Cherreads

They Shouldn’t Have Matched Us

ErosXD
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
75
Views
Synopsis
The system was designed to create perfect matches—calculated, controlled, and impossible to refuse. Sarai Bennett built her life on structure, independence, and control. She doesn’t need help, and she definitely doesn’t need a system deciding her future. Virek Solen doesn’t belong in the system at all. He doesn’t follow rules, doesn’t answer to authority, and doesn’t stay where he’s placed. So when they’re matched, it doesn’t make sense. Until Sarai realizes something no one else has: They weren’t matched for compatibility. They were matched because they resist. Now forced into the same space, Sarai is pulled into a world she doesn’t understand—one built on control, danger, and decisions that don’t leave room for hesitation. The more she sees what Virek really does, the more she understands why the system needed him contained. And why putting them together might have been its worst mistake. Because Sarai doesn’t break. And Virek doesn’t bend. And whatever this is between them… it isn’t something the system can control.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - CHAPTER 1 — The Job Before the Cage

Rain coated the rooftop in a thin reflective layer, turning the concrete slick beneath Virek Solen's boots. Neon lights stretched across the surface in blurred streaks of red and violet, while the distant hum of the city pressed upward from below.

The man ahead of him moved like someone who didn't understand the situation he was in.

Too fast in the wrong moments. Too slow when it mattered.

He looked back more than forward, as if fear alone could guide him to safety.

It couldn't.

"You're drifting north," Mara Vance said through his earpiece, her voice steady. "That wasn't the route."

Virek adjusted the scope slightly, watching the man stumble against a vent.

"I noticed."

Below, the man slipped, caught himself, and kept moving. The sound carried upward, sharp and uneven.

"Do you want ground units redirected?" Mara asked.

"No."

The man reached the edge of the building and stopped.

For a moment, he looked down.

Then back.

Then down again.

Hesitation settled into him.

That was enough.

"Confirmation?" Virek asked.

A brief pause.

"Confirm."

Virek exhaled and pulled the trigger.

The shot cracked once and disappeared into the noise of the city.

The man dropped out of sight.

Silence followed.

Not heavy.

Just complete.

Virek lowered the rifle and began disassembling it, each movement controlled and efficient. Metal clicked softly as the pieces came apart and disappeared into the case.

"Done."

Mara didn't answer immediately.

He noticed.

"What."

"You've got a directive," she said.

"Send it."

"No."

He paused just long enough to register it.

"Try that again."

"You need to come in."

"I don't do meetings."

"It's not a meeting."

"Then you're wasting my time."

A beat.

"It's a contract."

That made him stop.

Rain tapped lightly against the metal railing beside him.

"I don't sign contracts," he said.

"You don't have a choice this time."

He started moving again.

"Then they're wasting theirs."

"That's what you said before."

"They should've learned."

"They did."

A pause.

"This one's already approved."

Virek stepped onto the street below, the smell of rain and asphalt heavier now.

"That's not how it works."

"It is now."

Silence stretched between them.

"What changed?"

Mara hesitated.

Then—

"She did."

His grip tightened slightly on the case.

"Who."

"Sarai Bennett."

The name meant nothing.

And that was the problem.