Summary:
In the glow of a fading party, Y/N feels the weight of Viraj Dobriyal’s gaze before the night twists into something darker. Dragged into a soundproof room, bound in leather straps, she is forced to face an impossible choice—betray him, or surrender. But either way, Viraj has already decided: freedom is nothing but an illusion.
The night had started like any other, with a gathering meant to distract from the monotony of the week. The courtyard buzzed with laughter, glasses clinked, and strings of golden lights swayed gently in the breeze. It should have been comforting, yet a cold knot coiled in your stomach. Because even in the middle of it all, you could feel his gaze.
Viraj Dobriyal.
He didn’t need to be close for his presence to consume you. It lingered like smoke creeping under a door—insidious, impossible to ignore—until every breath felt heavier. His shirt was—as always—half-buttoned in casual arrogance, as though he wanted the world to know his confidence could never be questioned. His eyes dragged against your skin, daring you to acknowledge what you already knew: he saw everything. Every step, every glance, every breath.
You avoided him as best you could, clinging to conversations, hiding in groups, laughing when it felt unnatural. But the crowd thinned as the hours passed, friends drifting off in twos and threes. The music softened, shadows stretched longer, and the night’s warmth bled away. You felt it then—the shift. The safety of numbers was gone. A strange stillness crept in, and every instinct screamed that you were being watched.
That was when he found you.
A hand, cold and unyielding, closed around your wrist. Your body stiffened, breath catching in your throat, but he didn’t allow hesitation. Viraj pulled you into the shadows with a purpose so sharp, so deliberate, that resistance felt futile. You thought about screaming, but the look in his eyes froze the sound in your lungs. Those eyes carried promises written in blood and cruelty, and you understood—men like him didn’t grant second chances.
The path blurred into darkness. One hallway became another, a staircase descended, and before you could regain your bearings, you were shoved into a room you didn’t recognize. The air shifted instantly: thick with leather and something darker. The door slammed, followed by the sound of locks sliding into place like a judge’s gavel. Final. Inescapable.
The walls stood bare—no windows, no exits. Silence reigned, broken only by the thunder of your pulse. You barely had time to register your surroundings before the binds came. Smooth leather straps wrapped your wrists, biting into skin with every twitch of defiance. He tied them with slow, practiced precision, as though binding you was a ritual, as though it gave him satisfaction in itself. His smirk deepened at your futile struggles, a predator’s amusement at prey caught in its own panic.
“You can scream my name all you want,” he whispered, his voice sliding against your nerves like silk and steel. “But the walls are soundproof.”
The words sank into you, chilling marrow and bone. He leaned back slightly, regarding you with the detached calm of someone in complete control. To him, you were already his—stripped of freedom, stripped of choice. Yet he dangled the illusion of decision before you, a cruel game where every outcome served him.
The choice was laid out like an executioner’s blade. Betray him, and maybe, just maybe, find a fleeting chance at escape. Or save yourself—cling to him, become what he demanded, and accept that freedom was only a mirage. But betrayal meant blood. And blood meant death. Everyone knew: no one crossed Viraj Dobriyal and lived to tell.
“You think you can save yourself by betraying me?” His tone was deceptively soft, yet every syllable slithered like a knife across raw skin. He took a step forward, slow and deliberate. The distance between you collapsed until his shadow merged with yours, until the heat of his presence pressed against every inch of your being. He burned without touching you.
He crouched down, gripping your chin with a touch that was cruelly gentle, forcing your eyes up into his. His gaze was endless—bottomless darkness, sharpened cruelty, merciless in its clarity. You wanted to look away, to close your eyes, but he held you captive with nothing more than the weight of his stare.
“Every decision you make, every breath you take—it already belongs to me.” His thumb brushed your jawline, deceptively tender, a mockery of comfort. He tilted your face, studying you as though measuring how much of you he could break before you shattered completely.
