“At midnight, my brother-in-law showed up at my door shirtless, his skin glistening with sweat, and made a baffling proposition.”

Chapter 1: The Forbidden Knock

The guest cottage at the edge of the sprawling Blackwood Estate was my sanctuary, but it was also my cage. I lived here by the grace of my brother-in-law, Gabriel Blackwood, and his wife, Victoria.

It had been two years since my husband—Gabriel’s younger brother, Liam—died. I should have moved on. I should have left. But Gabriel insisted I stay. “It’s family land, Elara,” he had said, his face unreadable. “Liam would want you safe.”

So I stayed. I painted in the garden. I avoided the main house. Especially when Victoria was home. Victoria was beautiful, icy, and possessed a way of looking at me that made me feel like a squatter.

Tonight, the estate was being battered by a fierce Nor’easter. Rain lashed against my windows. I knew Victoria was away on business in London for the week. Gabriel was alone in the big house.

It was 2:00 AM when the knock came.

It wasn’t a knock. It was a body hitting the door.

I grabbed my phone, ready to call security. “Who is it?”

“Elara.”

The voice was unrecognizable. Guttural. Broken.

I opened the door, keeping the chain on.

Gabriel stood there.

He was shirtless. In the middle of a storm. His dress pants were soaked black, clinging to his legs. His chest was heaving, water streaming down his defined muscles.

But it was his face that terrified me. He was flushed a violent shade of crimson. His eyes were wild, glassy, shifting around as if he were seeing ghosts in the dark.

“Gabriel?” I whispered, scandalous shock warring with concern. “What are you doing? Where is your shirt?”

He leaned his forehead against the doorframe, closing his eyes. “I need… your bed.”

My stomach dropped. He’s drunk, I thought. Victoria is away, and he’s drunk and he’s come to…

“Go home, Gabriel,” I said firmly, though my heart was pounding. “You’re married. Go home.”

“Can’t,” he slurred. “Hot. Too hot. The house… the house is ice.”

“You have central heating! Go back!”

“Keys,” he mumbled, sliding down the frame until he was on his knees. “Mud. Lost.”

He looked up at me through the crack in the door. “Please. Just… let me in. I’ll sleep on the floor. Just… open.”

He didn’t look like a predator. He looked like a dying animal seeking shelter.

I undid the chain.

Gabriel fell forward. I caught him, or tried to. He was heavy, a wall of solid muscle and heat.

My hands touched his bare shoulders. I gasped.

He wasn’t just warm. He was scorching.

“Oh my God,” I hissed.

“Elara?” he blinked, his head lolling onto my shoulder. “Why is the rain… boiling?”

“You’re not drunk,” I realized, the guilt hitting me instantly. “You have a fever. A massive fever.”

“Flu,” he wheezed. “Hit me… at dinner. Tried to… find meds. Locked out.”

He coughed, a dry, racking sound that shook his whole body. He shivered violently against me.

“Okay,” I said, panic setting in. “Okay, Gabriel. We need to get you inside.”

Chapter 2: The Secret Keeper

I managed to drag him to the sofa. He collapsed, shivering uncontrollably.

I ran to get the thermometer. 104.2°F.

This was dangerous.

“Gabriel, I need to call a doctor,” I said, putting a cold compress on his forehead.

“No!” He grabbed my wrist. His grip was weak but frantic. “No doctor. No press. Stock price… merger…”

“Screw the merger, you’re burning up!”

“Victoria…” he whispered. “Don’t call Victoria. She… she hates sickness.”

I paused. She hates sickness? What kind of wife hates sickness?

“Okay, no Victoria,” I promised. “But you need to drink this.”

I fed him Tylenol and water. I spent the next hour sponging him down with cool water. It was an intimate, terrifying task. Touching his chest, his arms, trying to cool the fire in his blood. I tried to be clinical, but he was a beautiful man, and I was a lonely woman, and the situation was rife with a tension I couldn’t name.

around 4 AM, the fever spiked again. The delirium set in.

“I didn’t want to,” he mumbled, thrashing his head on the pillow I had given him.

“Didn’t want to what?” I asked softly, wiping his brow.

“Marry her,” he whispered.

I froze.

“It was the only way,” Gabriel continued, tears leaking from his closed eyes. “The company… Liam’s debts… Dad’s debts… Victoria’s father had the capital.”

I sat back on my heels. I knew Liam had been reckless with money, but I didn’t know the extent.

“You married her for money?” I whispered.

“To save the estate,” he rasped. “To save… you.”

My heart stopped. “Me?”

“If the estate was sold,” he breathed, “you’d have nowhere to go. You have no family. I couldn’t… I couldn’t let you be homeless, Elara. I promised Liam.”

He turned his head, his glassy eyes opening, looking at me but seeing through me.

“I sold myself,” he said, a bitter smile touching his lips. “To a woman who sleeps in a separate wing. Who spends half the year in London with her ‘tennis coach’.”

