Stranger Things

JVL

oozey mess
No title available
hello vonnie

Kiana Khansmith

No title available

Love Begins

No title available

JBB: An Artblog!
taylor price

Discoholic đȘ©

romaâ
RMH

â
I'd rather be in outer space đž

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
Cosimo Galluzzi
sheepfilms
dirt enthusiast
seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Belgium
seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia
seen from Iraq
seen from Argentina
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@aleburton
ARIANA GRANDE Eternal Sunshine Tour - Oakland Arena (06/06/2026)
@arianagrande: hellow thirty three đ«§âĄ
Zach laid flat, shirtless, under the gentle waft of the ceiling fan. He was still coming down from what could only be described from the way his whole body fizzed as a first date, and somewhere beyond that, the relentless dry heat of Las Vegas. The desert city, the birthplace of Zach Winthropâs beating heart. The French doors to his balcony leaned ajar, the sounds and smells of the hotel a hundred floors beneath him rose up, danced, floated around his room. He drifted between states of consciousness, allowing his senses to be overtaken; his eyes fell closed and peeled open, his phone arrhythmically spasmed for attention under his crooked elbow. He dutifully ignored it. He had fallen victim, yet again and as so many others often did, to his own whim. His impulses, his suffocating, wailing desires. For all his confidence that morning, the bravado of delivering that ostentatious assortment to her room, the entitlement of requesting her presence, all the grinning nerve he gloated within the grand walls of Caesarâs Palace, now he just felt a little bewildered and crazy. Out of therapy for years now, heâd forgotten the intricacies of exactly how heâd once been coached to get a handle on his runaway vagaries when it came to Alex. Life felt impossibly big in her orbit, whether that bigness was sparkling or a black hole, and he had a tendency (or so his therapist had told him) to become consumed by the things she made him feel. To run after those feelings, try to lasso them in grand and occasionally destructive, ridiculous ways.Â
The problem was, had been, his neglect to ensure those around him, namely Alex, were willing passengers to his speeding freight train. And maybe he had come on a little strong, but hadnât she responded to it? Wasnât the truth of the matter that, no matter what, theyâd always meet each other where they were? Perhaps what his former therapist, and everybody else, failed to understand was their equivocal kinship. Because when it felt impossible that they both endured, they did. Again and again. Until the world went dark. Until, sometimes, they even skyrocketed out the other side of it. They had to; a twin flame without its other half is only ash. While Alex had protested to his dinner reservation at first, her bitten-lip reservations seemed to revolve primarily around the optics of his proposition. What if people were to see them? What if word were to get around, or worse, get back to Kylie, Andrew? Of course, he knew that was a risk. But that morning, in the car on his way to meet her, it had simply been a risk he was willing to ignore. She hadnât seemed off-put by her own unwillingness to join him. In fact, when she stipulated her lone condition, there had been a starriness to her eyes that made him shiver. So, ultimately, who gave a fuck? Heâd been advised once, many times, to pause before he ran down the forest-thickened path he chose for himself. And hadnât he? Hadnât he done his due diligence, laying there and staring at the ceiling, feeling the madness rising in him? Wondering what the hell he was doing? And he still wanted to run down it. So, fuck it, whatever. He wanted what he fucking wanted. And she might just want him back.
He showered quickly, changed into the outfit he and Alex had selected at the mall. Heâd let her take the lead, watching her features grow serious as she contemplated his options, yielding to the pleasure he felt being dressed by her. He spent much of his life resisting the women around him and their urges to bend his appearance to their will, but with Alex, it was a luxury. She was, always had been, vulnerable to his appearanceâheâd long suspected this was in part due to his style. Even after therapising herself into oblivion, that rebellious organ sitting under her heart like a satin cushion had grown resolute and full at a young age. It couldnât be cut out. So, she didnât try to change him, but instead she catered to the him that already existed. Elevated him. He evaluated his reflection now, ran his hands over his head, and felt satisfied with the man blinking back at him. Dabbing cologne to his pulse points, he made his way to the gilded elevator outside his room, chancing a look at his phone. Many from work; Amanda, his creative director, his publicist, one of his producers. Andrew. His lip quivered. He opened the text. Hi Zach. Heard about the âemergencyâ in Vegas. Youâre covered here âtil Monday but thereâs a lot we need to finalize next week ahead of album submissionâthe assistants are filling your diary up as we speak. Have a great time, but not too great... Need you at your best. â A. Zach blinked at it, then up at his reflection. He almost locked it, put it away. But he hesitated. He thought of Alex in that dress, thought of her five years ago on that balcony. Thought of her in a matter of minutes, sitting across from him at the restaurant. His gut snake-twisted and he almost smiled. Youâre the boss, boss, he typed in return, hit send. Then the elevator dinged, and the doors slid open.
The air outside had cooled, slipping into early evening. Zach leaned against the car door, waiting, eyes flitting over every patron that exited the hotel in search of her. He neednât have bothered. When she did emerge, it was as imposing as passing sirens. His head was not the only one to turn. Clipped to her body was the little blue dress from Dior, wet like scales, slick to her figure. Her legs spilled out of the sequined hem like all hell. He inhaled, chest inflating, reinvigorated. Of course he hadnât been crazy. Look at her. A magic sense of something seemed to swell under her feet as she walked, getting tangled in the waves chasing one another down her back as they floated up to meet her. It moved like music in the air, coalesced with the promise of a blue desert at pre-dusk. And ringing atop it all in high harmony was her smile, a little smug and entirely omnipresent, knowing everything there was to know. She was more dangerous in his hands than a loaded gun. He laughed at her question, rhetorical but he couldnât help jumping in, âecstatic.â Zach was not allowed the pleasure of opening her door, as the driver leapt into action, then hurried around the car to open his door, too. Zach thanked him and sank into the leather beside her. The car smelled new. Felt it, too. Before they could even pull away from the entrance, she produced a wrapped chocolate chip cookie from her purse and presented it proudly to him. He laughed immediately, honestly. âMaybe itâs both,â he chimed, eyeing her as she took a second bite. He plucked it from her fingers, dropped it into the door compartment, and looked at her. âDonât ruin your appetite. Your stalker wants you hungry.â
They rode the rest of the car journey in a similar mannerâeasy back and forth, quipping at and ribbing one another until he was practically squirming in his seat. Every other sentence he had to bite down on his cheeks to stop from telling her how astonishing she looked, how he couldnât fucking believe someone could look like that. How he couldnât believe she looked like that to accompany him to dinner. If this morning was, in effect, their first date, this felt a lot like their second. Though Zach had built an entire, globally successful career around riding nerves like a high, he was still shocked at how on-edge she actually made him. After all this time, how did she do it? But it wasnât the same as it had been, back then. This wasnât a practiced routine. It was a different game entirely, and moreover, he didnât know how to win this time. Every step he took was erratic and impulsive, a desperate venture to shoot for the pot of gold at the end, but ultimately, he was shooting blind. All he had to rely on was that every now and then, he saw it in her, too. A glint in her Bambi eyes, a shiver in her lip, a stuttering as she came back to her senses. It was more than enough to sink his teeth into.