Silence stretched, oppressive, filled only with the ragged sound of your own breathing. Your chest heaved as though the room itself had shrunk, the walls pressing closer, stealing oxygen with each passing second. The binds cut deeper into your skin. The truth was merciless—escape was an illusion. Freedom was a fantasy. All that remained was him.
“Choose,” he murmured, and though the word was simple, it thundered like a verdict. “Betray me… or stay. Either way, you’re mine.”
The words hung heavy in the stillness, dripping into the cracks of your thoughts like poison. Betrayal or surrender. Both paths led to ruin, and yet he made you believe you had a choice. That was his cruelty—offering false doors in a maze where every exit circled back to him.
His lips brushed against your ear, feather-light, a ghost of touch that made you shudder. His voice carried through the dark, soft, intimate, but it wasn’t a promise. It was damnation.
“You’ll find,” he whispered, “there’s no saving yourself from me.”
Silence followed. Heavy. Absolute. The only proof of life was the sound of your own breath—shallow, trembling, bound in his shadow.
💔 Viraj Dobriyal One-Shot | Angst / Dark
Genre: Angst, Dark Romance, Psychological Drama
Summary: On the day of your wedding, Viraj Dobriyal walks in—calm, composed, and unshakable—claiming you as his own. What was meant to be freedom begins to feel like the prison he has already built around you.
The air was thick with jasmine and sandalwood, the hum of relatives, laughter, and the rustle of silk filling the wedding hall. You stood before the sacred fire, hennaed hands trembling as your groom tied the final knot of fate around your neck. This was supposed to be the beginning of your new life.
And then the doors creaked open.
The sound was small, but it cut through the chanting like a blade. Heads turned, whispers rose, and silence swept across the hall.
He walked in.
Viraj Dobriyal.
Clad in a dark tailored suit, half his shirt buttons undone as always, his steps were unhurried, calm, deliberate. But there was no mistaking the storm behind his eyes. His presence swallowed the room whole, an uninvited shadow that made the flames flicker. Murmurs spread as he strode closer. He didn’t need to raise his voice—the weight of him silenced the hall.
“You think vows will keep her from me?” His tone was velvet, sharp enough to cut. He didn’t glance at the groom. His gaze locked on you. “She’s mine.”
Your breath caught, the sacred thread biting into your skin as though warning you of the truth you didn’t want to admit. Bangles clinked as your fingers trembled. Memories flashed—the nights you woke breathless, the way his shadow lingered long after he was gone. He smiled—cold, triumphant—as if he’d already won.
The groom stepped forward, protective, jaw tight, but Viraj only tilted his head, amused. “Do you even know her?” he asked softly, mocking. “Her laughter. Her fears. The way she hates the dark. No… you don’t. I do.”
Gasps rippled through the crowd, some covering their mouths, others murmuring prayers. The priest shifted uneasily, eyes darting between the flames and the intruder. You wanted to deny it, to scream, to break free from the invisible chains tightening around your chest. But Viraj’s words, calm and steady, cut through the fragile illusion of safety you had built.
Your groom’s hand reached for yours, firm, grounding, but it felt fragile compared to the pull of Viraj’s gaze. He stepped closer, heat radiating from him, and the world shrank to just you and him.
“I’ll wait,” he said finally, stepping back but not leaving. His eyes never wavered. “No knot, no promise will change it. You chose me long ago.”
The fire crackled between you and your groom, but the only heat you felt was Viraj’s gaze. Heavy. Possessive. Inescapable. You could hear your mother’s quiet sobs, your father’s voice rising in anger, the rustle of guests leaving their seats, but it all blurred. Only his voice lingered, echoing like a curse.
And in that moment, your wedding no longer felt like freedom. It felt like a prison he had already built around you—one you feared you might never escape.
Summary:
At a glittering gala, Viraj Dobriyal cuts through the crowd with the kind of presence that silences rooms. Everyone warned you of his cruelty, but when he extends his hand for a dance, his touch lingers a moment too long, his gaze holding you captive. Cruelty you could brace for—but Viraj’s fleeting kindness, wrapped in charm and possession, is the true peril.