I covered my mouth. I had thought they were the perfect power couple. Cold, yes, but perfect.

“She doesn’t touch me,” Gabriel whispered. “I haven’t been touched… in three years.”

He shivered. “I’m so cold, Elara.”

Without thinking, I grabbed the heavy quilt from my bed and tucked it around him.

“You’re safe,” I said, my voice trembling. “You saved me. Now I’m saving you.”

Chapter 3: The Morning After

I fell asleep in the chair. When I woke up, the storm had passed. Sunlight streamed through the windows.

Gabriel was sitting up. He was wearing the oversized t-shirt I had left out for him—it was tight across his chest. He looked pale, exhausted, but lucid.

“Morning,” he said. His voice was rough.

“Hi,” I said, rubbing my eyes. “How do you feel?”

“Like I was run over by a truck.” He looked around the cottage. “I… I came here last night.”

“You did. Shirtless.”

He winced. “I remember. I lost my keys in the mud by the gate. I was confused.”

“You were delirious, Gabriel. You had a 104 fever.”

He looked down at his hands. “Did I… say anything?”

I hesitated. I could lie. I could let him keep his dignity. But I looked at the man who had apparently sold his happiness to put a roof over my head.

“You said you married Victoria to save the estate. And me.”

The silence stretched out, heavy and suffocating.

Gabriel closed his eyes. He let out a long sigh. “I hoped that was a hallucination.”

“Is it true?”

He looked at me. “Yes. Liam left us in a hole, Elara. A deep one. Victoria’s father bailed us out. The price was the marriage.”

“And the part about her and the tennis coach?”

Gabriel gave a dry laugh. “His name is Jean-Luc. She’s not on business, Elara. She’s in Paris with him. We have an… understanding. As long as I keep the stock price up, she plays the dutiful wife at galas.”

“Gabriel,” I whispered, walking over to him. “That’s not a life. That’s a prison.”

“It’s a duty,” he said. “One I accepted.”

“Why didn’t you tell me?”

“Because,” he looked up, his eyes intense. “Because then you would know that every time I walked away from you, every time I acted cold… it was because I was terrified.”

“Terrified of what?”

“Of wanting you,” he said.

The air left the room.

“I’m a married man, Elara. Even if it is a sham. I have honor. But last night… when the fever hit… my defenses fell. My feet just walked to where I wanted to be.”

He stood up. He swayed slightly, but steadied himself.

“I should go. Before the staff sees me here.”

He walked to the door.

“Gabriel,” I called out.

He stopped, his hand on the knob.

“You said you did it to save me,” I said. “But you never asked if I wanted to be saved at that price.”

He didn’t turn around. “I couldn’t risk the answer.”

Chapter 4: The Twist

Two days later, a courier arrived at the cottage.

He handed me a thick envelope.

Inside was a deed. The deed to the cottage. Transferred into my name. Paid in full.

And a letter.

Elara,

I realized something that night. I can’t protect you if I’m destroying myself. You deserve a home that is truly yours, not one borrowed from a transaction.

Victoria returned this morning. I handed her the divorce papers. I’m dissolving the merger. It will cost me half my fortune, and likely the CEO position, but the contract had a clause: infidelity voids the non-compete.

I have photos of Jean-Luc. I’ve had them for months. I just never had the courage to use them.

I’m leaving for a while. I need to figure out who I am when I’m not ‘The Fixer’.

Be happy.

– Gabriel

I stared at the letter. He had blown up his life. For himself. And maybe, a little bit for me.

Epilogue: The Fever Breaks

Six months later.

I was painting in the garden. The cottage was mine now. I had painted the door a bright, cheerful yellow.

A car pulled up the long driveway. Not a limousine. A vintage Mustang.

A man stepped out. He wore jeans and a t-shirt. He looked younger. Lighter.

Gabriel.

He walked up the path. He stopped at the gate.

“Nice door,” he said.

“I like it,” I smiled, wiping paint on my apron. “I hear the former CEO of Blackwood Inc. is starting a vineyard in Napa.”

“He is,” Gabriel grinned. “Small scale. Honest work. Dirt under the fingernails.”

“Sounds nice.”

“It is. But it’s lonely.”

He opened the gate and walked toward me.

“I’m not married anymore, Elara.”

“I know.”

“And I’m not sick.”

“That’s debatable,” I teased.

He stopped in front of me. He reached out and tucked a strand of hair behind my ear. His hand was warm, but not feverish. It was steady.

“Can I ask you something?” he said.

“What?”

“If I hadn’t had a fever that night… if I had come to your door sober and healthy… would you have let me in?”

I thought about it. The fear. The guilt. The walls we build.

“Probably not,” I admitted.

“Then I’m glad I got the flu,” he whispered.

He leaned in.

“Can I come in now?”

I looked at the man who had sacrificed everything for duty, and then destroyed it all for truth.

“You don’t need to ask,” I said. “The door is unlocked.”

He kissed me. It tasted like sunlight and second chances.

The End

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