They pulled up to the restaurant heâd called to reserve that morning, used his name to acquire the private booth heâd intended to take her to five years ago. After that first night, they didnât leave the hotel room much. Thus, that romantic evening meal that lived in his head had turned into room service in reality. Inside the restaurant, everything was plush, red velvet, darkened chandeliers and the smell of smoky vanilla. They were greeted at the entrance by a waistcoated host, shown to their table through a dense atmosphere of jazz music and soft chatter. Zach did little to hide his appearance. His head was held proud as he walked a step behind Alex, not touching her but on her tail like a well-trained guard dog. The sight of her from this angle almost forced some kind of instinctive, low noise from his throat. But instead, when she turned to him to take her seat, he just smiled. Like he had everything under control. Like he, too, knew all the answers. Like he had his own leash between his teeth. They were left alone with the menu and wine list, but Zach didnât touch them yet. He looked across at her under this light and saw Jesus behind his eyes. The right edge of his bottom lip was pulled between his teeth, and he almost laughed. âI heard about this place when I was eighteen,â he said, without realizing he was going to say it. Okay, fuck it. We can do that, he thought. âSomeone told me it was the fanciest, most romantic restaurant in the world. And back then my brain couldnât even comprehend somewhere classier than Las Vegas, so it became, essentially, a bucket list item for me.â And heâd never once considered asking another woman along with him. No one but her. His hand went for the wine menu, fingers sliding down the leather bindings. âI tried to get here, once. Didnât quite make it,â Zach kissed his teeth, looking at her with unrestrained delight, his mind sent back all those years for a flash. âSo, thanks for letting me kidnap you. Gotta celebrate being chosen by the chosen ones somehow.â
Though they had spent a considerable portion of the day together, Alex had yet to acknowledge the extravagant display waiting for her in the hotel suite that morning â at least, until now. She hadnât known what to say. Thank you felt too much like approval, as though accepting the gesture meant condoning whatever intentions had inspired it. Yet pretending it hadnât happened seemed equally discourteous. He had gone to such lengths, recalling details that most people would have long forgotten. Details others might have dismissed as trivial. Her favorite flower. A bouquet of ruby-red peonies, their velvety petals nearly identical to the striking crimson hair she donned when they first met. Her favorite dessert. But she decided the gesture didnât need to mean anything. There was no reason to dissect it or assign it motives it might not deserve. A soft, almost childlike appreciation felt like the safest response. She simply wanted him to know she had received it.She had barely sunk her small front teeth into the cookie when it vanished.He plucked it neatly right from between her fingers.Her lips parted in protest as she instinctively leaned after it, watching in disbelief as he tossed it into the storage pocket on the side door. It landed with a dull thud. âHey,â she groused, her voice more wounded than angry. âI haven't eaten all day.â
Alex leveled her gaze at him, her wide doe eyes narrowing into thin slits. âWell,â she deadpanned, âif my stalker wanted me to stay hungry, maybe he shouldnât have sent so many cookies before dinner.â She gave a pointed shrug. âWhat was I supposed to do? Just look at them?â She folded her arms across her chest and settled deeper into the leather seat, angling her face toward the darkened window. âAnd just because we're being nice to each other for the moment doesn't mean you've earned the right to tell me what to do.â She exhaled slowly through her nose, the corners of her mouth threatening to betray her. âIâm sure youâve noticed Iâm still mean. Thereâs probably not enough therapy in the world to fix that.â A delicate half-smile finally won, drawing the familiar dimple into her cheek. It felt, in some unspoken way, like a test whether he had intended it or not. If he took it from her, would she comply? Control had always been the invisible thread woven through whatever existed between them. Neither surrendered it easily. Still, there was an intimacy in choosing to relinquish it, particularly to someone whose adoration you desperately wanted.
Looking back, even their ugliest arguments had often ended the same way. Her love had never been measured by grand declarations but by the moments she stopped resisting. After the anger had burned itself out, or after heâd managed to disarm her with nothing more than the warmth of his touch, she would eventually relent, allowing him to lead. It was rarely easy. It demanded more of her pride than she cared to admit. Yet somehow, with him, it had almost always been possible. If this could be considered an assessment, it produced an inconclusive result. Alex wasnât resisting him, but she wasnât surrendering either. Zach seemed to recognize that she was teasing him and the conversation drifted onward with an easy cadence as they continued toward whatever mysterious restaurant he had chosen. Despite the strange circumstances, the drive was... unexpectedly pleasant. She had promised civility for the duration of the weekend, yet none of it felt forced. The laughter came with little effort. They spoke as though no years had passed between them. As if the hurt had never occurred at all. It reminded her of the beginning, the version of them that had existed before the world was invited in.
When she had lowered every defense she possessed and allowed him into the quiet places she rarely shared with anyone. When sheâd been swept into the intoxicating honeymoon phase sheâd once alluded to on their very first date. Before everything became impossibly complicated. Before the drugs. Before the competing egos. Before publicists, managers, expectations, and twisted narratives began dictating the rhythm of their lives. Once, they had something undeniably beautiful. It just hadnât lasted nearly long enough. It was all she had ever wanted.
Alex stepped from the oversized SUV, immediately greeted by the driverâs imposing frame. He rounded the rear of the vehicle, offering a steady hand as she navigated the curb in towering heels before delivering her safely into Zachâs company. Her attention drifted to the ornate sign mounted just beyond the entrance. Bardot. The name seemed faintly familiar, but she couldnât place it. Then again, the handful of times sheâd visited Las Vegas had been before she was old enough to drink. The last thing she was concerned about then was a reservation at one of the stripâs most coveted restaurants. Zach guided her inside. She paused for the briefest moment, allowing herself to absorb the room before following the maĂźtre dâ. Everything about it felt indulgent. Rich carmine velvet stretched across curved banquettes. Gilded accents shimmered beneath low, amber light. The entire space exuded the sort of old-world romance that felt like it was from another era. A quiet laugh escaped her. She glanced down at the sleek, barely-there dress hugging every contour of her body before looking toward the impeccably dressed host.
A little black dress suddenly seemed far more appropriate for the setting. Not that she particularly cared. Anyone with even a passing appreciation for fashion would recognize what she was wearing. At the very least, she hoped it spared her from being mistaken for an escort Zach Winthrop had plucked from the Las Vegas Strip. As they followed the maĂźtre dâ through the dining room, she became acutely aware of the glances trailing behind them. Some belonged to her. She was impossible to overlook in that dress. But most belonged to him. Heads turned almost instinctively. Conversations paused for a heartbeat before quietly resuming. Phones remained tucked away, for now, but recognition spread from table to table fast. It was strangely easy to forget who he was. Once sheâd learned to separate the headlines from the man standing beside her, the mythology surrounding Zach Winthrop began to dissolve. To her, he was simply Zach. Her Zach.
So much of their relationship had existed behind closed doors, tucked beyond the reach of curious eyes, that standing beside him like this felt foreign. She found herself wondering what they were thinking. Once again, Zach had placed himself in an undeniably precarious position simply by being seen with her. Even if there was nothing improper about it. Alexâs fingers tightened around the crystal clasp of her clutch. It was the only outward indication of her unease. Everything else remained composed. Her shoulders stayed relaxed, her chin lifted, each step in her silver heels as graceful as the last. The cool metal links of her dress skimmed the backs of her toned legs with every stride, its short hemline leaving little to the imagination. Fortunately, their table was in a quieter corner of the restaurant. The moment she slipped into her chair, she felt the tension in her shoulders loosen ever so slightly.
She crossed one long leg over the other just as Zach settled into the seat across from her. The maĂźtre dâ placed two menus upon the table before excusing himself, leaving them wrapped tightly in a pocket of privacy. Alex looked up at him, pressing her lips together as silence settled between them. How strange to find herself here. Across a candlelit table from the man she had once known better than anyone. Even more strange was the feeling unfolding somewhere beneath her ribs. She couldnât give it a name but only recognize it for what it was. Dangerous. Her gaze lingered as he spoke, tracing the familiar angles of his face, the subtle movement of his mouth as each word formed in that low, velvety timbre she knew almost too well. She listened more intently than she intended to and what he said caught her off guard.
She had expected another sarcastic remark. Another jab designed to coax an eye roll or a laugh from her. But it was something thoughtful. Something genuine. Alex smiled, unable to suppress it. She wondered if the elaborate first date heâd once promised had been this. He had spoken about having something special planned all those years ago, but the evening had unraveled before it ever had the chance. Theyâd left the concert early after a confrontation that had left both of them raw, retreating to the privacy of their suite where the night dissolved into hours of lust. She had never considered their date a disappointment. If anything, it had been the moment everything changed. He had rooted himself so deeply within her that imagining a life without him became impossible. She cleared her throat, returning to the present. âMmm. Well,â she said lightly, âI hope whatever kept you from coming here before was time well spent.â She lifted the menu, letting her eyes drift across the cocktail list. Something told her she might need one. The lemon drop tempted her immediately, but she hesitated. Too nostalgic. Her gaze settled instead on the French 75. Safer.
âBesides,â she continued, âI don't remember you ever having much of an appetite for food.â Her eyes lifted over the edge of the menu, amusement dancing across them. âCertainly not somewhere like this. Maybe it was always supposed to happen now.â Their waiter appeared, introducing himself before asking for their drink selections. âThe French 75, please.â She waited as Zach placed his own order, then watched the waiter disappear toward the bar before turning her attention back across the table. Feeling just a little bolder than she had a few minutes earlier, she folded her hands neatly atop the white tablecloth and tilted her head. âAlthough...â she mused, âit is a little peculiar that, out of everyone in the world you could've kidnapped, you chose me.â She paused just long enough for the smile to return. âAnd in public, no less.â
Zach had been too consumed with her, obsessed like he had to remember every fine detail of her in this dress like somebody might take her away from him, to notice the obvious. Once, she had been only beautiful to him. One of the most beautiful women heâd ever seen, sure. But now she appeared like the gauzy image of his own aching heart. Looking at her felt like dreaming, like hurting. Heâd been too distracted with her to notice the way she had been looking at him, too. When he met her eyes in their reflection, he startled silently to see that she was not assessing her own image at all. She was not checking how the dress sit on her hips or where the cut fell on her chest, how tightly the fabric clung to her waist, but solely at him. Her eyes were full, sparkling wet, with admiration so earnest and full it sort of knocked him sick. She met his eyes and his chest inflated. âI think Iâve found the one,â is what she said. His heart couldâve punched a hole through his ribs. He kept her eyes chained to his, making sure, making sure, and surely enough she didnât break away. Not even for a moment. His lip twitched at the corner. âI know you did,â he answered. Was this happening? Was he crazy? Was he nuts?
