La Vie en Rose [Dark Romance]
Jey has built her reputation on being untouchable - sharp-tongued, stubborn, and impossible to please. Jey has always worn cruelty like armor. Sharp, calculating, and unapologetically ruthless, she thrives on watching others squirm beneath the weight of her words. To her, suffering is proof of her power - a twisted comfort she's unwilling to let go of. The only exception lies in her small circle of loved ones, the few people she protects fiercely. For everyone else, Jey is the storm they dread walking into.
Then comes Angela.
Smart, self-possessed, and infuriatingly untouchable, Angela doesn't flinch at Jey's cruelty but laughs at the sight of it. Where others break, she remains calm; where others scramble to please, she stands her ground. She meets Jey's cruelty with quiet resilience, and her silence speaks louder than any retaliation. Instead of feeding Jey's need for control, Angela denies her the satisfaction completely - humbling her in ways no one else ever could.
What begins as irritation turns into fascination, fascination into longing. Slowly, without realizing it, Jey begins to soften - her sharpness dulling in Angela's presence, her need to dominate replaced by a strange urge to protect. Angela forces her, without a single demand, to be better. To be kinder. To be worthy.
It's not the suffering of others that gives Jey strength anymore - it's the thought of Angela, the only person who ever dared to stand unshaken before her.