
MY UNDOING
- Genre: Billionaire/CEO
- Author: OJthewriter
- Chapters: 66
- Status: Ongoing
- Age Rating: 18+
- 👁 62
- ⭐ 7.5
- 💬 1
Annotation
To the world, I am just Macey Carter. Mason’s little sister. Samantha’s best friend. The girl who somehow landed her dream job as lead designer at Seams & Touch. I smile, I work, and I fit neatly into the boxes everyone expects me to occupy. Inside, I am someone else entirely. I am someone who aches to be broken down and rebuilt by a man who knows exactly how to use me. I crave submission so badly it feels like a sickness, a fire consuming everything else. My ex never understood. David was too soft, too careful. He wanted to hold hands and make promises, while I wanted to kneel and beg, to surrender fully to someone who could take without mercy. When he left me, I did not fight. Two years later, I am twenty-three, single, untouched, and suffocating under desires I cannot admit out loud. Then there is Damien Blackwell. My boss’s older brother. Ten years older, sharper, and rougher, with a reputation that makes people whisper when he walks by. Every glance carries a warning, a threat, and a promise. I should not want him, but I do. God, I do. He is the finest man I have ever seen. I have seen all of him, taking a woman apart like she did not exist. I hated her because I would have begged for more. He promised he would stay away from me. That ended the night he caught me touching myself in my office, knowing he was watching. Now, we circle each other like predators. He wants me filthy. I want him cruel. Secrets rot from the inside. When we finally give in, the fallout is merciless. Families recoil. Coworkers whisper. The company teeters on scandal. Through it all, Damien will not let me go. He wants me ruined, owned, and entirely his. Can love survive sin and shame, or will Damien Blackwell be my undoing?
Chapter 1
MACEY
I sat behind my desk, pretending to work, but in reality, I was watching from the corner of my eye. My boss, Zinna, was laughing with her brother in the open space outside my office. He was with another girl, a blonde. Of course. I bit the inside of my cheek, annoyed. Seriously, how many blondes existed in the world? And why had Damien gone through all of them except me? Not that I wanted to be on his ridiculous roster. Not that I wanted him at all.
Except my thighs pressed together automatically just thinking about him.
I hated how my body reacted before my brain had the chance to shout at it to behave. It was humiliating how one careless glance in his direction could send heat curling low in my stomach, like a match flaring against dry kindling. I told myself it was just chemistry, nothing more. Even chemistry had no right to be this reckless and consuming.
I huffed and dragged my focus back to my laptop. Our newest client was driving me insane. She wanted vintage lace and at the same time no lace. She wanted roses embroidered, but also her late mother’s face painted on her veil. May her mother’s soul rest in peace, but someone needed to tell this woman to let the poor woman remain peacefully dead.
The request itself bordered on grotesque. Who in their right mind wanted their mother’s face hovering like a ghostly watermark over wedding vows? But apparently, people with too much money and too little sense existed in droves, and they all seemed to find their way to Seams & Touch.
And of course, I was the one who got stuck with turning that disaster into a design. Lead designer at Seams & Touch, thank you very much. Zinna had practically shoved the client into my lap with a sweet smile that said, good luck, sucker. I almost admired her for it. Almost.
At least I only had to sketch it. The seamstress who had to actually bring it to life deserved my prayers and maybe even a shrine.
I stretched in my chair, letting my neck roll lazily, and sneaked another glance toward the lounge. My eyes searched instinctively for him. Zinna was gone now, leaving only Damien. Just my luck, I turned my head at the exact wrong time. Damien was walking away with the blonde, his palm resting firmly on her *ss.
The sight punched the air right out of me. Heat shot through me embarrassingly fast, coiling sharp and sweet at the base of my spine. My body betrayed me, as it always did when it came to him. I clenched my thighs tighter under my desk, furious with myself for caring at all.
D*mn Damien. D*mn his smile. D*mn his hands, those hands that looked like they could unravel me in seconds.
I snapped my gaze back to my screen and glared at the lifeless lines of my sketch until they blurred. No. I was not going there. Not today. I needed a break. Coffee would fix this. Coffee and maybe ice water over my head.
I left my office and headed to the kitchen, rehearsing a long lecture in my head about how I would tell Zinna we needed normal clients with sane wedding dreams. Reasonable ones. Brides who did not treat veils like haunted canvases for their dead relatives. My speech was shaping up beautifully, dripping with sarcasm and indignation, when the second I stepped into the kitchen, all of it vanished.
I froze.
Damien was there. And so was Blondie.
The room was charged before I even processed what I was seeing. They were facing each other. His body was angled forward, hers leaning back, but neither was willing to budge. Damien’s voice was low and clipped, the kind of tone that brokered no argument. “I said wait in the car,” he said.
Blondie tossed her hair like she was auditioning for a shampoo commercial. Her arms were crossed tight over her chest, her chin jutted in defiance. “And I said I am not waiting like some pathetic side chick,” she said.
Her words dripped with entitlement, but they sounded hollow in the face of Damien’s authority. His stare was lethal, like he could pin her to the spot without lifting a finger. Still, she did not fold. Blondie must have thought she was special. They all did, until they were not.