He hoped not. Fuck, he could invent a God and pray not, if thatâs what it took. Alex swivelled on her heel, neck craning to look up at him with a know-it-all smirk that made his whole body clench. She taunted him, light-touch, like sheâd seen everything inside him and understood it better than he ever could. His lips picked up at the corners, mirroring her without even meaning to. His typical reprobate veneer had been almost entirely dismantled by her deft hand. âYeah, well,â he argued directionlessly. Even now, he struggled conjuring the reliable snark generator that lived at the back of his throat. He was just looking at her, looking at that fucking face that had lived in his dreams for five years now, feeling unnameable things shift inside him; they felt like tiny, delightful deaths, going off erratically all through him. He opened his mouth, but still nothing came. He could only laugh and shake his head in mild disbelief at himself, muttering happily, âfuck.â
Alex, retaining some semblance of control over herself he couldn't dream of, swanned closer until his throat went tight. Like heâd never touched a woman before, much less the one standing before him. She pored over him like an offering and he was delighted. Please, fucking look all you want. He wondered what she was seeingâperhaps, god willing, him. Really. For the first time in forever. Not the boy sheâd had to leave behind, but the man before her now; the one that was forged in her absence. Because of her absence. He remained mum as she praised him in perhaps the most earnest tone heâd heard from her since the one sheâd used to tell him she was getting fucking married. His head was full, buzzing, spinning. He couldnât say anything, only look on at her like she were some sprite appearing to him and he was left to decide if she was actually real or he was just high out of his mind. She lapsed into a joke, but the relief didnât last long. Not even long enough for him to answer. Her hand came up, and his eyes followed it until they couldnât. It landed softly on his shoulder, and a throbbing wave swept through him from where sheâd touched right to his toes. I like it, she concluded, which out of her mouth felt akin to tens of thousands of screams from a crowd. He imagined taking her nowâhand to the back of her neck, other on the small of her back, kissing her dumb. Zach inhaled, agency returning to his body as he doused the thought, and he smiled small but full. âThen Iâll take it.â
Caleb interrupted and it was like waking from a dream. Zach had actually, really forgotten that there was anyone else in the room. They must have been thinking all sorts of things, but whatever was in their heads Zach was sure would fail to ever come close to the truth. He couldnât find it in himself to care; every free spot in his mind had since been taken, consumed, by this lingering feeling. Not like a comedown, but like an aftershock. It tingled pleasantly all through him. Alex was presented with a dress that, if Zach had been let loose in the backrooms, he was certain he wouldâve picked out for her himself. It was ridiculous, bright, short, and if he was frank, mind-numbingly sexy. He watched, endeared and amused, as Alexâs jaw dropped at the sight of it. She was pulled toward the garment like a magnet. She pulled the fabric between her lithe fingers, a sight so erotic he almost had to look away, and relented instantly. She quipped, and Zach almost laughed, didnât say what he was thinking; as if itâs possible for you to walk into any room and not show up every other woman in it. She tossed a glance to him, not seeking his approval but including him in the decision, somehow. Like he needed to be in it. It was rife. âObviously,â she stipulated. Zach nodded once, frankly, flattening his held out palm. âNaturally,â he resolved.
They disappeared back behind their respective curtains to re-dress in their own clothes, and he was finally allowed a moment to decompress. To slow his ridiculous, rhapsodic heart. It was only then he remembered the reservation heâd made for them. He flicked his wrist to angle his Cartier watch upward, eyes widening at the time. How had several hours managed to slip by unnoticed? He dressed quickly, wanting to beat her to the punch. He didnât care if it seemed forward, now. He wanted to. He felt compelled to. So, before she could emerge from her dressing room, Zach efficiently consorted with Annie and Caleb to settle the bill for every last item. Andrew had already bought her enough today, with that card burning a hole in her wallet. It was his turn. Zach thanked them and, right as Caleb was handing back the bags heâd been relieved of, Alex appeared like a rush of air. He bit his tongue on the âPrincessâ greeting that stuttered at the back of his teeth, knowing he was pushing his luck. Instead, his mouth flipped into a wicked grin and said, âletâs go, sweetheart. Weâre late.â
Alex slipped behind the heavy velvet curtain once more, retreating into the privacy of the dressing room to change out of the gown. She gathered the soft chiffon in her hands, allowing the fabric to glide slowly down her body and refused to let even the smallest portion touch the floor. Once free of it, she returned the dress to its hanger and paused for a moment, studying it beneath the warm dressing room light. Her fingertips brushed lightly over the fabric one final time before she surrendered it to Caleb, trusting him to package it with the care it deserved inside one of Diorâs pristine garment bags. Changing back into her own clothing felt oddly disappointing. The black dress she had arrived in suddenly seemed less exciting, less magical. Maybe it was because the gown had allowed her to become someone else for a little while, or maybe it had simply reminded her of someone she used to be. Once upon a time, Alex would have described herself as unruly.
For most of her childhood, her world had revolved around earning her fatherâs approval. His affection felt conditional, his expectations impossibly high, and yet she chased them relentlessly. Every achievement, every polished smile, every decision she made was in pursuit of praise that rarely came. She learned early that appearances mattered. The circles her family occupied were small, insular worlds filled with sharp eyes and sharper tongues. People observed everything. They collected details, traded rumors, and built entire narratives from brief moments. Her father possessed a reputation that carried weight and to the public, he was revered. The last thing Alex ever wanted was to damage it. So she became what was expected.
But perfection is a fragile thing. As the years passed, adolescence arrived with all its volatility, dragging behind it the unresolved wounds of a childhood spent performing for love. Small fractures began to appear in the cloche that contained her. The truth was, she didnât know who she was. Not really. She only knew who everyone expected her to be and with every passing year, she resented it more. People treated her delicately, as though she might shatter beneath the slightest pressure. They spoke carefully around her. Like she was something to protect or pity. She hated all of it. And so, in a desperate attempt to prove she wasnât fragile, she made a choice. A terrible one. She had never set out to hurt Noah. The truth was far less malicious and far more selfish. She had simply wanted to feel something. Anything. Something that belonged entirely to her. Something that could convince her that her life was still her own. She realized almost immediately that she had gone about it the wrong way and for years afterward, she carried the weight of that realization in silence.
The problem was that self-discovery was rarely graceful. It twisted and doubled back on itself, paved with bad decisions masquerading as lessons and impulses disguised as freedom. She would make mistakes, many of them. Some small enough to fade with time. Others so damaging they would leave permanent scars. A few would come dangerously close to costing her everything. By the time she met Zach Winthrop, she was already vulnerable to influence in ways she hadnât realized. Restless and bored. A somber little princess born into privilege, wandering through life in search of something she couldnât quite name. Her introduction to Hollywoodâs nightlife had been the beginning of that search. It was a far cry from the world she had grown up in, where iron gates, security systems, and trust funds created the idea that life could somehow be controlled. Los Angeles stripped away that illusion. For the first time, she found herself surrounded by people whose realities looked nothing like her own. People who worried about rent, worked double shifts, chased impossible dreams, and measured success one paycheck at a time. Looking back, she could see how silly it all was.
She had spent years pretending to be an ordinary girl. While others fought desperately to climb into the world she inhabited by birthright, Alex was busy trying to climb out of it. Night after night, she slipped behind the velvet ropes of an upscale nightclub, working long hours she didnât need to work. Her rent was paid before the invoice ever arrived. Her bills were covered without a second thought. A black credit card with no spending limit sat comfortably in her purse, ready to solve problems she would never truly have to face. Financial hardship was a language she had never been required to learn. What the hell was she thinking? The answer was embarrassingly simple. Escapism. She was searching for distance. From her family, from expectations, from the suffocating pressure of being Matthew Burtonâs daughter. Inside the club, none of that mattered. Â No one expected perfection there. The requirements were uncomplicated. Be beautiful. Smile when spoken to. Laugh at the right jokes. Show a little skin. Keep the conversation light. That, at least, she knew how to do.
