"Obsessive Virtual Boyfriend Is a Billionaire" Chapter 10
Tuesday evening arrived wrapped in fog thick enough to swallow half the city skyline.
From her apartment window, Ravenfall City looked softened around the edges, all silver light and blurred glass beneath steady rain. Elowen sat cross-legged at her desk with a stylus tucked behind one ear, trying unsuccessfully to finish a confession scene between two characters who refused to kiss despite forty-three chapters of emotional suffering.
"You people are exhausting," she muttered at the screen.
Sunny lifted his head from the rug beside her desk.
"I'm talking about them, not us."
He accepted this calmly and went back to sleep.
Her tablet remained open for another twenty minutes before she finally gave up pretending she could focus. The lines on-screen blurred together every time her attention drifted toward the phone resting beside her keyboard.
Toward Lucien.
That realization should still have embarrassed her.
Instead, it felt oddly natural now.
Over the past few days, he had settled quietly into the shape of her evenings. Messages over tea. Conversations stretched lazily beneath rainfall and city lights. The strange comfort of opening Lumina and immediately finding him waiting.
Waiting specifically for her.
The thought lingered longer than it should have.
Elowen leaned back in her chair and rubbed tiredly at her eyes.
"You know," she told Sunny, "if Sofia ever finds out I'm emotionally attached to both a fictional boy and his suspiciously attractive real-life counterpart, she'll kill me."
Sunny snored softly in response.
"Exactly."
Her phone buzzed before she could spiral further.
Not Lumina this time.
A message from Lucien.
The real Lucien.
Elowen stared at the notification for several full seconds before opening it.
There's a night market near the river tonight. You mentioned once that you liked winter festivals.
Her pulse shifted annoyingly fast.
No greeting.
No awkward lead-in.
Just quiet attention to something she barely remembered mentioning.
Elowen frowned slightly at the screen.
When had she said that?
Then she remembered.
Yesterday morning. While distracted. Halfway through a conversation about childhood traditions and seasonal food while Sunny attempted to steal another pastry from the coffee table.
Lucien remembered all of it.
Every time.
Her fingers hovered briefly over the keyboard before replying.
Are you inviting me somewhere, Mr. Vale?
The typing bubble appeared almost immediately.
Is that strange?
Elowen smiled despite herself.
A little. But not in a bad way.
Several seconds passed.
Then:
I can stop asking if it makes you uncomfortable.
The message softened something immediately inside her chest.
That was the dangerous part about Lucien.
Not the intensity.
The restraint.
He always stepped back the moment discomfort became possible.
Elowen typed before she could overthink herself out of it.
No. I want to go.
The reply came slower this time.
I'll meet you downstairs at seven.
By six-thirty, Elowen had changed outfits four times.
"This is humiliating," she informed her reflection.
The mirror offered no sympathy.
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Nothing looked right suddenly. Too formal. Too casual. Too obvious. She finally settled on a cream sweater beneath a dark coat, loose hair falling around her shoulders because every attempt to tie it up somehow made her look more nervous instead of less.
Sunny watched the process from the bed with visible concern.
"You're judging me too."
His tail thumped once.
At exactly 6:58, there was a knock at her door.
Her stomach flipped immediately.
Ridiculous.
Absolutely ridiculous.
Elowen opened the door.
Lucien stood outside dressed almost entirely in black, one hand tucked loosely into the pocket of his coat while rain-darkened city light framed him from behind. Without the elevator's confined space or the distraction of accidental conversation, she noticed details she'd missed before.
The elegant line of his shoulders.
The faint tiredness beneath his eyes.
The way he looked at her too directly whenever she smiled.
For one suspended second, neither of them spoke.
Then Lucien's gaze softened almost imperceptibly.
"You look beautiful tonight."
The words landed with devastating calm.
No hesitation.
No performance.
No flirtatious grin to soften the impact.
Just honesty.
Heat rushed immediately into Elowen's face.
"Wow," she said faintly. "Okay."
Something dangerously close to amusement flickered through his expression.
"Was that inappropriate?"
"No," she admitted quickly. "Just very effective."
Lucien lowered his gaze briefly in a way that looked strangely relieved.
The elevator ride downstairs felt quieter than usual.
Not awkward.
Aware.
Elowen became absurdly conscious of every small movement beside her—the faint scent of rain and cedar from his coat, the controlled stillness of his posture, the occasional brush of his sleeve near hers whenever the elevator shifted slightly.
She folded her arms tighter around herself mostly to stop noticing.
Outside, the city glowed.
Lanterns stretched across narrow streets near the river market, warm gold reflected against wet pavement while crowds moved slowly between food stalls and paper decorations. Music drifted faintly through the cold air alongside the smell of sugar, grilled meat, and rain-soaked fabric.
"Oh," Elowen breathed softly.
Lucien watched her instead of the market.
"You like it."
"I love this."
Warm light flickered across her face as she turned slowly beneath the hanging lanterns, eyes brightening with the kind of uncomplicated happiness Lucien had spent years memorizing from a distance.
Only now she was beside him.
Close enough to touch.
The thought moved through him with quiet violence.
Elowen drifted naturally toward a small vendor selling prayer ribbons tied to branches beneath a temporary shrine display.