The gala shimmered—light spilling from chandeliers, music flowing like silk, glasses clinking in rhythm with soft laughter. You stood at the edge of the crowd, clutching your drink a little too tightly, hoping to remain unnoticed among the swirl of gowns and tuxedos.
And then his eyes found you.
Viraj Dobriyal moved through the crowd like the room belonged to him. People parted instinctively as he passed, his aura commanding, his presence undeniable. The faintest smirk tugged at his lips, a dangerous kind of amusement. When he reached you, he didn’t waste words. He simply extended his hand, palm open, gaze steady.
“Dance with me,” he said. His tone was low, smooth, yet laced with something closer to an order than a request.
Your pulse leapt. Against every warning you’d heard, against your own better judgment, you placed your hand in his.
The music wrapped around you as he guided you onto the floor. His grip was firm but careful, his other hand settling at your waist—lingering just a second too long. The warmth of his palm bled through the fabric of your dress, sending a shiver up your spine. Each step felt purposeful, practiced, as though he had planned this moment long before you ever arrived.
You tried to focus on the rhythm, on the steps, but it was impossible beneath the weight of his gaze. He looked at you like you were the only person in the room, as if the gala, the music, even the world itself had fallen away. The polished floor gleamed under the chandelier’s light, but you could see nothing except the sharp, magnetic intensity of his eyes.
“Relax,” he murmured, close enough that his breath brushed your cheek. The word was gentle, but his hold was not—it was steady, claiming, unwilling to let you slip away. His thumb pressed lightly against your waist, a subtle reminder of his control. The faint scent of his cologne mixed with perfume and champagne in the air, wrapping around you almost as tightly as his arms.
Your heart thundered, each beat echoing in your ears louder than the orchestra’s strings. Was this charm? The smooth charisma that everyone warned you about? Or was there something deeper, something dangerous, in the way he refused to let go, in the way he drew you imperceptibly closer with every turn?
The song stretched on, a slow waltz that demanded closeness, and you found yourself caught in his orbit. He guided you effortlessly, his steps confident, his touch both protective and possessive. You were aware of every brush of fabric, every shift in breath, every second that he held you just a little tighter than the dance required.
When the music finally dwindled to its last note, applause rose around the room. But you barely heard it. His hand remained at your waist, fingers flexing slightly as though reluctant to release you, his eyes lingering on yours with an intensity that left you breathless.
And in that moment, you realized: cruelty you could prepare for. Sharp words, cold dismissals, you could survive those. But Viraj Dobriyal’s fleeting kindness, his quiet possession disguised as charm—those were the weapons that cut deepest.
Because charm fades, cruelty can be endured, but this subtle, intoxicating gentleness was the peril you never expected to crave.
Summary:
Detective Y/N is determined to bring down Viraj Dobriyal, the prime suspect in a string of disappearances plaguing the city. But every lead, every alibi, every piece of evidence only seems to prove one thing—Viraj is always three steps ahead. Caught in his game of shadows, Y/N realizes they may not just be chasing a suspect… but becoming part of his design.
Rain-slicked streets gleamed under fractured streetlamps as you tightened your coat, file clutched in hand. The city had been restless for weeks—break-ins, unexplained disappearances, whispers of something darker threading through the air. And every lead, every witness statement, every camera glitch pointed to one name.
Viraj Dobriyal.
He wasn’t just another suspect. He was meticulous, wealthy, and far too charming for the crimes attached to his name. But there was a pattern, and you could see it—subtle enough to slip through most eyes, deliberate enough to feel like taunting. Every breadcrumb, every coincidence, seemed arranged just for you. And now it was your job to prove it.
The mansion loomed ahead, shadowed against the storm. Its black windows reflected the lightning like eyes blinking in the dark. You entered under the guise of official business, badge flashing, but the walls seemed alive, humming with secrets. Every corridor whispered danger.