By the time she and Zach neared the inevitable end of whatever they had been, Alex was at the height of her rebellion. She simply did not care. The less clothing she wore, the better. The more substances she consumed, the less she had to think. Every reckless decision felt like another small act of defiance against a life she no longer understood. She was drifting, untethered and directionless, and if she was being honest with herself, she wasnât entirely sure she wanted to be rescued. There was a strange comfort in the chaos. At least it was honest. As the story went, rock bottom found her long before she anticipated it would. Funny how that worked. Sleeping with one of Zachâs closest friends while she hardly lucid forced her to confront a truth she had spent months avoiding. She didnât recognize the person she had become. No one did. Now, years later, she could reasonably be considered a success story. Her reflection stared back at her from the dressing room mirror. Prim and proper. Not a single strand of dark hair out of place. A breathtaking diamond ring glittered on her finger. She was healthy, stable, and safe. Everything she once claimed she wanted. But, had she actually found herself?
Alex shook her head, a quiet laugh escaping her lips. Who wouldâve thought a dress could inspire such an existential crisis? Sliding back the curtain, she stepped into the now-vacant lounge area. The champagne flutes had disappeared. Even the music seemed softer now. Her gaze landed on the checkout counter and she immediately rolled her eyes. Of course. She reached for her purse, draping the strap over her shoulder as she wandered toward the front of the boutique. Just as expected, Zach stood waiting with nearly every shopping bag sheâd accumulated throughout the afternoon hanging from his arms. Several glossy Dior bags had somehow joined the collection. âI hate to be the bearer of bad news,â she said, an angelic smirk tugging at the corner of her mouth, âbut Iâm not accepting Sugar Daddy applications at the moment. The positionâs already been filled.â Her eyes lowered deliberately to the Dior bags before returning to him. âBesides, Iâd hate for someone at home to be disappointed when they realize there arenât any vintage Dior dresses waiting in your suitcase.â
Satisfied with herself, Alex pivoted on the ball of her foot and started toward the exit. Sheâd barely taken two steps before Zach spoke. Alex glanced over at him, her brow arching as confusion flickered across her features. âLate?â she repeated.
--
One thing about Alex â she did not like surprises. Zach should have known that better than anyone. Spontaneity had never been one of her strengths. Going with the flow sounded wonderful in theory. In practice, it usually left her feeling like she was free-falling without a parachute. A private dinner reservation for the two of them. Tonight. While she had agreed to remain civil for the duration of the wedding weekend, this felt very close to crossing a line neither of them needed to approach. It felt intimate. Secretive. Entirely too easy to misinterpret. If someone spotted them together, what would they think? More importantly, what would she think? Because if she stripped away all the excuses and technicalities, it looked suspiciously like a date. How Zach failed to recognize the risk in that was beyond her. Reluctantly, she agreed, but only under one condition. The reservation needed to be pushed back long enough for her to return to the hotel and change. The evening ahead promised to be a marathon. Ryan and Eden intended to spend their final night as unmarried people celebrating with the entire wedding party and there wasnât a universe in which Alex would willingly spend hours navigating the Las Vegas Strip in satin ballet flats. Thankfully, Zach didnât argue. They parted ways outside the boutique with the understanding that she would meet him at the front entrance of the hotel at precisely seven oâclock.
Somehow, against all odds, Alex managed to pull herself together in time. The doors of the hotel swept open and a wave of dry desert heat immediately wrapped around her like a warm blanket. The sun had begun its slow descent, painting the skyline in shades of amber and gold, though the pavement still radiated the warmth it had absorbed throughout the day. For once, she was grateful she was wearing next to nothing. The vintage Dior dress fit perfectly and a pair of silver Jimmy Choo Metz heels added just enough height to transform her, giving her petite stature the extra few inches she needed. Gone was the sleek ponytail sheâd worn while shopping. In its place, loose, tousled waves cascaded down her back, catching the fading sunlight whenever she moved. And because moderation had never been one of her talents, sheâd finished the look with a winged liner sharp enough to qualify as a weapon. A few hours ago, she had looked like every bit the image of a CEOâs wife. Now she looked like trouble.
Her gaze immediately found Zach waiting beside a large black SUV idling at the curb. He stood with his hands tucked into his pockets, looking entirely too comfortable for someone who had just orchestrated a surprise dinner she was still skeptical about. A smile grazed her lips despite herself. âSee?â she said as she approached. âAren't you glad we changed?â Before he could respond, the driver stepped forward and opened the rear passenger door. Alex wasted no time climbing inside. The blast of air conditioning felt heavenly against her skin. Settling into the cool leather seat, she immediately began rummaging through her clutch before producing a single chocolate chip cookie wrapped in a napkin. âWant one?â she asked, laughing as she broke off a piece and popped it into her mouth. The chocolate was still soft. âI think I have either a secret admirer or a stalker.â She glanced over at him. âSomeone sent an entire three-tier display of cookies and red peonies to my suite.â Another bite. âItâs either threatening or romantic. Iâm not sure.â
56 DAYSÂ //Â 1.07
YES, AND? - Ariana Grande Eternal Sunshine Tour: Oakland, CA (June 6, 2026)
RAIN ON ME - Ariana Grande Eternal Sunshine Tour: Oakland, CA (June 6, 2026)
hate that i made you love me
Zach looked toward her then, that smug little grin surfacing again as the word trust lingered between them. Alex lowered her chin slightly, wide doe eyes lifting back toward him in challenge. They both knew better than that. If there was something she disliked, she would say so. Immediately, passionately, and in great detail if necessary. Alex was not a woman accustomed to settling, nor was she denied what she wanted. By anyone, really. Zach included. Though he took obvious pleasure in provoking her, he had learned long ago that she was more than capable of returning fire. âWhatever you say,â she replied, lifting her champagne flute for another swill. The frothy bubbles hissed against her tongue as she leaned back into the chair, gaze never fully leaving him.
The Dior associate was heard before she appeared, the click of black kitten heels echoing against the floor, just above the low pulse of deep house music drifting through the boutique. When she rounded the corner, she carried with her an entire rack of possibilities. Different fabrics, colors, silhouettes, all curated just for him. Â Zach rose almost immediately, a sense of boyish excitement radiating from him as he approached the spindling blonde. She stepped aside, allowing him to sift through the garments at his leisure, her hands folding neatly in front of her as she observed. Though she carried herself with composure, Alex caught it anyway. That tiny flicker of nerves beneath the surface. One hand disappeared behind her back, index finger tapping lightly against her thumb in quick repetition.
Alex straightened in her seat. Had they realized who he was? Her gaze drifted around the boutique, discreetly surveying the otherwise quiet space. Everything appeared normal. No whispers. No photographs. No overeager glances lingering too long. They were likely trained to remain unfazed by celebrity clientele, especially when commissions large enough to change someoneâs monthly income were potentially standing right in front of them. And if anyone could provide that kind of commission, it was certainly Zach. By the time Alex turned her attention back toward him, Zach had already selected a suit to try on. Her eyes narrowed, though she worked quickly to disguise any obvious reaction from her expression. It wasnât something she would have ever pictured him wearing, especially not in that color.
Perhaps he was feeling adventurous. âI donât think this is my color,â he muttered, studying the suit with skepticism. A quiet laugh slipped from beneath Alexâs breath before she could stop it. They were both thinking the same thing. Still, she understood the logic behind trying it anyway. Certain pieces transformed entirely once worn; what appeared questionable on a hanger could suddenly become amazing on the body. Fashion was fickle that way. The blonde glanced toward Alex as Zach casually referred to her as the expert. Alex reacted quickly, shaking her head as she lifted both hands, palms upward in playful surrender. âI am not claiming expertise over the people who actually work for Dior,â she clarified. âJust putting that out there.â
She smiled politely at that. A moment later, Zach disappeared behind the heavy velvet dressing curtain, the rich fabric falling shut behind him. Left waiting with Annie, Alex allowed her attention to wander once more. Toward the back of the boutique, Caleb had assembled a selection of garments of his own, draped carefully along his rack. Even from a distance, she could tell they were entirely different from the sleek, plain pieces displayed throughout the store. There was color, lace, chiffon. Alex found herself immediately intrigued. Before she could study them longer, the dressing room curtain was abruptly swept back. Zach emerged with a low hum of dissatisfaction already rumbling in his throat.
He had made very little effort to properly assemble the look. The styling was so incomplete that it practically shouted his disapproval before he ever spoke. Alex bit lightly against her lower lip, her nose creasing as she attempted to formulate her thoughts. Caleb appeared beside her, one hand settling against his hip while he assessed Zach with the same scrutiny. But was he assessing the suit or simply staring at Zach Winthrop inside of it? He cleared his throat softly, pulling himself back into professionalism. âWell,â he began. Alex nearly laughed again. The suit wasnât terrible, necessarily. But it was far too stiff, too severe. It aged Zach several years. Butler was, unfortunately, a very accurate description. Likely far too formal for the wedding as well.
