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"His Favorite Anti-Fan" Chapter 2

Chapter 2: The Iceland Confinement

The Icelandic landscape was a brutal expanse of monochromatic violence. Outside the floor-to-ceiling glass panels of the remote estate, a black blizzard tore through the mountain pass, throwing sheets of frozen, ash-tinted ice against the reinforced structure.

The villa itself was a masterpiece of architectural arrogance—all exposed concrete, sharp angles, and dark Nordic timber—built directly into the volcanic rock. It was designed to offer panoramic views of the apocalypse, but tonight, it felt like a luxury prison capsule buried beneath the snow.

Inside, the only light came from the massive stone hearth. Burning logs of Icelandic birch popped and hissed, casting long, erratic shadows across the minimalist living room.

Roxie sat on the low hearthstone, her knees pulled to her chest, shivering despite the heavy cashmere of her oversized charcoal sweater. Her skin felt raw, her mind utterly drained by the flight and the frantic emergency meetings that had preceded it.

The pre-sales metrics for The Last Horizon had leaked forty-eight hours ago. The numbers were disastrous. The public was weary of expensive spy thrillers unless there was blood or genuine scandal attached to them.

The studio’s response had been swift, cold, and legally binding.

A total public relations pivot.

They were no longer just bitter co-stars sacrificing their sanity for a two-hundred-million-dollar auteur project. According to the fresh addendum in her contract, signed under Maeve King’s unyielding gaze at Heathrow, Roxie Wilde and Christian Vance were now deeply, toxically, and exclusively in love.

"You're quiet tonight, darling," a low baritone cut through the crackle of the fire.

Christian stepped out of the shadows of the kitchen module. He had already discarded his traveling coat, wearing only a black merino wool turtleneck and tailored trousers that made his legs look impossibly long.

In his right hand, he carried a heavy crystal tumbler filled with amber liquid and a single, perfectly spherical sphere of ice.

He didn't stop at the edge of the rug. He walked with that slow, deliberate theatrical stride until he was standing directly over her, his tall silhouette completely blocking her view of the raging storm outside.

"I am practicing the art of not murdering you before principal photography begins," Roxie said, her voice tight, eyes fixed firmly on the orange embers.

"The studio wouldn't like it. The insurance premium alone would ruin us."

Christian let out a low, humorless chuckle. He lowered his frame, leaning one arm against the high stone mantle above her head. The proximity was instant, claustrophobic, and entirely unauthorized by her nervous system.

As he bent closer, the icy, sharp scent of his expensive British cologne—something smelling of rain, cedar, and high-altitude air—collided with the warm, smoky sweetness of the burning birch.

"Oh, come now. Where is that famous Hollywood gratitude?" Christian murmured, tilting his head so his ice-blue eyes caught the firelight. The shadow of his jawline was terrifyingly sharp, exactly like the image she had edited in the dark just days before.

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"I believe congratulations are in order. Thanks to our shared management, the internet currently believes I spent the flight from London with my hands wrapped around your waist instead of reading the rewritten script."

Roxie finally looked up, her green eyes flashing with venom. "Don't flatter yourself, Christian. We are both just highly leveraged corporate property. If the studio told you to fake-marry a golden retriever to save the opening weekend metrics, you'd be looking for a collar by Tuesday."

"True," he admitted, his gaze drifting lazily down the line of her throat, completely unbothered by her bite.

"But a golden retriever wouldn't look nearly as miserable in liquid gold as you did in Paris. Or as beautifully ruined as you look right now."

The word ruined hung heavily in the air between them, thick with an unspoken, dark magnetism that neither of them had the permission to acknowledge.

They were locked in the same high-security estate, entirely isolated by a blizzard that would keep the security detail and the crew trapped in the lower camp for at least three days.

They were forced to breathe the same air, twenty-four hours a day, under the terms of a contract that legally commodified their bodies.

Christian shifted his weight, his chest moving an inch closer to her shoulder. The heat radiating from him was palpable.

