Current location: Novel nest The Shared Flesh Chapter 3

"The Shared Flesh" Chapter 3

Chapter 3: The Host Enters

The heavy, pivot-hinged steel front door of the Vance mansion swung open with a muted hiss, sealing out the damp Atlantic fog.

Luna stood in the grand foyer, holding a single, scuffed canvas duffel bag. She looked incredibly small against the soaring, raw concrete pillars, like an accidental stray that had wandered into a pharaoh’s tomb.

She wore a simple, pale yellow cotton dress that looked thin enough to let the coastal chill bite through, and her hair was tied back with a cheap, fraying ribbon.

She kept her head lowered, her eyes fixed on the polished concrete floor, radiating the perfect, deferential aura of an underpaid domestic servant.

Helena stood three steps up on the cantilevered floating staircase, looking down at her. Her hands were buried deep in the pockets of her cream wool trousers.

"The terms of your residency are straightforward, Luna," Helena said, her voice dropping into the smooth, detached register she used during a routine corporate onboarding.

"You will have the suite in the east wing. You are on duty from 6:00 AM until the baby falls asleep. Your primary objective is the stability of Julian Jr. Do you understand?"

"Yes, Mrs. Vance," Luna whispered softly, her voice trembling just enough to convey a delicate, fragile submission. "Thank you for letting me come back. I just... I couldn't stop thinking about him."

An instinctive, visceral repulsion coiled tight in Helena’s stomach. It was a purely animal reaction, a deep-seated cellular rejection of the girl who had once carried her legacy.

Logically, Helena knew this was an excellent operational fix—bringing Luna back would restore order to the household, freeing Helena to return to the high-stakes tech mergers waiting on her desk in Manhattan.

Yet, looking at Luna’s soft, scrubbed-clean face, Helena felt an intense urge to order her security detail to drag the girl out into the mud.

Before Helena could speak, a piercing, frantic shriek shattered the sterile quiet of the house. Julian Jr. was crying again, the harsh sound echoing mercilessly off the brutalist concrete walls.

From the shadow of the corridor, Julian appeared, holding the thrashing infant. His eyes were heavily bloodshot, his jaw shadowed with dark stubble, his entire posture exuding the deep, suffocating fatigue of a broken man.

The baby was arching his spine, his tiny face purple with rage, completely rejecting his father's touch.

"He won't sleep, Helena," Julian muttered, his voice ragged with marital exhaustion. "He hasn't slept in four hours. The pediatric drops aren't doing anything."

"Let me, sir," Luna said softly, stepping forward without being asked. Her movements were fluid, unhurried, and completely devoid of the tense stiffness that plagued Helena.

She reached out her arms. The contrast was bone-chilling: Luna’s soft, unpolished, working-class skin against the cold, high-end concrete of the house. The exact moment her fingers brushed the flannel blanket, a terrifying miracle occurred.

ADVERTISEMENT

Julian Jr.’s frantic, violent shrieks cut off instantly.

The silence that followed was absolute, heavy, and suffocating. The infant let out a long, shuddering sigh, his tiny fists unclenching as he melted entirely against Luna’s chest, his face burying into the crook of her neck with an innate, primal recognition. He didn't just calm down; he surrendered to her.

Julian’s breath hitched. He stared at Luna, his eyes tracking the soft, rhythmic rise and fall of her chest as she gently cradled the boy.

For months, he had been trapped in the icy, castrating vacuum of Helena’s coldness.

Seeing Luna now, radiating a raw, unpolished, and completely natural maternal softness, triggered a dangerous, forbidden pull in his chest. It was a profound, suffocating relief that felt dangerously like desire.

Luna looked up over the baby's head, her wide, docile eyes locking directly onto Helena. Her face was a mask of absolute, flawless innocence.

"See, Mrs. Vance?" Luna whispered, her lips curving into a tiny, submissive smile. "He just needed his home."

His home. The words carried a subtle, venomous weight that went completely unnoticed by Julian, but sliced straight through Helena's psychological armor. The parasite’s first successful infiltration of the host family was complete.

"Take him to the nursery," Helena ordered, her voice tightening as she fought to maintain her corporate composure.

"Julian, come to the study. We need to review the quarterly trust allocations."

"In a minute," Julian murmured, his eyes still lingering on the gentle sway of Luna's hips as she turned and carried the quiet baby down the long, dim corridor.

An hour later, the east wing guest suite was silent.

Luna set her cheap canvas duffel bag on the pristine, grey minimalist platform bed. The room was beautiful, sterile, and entirely designed by Julian—all exposed concrete and sharp glass.

Luna didn't look at the view of the Atlantic through the floor-to-ceiling windows. Instead, she unzipped her bag, bypassed her few faded clothes, and pulled out a small, heavy glass bottle.

It was a bottle of No. 22, a hyper-exclusive, discontinued vintage fragrance that Helena bought at private auctions. It was Helena’s signature scent—the olfactive mark of her high-society identity. Luna had slipped into the master walk-in closet during her brief medical stay nine months ago and stolen it from the back of the vanity.

Luna walked into the attached concrete bathroom and clicked the heavy steel lock into place.

She stripped off her cotton dress, standing naked before the massive, backlit mirror. She didn't look at her face; she looked at her flat, pale stomach, tracing the faint, silvery stretch marks left by the Vance heir.

A dark, unhinged hunger flashed in her eyes, utterly erasing the submissive nanny persona she wore downstairs.

She lifted the heavy glass bottle. With a slow, calculated precision, she didn't spray the perfume on her wrists or behind her ears. Instead, she brought the atomizer down, parting her thighs, and sprayed the expensive, vintage mist directly onto her inner thighs, letting the cool, rich scent of Helena's identity absorb into her own flesh.

She closed her eyes, breathing in the high-society musk, her lips curling into a wicked, predatory grin in the dark.

By midnight, the brutalist mansion had settled into a freezing, paranoid quiet.

Helena sat alone in the vast, open-plan living room, her laptop open on her knees, pretending to review tech acquisition spreadsheets.

The house was dark, illuminated only by the cold, blue light of her screen and the pale, winter moonlight spilling through the massive, triple-height floor-to-ceiling windows.

A faint, rhythmic creak echoed from the glass facade.

Helena looked up, her fingers freezing on the keyboard.

Luna was standing by the glass, slowly rocking the sleeping baby in her arms. She hadn't turned on a single light.

She just stood there in her thin nightgown, her bare feet pressing against the cold concrete floor, moving with a smooth, hypnotic tranquility.

As the bright moonlight struck Luna from behind, it cast a long, warped shadow across the polished concrete floor.

Helena watched, her heart hammering against her ribs, as that dark, ink-like silhouette stretched out inch by inch, sliding over the minimalist rugs, climbing up the legs of the designer furniture, until it reached the dark sofa—completely swallowing Helena in its pitch-black, suffocating embrace.

ADVERTISEMENT

You May Also Like

Compartilhar Link

Copie o link abaixo para compartilhar com seus amigos: