The timestamped was hours ago.
Hesawme.
Maybe when Declan carried me. He was the last to touch me—lifting me like I weighed nothing, letting me breathe again.
But earlier—there was also Graham.
I bumped into him and he called mePops.Flirted like I’ll stop turning him down.
That happenedinsidethe courthouse, in a secured floor accessible only by employees with badges.
But Declan touched me there too—pulled me away like a wolf marking territory.
Could Graham have followed us?
Could it be someone else in the DA’s office?
I shake off the spiral as a third message pings:
UNKNOWN: I also don’t like to be kept waiting.
I exhale—sharp. Cold.
Anger replaces fear.
Not today, buddy.
I’ve walked through blood. Held myself together with paperclips and spite.
I’m not here to entertain some delusional man-child with a burner phone and a savior complex.
I type without thinking:
POPPY: Wrong number. There is no Sunny here.
Then I stare at it like I summoned a demon.
Which, honestly, I probably have.
The screen blinks again. Buzzes—impatient.
UNKNOWN: Good girls get rewards. But I love to punish.
UNKNOWN: Are you going to make me punish you, Sunny?
My stomach twists into a stylish, stressed little bow.
I should delete it. Or report it. Or chuck the phone into a storm drain like a normal person would.
Instead, I start typing.
I don’t know what I’m planning—something clever. Something that says:
I am not your Sunny, and if you breathe near me again, I’ll smite you with the justice system and a very aggressive purse.
But before I hit send, the driver’s door yanks open. Declan slides in—still on the phone, voice sharp enough to leave paper cuts.
I nearly drop the flip phone. “Oh my?—”