In the drawing room, you found him waiting. Crisp suit, hands folded, that calm smile that never seemed to falter. “Detective,” he greeted smoothly, as though you were a guest rather than an investigator. “Out on a stormy night like this? I hope you’re not here to accuse me again.”
You set the file on the table, photographs spilling out—victims, locations, timelines. “Your name keeps showing up,” you said firmly. “Patterns don’t lie. People do.”
Viraj’s gaze swept the photos, then returned to you, sharper now. “Patterns are easy to draw when you want them to exist. But what if the real game is that I want you here? Following me. Obsessing over me.”
His words cut louder than the storm. You steadied your breath, hand brushing the recorder hidden in your coat. His smile grew, as if he already knew.
“Careful, Detective,” Viraj said, leaning forward, his voice velvet over steel. “Chasing monsters can be dangerous. Sometimes, you end up alone in their den.”
Your heart hammered, but you held your ground. “If you’re trying to scare me, you’ll need more than theatrics.”
He chuckled, low and unsettling. “Scare you? No. Fascinate you? Absolutely.”
Later, the interrogation room felt colder than the rain outside. The walls were plain, the table bare, but Viraj sat with quiet composure, hands folded as though he had invited himself there. The photographs lay between you once again, evidence that should have spoken louder than words.
“You were seen near the docks the night of the disappearance,” you pressed. “Witnesses placed your car within two blocks of the warehouse.”
His lips curved slightly. “Two blocks? In this city, that could be a hundred people. Coincidence isn’t a crime.”
You leaned in. “Then why does every lead bring me back to you? Wrong place, wrong time, again and again. You’re either the unluckiest man alive… or exactly who I think you are.”
Viraj tilted his head, amusement flashing in his gaze. “Or perhaps you’re exactly where I want you. Spending your nights thinking about me, your mornings plotting how to catch me. How many hours of sleep have you lost to me?”
The words struck harder than they should. You forced yourself to ignore the chill crawling up your spine. “Deflection won’t save you. We’ll have enough soon. It’s only a matter of time.”
Viraj leaned back, relaxed. “Time. That’s the beauty of it. While you waste it chasing shadows, I use it. And by the time you think you’ve caught me…” His smile sharpened. “…I’m already three steps ahead.”
Your pen tapped against the file. “Eventually, everyone slips,” you said quietly. “And when you do, I’ll be there.”
Viraj’s eyes glinted. “Then we’ll see who’s truly hunting whom.”
Silence stretched, thick and suffocating. The fluorescent light buzzed above, casting a cold pallor over his face. You studied him the way you studied case files—searching for cracks. But Viraj gave nothing away. His calmness was deliberate, rehearsed, like an actor on stage who knew the ending long before the audience.
“Where were you on the night of the 14th?” you asked.
He shrugged. “Dinner. Alone. I can give you the name of the restaurant, though I’m sure you’ve already checked.”
You had. The reservation existed, the staff remembered him—but the security footage had mysteriously vanished. Another loose thread you couldn’t tie down.
“Every alibi you give me falls apart,” you pressed. “Each one unravels just enough to let you slip through.”
Viraj smiled faintly, tapping a finger against the table. “Or maybe it unravels because you want it to. Perhaps you need me to be guilty. Without me, perhaps you’d have no purpose.”
The suggestion twisted in your gut. You pushed it away. “This isn’t about me.”
“Oh, but it is,” he countered. “It’s always been about us.”
When you finally stepped out into the storm again, your chest felt tight with the weight of the encounter. The city stretched ahead, dark and unwelcoming, rain pooling at the gutters. Neon signs flickered, headlights cut through mist, but nothing felt steady. Somewhere in the shadows, you knew Viraj’s influence lingered. Evidence was mounting, but so was his game.
You replayed every word, every smile, every calculated pause. He wanted you rattled, and he had succeeded. But beneath the unease, there was a spark—a determination not to let him win.
As thunder cracked overhead, one truth became painfully clear: you weren’t just investigating Viraj Dobriyal anymore—you were part of his design. A piece in the cat-and-mouse game he had set long before you arrived.
