Chapter 1042: What We Never Had
Chapter 1042: What We Never Had
We sat on a glorious pile of our own discarded clothes—my jacket folded beneath us like the throne it deserved to be, her’s spread across the hay to protect that flawless skin from anything as crude as prickle.
The rest of our fabric lay scattered in elegant disarray, somewhere between a love nest and a small, delicious act of sacrilege against whatever gods still bothered with modesty.
The stable wrapped us in that hushed, amber calm that only exists after two people have thoroughly emptied themselves into each other and have nothing left to hide, with no secrets or any need for performances.
Just raw, satisfied silence.
Madison settled between my legs, her back against my chest, my arms wrapped possessively around her waist, her head tucked perfectly into the hollow under my chin.
Her skin was still warm. Still slightly damp from our efforts while her hair smelled like hay, perfume, and me—a combination so intoxicating it had no right existing anywhere except in this exact moment, under my roof, in my stable, with my horse watching like the judgmental queen she was.
Nyxire observed us from her stall with those ancient, unblinking eyes. She’d finally stopped snorting at our interruption of her royal evening and had settled into that patient, superior calm reserved for creatures who’ve seen empires rise and fall and still consider humans mildly entertaining at best.
The other horses shifted lazily down the line—warm bodies, soft exhales, the occasional hoof scraping stone like they were politely pretending not to notice the naked Dark Lord and his First Queen defiling their sacred space.
A chestnut mare two stalls over stretched her neck, sniffed the air (probably judging our scent), and went back to her feed with the unbothered grace of something that knew it lived inside something far holier than it deserved.
I stroked Madison’s hair. Slow. Deliberate. Letting my fingers catch every strand and untangle them one by one like I was claiming territory.
My other hand rested flat against her stomach, rising and falling with each breath, and every few minutes I’d lean down to press a lazy kiss to the top of her shoulder—
She sighed. Deep and content.
Her eyes drifted across the stable—the heavy beams, the warm stone, the golden light spilling through windows—and she let out a soft, rueful little laugh.
"You know what this reminds me of?"
"Hm?"
"Nothing. It doesn’t remind me of anything. That’s the point."
I waited. One of the many things I’d learned about Madison was that when she used that particular dry, self-aware, slightly melancholic tone, whatever followed was always worth the patience of a Dark Lord.
"I was just thinking," she said, tracing idle patterns on my forearm with one fingertip, "do you realize we never actually did any of this? The normal stuff, I mean. The teenage nonsense. The hiding, the sneaking out, the desperate search for some pathetic little corner of the world where nobody could find us just to steal a few moments together. All those mundane little rebellions that ordinary young love is supposed to be built on."
I turned the thought over in my head with the same lazy consideration she was giving my arm.
"No," I said eventually, voice low and amused. "We really never did."
We hadn’t. Not once.
Our first time had been at her house—parents conveniently absent, bedroom straight out of a luxury catalog, her driving me there in that pristine white BMW that still sat in her garage like a shiny relic of a simpler era.
We’d strolled straight through the front door like we owned the place.
No sneaking. No stolen glances or the mundane whispered plans or racing hearts over the fear of getting caught. Her parents had never disapproved and only later they accepted our engagement.
Just that distant, wealthy indifference of people who’d already decided their daughter’s choices were none of their damn business.
Then the System and the whole harem began. The money started pouring in at levels that made old-money empires look like lemonade stands.
Every awkward, fumbling stage that normal teenagers dragged out over months and years? We skipped it entirely.
Straight from first kiss to ten-figure dominance and then straight from her perfect bedroom to a thirty-woman empire, a mansion that spat in the face of physics, and a Friesian mare currently staring at us like we were mildly amusing peasants in her stable.
We’d never held hands in a hallway wondering who might see. Never snuck out a window at 2 a.m. to meet at some sad little park. Never made out in the backseat of a cheap car because we had nowhere else to go.
Never experienced the small, desperate, stolen version of love that most people spent their entire adolescence romanticizing.
We’d jumped straight to the after version. The superior one. The one where I win.
Small human things that actually were stupid but mattered!
A stage we never experienced.
I laughed softly. She laughed with me. Then she tilted her head up and kissed me—slow, lingering, like she was leaving a mark she planned to come back and admire later.
"Do you miss it?" I asked when she pulled away. "All that childish theatre? Was it something you secretly wanted?"
She actually thought about it. I watched her do that signature Madison stillness—the way her eyes went slightly unfocused while she conducted an honest audit of her own soul.
Then she shook her head.
"No. That’s the strange part. It always felt... beneath me, somehow. I never looked at those clumsy couples sneaking around and thought, ’Yes, I want that.’ The drama, the risk of getting caught, the stupid little thrills—none of it ever appealed. Not even when I was twelve and supposedly supposed to be fantasizing about exactly that nonsense."
She turned slightly in my arms, just enough to look up at me properly, her cheek still pressed against my chest like it belonged there.
"But these quiet moments?" Her voice dropped, soft and genuine. "These stolen hours away from the rest of my sisters? They make me realize I never really got to be a teenager. Not in any way that actually counted. The night the System woke up... that was the end of teenage life for me. Before I even knew it had properly begun."
I kept stroking her hair. Didn’t interrupt. Knew she was circling something that mattered.
"And suddenly I am the Queen of this ridiculously powerful boy who could probably conquer the world if he ever bothered to get off his ass and stop collecting everyone else’s women long enough to do it."
I snorted.
She grinned against my chest, wicked and perfect.
"And I’m respected," she continued, her voice carrying that quiet, dangerous confidence. "By all of them. Every last one. Sometimes they look at me in certain situations and I can feel them waiting—actually pausing—to see what I’ll say before they form an opinion of their own.
"None of them would ever admit it out loud, of course. They’d all smile sweetly and call themselves equals and mean it in that adorably delusional way of theirs. But the dynamic is there, carved deep. Apart from your mother, I’m the most respected woman in this entire glorious mess you call a harem.
"The Queen title got branded into their souls somewhere along the way, and nobody trys filing it off."
She shook her head and laughed—soft, incredulous, the laugh of a woman who still couldn’t quite believe the ridiculous terrain she was describing was now her everyday reality.
"And I’ll admit it’s intoxicating. Not just from the ones my age—but the mature ones too respect me? The ones who should look at me and see an eighteen-year-old playing Queen in her man’s harem? But they don’t. They look at me and see..."
She searched for the word, tasting it. "A leader. Without me having to earn it. Without me ever having to impose it or throw my weight around like some insecure little tyrant."
She paused, tracing another lazy pattern on my forearm with one fingertip, as if mapping out her own quiet empire on my skin.
"Priya," she said quietly. "She’s one of the most respected self-madefemale lawyers in LA. A woman who built her entire career in rooms full of men who hated her for simply existing and still walked out owning half of them. She looks at me—a eighteen-year-old who’s barely old enough to buy her own wine—and treats me like royalty. She asks me things. Not business things. Not legal questions. Personal things.
"What I think. What I’d do. Whether a decision is even worth making. A woman who’s spent her whole life being the smartest person in every room she enters is now asking a teenager for input. It’s almost insulting how natural it feels."
I kissed the top of her head, slow and possessive. Let her keep going. My queen deserved her moment.
"My aunt Catherine," she continued, and her voice shifted into something between awe and the specific tenderness reserved for family you’d loved your whole life.
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