LOGINAdeline's POV
--- Two hours later I'm back in my jeans and sweater, but I can still feel that silk against my skin. Matteo waits by a table covered in place settings. A sprawl of forks, knives, and crystal arranged with surgical precision. I have no idea what any of them are for. "Welcome to etiquette crash course." He gestures to the table. "I'll keep it simple." Nothing about this table is simple. I must look panicked because he laughs. "At my first formal dinner, I grabbed the fish fork for salad. Still here." That helps. Sort of. "Why are there so many forks?" "Formality loves complexity." He picks up the first one. "But it's really about pacing. Start from the outside and work your way in." He walks me through it. Salad fork. Fish fork. Main course. Dessert fork resting horizontally above the plate. My head spins. "The wine glasses." He indicates each shape. "Water. White. Red. Champagne. Larger bowl for red because it needs to breathe. Smaller for white because of temperature." I pull out my phone and take notes. No chance I'm holding all this in my head. "Napkin goes in your lap the moment you sit. If you excuse yourself, place it on your chair. When the meal ends, leave it to the left of your plate. Loosely." "Why loosely?" "Folding says you're trying too hard." He sets the fork down. "Loose says you've done this a hundred times." Every rule is a message. Every gesture carries subtext. I'm learning a language nobody told me existed. I think about the safety pin holding my zipper together. The ramen waiting at home. All these forks. If I make it through tomorrow without humiliating myself, it will be the greatest achievement of my academic career. "What about conversation? What am I supposed to talk about?" Matteo perches on the table's edge. "Ask questions. Let them talk about themselves. Avoid politics. Religion. Money unless they bring it up first. Keep it light until you read the room." "And if I say something wrong?" "You will." His voice is calm. "Everyone does. The trick is not panicking when it happens." "That's not reassuring." "It's honest." His expression settles. "These people aren't better than you. They just had more time to learn the choreography." His directness catches me off guard. I expected Albert's world to run entirely on performance and hierarchy. Matteo feels like someone who remembers standing exactly where I'm standing. I fidget with my phone. "Can I ask you something?" "Of course." "What's he actually like?" I watch Matteo's face carefully. "Not the headlines. Not the office. Who is he really?" Matteo goes quiet long enough that I almost take it back. "Complicated," he says. "Brilliant. More alone than anyone around him understands." "He doesn't seem lonely." "That's exactly what makes it lonely." He meets my eyes. "He's surrounded by people who want access, leverage, proximity. You're the first in a long time who wanted nothing from him." "I wanted to not go to jail." "But you didn't know who he was. You needed out of an embarrassing situation." Matteo starts stacking the practice plates. "That registers differently than you'd think." I want to press him further. The door opens before I can. Colette walks in, garment bag in hand. Even Matteo straightens almost imperceptibly. "We have the final fitting," she announces. "Mr. Rossi wishes to approve before Saturday." Everything in my chest seizes. "He's coming here?" "He is already here." She unzips the bag. Midnight blue silk catches the light. Every instinct fires at once. Grab the bag. Find the subway. Send Albert a message explaining why this whole arrangement is absurd. My feet don't move. I take the dress. I change in the private bathroom off the conference room. The fabric settles over me more easily this time, like it's learned the shape of me. I look in the mirror. The woman looking back could walk into a gala. Could stand beside Albert Rossi without the whole room knowing she took the train here. She looks certain. Like she arrived at this exact moment on purpose. I wish I felt a fraction of what she looks like. I step back into the conference room. Colette circles me immediately, adjusting the skirt by degrees. "Perfect. Don't move." The room holds its breath. The door opens. I don't turn around. I don't need to. Cedar and something warmer underneath it. My pulse picks up before I've registered why. Albert steps into the room. He stops in the doorway. His eyes find me through the mirror and stay. Four seconds. Five. His jaw moves once, the smallest possible adjustment. Gone before I can be certain I saw it. He crosses the room. Stops closer than necessary. His fingers brush the fabric at my shoulder. The contact lasts less than a second. "Fine work, Colette." His voice drops a pitch. "She'll do." The words should land as dismissal. They don't. His eyes haven't moved from me since he walked in. "Tomorrow's the charity gala," he says, redirecting to Matteo. "Car picks her up at six thirty." He moves toward the door. Pauses. Turns back. Our eyes meet in the mirror's reflection. "You look perfect." Low. Almost involuntary. The words out before the wall came back up. Then he's gone. Door shut. I stare at the space he left. Colette makes a knowing tsk. "That went well." "He barely said anything." "Exactement." She lifts the dress from my shoulders. "Mr. Rossi says very little. You must learn to hear what he does not say." The way *perfect* came out. The speed at which he recovered and left. I keep running both on repeat. --- Twenty minutes later I'm back in my regular clothes. Colette hands over the garment bag with the gravity of someone passing something irreplaceable. "Saturday." She holds my gaze. "Remember to breathe." "And if I mess up? Wrong fork, dumb comment, trip in heels?" "You recover. Smile. Move forward." Her expression softens. "The real mistake is impersonating someone you are not. Stop performing fear. It doesn't suit you." Matteo walks me to the elevator, carrying the garment bag because both my hands death-grip my bag strap. "You'll be fine tomorrow." He says it the way people say things they actually mean. "Every person in that room is performing something. You're newer to the production." The elevator arrives. "Adeline." I turn back. "Don't misread him," Matteo says. "He doesn't get that close without a reason." The doors close before I can ask what he means. I ride down alone, watching the floor numbers descend. The dress across my arms feels heavier than silk has any right to. The screen lights up. *Details for tomorrow: Car arrives 6:30. Hair and makeup team will meet you at your apartment at 2 PM. Everything is arranged. All you need to do is show up. M.* Hair and makeup. At my apartment. The subway carries me home through the familiar underground dark. When I surface, my street looks exactly the same. Cracked front steps. Graffiti across the mailboxes. The smell of someone's dinner drifting down from the second floor. I climb the stairs. Key in the lock. My studio greets me with its usual wreckage. Books on every surface. This morning's coffee mug in the sink. Real life, preserved. I hang the garment bag on the back of my door. It looks out of place here. Too elegant for the chipped paint and secondhand furniture. A reminder of everything I'm about to walk into. I open a message from Mom I haven't read since 2pm. *How's the studying going, sweetheart? Don't forget to eat real food. Not ramen.* Guilt, immediate. *Going well. Promise I'm eating properly. Love you.* I make ramen anyway. Sit on my bed with the bowl balanced on my knees and stare at the dress. Tomorrow that dress carries me into a room full of people who have spent their entire lives learning rules I learned this afternoon. People who will assess me in the first three seconds and file their verdict away before I've opened my mouth. And somewhere in that room, Albert Rossi will be watching. The way he watches everything. *He doesn't get that close without a reason.* I think about the warning text again. The untraceable number. The black car that vanished before I could blink. Someone knew I'd end up here. Knew before I did. I wash the bowl. Pull on my oldest pajamas. Get into bed. The dress hangs in my direct line of sight, a different version of me waiting on the back of a door. I reach over and turn off the light. In the dark, I can still see its outline. Tomorrow I walk into Albert Rossi's world for the first time. I have to survive. It's a dangerous place to be.Albert's POV---It has been five days since I was last at her apartment.The threat is far from over, and Matteo is still pulling at authorization codes and funding trails while our lawyers build cases against names we do not even have yet.And somehow, despite all of it, the only thing I've really been counting is the number of hours until I see her again.Tonight's investor dinner is mandatory because Jonathan Whitmore will be there to discuss the Henderson merger alongside the usual corporate parade.I shrug into my jacket first, choosing a charcoal Tom Ford instead of standard black because it looks precise without appearing severe. My phone stays propped against the mirror with emails scrolling while I work one cufflink through its hole and then the other, hands moving without needing my attention anymore.Matteo appears in the doorway while I loop the watch strap through its buckle, pushing the pin into place."The car is ready, sir. Dinner starts at seven.""I'm aware."He doe