As he remained suspended over her, his eyes suddenly narrowed, a microscopic twitch of curiosity passing over his aristocratic features.

He took a slow, deep breath, his nostrils flaring slightly.

Clinging to the thick wool of Roxie’s oversized sweater was a very specific, deeply personal scent. It wasn't the expensive French perfume she wore for the red carpets.

It was a faint, raw combination of sweet vanilla body lotion and the sharp, bitter undertone of stale cigarette smoke—the exact, desperate grounding ritual she used when her stage anxiety made her feel like her lungs were collapsing.

Christian froze for a fraction of a second.

Just nine hours ago, during his layover, he had opened his private phone to check the latest activity of his personal shadow. @Anti-Christian_666 had posted a rare personal text update on her blog, an uncharacteristic moment of vulnerability amidst her usual high-gloss malice: Locked in a glass box in the middle of nowhere.

Insomnia is winning. Smelling like cheap vanilla and bad decisions just to keep my feet on the floor.

The realization didn't hit him like a shock; it descended upon him like a cold, heavy fog.

His eyes locked onto the tiny, near-invisible crescent scar right beneath his own left jawline—the exact detail her account had pointed out to millions of people. Then, his gaze tracked down to her hands.

Her manicured fingers were twitching against her knees, the exact rhythm of a classic musician trying to find a chord in the dark.

A dangerous, pathologically amused smile began to curl at the corner of Christian’s mouth.

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Before Roxie could notice the change in his demeanor, the sharp, vintage chime of a satellite phone broke the silence of the villa. The sound was harsh, static-heavy, echoing off the concrete walls like a gunshot.

Christian didn't move immediately. He let his eyes linger on the crown of her platinum-blonde head for one more agonizing second before he stood up fully, pulling the satellite device from his pocket.

He flicked it open, his face instantly smoothing into a mask of pure, iron-clad emotional distance.

"Speak," Christian commanded, his voice dropping into a chilly, formal register.

A voice crackled through the small speaker, distorted by the atmospheric interference of the Arctic storm, but entirely unmistakable. It was a heavy, aristocratic British accent, dripping with a passive-aggressive control that had been sharpened over decades of high-society dominance.

"I see the trades are calling your little film a sinking ship, Christian," Liam Vance’s voice sneered through the static.

"And your choice in co-stars remains as... loud as ever. I trust you haven't forgotten the family foundations while you're playing the romantic hero in the snow? The board expects your return to London by the winter solstice. Do not let this cinematic vanity project bleed into your actual obligations."

Roxie watched Christian’s knuckles turn entirely white against the plastic casing of the phone. His face didn't move a single muscle, but the absolute void in his ice-blue eyes was terrifying. He looked less like a man receiving a call from his father and more like a soldier listening to his execution order.

"My obligations are fully funded, Father," Christian said, his voice dropping into a register so quiet it was almost buried by the howling wind outside. "Goodbye."

He snapped the phone shut without waiting for a reply, shoving it back into his pocket. The aristocratic grace returned to his posture instantly, a terrifyingly rapid re-masking that made Roxie’s stomach twist with a sudden, unexpected spike of empathy.

He didn't look at her as he walked back to the hearth, picking up his crystal tumbler from the mantle.

Christian took a slow, deliberate sip of his scotch, the ice clinking against the glass with a sharp, rhythmic sound. He turned his body toward the floating black staircase that led to the upper suites.

As he reached the first step, he paused, turning his head just enough to look back down at her.

His eyes didn't find her face. Instead, they tracked slowly, heavily down the length of her body, his gaze deliberately lingering on the wide, stretched-out hem of her oversized gray sweater where it pooled over her bare, pale thighs.

"Get some sleep, Roxie," he murmured, his tone carrying a strange, new layer of dark, possessive amusement that made her skin prickle.

"We have a very long, very intimate performance to give tomorrow."

Roxie didn't answer. She stood up abruptly, her heart slamming against her ribs, and stormed up the stairs past him, her bare feet making no sound against the timber, desperately trying to escape the suffocating weight of his sudden, predatory focus.

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