" in the hallway. But underneath it all was that stare—quiet, burning, possessive. It followed me when I came home late from parties, when I lounged by the pool in my bikini, when I argued with my boyfriend over the phone. I'd catch him watching from the window, from the doorway, from across the room. And each time, it sent a thrill through me that I hated admitting.

Tonight was no different. It was a Friday evening in mid-autumn, the kind where the leaves outside our kitchen window glowed orange under the streetlights. Our parents were out—date night, they called it, leaving the house to Taehyung and me. I'd just gotten back from a long day at university, my backpack slung over one shoulder, craving nothing more than a glass of water and some mindless scrolling on my phone.

The kitchen was dimly lit, just the under-cabinet lights casting a warm glow over the marble counters. I kicked off my shoes by the door, padding across the cool tile in my socks. The house was quiet, save for the distant hum of the fridge. I assumed Taehyung was in his room, buried in work as usual.

I reached for a glass from the upper shelf, standing on my toes, my shirt riding up slightly. That's when I felt it—the warm brush of a body pressing behind me. Not touching, but close. Too close.

My breath hitched, caught in my throat like a trapped butterfly. The scent of him enveloped me: clean, masculine, with a hint of sandalwood from his cologne. It was intoxicating, familiar in a way that made my pulse quicken.

He didn't touch me. Taehyung never did. Not a hand on my shoulder, not a brush of fingers. But he stood there, his chest inches from my back, his presence a wall of heat that made the air between us crackle.

"Use the lower shelf next time," he murmured, his voice low and rough, laced with that almost-dangerous edge that always sent shivers down my spine.

I froze for a second, my fingers grazing the glass but not quite grabbing it. My heart hammered against my ribs, loud enough that I wondered if he could hear it. "I'm not short," I muttered, trying to sound defiant, but it came out breathy, weak.

His chuckle was soft, a rumble that ghosted down my spine like a caress. "You are. To me."

The words hung in the air, heavy with implication. I was five-foot-six, not tiny by any means, but next to his towering frame, I felt small. Delicate. And something about the way he said it made it feel like more than just height—like he was claiming some invisible territory.

I stepped aside quickly, pretending my heart wasn't sprinting a marathon. The cool air rushed in where his warmth had been, but it did nothing to calm the flush creeping up my neck. He reached above me effortlessly, his arm brushing past my shoulder, muscles flexing under his fitted black t-shirt. He grabbed the glass I wanted and placed it on the counter with deliberate slowness—so close that our fingers nearly touched.

Nearly.

I could feel the heat from his hand, the electricity sparking in that almost-contact. My eyes darted up to his, and there it was again: that flicker in his dark gaze, unreadable yet warm, like a secret flame only he knew how to tend.

We stood there for a moment, the kitchen shrinking around us, the silence thick and charged. I swallowed hard, my throat dry despite the glass now within reach. "Thanks," I said, my voice barely above a whisper.

He didn't move back right away. Instead, he leaned against the counter, crossing his arms over his chest, his eyes never leaving mine. "Rough day?" he asked, tilting his head slightly. It was casual, but there was an undercurrent, like he already knew the answer.

I shrugged, grabbing the glass and filling it from the sink to give my hands something to do. "Just classes. Nothing exciting." I took a sip, the cool water doing little to quench the sudden dryness in my mouth. "What about you? Still buried in spreadsheets?"

He smirked, a real one this time, the kind that made his eyes crinkle at the corners. "Something like that. But I made time for dinner. Left some in the fridge if you're hungry."

I raised an eyebrow, surprised. Taehyung wasn't the domestic type—or at least, he hadn't been when we first moved in. But over the years, he'd taken to cooking on nights when our parents were out, leaving plates wrapped in foil with my name scribbled on a sticky note. It was thoughtful, almost sweet, but it always felt like more. Like a quiet way of saying he was watching out for me.

"I ate on campus," I lied, not wanting to admit how touched I was. "But thanks."

He nodded, but his expression shifted, something unreadable flashing across his face. "You should eat more. You're looking... tired."

I set the glass down a bit too hard, water sloshing over the rim. "What's that supposed to mean? I'm fine."

He uncrossed his arms, stepping closer again—not invading my space, but close enough that I could see the faint stubble on his jaw, the way his Adam's apple bobbed as he swallowed. "Just an observation, Ava. No need to get defensive."

Defensive? Me? I wanted to laugh, but it stuck in my throat. How could I not be, when every conversation with him felt like walking a tightrope over an abyss? "I'm not defensive," I shot back, crossing my own arms to mirror him. "You're just... always watching. Always commenting. It's weird."

His eyebrows arched, amusement dancing in his eyes. "Weird? Or attentive?"

"Attentive?" I echoed, my voice rising. "Like when you 'accidentally' show up at my campus cafe last week? Or when you interrogate my dates like some overprotective bodyguard?"

He chuckled again, but this time it was darker, laced with something possessive that made my stomach twist. "That guy was an idiot. You deserve better."

"Oh, and you know what I deserve?" I challenged, stepping forward myself now, closing the gap until we were toe-to-toe. My heart thundered, adrenaline mixing with something hotter, more dangerous.

Taehyung's gaze dropped to my lips for a split second, then back to my eyes. The air between us hummed with tension, thick enough to cut. "Maybe I do," he said softly, his voice dropping to that rough murmur again. "Better than you think."

I swallowed hard, my bravado faltering. What was this? We'd danced around it for years—stolen glances, lingering moments, unspoken words. But tonight, it felt different. Closer to the surface. "Taehyung, what are you—"

"Ava..." he interrupted, his tone too soft, too gentle, too... something. It wrapped around my name like velvet, making it sound intimate, forbidden.

I blinked, my breath shallow. "Yes?"

He hesitated, his jaw tightening as if wrestling with himself. Then he shook his head slightly, stepping back, the moment shattering like glass. "Nothing. Goodnight."

He turned to leave, his footsteps echoing softly on the tile. But as he reached the doorway, I heard it—the smallest whisper, barely audible, carried on the edge of a breath.

"Mine."

The word hung in the air long after he was gone, echoing in my mind like a promise. Or a threat. I stood there, frozen, my hand trembling as I gripped the counter. It wasn't nothing. And it sure as hell wasn't innocent.

That whisper ignited something in me—a curiosity, a fear, a desire I couldn't name. Because deep down, I knew Taehyung wasn't just my stepbrother. He was a storm waiting to break, and I was caught in the eye, wondering if I'd survive the chaos.

But as I finally turned off the light and headed to my room, passing his closed door where a sliver of light spilled out from underneath, I couldn't deny the pull. The way his presence lingered, possessive and unyielding. Two years of this dance, and tonight, the music had changed.

Little did I know, it was only the beginning.

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