Chapter 3 The Line Between Control And Lust
Adrian's POV
I square my shoulders, instincts kicking in faster than reason. My mother’s voice cut through the room like a whip. I didn’t even think. “Enough,” I say, sharper than intended. “Darcy stays.”
My mother freezes. I can almost see her calculating the gravity of my words, weighing it against the audacity of a stranger holding my child.
“Adrian…” she begins, her tone like ice on a summer day, “you can’t seriously….”
“I am serious,” I interrupt, my voice steady now. Not polite. Not negotiable. Just the truth.
She narrows her eyes, scanning Darcy from head to toe, her gaze so thorough I feel like I can see the judgment imprinted in every movement. She asks fast, precise, accusatory questions about where she is from, who her family is, why she thinks she could even touch Hazel. Her words are sharp, surgical. As though she is interrogating a criminal, not a girl who has just saved my daughter from a meltdown.
Darcy answers carefully, her voice steady, but I could tell the tension in her shoulders, the tight grip on Hazel. Hazel whimpers and stares, sensing the storm in the room.
I feel Hazel shift slightly in Darcy’s arms, small fingers curling into the fabric of her blouse. And then something happens. I notice the room has changed. The air seems heavier when my mother questioned Darcy, but when Darcy speaks softly to Hazel, the tension eased. Hazel’s breathing evens, her eyelids drops in trust. And for the first time in months, the knot in my chest loosens.
I realized the absurd truth: this woman could calm my daughter in ways I couldn’t. Not after hours of pacing, trying, failing, and pretending I had it all under control.
My mother, of course, doesn’t notice this. She continues, relentless, unaware of the small miracle unfolding in front of her.
Darcy’s voice is steady, her answers precise, but gentle. Hazel’s tiny hands brushes against her neck. The calm radiating from her was magnetic. I feel it seeping into me. Even as I try to focus on my mother’s questions, I couldn’t ignore the way Darcy made the chaos dissolve.
“Do you have experience with children?” my mother asked, eyes sharp.
Darcy nodded, soft but firm. “I’ve babysat since I was a teen. I know how to handle tantrums… and panic attacks.”
Her honesty was simple, yet I felt something deeper in her words. I felt it in Hazel. A connection I couldn’t fabricate, no matter how much money, training, or control I had.
Hazel stirred again, woke fully, and immediately reached for Darcy. Instinctively, she stretched out, tiny arms desperate to return to the one who offered peace. I watched, tense, as my daughter’s trust was not in me but in this stranger.
A jolt of discomfort passed through me, but it wasn’t jealousy. Not really. It was awesome. Respect. Relief. Relief that someone could keep her safe when I failed to be enough.
My mother’s glare shifted from Darcy to me. I could feel her evaluating the situation, judging me for losing control. I ignored it. My focus was on the two people in my arms: my daughter and the girl who had become an anchor in a storm I didn’t even realize I was drowning in.
Finally, my mother sighed, exasperated. She left with a final, sharp remark about propriety and judgment. The door closed behind her, leaving an eerie quiet that felt heavier than the storm outside.
I exhaled, tension melting slightly, though not entirely. I turned to Darcy, still holding Hazel with a gentle, careful grace. The sight of her rocking my daughter in her arms made my chest tighten in ways I wasn’t used to.
“I…” I began, unsure how to phrase the weight of my gratitude, “I think you should stay. At least… temporarily. Officially.”
Darcy blinked at me. I could see hesitation. Something flickered in her eyes a secret, a fear, a past she wasn’t ready to share. I swallowed hard, aware of the fragile tension between honesty and privacy.
“Officially?” she echoed, voice soft. She shifted Hazel slightly, adjusting the baby against her chest.
“Yes. Temporary. But paid. Full access. You stay here, with Hazel, under my supervision,” I said, careful. Every word mattered. This wasn’t just a job. This wasn’t just childcare. This was a responsibility I couldn’t delegate lightly, and yet, I couldn’t ignore the undeniable pull of… something I didn’t yet name.
Her eyes darted down to Hazel, then back to me. “I—” Her words faltered. The hesitation was sharp, deliberate. I leaned slightly forward, my attention fixed entirely on her.
“I’m… not sure if you know everything about me,” she said finally, her voice barely above a whisper. “There’s something you should know before you hire me.”
My pulse jumped. My breath caught. The calm that had returned with my mother’s departure evaporated instantly. I braced myself, half afraid of what she might say, half curious.
Hazel stirred, small hands gripping Darcy’s blouse. The baby’s trust in her was complete. And I realized… Whatever Darcy’s secret, it didn’t change this bond. It didn’t change the fact that Hazel already trusted her more than me, more than anyone.
I couldn’t stop myself. I leaned a fraction closer, voice steady but quiet, almost a whisper. “Tell me.”
Darcy swallowed. She looked away, then back at me. The faintest tremor ran through her shoulders. Hazel’s small hand found her collarbone, and for a moment, I could have sworn the baby understood the weight of what was coming.
My mind raced, thoughts colliding. Was this about money? Family? Past mistakes? I didn’t care. Not really. I only cared that Darcy was here, that Hazel was calm, and that she had this quiet, undeniable strength that could hold my daughter and maybe me together.
“I…” she began, voice wavering. She looked down at Hazel again. “Mr. Ashford… there’s something you should know before you hire me.”
Her words hung in the air like a storm cloud, heavy, threatening, impossible to ignore.
I felt my stomach tighten. My instincts screamed that this was the beginning of something larger, something that could shift everything in my carefully ordered life.
And yet… I couldn’t step back.
I couldn’t.
I wanted to know.
I needed to know.