Annie moved toward him quickly, composure still intact though her nerves had become much more apparent now that Zach stood fully before them. If she had recognized him before, she was certainly trying not to reveal it now. She began adjusting the outfit properly, pressing the fabric against his torso, straightening the shirt, refining the silhouette the way it had originally been intended to look. Zach stood unnaturally still throughout the process, arms slightly lifted at his sides like someone enduring a deeply inconvenient medical examination. The moment his eyes met Alexâs, she lost it. A laugh escaped her before she could smother it behind the rim of her champagne glass. For a man so accustomed to attention, Zach truly looked out of his element being fussed over like this. Annie, to her credit, remained dedicated. She began explaining the reasoning behind the selection, her tone seemingly open to feedback despite the visible tension sitting just beneath it. And of course, Zach made some shamelessly ridiculous remark. This time, Caleb laughed out loud. Unlike Annie, he seemed slightly less intimidated and far more aware of the kind of aesthetic Zach was actually gravitating toward. Then again, hindsight made everything easier. Neither of them truly knew who was standing in front of them beneath those dark sunglasses.
âWhite trash,â Alex repeated, nodding as though confirming a very serious fashion diagnosis. âPrecisely what one expects to encounter inside Dior.â Her laughter softened the words enough to keep them playful, though Zachâs expression suggested he was thoroughly unconvinced by the ensemble regardless. Beside her, Caleb shifted slightly, restless with withheld opinions. She could practically see the suggestions forming in his head, though he resisted interrupting Annie for the moment. Now fully styled, Zach turned toward Alex again, gesturing dramatically at himself as he mocked the look. Alex pinched the bridge of her nose, fighting for her life as another smile threatened to break across her face. âFor me, personally? No,â she replied. She let her gaze drift idly over the outfit once more before adding, âBut Iâm really not one to judge another personâs fetish. Though it does really make me want a bowl of Lucky Charms.â Caleb gave her shoulder a gentle nudge in jest, laughing alongside her as the moment became something far less formal than Dior had probably intended. Annieâs cheeks had flushed a delicate pink, though surely even she understood the laughter wasnât directed at her.It was Zach.Or more specifically, Zachâs commitment to poking fun at himself before anyone else had the opportunity.
Caleb exhaled dramatically as he recovered, placing a perfectly manicured hand against his chest before inching his garment rack closer. âYou know,â he began, âI understand we started with the suit, but I actually think it would be much smarter to start with the dress.â He glanced briefly toward Zach and Annie over his shoulder before continuing, âSuits are boring. Weâve all seen them a thousand times. No offense. Everyone looks at the dress first anyway.â Caleb then pulled a gown from the rack, a rich plum-colored piece with fabric so soft and airy, it was nearly weightless as it spilled over his hands. He smoothed a portion of chiffon between his fingers before holding it up toward Alex. âAllowing her to choose first eliminates at least half of your options immediately and makes your life significantly easier.â His eyes drifted toward Zach. âBecause letâs be honest. Do you really want to spend the rest of the afternoon trying on another twelve waistcoats?â He paused. âOr would you rather be using your time more wisely in the City of Sin?â He answered his own question with a satisfied nod before either of them could speak. âExactly.â
Alex smiled as Caleb extended a hand toward her and gently pulled her up from the couch. âAnd, itâs archival. Youâre welcome.â How was she supposed to say no to that? Her heart swelled fast. Alex rose from the couch, pressing the dress carefully against herself before beginning toward the dressing room. As she passed Zach, her lips twisted. âYou heard him, Lucky,â she mused lightly over her shoulder. âItâs archival.â The velvet curtain swept aside beneath her fingers as she tucked into the dressing room, leaving only the smallest gap behind her. She slipped out of her ballet flats first, nudging them neatly toward the corner before reaching for the hem of her black mini dress. It slid easily over her skin, pooling at her feet alongside her lace bra moments later. She reached for the gown with gentle hands, handling it with the sort of care reserved for a piece of art. She lowered the zipper, exposing the aged interior tag hidden within the seams. She adored vintage clothing. There was something romantic about it. Rediscovering something once forgotten, once discarded, spoke to her. Something so beautiful deserved a second chance. To be see fully and appreciated. Stepping into the dress, she guided it upward along her legs, over the curve of her thighs, her waist, her chest. The chiffon whispered against her skin as it settled into place, so delicate and intentional in the way it draped around her figure.
Holding the front against herself, Alex turned toward the mirror to inspect the fit before attempting the zipper. Not that she was particularly worried. She was practically a size nothing. Of course it fit. Reaching behind herself, she worked the zipper upward as far as she could manage. The gown hugged her perfectly. Just enough sex appeal. Just enough class. It was stunning. Alex slowly peeled back the velvet curtain, one hand moving over the curve of her hip as she stepped out beneath the boutique lighting. It moved beautifully with her, soft and fluid, skimming and tracing her body like it belonged there. She turned slightly to the side, brushing her hair forward over one shoulder as she revealed the small gap left at the back of the gown, barely half an inch from fully zipped. Caleb reacted quickly, crossing the space toward her. He reached for the zipper, his expression becoming more lively the closer he looked at the gown on her frame. Once it was fastened completely, he stepped back, both hands cupping his mouth. âI am sure this violates some portion of the Dior Code of Conduct, but Mr. Zach Winthrop, sheâs absolutely eating you up in this gown, Honey.â
How, the moment Zach made eye contact with her, and she broke into a mortifyingly endearing fit of giggles, was anyone supposed to stay sane? He wondered. How did anyone make her laugh, make her narrow her eyes, succeed in asking her to play along with a joke, and not fall in love with her? It was hard to stop the thought once it was cocked and loaded in his chest, hard to stop the feeling as it rushed to every nerve end in his body. Zach glanced at himself in the mirror, the tips of his cheeks flushed with life, full faced exposed out in the open. It was a foreign sight, and yet among it was this inextinguishable smile. He could only hope it wasnât so glaringly obvious to everyone else in the room as it was to him; that these gracious, trained employees wouldnât be sent running to the nearest news outlet with a story of how Zach Winthrop had brought his bossâ fiance out coupleâs shopping and seemed entirely, unequivocally smitten with her.Â
Even the male shop assistantâCaleb, he rememberedâlaughed now, and Zach felt giddy on the attention, on the amused audience. He leaned in, nudging Annie. âDonât worry. Itâs not your fault youâre used to styling much classier guys than me.â She smiled at him, eyes rounding, and laughed a little. âI wouldnât say that,â she muttered, face softening with slight relief and stepping aside for him. His attention danced gleefully back to Alex, chasing his own mouth down as it, without permission, spurted more nonsense in a manic plea to keep her attention. She seemed charmed by him. It made his abdomen squirm, clench. He smiled at her, popping his top button open. âWell, they are magically delicious.â Lucky Charms were a staple of his childhood. A regular meal that landed him with ten cavities on his tenth birthday, of which Loniâs mom Paula paid the dental bill for after one of his molars fell out into a candy apple. Lucky Charms were, ironically, more aligned with his understanding of himself than the suit he currently found himself strapped within.Â
Caleb seemed to click into overdrive, and began running the show, leading with Alexâs dress. Zach was relieved; he was far more at home admiring her than he was parading himself around in various get-ups. âEveryone looks at the dress first anyway,â Caleb whittled off, busying his hands with the rack of dresses heâd carefully selected. Zach, shrugging off his blazer and snapping open the buttons of the waistcoat to free himself, nodded in spirited concession. âI couldnât agree more,â he said, tone leaning too sincere. As Caleb went on, something about boring waistcoats versus Sin City, and Zach went on bobbling his head in continued verification, bowtie now hanging loose from his neck. He moved to sit down, but Annie flinched. âYou need me to not wrinkle the suit or something. Am I warm?â She smiled, shifting her weight. âRight on the money. Sorry.â Zach held his hands up, moving back toward the curtain, as Caleb handed a garment off to Alex that appeared to him like a large pile of barely-there chiffon. He was sure it would transform when snug upon her body. Zach watched as Alex's demeanor shifted into that of almost girlish delight, floating from the couch and toward the presented garment. She accepted it carefully, like it was a precious, rare thing. From the sounds of it, it actually was.