Escape Might Not Be Possible Tonight (Viraj X F!Reader)
🖤 Escape Might Not Be Possible Tonight 🖤
Viraj Dobriyal | One-Shot Thriller
Genre: Thriller / Suspense
Summary:
Trapped inside Viraj Dobriyal’s mansion during a violent storm, you stumble upon a hidden room filled with photographs of yourself. Each picture is proof that you’ve been watched for longer than you realized. When Viraj appears behind you, his velvet voice and unyielding presence make one thing terrifyingly clear: escape might not be possible tonight…
The storm outside howled like a beast, rattling the glass panes of the Dobriyal mansion. Wind clawed at the shutters as if the night itself wanted to break inside. The power had long since gone, leaving only the faint glow of candles to hold back the dark. Shadows stretched unnaturally, and every creak of the wooden floorboards whispered—you were not alone.
The mansion felt alive, its walls groaning with age, its silence broken only by distant thuds you couldn’t explain. Lightning flared suddenly, flooding the corridor in a white flash. A door at the far end caught your eye—slightly ajar, its frame leaking shadows like smoke. A chill spread across your skin, but curiosity and dread pulled you forward until your hand rested against the cold brass handle. You pushed it open.
The air inside was stale, heavy with dust, old paper, and something sharper—cologne. The storm hissed faintly beyond the walls, but this room had its own atmosphere. Then you saw them.
Photographs. Dozens of them. All of you.
Some candid, some posed, many from angles you didn’t remember anyone being close enough to capture. Your smile at the market. Your walk to class. The moment you tied your shoelace outside your building. Even one you swore had been taken inside your own bedroom. Dust clung to the frames, and when you brushed one, particles drifted down, carrying the acrid tang of old chemicals. Your stomach sank with the truth: someone had been watching you. Closely. For a long time.
Your pulse spiked. Breath unsteady, you reached for the nearest frame, fingertips brushing cool glass. That’s when you felt it—the shift of air. The warmth of a presence.
“Beautiful, aren’t they?” a low, velvet voice purred from behind you.
Every muscle locked. In the reflection of the photo, you saw him—a tall figure, gaze sharp, unblinking. Viraj Dobriyal.
Slowly, you turned. He stood barely an arm’s length away, candlelight carving harsh lines across his face. His expression hovered between pride and hunger. Outside, thunder rolled, but inside, silence pressed hard against your chest.
Viraj’s lips curved into a smile that never reached his eyes. “You shouldn’t be here,” he whispered, stepping closer, his shadow swallowing yours. “But maybe this is exactly where you belong.”
Your voice trembled. “Why do you have these pictures of me?”
His eyes flicked to the wall, then back to you with unsettling intensity. “Because no one sees you the way I do. They glance, they forget. But I notice. Every detail.” His fingers brushed a photograph as though it were sacred. “The way you tilt your head when you’re lost in thought. The way you bite your lip when you’re nervous. Every smile. Every frown.”
You staggered back, but he matched you step for step. “You’ve been following me,” you said, sharper now, fighting the tremor in your chest. “This is insane.”
Viraj chuckled softly, the sound dark and unsettling. “Insane? No. Necessary. The world doesn’t deserve you. They’d crush something so rare. But me? I know how to protect what’s mine.”
Another flash lit the room. Candle flames sputtered, plunging everything into a breath of darkness before flaring back. His eyes gleamed in the flicker, locked on you.
You lunged for the door. But his hand slammed it shut, rattling every frame on the wall. His other hand braced beside your head, pinning you in place. The wall at your back felt colder than ice.
“Running won’t change anything,” he murmured, voice low and dangerously soft. “You were always going to end up here. With me.”
Your throat tightened. “I’m not yours.”
Viraj leaned closer, his breath warm against your ear. “A storm like this washes everything away. Out there, no one hears a scream. In here…” His hand grazed a photograph—one from your bedroom. “…in here, it’s just us.”
