Page 138 of Ruined By My Ex's Dad

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By the time Lucas emerged from the bedroom, impeccably groomed despite the early hour, I was sitting at the kitchenisland with coffee and my laptop, working with focused intensity.

"Morning," he said, pressing a kiss to the top of my head before pouring his own coffee. "You're up early."

"Had an idea that wouldn't wait." I continued typing, finishing a thought before looking up. "How attached are you to the living room arrangement?"

He paused, cup halfway to his lips. "I'm not sure I understand the question."

"The furniture. The placement. The whole..." —I gestured vaguely— "aesthetic."

Wariness entered his expression. "Reasonably attached. Why?"

"Because I called Maria Lawrence this morning."

His eyebrows rose. "The designer who did the penthouse originally?"

"The very same." I turned my laptop toward him, showing the sketches she'd already sent through. "I asked her to reimagine the space. Not to erase your preferences, but to integrate mine. To create something that reflects both of us."

He studied the images—renderings that maintained the clean lines he preferred but introduced elements of warmth and color that spoke to my personality. The sterile showcase quality was gone, replaced by something that looked genuinely lived-in while still elegant.

"You contacted my designer." His voice was carefully neutral, giving away nothing of what he might be feeling about this initiative.

"I did." I met his gaze steadily. "Because this needs to beourhome, Lucas. Not yours that I'm visiting. Not mine, that's invaded yours. Ours." I gestured to the images.

"Maria understands your taste intimately. I explained mine. She thinks we can create something that honors both."

He was silent for a long moment, and I tensed slightly, wondering if I'd overstepped. If my attempt to claim space had ventured too far, too fast.

"When can she start?" he finally asked, a slow smile spreading across his features.

Relief washed through me. "She's coming at ten to discuss specifics. I told her we both needed to approve everything."

He set his coffee down, moving to stand before me, hands resting on my thighs as I remained perched on the bar stool. "You continue to surprise me, Savannah Blake."

"Good," I said, wrapping my arms around his neck. "Predictability is boring."

"What other domains of my life are you planning to revolutionize?" His tone was light, but I heard the genuine question beneath.

"All of them," I said simply. "Just as you're revolutionizing mine. That's what partnership means, Lucas—transformation. Growth. Change." I pressed a kiss to his lips. "But always by choice, never by force."

His arms tightened around me, pulling me against his chest. "I'm choosing this," he murmured against my hair. "Choosing you. Choosing us."

As the morning light filled the penthouse—our penthouse, now and in the future—I held that promise close. We were building something neither of us had experienced before—a relationship based not on power or control or dominance, but on mutual recognition. Mutual respect. Mutual transformation.

My phone buzzed with an incoming text from Zoe:

Survival check. Day 2. Has he organized your closet alphabetically by designer yet?

I laughed, showing Lucas the message before typing back:

Still surviving. Hiring designer to rework entire apartment. Send help if I start color-coding my underwear drawer.

Her response came seconds later:

Good God. He's infected you already. Intervention imminent.

Lucas read over my shoulder, a smile playing at his lips. "Should I be offended?"

"Probably." I set the phone aside, turning in his arms. "She thinks you're a bad influence."