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Chained By Crimson Obsession

Vaanni_Mittal
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
When seventeen-year-old **Kieran Black** transfers into Hollowridge High, he doesn’t arrive quietly—he arrives like a warning. Inked skin, dead-eyed calm, and a reputation stitched together from gangs, drugs, and men who don’t forgive debts. He’s not the misunderstood bad boy. He’s the villain who already chose the dark and burned the map back. Girls orbit him. Teachers fear him. Trouble follows him like a shadow that bites. And then there’s **Alora Hale**—sunlight in human form. Loud laughter. Sharp wit. A girl built from chaos and kindness, juggling dreams and expectations, carrying her parents’ pride on her back like fragile glass. She doesn’t look twice at Kieran Black. She doesn’t flinch. She doesn’t fall. She’s busy living, breathing, surviving. That indifference seals her fate. One glance is all it takes for Kieran to mark her—not as a crush, not as a fling, but as an obsession. The kind that festers. The kind that watches from across rooms. The kind that tightens its grip slowly, lovingly, violently. He calls himself the devil for a reason—and devils don’t admire. They claim. As Alora’s laughter echoes through hallways unaware of the chains being forged around her life, the line between protection and possession dissolves. What begins as watching turns into stalking. Want turns into hunger. And hunger demands blood. Because Kieran Black doesn’t love softly. He loves like a war. And Alora Hale is standing directly in its path. Some obsessions don’t fade. They tighten. They bleed. They drag you under. And once the devil decides you’re his— escape is just another illusion.
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Chapter 1 - Prologue

Prologue —

Alora's POV

Hallways weren't supposed to feel like cages.

Mine did that morning.

I heard the footsteps first. Slow, measured, deliberate. No one moved that way unless they wanted to be noticed—or wanted to intimidate. My pulse quickened, but I tried to ignore it. My feet moved forward, bag heavy on one shoulder, heart heavy on another.

Then he was there.

Kieran Black.

Not the type of boy you forgot the moment he passed, but the type who makes the air bend toward him, who makes the walls shrink and the world feel just a little too small. He didn't rush. He didn't glare. He just stood. And the space around him… it changed.

I froze.

He stepped closer. My instinct screamed at me to move—but the wall was behind me, cold and unyielding, and my path forward was gone. That was his first advantage.

Then his hands came up. One on each side of my head. Not a touch, not gentle. A blockade. A silent claim. The hallway narrowed, my back pressed to the unforgiving concrete. Every breath I took was sharp and shallow. The smell of him—cologne, sweat, and something metallic—hit me like a warning siren.

I swallowed.

"Move," I said. Sharp. Edgy. Full of adrenaline I didn't have the luxury to waste.

He didn't. He leaned in, close enough that I could feel the heat radiating off him, close enough to taste the threat in his silence. His eyes were unreadable, but there was a darkness in them I understood instinctively. This wasn't a boy who liked trouble. This was a boy who was trouble. Lived in it. Wore it like armor.

«Спокойно, солнышко.»

"Easy, sunshine."

"You don't look afraid," he said, voice low and deliberate. Calm. Like a predator testing the perimeter before the kill.

I laughed, brittle and sharp. "Congratulations. You're bad at reading people."

He tilted his head slightly, just enough to make me question whether that was amusement or calculation. «Я давно тебя заметил.»

"I noticed you a long time ago."

"You think you're invisible. You think I wouldn't notice. You're wrong."

I could feel the weight of him, not just his body, but his presence, pressing down on me. My chest tightened, stomach knotted, and my hands clenched into fists at my sides. I wanted to push him. To scream. To disappear. I did none of those things. Sometimes survival isn't about acting—it's about waiting, breathing, keeping your eyes wide open while the danger studies you like a puzzle.

And he was studying me.

"I like that you're loud," he whispered, leaning closer, so close my shoulder brushed against his chest. "It makes it… more interesting when you don't scream."

I wanted to throw up. I wanted to run. I wanted to pretend this wasn't happening.

The first bell rang. Shattering. Merciless. Like it was mocking both of us. Noise rushed back into the hallway—footsteps, chatter, lockers slamming—but Kieran didn't flinch. He didn't move. Not until I blinked, and the moment cracked.

Then he stepped back, hands dropping, expression smoothing into something almost human. Almost.

«Мы ещё поговорим, солнышко.»

"We'll talk again, sunshine."

And then he disappeared into the crowd.

I stayed pressed to the wall long after, fingers clawing at my bag strap, legs trembling like the world had shifted without permission. The hallway had returned to normal, but I hadn't.

That's when I realized: some people don't announce themselves. They just arrive. And once they do… there's no going back.

I didn't scream. I didn't cry. I didn't move.

I only understood one terrifying thing:

Kieran Black wasn't just dangerous.

He was darkness made deliberate.

And I'd just stepped into it.