Alex, and he was sure, positive, that she understood her unique impact as she did so, looked at him over her shoulder and out from under her lashes as she uttered âYou heard him, Lucky. Itâs archival,â in a way that made all the blood rush from his brain in an instant. He almost gulped. Maybe he did, but his mouth also upturned as he looked down at her appreciatively. âSuppose weâll see just how lucky,â he answered privately. Annie assisted him in finding something more fitting from the rackâa dark, neutral color, slightly laxer on the cutâto compliment his partnerâs rich plum and willowy shape. Together, they unearthed a black, clean, double-breasted blazer and wider dress pants with a crisp crease running down the front of the leg. This, he would be comfortable in. She offered him a tie, which he refused politely, then he disappeared behind the fabric. Annie and Caleb, if they talked at all, talked quietly. All Zach could hear was the modestly-volumed house music from the speakers and his own heartbeat as he contemplated how little separated the two of them now in various states of undress. Alex made him feel like such a boy, sometimes. Like all the excitement, all the unknowns and the maybes and even the nos, were brand new.
Dressed fully now, and styled like himself, he stepped back to address his reflection. He felt good; the buttons opened to his mid-chest, allowing his neckchain and tattoos to breathe, and the fit of the structured pieces were more relaxed. Without the blazer and with the shirt tucked into the waist, he felt truly at home. If only he could roll the sleeves up, but he wouldnât put Annie through the strife of fretting over more wrinkles. It wasnât often he allowed himself the space to admit to his own handsomeness, but some clothes he wore so perfectly it was difficult to ignore. His heart stuttered in his chest, remembering the ways in which his appearance alone could see Alex crumbling before his very eyes. How her pupils would blow and her sharp tongue would go blunt, soft, waiting for him. He took a deep, sharp inhale then pulled back the curtain. Annie almost made an audible noise, she was so delighted. âI knew I was still good at my job,â she breathed, relieved, awarding herself with a tiny applause as she looked at him. She stepped forward, adjusting odd bits here and there, but leaving the buttons alone. Potentially that was Calebâs recommendation.
Then came Alex like a stolen breath. Zachâs jaw feathered, his stomach whirling. He hated her sometimes. Why on earth had he allowed her to sweettalk him into staying in her life? He was so close to leaving, clean break, just a pretty year ago. He knew he couldn't take it. And maybe he wouldâve outgrown the torture, forgotten how sweet it tasted in the back of his mouth as his teeth squeezed the life out of his tongue, cursed forever just for daring look at her. She shifted, pulling her hair to one side, angling her back to Caleb. He rushed to assist, admiring her in the dress in a manner Zach was sure he could never understand. Zach's own admiration was unique to him, forceful almost, punching clean through his gut. Though he was caught up somewhere far away in his own mind, he offered a half-hearted laugh at Calebâs comment, mostly surprised he had addressed him by name. But still, he was distracted, his line of sight travelling rapturously up her dress to find her eyes. âSheâs something, alright,â he answered, too low, then cleared his throat. His chest inflated as he tried to remember she was not his. A strike of pain like a clock tower panged in his chest as he recalled, with awful clarity, heâd actually taken it solely upon himself to ensure she wasn't. Once. What a fucking idiot.
Zach stepped toward her, hands finding her hips and sending an electric shock through his arms, swivelling her to face her own reflection. âWhat do you think?â he asked, to her only, his heart pounding out his ribs. He could feel himself sinking, could hear alarm bells in the back of his mind, but still he met her gaze in the mirror and allowed it to descend upon him like it always did. And fuck reality. For a second, it was him by her side in the mirror, her by his, and it was almost real again. His eyes faltered, falling to the slide of her neck into her shoulder, the soft, shimmering skin there heâd always been weak for. His eyes followed the carve of her shoulder blade and delicate twines of muscle in her back. Her perfume found his nose, assailed him, and he almost took a step away, defensive. He wanted so badly to tell her how beautiful she was, how she made the blood freeze in his veins. How truly unfair it was that nothing else on the planet had him like she seemed to. But instead, he took a moment to gather himself, then looked back up with a half-slung smile. There they stood as a pair, the image of the two of them undeniably striking. He was taken then by how different they appeared to only three years ago. How grown, how real they looked. Crystal clear, no drugged haze, no yellowing bruises or befallen expressions. Zach made a noise somewhere in his throat. âI think⊠thatââ he hesitated, his true sentiment stuck between his teeth. It wasnât right to say it now. Maybe it wouldnât be right, ever. âI think that⊠if you donât want it for the wedding, Iâm going to insist on buying it for you anyway. Clearly, itâs just been sitting around, waiting for you.â Funny, he thought. I can relate.
Another genuine laugh slipped from between her lips, soft and effortless. Even if she had walked away without finding a single gown she loved, she likely would have purchased something anyway simply because of how unexpectedly pleasant the experience had been. Designer boutiques were rarely like this. Most were exactly what they appeared to be. Cold beneath the glamour, the luxury accompanied by carefully disguised arrogance. The higher the price tag, the sharper the attitude. Sales associates mastered a very particular performance. A million compliments, eager nods, exaggerated admiration for garments that should have never left the back room. Whatever was necessary to transform attention into commission. But this was different. Caleb possessed an undeniable talent for what he did. Somehow, he had managed to uncover a vision Alex herself hadnât fully realized until she stepped into the dress. And, quietly and almost without notice, he had done the same for Zach too, guiding Annie with gentle suggestions that had completely shifted the direction of the fitting. Alex noticed him almost immediately. Gone was the unfortunate dark green suit that had swallowed him whole only minutes earlier. In its place was something far more current, more stylish. More him. More Zach. He looked exactly like the man the clothing had been waiting for.
She knew everyoneâs attention was meant to be on her. On the archival gown draped perfectly against her figure. She could feel their eyes lingering, assessing, admiring, but Alex struggled to focus on anything other than him. For a moment, she simply stared. She couldnât remember if she had ever truly seen Zach in formalwear before. During most of their relationship, he had been almost aggressively resistant to conformity, treating societal expectations like personal insults. He rejected polish on principle, preferred rebellion over refinement. Maybe she had seen him dressed up once or twice in the past. But not like this. Â Her eyes moved slowly over him, languid in their appreciation of every detail. It was perfect. Sophisticated and refined without stripping away the essence of who he was. A faint glint of gold caught beneath the boutique lighting, the familiar chain at his neck peeking from behind the crisp white lapels of his shirt. Beneath them, she could see the dark suggestion of ink stretching across his chest, tattoos she knew intimately enough that she no longer needed to see them fully to remember their shape. They had long since etched themselves into her memory alongside every other thing about him.
The image in front of her no longer aligned with the reckless boy she had once known. The impulsive, self-destructive force that had spent years barreling through life like consequences were optional. He looked grown now. Not older. Grown. A man who had somehow evolved despite all the reasons she once believed he never would. Despite her skepticism. She saw it now. A genuine smile tugged at her lips before she could stop it, softening her features with her approval. But the moment lingered only briefly before instinct rushed back in to smother it. The last thing she wanted was to make it strange, or worse, give Zach even the slightest indication that she was smitten with him. He would weaponize it for the rest of her life. A quiet breath escaped her instead, relief settling into her chest now that the impossible task of dressing them both appropriately for a wedding had been conquered. Before she could even begin to voice her approval, Zach closed the distance between them.
Suddenly, his hands were on her hips, sweeping her effortlessly around until she nearly lost her footing altogether to face the mirror. Alex tilted her head slightly, trying to focus her attention on the gown hugging her frame. The soft plum chiffon, the delicate lines, the way it seemed made specifically for her body. Her gaze betrayed her, however. Again and again, it drifted upward over her shoulder toward him instead. Not once had he asked what she thought of the suit. Not once had he asked how he looked. Because the entire time, Zach had been far too consumed looking at her. The way he looked at her mirrored the very way she looked at him. Heavy with longing, softened by grief, aching with all the things neither of them could say or do aloud. But she knew exactly what he was thinking because the same thoughts had already wrapped themselves tightly around her chest, squeezing until it hurt to breathe.
Alex swallowed against the knot rising thickly in her throat, collecting herself to respond to him, âI think Iâve found the one,â she said finally, her voice surprisingly even. The statement could have belonged to the dress. Or perhaps there was a double meaning, swaying there between them. Turning on her heel, she faced him fully again, allowing a clever smile to bloom across her lips in an effort to pull the moment back toward safer territory. âI donât think Iâve ever seen you falter over your words like that before, Sir,â she teased lightly. âYou usually always know exactly what you want to say.â She moved toward him then, the chiffon of the gown whispering against her thighs with every step. The closer she came, the more impossible it became not to notice the way his eyes followed her movement. âI thinkâŠâ she began softly, reaching him, âthat Annie did a wonderful job.â Her gaze traveled over him once more. âYou look very handsome.â Then, because she was physically incapable of allowing sincerity to exist uninterrupted between them for too long, her brows furrowed dramatically. She lowered her voice an octave, mock seriousness settling over her features. âVery grown.â
A laugh threatened at the corners of her mouth as she lifted her hand, smoothing it gently over his shoulder. âI like it,â she admitted quietly. Only then did Alex remember they werenât alone. Her eyes flicked toward Caleb and Annie lingering nearby, both of them politely pretending not to witness the tension unfolding directly in front of them. She wondered what they saw. What conclusions they had drawn. With any luck, perhaps they looked like old friends reconnecting after years apart. Two people comfortable enough with one another to tease and touch without meaning anything by it. But if the ache inside her had manifested outwardly in any visible way. If heartbreak could somehow reflect itself physically, then surely the truth would have been obvious to everyone in the room. âOne more thing,â Caleb interjected suddenly, already reaching toward the rack before anyone could redirect the conversation elsewhere. He slid another garment free with excitement.
