Page 126 of Sweet Obsession

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A single drop of vermilion slipped from the edge of my brush and splattered onto the floor.

Just a single flick of paint that bled from my brush onto the floor.

I bent to wipe it and knocked over the jar of turpentine with my elbow.

The glass spun, caught the edge of the table, and crashed to the floor in a slow-motion symphony of chaos. I cursed and reached for a rag, but then

The canvas tilted.

And fell.

Right onto the palette tray.

Paint splattered everywhere, across the floor, the table, my legs, my shirt. Ochre, black, cerulean. A dozen colors exploded across my front like war paint.

I stared down at myself.

Then at the mess.

And for some reason, maybe it was the absurdity, or the silence, or the fact that laughter had become a stranger to me, I burst out laughing.

A real laugh. From deep in my chest. Loud, reckless, ugly even.

“Are you dying?” came a voice behind me, dry as ash.

I froze and turned.

Misha stood in the doorway, arms crossed, one brow arched. There was something dangerously close to a smile playing at the edge of his mouth.

“You’re bleeding paint,” he said flatly. “Is this a ritual sacrifice?”

I blinked at him, breathless from laughter. “If it was, it backfired. I’m the one who got sacrificed.”

He stepped into the room, eyes scanning the carnage. “I gave you a studio. You turned it into a crime scene.”

I wiped a streak of crimson from my cheek with the back of my hand, which only made it worse. “Some people work with inspiration. I work with chaos.”

“No argument there.” He bent down, picked up a shard of glass with two fingers, and dropped it into the trash. “You’re lucky you didn’t set the place on fire.”

“Give it time,” I said sweetly. “It’s only my second day.”

He made a sound—half-scoff, half-laugh—and moved to the sink, grabbing a towel and tossing it to me.

I caught it midair. “Thanks, Mom.”

“You’re welcome, gremlin.”

I grinned and wiped my face. “You know, this was almost a good painting. Before I ruined it with a palette dive.”

Misha stepped over to the easel and studied it, head tilted. “I’ve seen worse. In museums.”

“You’re lying.”

“Of course. But it’s the thought that counts.”

I rolled my eyes and turned back to the canvas, a smile tugging at my lips even as my chest twisted.

Because I knew what today was.