I moved toward the coffee maker, making no effort to pretend I was not eavesdropping. Subtlety was not my strong suit, and frankly, how often did I get front-row seats to Damien putting one of his girls in her place? If this was a show, I was not about to miss the climax.
The girl must have felt my eyes on her, because she whipped around suddenly, her gaze snapping to mine like daggers. “Can you please focus on your own business and stop staring?”
I blinked, my hand frozen halfway to the sugar jar. Excuse me? This Barbie had the nerve. Sarcasm bubbled on my tongue, sharp and ready to launch. I was two seconds away from verbally peeling her like an orange when Damien’s voice sliced through the air.
“Quiet,” he said.
One word landed like a whip crack. The girl’s jaw fell open, outrage coloring her cheeks, but she did not speak again. Then his eyes shifted to me. Immediately, his whole demeanor softened, the iron in his tone replaced with something gentler. “Sorry, Macey,” he said.
My heart forgot to beat. For a single second, the world tilted, and I stood suspended in the gravity of him. Damien apologized to me. To me. The girl was still there, fuming silently, and yet he chose to be polite to me.
It was a small thing, a blink-and-you-miss-it moment, but to me, it was monumental.
Without another word, Damien reached for Blondie’s arm and steered her firmly out of the kitchen. She sputtered some protest as he dragged her along, her heels clicking indignantly against the tile, but it did not matter. He was already gone.
The silence that followed was deafening.
I stared after them, my pulse thrumming in my ears, and muttered under my breath, “Good riddance.”
The corners of my mouth betrayed me, curving into a smile I tried to suppress. Damien had looked at me. Spoken to me. Defended me.
God help me, I already wanted more.
I stood there another moment, coffee forgotten, my body still buzzing from the intensity he left in his wake. The kitchen smelled faintly of him. Clean, sharp cologne, the kind that clung to expensive suits and made women weak-kneed. It lingered in the air like a phantom touch, teasing me, daring me to breathe it in deeper.
I curled my fingers into fists, as if I could squeeze the warmth flooding my stomach straight out of me. “You are ridiculous,” I whispered harshly. “Absolutely ridiculous.”
Finally, I forced myself to move. I poured the coffee, more for distraction than caffeine. The spoon clinked against the ceramic as I stirred in sugar, and I noticed the faint tremble in my hand. That only irritated me further. Since when did I, Macey Williams, lose composure over a man who treated fidelity like a foreign word?
I carried the coffee back to my office and shut the door with more force than necessary. Sitting again at my desk, I glared at the half-finished sketch glowing on my tablet. My client’s mother’s face looked more like a smudged ghost than a tribute. Perfect metaphor for my life. Half-finished, smudged, unflattering.
I dropped my stylus and leaned back, closing my eyes. For a moment, I let myself imagine it. Damien, walking into my office, shutting the door behind him. His voice was smooth and dangerous, saying my name not with politeness but with hunger. His hand, not on some random blonde’s *ss, but on mine.
My thighs clenched again, traitorous.
The fantasy shattered when someone knocked lightly at my door. My eyes flew open.
“Macey?” It was Zinna.
I straightened immediately, smoothing down my blouse like I had been caught naked. “Come in,” I said.
She peeked her head in, her smile too bright, too knowing. “How is the sketch coming along?”
“Wonderful,” I lied smoothly, angling the tablet away. “Really capturing the essence.”
Her smile widened, but she did not push. Instead, she tilted her head. “Did you see Damien?”
I froze. My lips parted and then closed again. She asked it so casually, but her gaze sharpened like she was gauging my reaction.
“Briefly,” I said finally, sipping my coffee to mask the tremor in my voice.
She hummed. “He is trouble, you know.”
I scoffed. “You do not say.”
But the look in her eyes lingered, heavy with something unspoken. Like she might know more about my thoughts than I wanted her to know. Like she had seen the way I watched him when I thought no one noticed.
When she left, I sagged back in my chair. My heart was still racing, but not from Zinna. From Damien. From the fact that he had chosen me in that tiny moment in the kitchen, however meaningless it probably was to him.
To me, it meant everything.
I hated that.
Wanting Damien felt like standing at the edge of a cliff. One step closer and I would not just fall. I would crash.
But oh, how tempting the fall looked.
Chapter 2
DAMIEN
This girl, whatever her name was, was getting on my nerves. Bad. The kind of bad where every word she spoke scraped against me like nails on glass. She stood there with her chin lifted, acting as if she had the right to challenge me. Seriously, she needed to know her place. I kept wondering when, exactly, I had given her the impression she could talk back to me.
The sharpness in her tone when she threw shade at Macey crossed a line. That was the line no one crossed. I did not care about much, but disrespecting Macey in front of me was like walking into a fire and daring me to throw gasoline on it. Macey was untouchable. Everyone knew that. Everyone except her.
She glared at me, testing how far she could push before I snapped. Her eyes were dark and challenging, almost begging me to put her in her place. “She is the one, isn’t she?” she hissed, every syllable dripping with venom. “The reason you touched me that night. She is blonde. Like me.”
Her