The dress shimmered the moment it caught the light. An aqua blue mini crafted from delicate chain metal and lace. Caleb held it up proudly between them. âNow,â he began carefully, though the grin threatening his face suggested he wasnât sorry at all, âthis is absolutely not wedding appropriate, but I couldnât resist.â His eyes flicked toward Alex. âBachelorette party? Reception? Dinner afterward? Some sort of scandalous rooftop moment?â The tension in the room shattered.Her mouth fell open as she stared at the dress, all previous emotion momentarily swept aside.Unable to help herself, she crossed toward him, taking the dress into her own hands. âWell, I canât show up the right. That would be in poor taste. But I think anything after tomorrow is fair game.â Caleb looked thoroughly vindicated. Alex glanced toward Zach briefly before returning her attention to the dress, âObviously, Iâll be taking both.â
ariana for the dangerous woman tenth anniversary vinyl variants
Zach watched Alex hesitate; her careful eyes flitted subtly from his face, to the champagne, to the tray proffered before her. And back again. His finger tapped rhythmically on the bowl of the glass flute in his hand. He was sure she was contemplating his sobriety, contemplating how smart a decision it would be to accept her own drink in his presence, contemplating the quiet absurdity of their situation. What she didnât know, and what he didnât say, was that with her was the only place he truly felt safe to take a drink anymore. He was always, already half-tweaked in her presenceârapid heart rate, adrenaline spike, borderline euphoric. The urge to spiral just wasnât there. He already felt high. The moment was barely a moment; everything assessed, judged and filed away in her mind in a passing second, she accepted the drink. His lip twitched, stomach tightening. Their flutes clinked and she quipped lightly back, taking a drink, and still he watched her. A warmth bloomed and spread, blood on fabric, in his abdomen. It felt dangerous, so he swallowed a mouthful to douse it out. âOnly when something threatens your ego,â Zach muttered back with a wry smirk. Lies like no, I donât want it. Or no, I donât want you. Lies like I donât love you anymore. If she could see his eyes beneath his sunglasses, sheâd know they were focused on her, searching, pupils blown. Her dimple appeared. He breathed out through his nose, letting go of something inside heâd been gripping. Thatâs right, they were walking together. How terribly ironic. And what a sight it would be to behold. He nodded faintly, chuckling. âThen Iâll put myself in your capable hands to make sure I donât.âÂ
A sales associate politely requested Alexâs attention and earned Zachâs, tooâa quick assessment passing from both of them determined the same thing. Alex smiled like a princess in a storybook, up at this man, and spoke with a velvety quality. He was safe. She tossed a look over her shoulder to Zach that wouldâve gone straight to his head if he werenât trying to ground himself. Their circumstance was tricky, easily indulged in, and he wasnât sure where she stood. Two steps ahead of him, by his side, firmly in her place as he raced ahead toward a faux-green light? The larger that light appeared the more nervous it made him, but heâd always performed well on nerves. Iâm waiting to see what he chooses first. He smiled. Zach felt high, dizzy on her. What an addictive sentiment, that any decision she made might hinge on his. He took a sip as the sales associate considered him, and a brief pause let Zach know that every employee in here knew precisely who he was. Zach nodded a silent acknowledgment to him. Employees in places of this caliber were trained in modesty, in courteous oversight. They were in safe hands for now. Alex relented control to this manâCalebâand he visibly thrilled at the suggestion. Dressing a lifesize, porcelain doll, whichever way he wanted. Zach perfectly understood the appeal. He resisted the appeal to call after Calebâs retreating back with something short, please!
Zach kicked back, then, comfortable, his stomach fizzing similarly to his champagne with anticipation. Anticipation with nowhere to go, no end goal, just making his extremities tingle and head feel light as fucking air. He smirked over at Alex. âNevermind,â he said, retracting his former statement. âI guess itâs you whoâs in my hands.â Zach took a sip. âI appreciate the trust.â The woman assigned to Zach shortly returned with a wheeled garment rack and several sartorial concepts to peruse. âOkay,â he pushed out through a hard breath, smacking his thigh as he rolled up to standing. âIâm ready to blow your mind.â He flashed a grin at Alex before accepting the first suit, forest green with large lapels and a waistcoat. He didnât hate it. He wasnât very good at discerning taste in formal wear, all he knew was that he disliked anything too form-fitting and strayed from bright colors. This suit looked dated to him, like something from a bygone era of moneyed New Yorkers. Or a guy who just won too big at the local casino and wanted to dress like an asshole. Like something Andrew might wear. âI donât think this is my color, but Iâll let the expert decide,â he said to the sales clerk, gesturing over his shoulder to Alex, so pristine and gathered on that sofa. Heâd quite like to dismantle her entirely. His gaze lingered on her a beat too long, then severed. As he disappeared behind the curtain, he called to the woman. âWhatâs your name, sorry?â He heard a flurry, something or other, and she called back, âso sorryâdidnât I say? Iâm Annie.â He nodded to himself in the mirror, dropping his sunglasses on a plush leather stool to his right and peeling his shirt off over his head. âThank you, Annie,â he answered, in a voice that could be considered flirtatious. Maybe it was. Whatever, he felt giddy, and his shirt was off with Alex only a peel away for the first time in three or four years, or forever, it felt like.
Half-dressed, sans jacket and with the waistcoat unbuttoned around his torso, he mused over the get-up, feeling unlike himself. Luckily, it was difficult to make him feel stupid, and it would take far more than this. âHmm.â He pulled back the curtain abruptly, interrupting chatter from outside, and turned to the women. Caleb had joined them while Zach had been dressing, and was equipped with his own clothing rack sporting five or six dresses for Alex. Zach had forgotten heâd removed his glasses, and even though they knew, there was a split second where their faces changed. Faltered. Then fixed themselves, resuming parodied normality. Zach gave a small, relenting smile. âI donât know that Iâm a waistcoat guy. I sort of feel like a butler,â he said, leaning down to collect his champagne from the table, then sinking it. Eyes flashing over Alex, glinting as they found hers. Like he could help it. Annie stepped forward, hands outstretched, and began buttoning it for him as she spoke. Oh, okay. Sure. His mouth curved into a suggestive, high arch as he raised his eyebrows at Alex over her shoulder. âThis is the most traditionally formal of the options, admittedly, but itâs good to get a full picture of what you do and donât like so we can find something that ticks all your boxes.â He nodded as though this resonated with him, bubbles going to his head, eyeing the replacement glass that had seamlessly and as if by magic refilled itself for him on the coffee table. âWhat ticks my boxes generally leans baggy and white trash, does Christian have anything like that in his arsenal?" Annie only laughed, charmed by him, but he was only concerned with impressing one woman in the room. The likes of whom seemed religiously dedicated to remaining irritatingly unfazed by him. God, it was heady. Zachâs dressing was completed with his buttoned-to-the-top shirt and black bowtie; he turned to the full-length mirror, mouth curving into an obviously suppressed laugh at the sight of himself. âRespectfully, Annie, I look like I should be clocking in for a shift of guarding a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.â He spun on his heel, cocking one leg and tipping an imaginary hat to Alex. âThis do anything for you, Burton? And is there anything particularly Gaelic you can try on to compliment me?âÂ
Zach looked toward her then, that smug little grin surfacing again as the word trust lingered between them. Alex lowered her chin slightly, wide doe eyes lifting back toward him in challenge. They both knew better than that. If there was something she disliked, she would say so. Immediately, passionately, and in great detail if necessary. Alex was not a woman accustomed to settling, nor was she denied what she wanted. By anyone, really. Zach included. Though he took obvious pleasure in provoking her, he had learned long ago that she was more than capable of returning fire. âWhatever you say,â she replied, lifting her champagne flute for another swill. The frothy bubbles hissed against her tongue as she leaned back into the chair, gaze never fully leaving him.
