Current location: Novel nest His Favorite Anti-Fan Chapter 3

"His Favorite Anti-Fan" Chapter 3

Chapter 3: The Leftover Cache

The production tent was a cavern of shivering shadows and humming diesel heaters.

Outside, the Icelandic night shoot had devolved into a grueling marathon of endurance, the director demanding take after take beneath the artificial moon of a massive crane light. Inside the canvas walls, the air smelled of stale catering coffee, damp wool, and frozen mud.

Christian Vance stepped into the tent, the heavy flap snapping shut behind him against the howling wind.

He was exhausted, the artificial snow still clinging to the dark curls at his temples, but his posture remained rigid. He was looking for the latest script rewrites—the writers had been hacking away at the third-act confrontation all evening, and he refused to speak lines that felt like cheap melodrama.

He approached the main folding table, littered with half-empty paper cups and discarded call sheets.

"Mr. Vance! I—I have the pages right here, sir! Just printing the final scene," a voice squeaked from the corner.

Oliver, a twenty-something production assistant with permanently bloodshot eyes and a faded beanie pulled low over his ears, stumbled forward. Oliver looked like a man who survived entirely on three hours of fractured sleep and pure, unadulterated panic.

His hands shook as he dropped a stack of warm, freshly printed paper onto the table, accidentally knocking over a clipboard in the process.

"Calm down, Oliver," Christian said, his voice a low, steady anchor that only seemed to make the boy more nervous.

"The pages are fine. Go find some coffee before you collapse."

"Yes, sir. Thank you, sir. Sorry, sir," Oliver muttered, practically tripping over a thick black camera cable as he scrambled out of the tent into the freezing dark.

Christian sighed, picking up the script pages. But as he reached for the stapled paper, his hand hovered.

Resting right beside the printer was a sleek, silver iPad encased in a familiar, scuffed black leather cover. It wasn't production property. It belonged to Roxie. She had been frantically typing on it between setups before being called out for her close-up twenty minutes ago.

The screen was not dark. It was fully awake, casting a cold, blue glow against the canvas wall. She had forgotten to lock it in her rush to set.

Christian told himself to look away. He told himself that a gentleman did not pry into the digital scraps of his co-star's life. But his ice-blue eyes caught the distinct, dark interface of a private, firewalled application.

He froze.

At the top of the screen, displayed in a bold, aggressive font, was a digital handle: @Anti-Christian_666. Beneath it, the words Dashboard: Creator Mode gleamed in high-contrast white.

The silence inside the tent became absolute. The distant roar of the wind and the faint, muffled shouts of the crew outside vanished, replaced by the loud, rhythmic thudding of Christian's own pulse.

The shift in the room was not physical; it was a terrifying, instantaneous realignment of absolute power.

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Christian lowered his script pages. Slowly, deliberately, he reached out and took the iPad into his hands.

His breath hitched in his throat.

The screen was a graveyard of his own anatomy. He wasn't looking at a collection of standard paparazzi photos or typical internet insults. He was looking at three years of raw, explicit, digital art—hundreds of high-resolution, charcoal-style sketches and hyper-realistic digital paintings dedicated entirely to him.

He scrolled, his thumb moving with agonizing slowness, his mind struggling to process the sheer, suffocating intimacy of the cache.

The artwork was stunningly, violently beautiful. It was also completely unrated. In one digital painting, he was rendered from the waist up, his three-piece suit torn open, his chest bearing detailed, high-contrast shadows that perfectly mapped the muscular contours of his real body.

In another, his hands—the long, elegant fingers he used so precisely on stage—were rendered in stark monochrome, gripped tightly around a pair of invisible wrists.

Every single piece was an exercise in intense, dark-academia eroticism. But it wasn't the explicit nature of the drawings that made Christian's chest tighten; it was the realization behind them.

The internet called him an untouchable god, a flawless, clinical specimen of British aristocracy. His father called him a disappointing corporate asset. But this account—his worst, most venomous online executioner—was the only person alive who actually looked at him.

The artist had captured the exact, weary droop of his left eyelid when he was tired. The specific, tense way his shoulder blades locked when he was angry. The tiny, crescent-shaped scar beneath his jaw.

Roxie didn't just hate him. She was pathologically obsessed with him. She had dismantled his public persona and reconstructed him in the dark, cell by cell, into a creature that belonged entirely to her imagination.

Christian’s cynicism, his deeply ingrained armor against the hollow praise of the industry, completely dissolved. In its place, a dark, territorial, and fiercely protective obsession took root.

She has no idea, he thought, his chest heaving silently. She stands three feet away from me in the snow, spitting poison, while her mind houses a temple of my skin.

He pulled his private smartphone from his pocket. With steady fingers, he opened his personal, completely unverified burner account.

He typed in her handle and hit the blue 'Follow' button, cementing his permanent, invisible presence in her digital shadow.

Before he could close the app on her iPad, his eyes caught the bottom of the dashboard. A local draft folder was open. Inside was a newly saved, unpolished sketch of him leaning against a wardrobe door, his shirt half-unbuttoned, titled simply: "The Wardrobe Trap."

Christian stared at the title, a slow, predatory calculation clicking into place behind his eyes. He memorized every line of the draft, every curve of the shadow she had drawn.

Footsteps crunched in the frozen mud outside. The tent flap twitched.

Christian smoothly slid his phone back into his pocket. With a soft, ominous click, he snapped the black leather cover of the iPad shut, leaving it exactly where she had left it.

As Oliver poked his head back into the tent, clutching a steaming paper cup, he stopped dead in his tracks.

Christian Vance was standing by the table, the script pages in his hand, but his usual cold, distant expression was completely gone.

Instead, a dangerously beautiful, razor-sharp smile was breaking across the actor's face in the dim light of the tent—a look of pure, unchecked dominance that made the young production assistant instantly want to turn around and run back into the storm.

"Your script pages are perfect, Oliver," Christian murmured, his voice laced with a terrifyingly soft amusement.

"In fact, I think the next scene is going to be absolutely unforgettable."

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