
The next morning after the tattoo.
Avani :
I wake before him.
Sunlight slips through the blackout curtains in thin golden lines, painting stripes across his bare chest.
His nameāmy nameāstill looks angry and red over his heart.
The skin around the fresh ink is hot, swollen, slightly raised.
I can feel the feverish heat radiating from him even from across the bed.
I hate him.
I tell myself that every day.
But my feet move anyway.
I slip out of bed quietly, pad barefoot to the kitchen.
The penthouse is silent except for the soft hum of the fridge.
I fill a bowl with ice and cold water, soak a clean washcloth, wring it just enough.
Back in the bedroom, I kneel beside him.
Gently press the cold cloth over the tattoo.
He flinches in sleep but doesnāt wake.
His breathing is shallow, feverish.
I take my phone, call the private doctor Aryan keeps on speed dial.
āFever from fresh tattoo,ā I whisper. āCome quickly. Please.ā
āThirty minutes,ā the doctor promises.
I go back to the kitchen.
I crack eggs.
Slice bread.
Squeeze oranges into juice.
Then I think: itās not enough.
Heās burning up.
He needs something sweet.
So I make pancakes.
My favourite.
Fluffy, golden, drizzled with honey and chocolate syrup.
Iām flipping the last one when I hear it.
Footsteps.
Fast.
Panicked.
āAvani!ā
His voiceāloud, raw, desperate.
āAvani!ā
Heās running.
I drop the spatula, sprint back to the bedroom.
Heās sitting up in bed, sheets tangled around his waist.
Face flushed red with fever.
Eyes wild, glassy, searching.
And tears.
Real tears.
The first Iāve ever seen in his life.
Heās looking for me like a child lost in the dark.
I run to him.
āAryanāā
He reaches for me blindly.
I catch his hands, guide him back against the pillows.
āAre you okay? What happened?ā I ask, voice shaking. āSit downāyouāre not well. You need to rest.ā
He obeys.
Instantly.
No argument.
No smirk.
No control.
Just⦠surrender.
He lets me tuck the blanket around him, lets me press the cold cloth to his forehead, lets me feed him small sips of water.
āWait,ā I whisper.
āIām coming⦠with your breakfast.ā
I leave the room on trembling legs.
I hate him.
I tell myself that every day.
But right now,
the monster is small.
Feverish.
Crying my name.
And I am the one who comes back.
With pancakes.
With honey.
With chocolate syrup.
Because even monsters need to be fed when theyāre burning.
And I am the only one who knows how.
Heās propped up against the pillows now, eyes half-lidded from fever and painkillers, still flushed, still weak.
The pancakes are half-eaten on the tray between us.
Iām sitting on the edge of the bed, feeding him the last bite.
He swallows slowly, then looks at meāreally looks.
āWhy?ā he asks, voice hoarse and cracked.
āWhy are you doing this?
You hate me.
Youāve always hated me.ā
I freeze with the fork in mid-air.
The question hangs between us like smoke.
I set the fork down.
Meet his eyesāthose black, endless eyes that used to terrify me.
āIām doing it because Iām human,ā I say quietly.
āThatās all. Youāre sick Youāre hurting.
And Iām⦠here. Thatās it.ā
He stares at me for a long time.
Something flickers in his gazeāpain, confusion, something softer I canāt name.
Then the doorbell rings.
I stand quickly.
āThe doctor.ā
He nods, but his fingers catch my wrist before I can leave.
āPassword,ā he says. āO333.
Tell them that.ā
I nod, slip out, go to the door.
The doctor is a middle-aged man in a crisp white coat, carrying a black bag.
I give the password.
The door clicks open.
He checks Aryanātemperature, pulse, the tattoo site.
āHigh-grade fever from infection,ā he says. āCommon with fresh ink if not cared for.
Antibiotics, paracetamol, keep the area clean and cool.
Rest. No stress. No⦠activity.ā
He looks at me briefly, then at Aryan.
Aryan just nods.
The doctor leaves medicine on the nightstand, gives instructions, and goes.
I lock the door behind him.
Back in the bedroom, Aryan is watching me again.
I pick up the tray, sit beside him, start feeding him the last few bites.
He lets me.
Every time my fingers brush his lips, he closes his eyes like heās memorizing it.
When the plate is empty, I take a napkin, wipe the corner of his mouth gently.
He catches my hand.
Holds it against his cheek.
āIām scared,ā he whispers.
I blink.
āOf what?ā
āLosing you.ā
The words are so quiet I almost miss them.
āI know what I did to you,ā he says, voice breaking. āI know I donāt deserve this.
But Iām in love with you, Avani.
Completely.
Stupidly.
And it terrifies me becauseā¦
Iāve never had anything I couldnāt control.
And youā¦
youāre the only thing I canāt force to stay.ā
His eyes are wet again.
āI see only you now.
Every day.
Every night.
I want you for lifetime.
But deep downā¦
Iām terrified youāll leave the second you can.ā
I donāt know what to say.
So I donāt say anything.
I just lean forward and press my forehead to his.
He closes his eyes, exhales shakily.
I stay like that until his breathing evens out again.
Narrator (soft, brief):
To be continue....
(ā ļ½”ā ā”ā āæā ā”ā ļ½”ā )___________(ā ļ½”ā ā”ā āæā ā”ā ļ½”ā )
She hates him.
She still tells herself that every day.
But right now,
she is the only thing keeping his heart from breaking.
And he knows it.
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