The Dior associate was heard before she appeared, the click of black kitten heels echoing against the floor, just above the low pulse of deep house music drifting through the boutique. When she rounded the corner, she carried with her an entire rack of possibilities. Different fabrics, colors, silhouettes, all curated just for him. Â Zach rose almost immediately, a sense of boyish excitement radiating from him as he approached the spindling blonde. She stepped aside, allowing him to sift through the garments at his leisure, her hands folding neatly in front of her as she observed. Though she carried herself with composure, Alex caught it anyway. That tiny flicker of nerves beneath the surface. One hand disappeared behind her back, index finger tapping lightly against her thumb in quick repetition.
Alex straightened in her seat. Had they realized who he was? Her gaze drifted around the boutique, discreetly surveying the otherwise quiet space. Everything appeared normal. No whispers. No photographs. No overeager glances lingering too long. They were likely trained to remain unfazed by celebrity clientele, especially when commissions large enough to change someoneâs monthly income were potentially standing right in front of them. And if anyone could provide that kind of commission, it was certainly Zach. By the time Alex turned her attention back toward him, Zach had already selected a suit to try on. Her eyes narrowed, though she worked quickly to disguise any obvious reaction from her expression. It wasnât something she would have ever pictured him wearing, especially not in that color.
Perhaps he was feeling adventurous. âI donât think this is my color,â he muttered, studying the suit with skepticism. A quiet laugh slipped from beneath Alexâs breath before she could stop it. They were both thinking the same thing. Still, she understood the logic behind trying it anyway. Certain pieces transformed entirely once worn; what appeared questionable on a hanger could suddenly become amazing on the body. Fashion was fickle that way. The blonde glanced toward Alex as Zach casually referred to her as the expert. Alex reacted quickly, shaking her head as she lifted both hands, palms upward in playful surrender. âI am not claiming expertise over the people who actually work for Dior,â she clarified. âJust putting that out there.â
She smiled politely at that. A moment later, Zach disappeared behind the heavy velvet dressing curtain, the rich fabric falling shut behind him. Left waiting with Annie, Alex allowed her attention to wander once more. Toward the back of the boutique, Caleb had assembled a selection of garments of his own, draped carefully along his rack. Even from a distance, she could tell they were entirely different from the sleek, plain pieces displayed throughout the store. There was color, lace, chiffon. Alex found herself immediately intrigued. Before she could study them longer, the dressing room curtain was abruptly swept back. Zach emerged with a low hum of dissatisfaction already rumbling in his throat.
He had made very little effort to properly assemble the look. The styling was so incomplete that it practically shouted his disapproval before he ever spoke. Alex bit lightly against her lower lip, her nose creasing as she attempted to formulate her thoughts. Caleb appeared beside her, one hand settling against his hip while he assessed Zach with the same scrutiny. But was he assessing the suit or simply staring at Zach Winthrop inside of it? He cleared his throat softly, pulling himself back into professionalism. âWell,â he began. Alex nearly laughed again. The suit wasnât terrible, necessarily. But it was far too stiff, too severe. It aged Zach several years. Butler was, unfortunately, a very accurate description. Likely far too formal for the wedding as well.
Annie moved toward him quickly, composure still intact though her nerves had become much more apparent now that Zach stood fully before them. If she had recognized him before, she was certainly trying not to reveal it now. She began adjusting the outfit properly, pressing the fabric against his torso, straightening the shirt, refining the silhouette the way it had originally been intended to look. Zach stood unnaturally still throughout the process, arms slightly lifted at his sides like someone enduring a deeply inconvenient medical examination. The moment his eyes met Alexâs, she lost it. A laugh escaped her before she could smother it behind the rim of her champagne glass. For a man so accustomed to attention, Zach truly looked out of his element being fussed over like this. Annie, to her credit, remained dedicated. She began explaining the reasoning behind the selection, her tone seemingly open to feedback despite the visible tension sitting just beneath it. And of course, Zach made some shamelessly ridiculous remark. This time, Caleb laughed out loud. Unlike Annie, he seemed slightly less intimidated and far more aware of the kind of aesthetic Zach was actually gravitating toward. Then again, hindsight made everything easier. Neither of them truly knew who was standing in front of them beneath those dark sunglasses.
âWhite trash,â Alex repeated, nodding as though confirming a very serious fashion diagnosis. âPrecisely what one expects to encounter inside Dior.â Her laughter softened the words enough to keep them playful, though Zachâs expression suggested he was thoroughly unconvinced by the ensemble regardless. Beside her, Caleb shifted slightly, restless with withheld opinions. She could practically see the suggestions forming in his head, though he resisted interrupting Annie for the moment. Now fully styled, Zach turned toward Alex again, gesturing dramatically at himself as he mocked the look. Alex pinched the bridge of her nose, fighting for her life as another smile threatened to break across her face. âFor me, personally? No,â she replied. She let her gaze drift idly over the outfit once more before adding, âBut Iâm really not one to judge another personâs fetish. Though it does really make me want a bowl of Lucky Charms.â Caleb gave her shoulder a gentle nudge in jest, laughing alongside her as the moment became something far less formal than Dior had probably intended. Annieâs cheeks had flushed a delicate pink, though surely even she understood the laughter wasnât directed at her.It was Zach.Or more specifically, Zachâs commitment to poking fun at himself before anyone else had the opportunity.
Caleb exhaled dramatically as he recovered, placing a perfectly manicured hand against his chest before inching his garment rack closer. âYou know,â he began, âI understand we started with the suit, but I actually think it would be much smarter to start with the dress.â He glanced briefly toward Zach and Annie over his shoulder before continuing, âSuits are boring. Weâve all seen them a thousand times. No offense. Everyone looks at the dress first anyway.â Caleb then pulled a gown from the rack, a rich plum-colored piece with fabric so soft and airy, it was nearly weightless as it spilled over his hands. He smoothed a portion of chiffon between his fingers before holding it up toward Alex. âAllowing her to choose first eliminates at least half of your options immediately and makes your life significantly easier.â His eyes drifted toward Zach. âBecause letâs be honest. Do you really want to spend the rest of the afternoon trying on another twelve waistcoats?â He paused. âOr would you rather be using your time more wisely in the City of Sin?â He answered his own question with a satisfied nod before either of them could speak. âExactly.â
Alex smiled as Caleb extended a hand toward her and gently pulled her up from the couch. âAnd, itâs archival. Youâre welcome.â How was she supposed to say no to that? Her heart swelled fast. Alex rose from the couch, pressing the dress carefully against herself before beginning toward the dressing room. As she passed Zach, her lips twisted. âYou heard him, Lucky,â she mused lightly over her shoulder. âItâs archival.â The velvet curtain swept aside beneath her fingers as she tucked into the dressing room, leaving only the smallest gap behind her. She slipped out of her ballet flats first, nudging them neatly toward the corner before reaching for the hem of her black mini dress. It slid easily over her skin, pooling at her feet alongside her lace bra moments later. She reached for the gown with gentle hands, handling it with the sort of care reserved for a piece of art. She lowered the zipper, exposing the aged interior tag hidden within the seams. She adored vintage clothing. There was something romantic about it. Rediscovering something once forgotten, once discarded, spoke to her. Something so beautiful deserved a second chance. To be see fully and appreciated. Stepping into the dress, she guided it upward along her legs, over the curve of her thighs, her waist, her chest. The chiffon whispered against her skin as it settled into place, so delicate and intentional in the way it draped around her figure.
Holding the front against herself, Alex turned toward the mirror to inspect the fit before attempting the zipper. Not that she was particularly worried. She was practically a size nothing. Of course it fit. Reaching behind herself, she worked the zipper upward as far as she could manage. The gown hugged her perfectly. Just enough sex appeal. Just enough class. It was stunning. Alex slowly peeled back the velvet curtain, one hand moving over the curve of her hip as she stepped out beneath the boutique lighting. It moved beautifully with her, soft and fluid, skimming and tracing her body like it belonged there. She turned slightly to the side, brushing her hair forward over one shoulder as she revealed the small gap left at the back of the gown, barely half an inch from fully zipped. Caleb reacted quickly, crossing the space toward her. He reached for the zipper, his expression becoming more lively the closer he looked at the gown on her frame. Once it was fastened completely, he stepped back, both hands cupping his mouth. âI am sure this violates some portion of the Dior Code of Conduct, but Mr. Zach Winthrop, sheâs absolutely eating you up in this gown, Honey.â
baby, the night is for me.
versace ready to wear FW03 for milan fashion week circa. 2003
dolores nemi caldentey
EUPHORIA 3.05 âThis Little Piggyâ
ARIANA GRANDE hate that i made you love me (2026)