You shoved at him, but his grip was iron, his body immovable. Panic clawed at your chest, while his smile deepened—dark, unreadable.
The storm raged on, rain hammering the windows. But the true danger stood inches away, watching you with unnerving patience, as if he had all the time in the world.
Escape might not be possible tonight.
Or worse… maybe he never intended to let you leave at all.
Summary:
For days, you’ve felt eyes on you—footsteps echoing too close, shadows stretching too long. When you finally confide in Viraj Dobriyal, he steps in as your protector. But his presence is constant, his gaze too sharp, and his timing always perfect. Notes slide under your door, texts appear at 3 a.m., and the question haunts you: is Viraj saving you from the stalker, or is he the stalker himself?
You first noticed it walking home late from work—the feeling of being followed. Footsteps that matched your pace. Shadows that stretched too long. Every night it grew worse, until paranoia became your constant companion. The streetlights offered no comfort; each flickering bulb only deepened the unease. You started carrying your keys between your fingers, rehearsing excuses, escape plans, prayers.
When you told Viraj Dobriyal, his expression sharpened instantly. “You should have told me earlier,” he said, voice calm but edged with steel. His eyes lingered on yours, unblinking, as though he already knew more than you’d said. “From now on, you’re not walking anywhere alone.”
And just like that, he appointed himself your protector. He drove you to work, lingered outside your apartment, even insisted on waiting in the café across the street when you met a friend. His presence was steady, his gaze scanning every passerby as if calculating threats. He never seemed distracted; it was as though guarding you had become his sole occupation.
At first, it was a relief. “Thank you, Viraj,” you told him once, gripping your coffee cup a little too tightly. “I don’t know what I’d do without you.”
His lips curved in something between a smile and a smirk. “You won’t have to find out.”
But the longer it went on, the more the edges blurred. He always seemed to appear before you called. He knew your schedule without you telling him. You spotted him outside your office lobby before dawn, claiming he couldn’t sleep. Another night, your curtains shifted—and across the street, a figure stood motionless. When you looked again, Viraj was suddenly at your door, insisting he had been “passing by.” His gaze lingered too intently, not protective, but possessive.
One evening, you tried to challenge him.
“You don’t have to watch me all the time.”
He said nothing.
“It feels like I’ve traded one stalker for another.”
Viraj’s expression didn’t change. “Do you really want me gone?” His voice was low, measured, almost dangerous. “If I leave, who’s going to protect you? Do you think whoever’s following you will simply stop?”
You faltered, unable to answer. His intensity pinned you in place until he finally leaned back, exhaling softly. “That’s what I thought.”
That night, a note slid under your door: You looked beautiful today.
Your hands trembled as you reread the words. You had seen no one. You had told no one where you’d be.
Except Viraj.
Sleep evaded you. Every creak of the floorboards, every whisper of wind through the window felt like proof someone was near. At 3 a.m., your phone buzzed against the nightstand, the screen’s glow slicing through the dark. Your stomach dropped. A text: Don’t worry. I’ll keep you safe. No name. No number you recognized. The vibration still echoed in your bones long after it stopped.
The next morning, he was already waiting, leaning casually against his car, arms folded. “Rough night?” he asked, eyes flicking to the dark circles under yours. When you didn’t reply, he added smoothly, “You’ll be safe with me.”
“Viraj…” your voice cracked. “What if—it was you all along?”
For a heartbeat, silence stretched between you. Then his gaze softened—too much, too suddenly—and he opened the car door for you. “If I were your stalker,” he said, voice silky, “you’d already know. Get in.”
You hesitated, scanning his face for cracks, for truth. His eyes gave nothing away, only that unnerving calm that left you doubting your instincts. Around you, the street was empty, the world holding its breath.
And you did get in, because being near him felt like the only defense you had. The leather seat was cool beneath your hands, but the air seemed heavy, suffocating, with his presence filling the space. His fingers brushed yours as he shifted gears, deliberate, steady.
