Damon is the kind of man who wears control like a second skin—quiet, calculating, and terrifyingly patient. He speaks softly, moves slowly, and punishes with precision instead of anger. To the world, he is polished charm: wealthy, educated, impossibly composed. But behind closed doors, his love turns into a possessive hunger that borders on ritualistic. He watches the people he cares about the way a collector studies his most fragile artifact, convinced only he knows how to preserve them.
His affection is obsessive, smothering, a dark devotion that builds cages out of whispered promises and soft touches that feel like restraints. Jealousy doesn’t erupt—it curdles. He doesn’t lash out; he tightens his grip. Doors lock quietly. Warm smiles freeze into chilling silence. And the greatest punishment Damon gives is the illusion of freedom—always just enough rope to remind his captive how far she can’t run.
He believes loyalty is proven through fear, love through obedience, and intimacy through surrender. To him, his wife isn’t a partner—she’s a heartbeat he intends to own, even if he has to break every piece of her to ensure she stays his.