"What's this?" she asked.
The elderly woman behind the table smiled knowingly.
"You write down a wish," she explained. "Then tie the ribbon somewhere high enough for the wind to carry it."
Elowen laughed softly. "That's dangerously romantic."
"You say that like it's a bad thing."
Lucien reached for one of the ribbons before Elowen could.
The old woman handed him two automatically.
Their fingers brushed briefly during the exchange.
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The contact lasted less than a second.
It still altered the atmosphere immediately.
Elowen felt it first.
A faint warmth against her skin.The sudden awareness of how close he stood beside her.
Lucien's breathing changed slightly.
Not enough for anyone else to notice.
Elowen noticed anyway.
She looked up instinctively.
Lucien had gone very still.
Not frozen.
Controlled.
Like someone holding tension carefully beneath the surface.
"You okay?" she asked softly.
His eyes lifted to hers.
"Yes."
The answer came too quickly.
Elowen studied him for another second before letting it go.
The old woman handed them pens.
"Make sure the wish matters," she said. "Otherwise the wind ignores it."
Elowen smiled faintly and stepped aside toward the lantern-lit railing overlooking the river.
Rain drifted lightly across the water below while music echoed somewhere farther down the market street. Around them, strangers laughed, couples wandered between stalls, and prayer ribbons fluttered softly overhead like fragments of color caught in the wind.
Elowen looked down at the blank ribbon in her hands.
Then she laughed quietly.
"What do people even write on these?"
Lucien glanced toward her.
"The truth, probably."
The answer settled strangely beneath her ribs.
She looked at him again.
The lantern light softened him in dangerous ways. Without the hard shadows of the elevator or the distance of the café, Lucien looked less intimidating tonight. Still quiet. Still observant. But tired too somehow, in a way that made his composure feel less like confidence and more like armor.
"What would you wish for?" she asked.
Lucien's gaze held hers for one long moment.
Then he looked away first.
"You'd think it was unreasonable."
Something tightened unexpectedly in her chest.
"You don't know that."
A faint smile touched his mouth.
"I know myself well enough."
The answer lingered between them while rain moved softly through the ribbons overhead.
Elowen looked back down at her own.
She wrote slowly. I want the people I love to stay safe.
Simple.
Honest.
When she finished, she glanced sideways toward Lucien.
He had already folded his ribbon closed.
"You're hiding it?"
"Yes."
"That means it's dramatic."
"It means it's private."
"Same thing."
A quiet laugh escaped him.
God.
That sound was becoming dangerous to her.
Together, they tied the ribbons among hundreds of others twisting gently in the wind.
Elowen's fingers slipped slightly against the wet fabric while reaching higher.
Before she could steady herself, Lucien's hand closed carefully around her wrist.
Warm.
Firm enough to support her immediately.
The breath caught in her throat before she could stop it.
Lucien's hand remained there for half a second too long.
Then he released her slowly.
"You almost slipped."
His voice sounded lower now.
Closer somehow.
Elowen nodded once, suddenly very aware of the pulse beneath her skin where his fingers had been.
"Right."
Neither of them moved immediately.
The market noise blurred faintly around them.
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Rain.
Lantern light.
River water moving black beneath the bridge.
Lucien's gaze dropped briefly toward her mouth before returning to her eyes.
Elowen noticed.
Heat climbed slowly into her chest.
Then her phone buzzed sharply in her pocket.
The moment shattered instantly.
Elowen stepped back too fast while fumbling for the screen.
A Lumina notification glowed brightly across it.
Lucien is waiting for you tonight.
Silence.
Elowen stared at the phone.
Then at the man standing beside her.
Then back at the notification.
Something strange moved briefly through her stomach.
Not fear exactly.
Just disorientation.
Lucien's attention rested calmly on the screen.
"You still play often?" he asked.
His tone remained perfectly even.
Too even.
"Uh… yeah."
The rain suddenly felt colder.
Elowen locked the phone quickly and shoved it back into her pocket.
"Sorry. The timing on that was horrifying."
Lucien's gaze lingered on her face for another second.
Then he said quietly, "You don't have to apologize for things that make you happy."
The warmth returned instantly despite herself.
How did he keep doing that?
They wandered the market for another hour afterward, drifting between lanterns and food stalls while conversation unfolded more naturally than Elowen wanted to admit. Lucien listened the way he always did—with full attention, as though every small thing she said mattered more than the noise around them.
She told him about childhood festivals.
About learning to draw by copying manga panels beneath blankets with a flashlight.
About Sunny chewing through an entire sketchbook once during puppyhood.
Lucien remembered everything.
By the time they walked back toward the apartment building, rain had softened into mist around them.
The city looked quieter now.
More intimate.
Elowen glanced sideways toward him while they waited at a crosswalk.
"You know," she said carefully, "I had fun tonight."
Lucien looked at her immediately.
The expression in his eyes changed with such visible relief that her chest ached unexpectedly.
"So did I."
The honesty in his voice made her smile.
And somewhere beneath the quiet warmth of the evening, beneath lantern light and careful conversation and rain drifting softly across the city—
something dangerous deepened between them.
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