But deep down, the question gnawed at you louder than ever: was he protecting you from the stalker—or had you stepped willingly into the stalker’s arms?
Summary:
Viraj Dobriyal offers to teach you self-defense, but every correction feels like something more. His hands guide your stance, his voice sharp yet low, and his gaze unreadable. Each lesson blurs the line between discipline and desire—until the real danger is no longer the fight, but the way his presence leaves you breathless.
The training room was hushed, mats cool beneath your bare feet. You shifted uneasily, tugging at the hem of your shirt as you waited.
Viraj Dobriyal stepped forward, his presence commanding the space. Dressed in black, he looked like control personified—measured movements, sharp eyes that missed nothing. He gestured for you to stand before him.
“Show me your stance,” he said, voice low and unyielding.
You positioned your feet as best you remembered, hands raised in a hesitant guard. His gaze swept over you, unreadable, before he closed the distance.
“No.” His grip adjusted your shoulders, firm but not rough. “Too open here.” He tapped lightly against your side, the touch brief yet searing. He crouched slightly, nudging your elbow higher. “Keep this up. Protect your face. Always.”
Your breath caught at his nearness, at the way his scent—spice and something darker—wrapped around you. He stepped behind, guiding your wrist into place. Each correction was precise, efficient, yet his touch lingered just long enough to blur the line between lesson and something more.
“Better,” he murmured near your ear, his breath raising goosebumps along your skin.
You swallowed hard, trying to focus, but the closeness made it impossible. His chest brushed your back as he adjusted your footing, his palm briefly steadying your hip.
“Now,” Viraj said, stepping back though his gaze stayed sharp, “again.”
You exhaled slowly, fists raised. But as you shifted forward, he cut in.
“Too stiff.” His hand caught your wrist. “Not a dance. A fight. Loosen.”
“I’m trying,” you muttered, frustration edging your voice.
He smirked faintly. “Trying won’t save you. Again.”
You reset. This time he circled you, predator-like, watching every movement. When you faltered, he pressed a hand between your shoulder blades. “Lower. You’ll lose balance if you’re too upright.”
The sting jolted through you. You adjusted quickly, hoping he hadn’t noticed—but his smirk told you otherwise.
“Good,” he said at last, stepping in front. “Now throw a punch.”
You hesitated. “At you?”
“Of course.” His chin tilted in challenge. “Unless you’re afraid to touch me.”
Your cheeks burned. Determined, you snapped your fist forward. He caught it easily, his grip strong, thumb brushing the inside of your wrist. “Better. But don’t telegraph it—you let me see it coming.”
He twisted gently, pulling you off-balance before steadying you with a firm hand at your waist. “Plant your feet. I won’t always be this generous.”
The way he said it—low, deliberate—made your pulse skip. His gaze lingered before he let go.
“Again,” he ordered.
You struck quicker this time. He dodged, the corner of his mouth twitching. “Improvement.”
You tried once more, grazing his shoulder. His brows lifted before his hand shot out, seizing your wrist and pulling you against his chest. His breath ghosted your temple as he murmured, “Now you’re learning.”
Your heart thundered, every nerve alight. His hold loosened, but he didn’t step back right away. The silence stretched, heavy with something unspoken.
Finally, he released you. “That’s enough for today,” he said, though his eyes lingered, dark and unreadable.
“Next time… you won’t get off so easily.”
The promise burned hotter than any lesson, leaving you breathless as he turned away, already planning the next round.
📅 KINKTOBER 2025 | DAY 19
🖤 “HUSH, AND TAKE IT”
📺 Fandom: Saubhagyavati Bhava
👤 Pairing: Viraj Dobriyal × Female Reader
🔮 Genre: Smut | Power Play | Sensory Deprivation | Creampie | BDSM Kink
🔞 Rating: E (Explicit)
🧠 Summary:
Blindfolded. Bound. Sound stolen. Viraj controls everything—how you breathe, when you writhe, what you feel. Every thrust is deeper when your senses are gone, every drag of his cock inside you louder than words. When he fills you at the end? You can’t hear the groan in his throat. But your body knows who owns it.
SMUT WARNING! READ AT YOUR OWN DISCRETION!
It began with the blindfold.
Thick black silk wrapped around your eyes, drawn taut by Viraj’s gloved fingers. You felt the brush of leather against your temple as he tied the knot, his breath grazing your cheek. Then came the buds—soft, molded, and shaped to fit snugly into your ears. The sound dampened instantly. The world fell silent. Just like he wanted.
Muted.
Blind.
Your chest rose, quick, shallow breaths beneath the thin lace that barely covered your breasts. You sat on the edge of the bed exactly where he placed you—naked, vulnerable, senses stolen—waiting.
Waiting.
And then—touch.
A single gloved fingertip dragged along your thigh, and your whole body flinched. You couldn’t hear him, couldn’t see him—but god, you could feel him.
He toyed with that, made it a game. Brushed against your skin lightly, teasing. Then gripped your hips, hard, grounding you. Your thighs quivered under his hands, your cunt already wet, aching from the sheer anticipation of his next move.
His palm came down against your inner thigh with a slap, and you gasped, instinctively jerking. The silence made it louder in your head, the sting lingering, the heat blooming.
You reached blindly, needing something—him—but he caught your wrists easily, twisting them behind your back and binding them together with silk rope. Not tight enough to hurt. Just enough to hold.
Then silence again.
Time stretched.
Your breath was the only thing you could feel, until his hand slid between your legs—fingers teasing the slick between your folds. A low groan built in your throat. You tilted your hips to follow the touch, greedy for it.
He pulled away.
You whimpered.
Then his cock pressed against your entrance.
Thick. Hot. Bare.
No warning. No buildup.
He slid in with one long thrust, sheathing himself to the hilt in your dripping pussy, and your back arched, a broken moan caught in your throat. The stretch was overwhelming—his cock always felt big, but now? Now it felt massive, every ridge and vein magnified by your stolen senses.
He started to move.
Slow. Deliberate. Unforgiving.
Your breath stuttered with every deep thrust, your cunt clenching, helpless to do anything but feel. Each roll of his hips was its own world — a wave of pressure that rocked through your spine. Your bound wrists twisted in the silk, desperate to hold onto something, anything.
But there was only him.
He angled his thrusts downward, grinding deep against your g-spot until you were trembling. Your moans got louder, throat hoarse, your body jerking with every drag of his cock through your dripping cunt. The bed creaked under the rhythm. Your legs splayed wider instinctively, trying to take him deeper.
Then he stopped.
You whined, hips writhing, desperate.
He ran his hands over your trembling thighs, slow, grounding. You felt the slick heat of his breath against your nipple, then the bite of his teeth. You gasped again, body twitching. Then his hand slid to your throat.
Not to choke. To anchor.
He started fucking you harder.
Relentless. Brutal. Every thrust was a message, a claim, cock driving into you again and again until you couldn’t think, couldn’t breathe, only feel his length splitting you wide. Your cunt drooled around him, juices dripping onto the sheets, loud wet squelches you couldn’t even hear, but felt with every clench of your overstimulated body.
He let out a growl—you felt the vibration in your chest.
He was close.
So were you.
Your legs trembled violently as your orgasm built—no warning, no sound, just rising like a wave and then crashing.
You screamed, body locked tight as your cunt milked his cock in frantic pulses, slick gushing between your thighs as your orgasm exploded through you.
Viraj slammed into you one final time and came.
You felt the pulse of it—thick, hot ropes of cum filling your cunt, his cock twitching inside you as his hips stayed flush to yours. The warmth of it seeped out around his cock as he held you still, your bound body pulsing with aftershocks.
You were full.
Blind.
Muted.
Helpless.
Owned.
He stayed inside you, cock softening slowly, hands gentle now—stroking your hair, untying your wrists, kissing your shoulder. He whispered something into your ear.