Albert's POVSeven PM.My father calls at 8:12 that morning and tells me to replace her.Not directly, of course.Men like Lorenzo Rossi prefer disappointment over orders.“Bring someone credible,” he says calmly while Manhattan moves beneath my office windows. “Someone who strengthens your position instead of complicating it.”A scholarship student from Queens was never supposed to survive this long in my world.The problem is that somewhere between the contract and the headlines and the six carefully planned events, she stopped feeling temporary.And tonight, for the first time since this arrangement began, I am going to her without an excuse.—The board meeting starts thirty minutes later.Quarterly projections exceed expectations. The numbers are strong. The New York expansion is ahead of schedule. Lorenzo appears via video from Milan, silver hair precisely slicked, expression unreadable as I move through the presentation.Everything runs smoothly until Richard Ashcroft sets dow
Adeline's POV---The 7 train reeks of Sunday morning regret.I wedge myself between a man hauling groceries and a teenager drowning in bass through his headphones. We jerk away from the station, the old rhythm. My hand finds the exact pole I grabbed every weekday for four years of commutes.Some things don't change.The train lurches. Bodies shift. My reflection surfaces in the scratched window.Everything about me looks wrong here.Hair falling in the soft waves Colette insisted would hold better for events. Manicured nails because Matteo mentioned photographers love hand shots.Last night, the contract ended. Six events, one month, done.Albert sent me home in the car, said goodnight at the curb like it was any other evening. Like we hadn't spent the last month becoming whatever it is neither of us has named.I didn't sleep. Kept replaying his voice. The way he answered my question, turned my hand over, let go.So this morning I got on the 7 train. Because I needed something real b
Albert's POV—The champagne glass explodes against the marble fireplace. Crystal shatters across the penthouse floor.Matteo doesn't flinch. Neither do I.Amber whiskey drips slowly down the stone while the image burns from the tablet in my hand straight into my skull.Adeline.Inside the backseat of my car.Emerald silk against black leather. Her face turned toward the window. Unaware someone was photographing her through tinted glass from across the street.Timestamped twelve minutes ago.Beneath it: Curious what the board would think about the CEO's judgment.Wind pushes through the open balcony doors hard enough to stir the papers on my desk. Manhattan glows below us in fractured gold and white. Forty floors down, traffic keeps moving like nothing in the world has shifted.But it has.Because this is no longer gossip. This is surveillance. Someone with resources and patience running this.I set the tablet down carefully before I put it through the window."Route?"Matteo's voice
Adeline's POV—The lecture hall falls silent when I walk in.Whispers cut off halfway. Laptop screens tilt down seconds late. Someone in the second row pretends very hard not to stare at me.My photo is open on six different phones before I even reach my seat.Albert's hand at my waist. My face turned toward his. The headline underneath in violent capital letters.ROSSI'S NEW OBSESSIONHeat crawls slowly up my neck. I keep walking anyway.Back straight. Chin level. Like I don't hear the whisper from the left side of the room."That's her." "She actually came to class.""I heard she met him at some charity thing.""No, coffee shop.""False info, it's a hotel.”Amazing how quickly strangers invent your life once they think it belongs to them.I slide into my seat beside Clara. Her eyes move across my face. "You look exhausted.”"I got three hours of sleep.""Three?""I had an existential crisis at four in the morning.""Reasonable.”My notebook lies open in front of me. Blank.Profess
Albert's POV --- I almost cancel the dinner twice before the first guest arrives. The second time, my thumb is already over Matteo's contact when the elevator doors open behind me. Too late now. The private dining room stretches across the fortieth floor, all glass and candlelight and carefully controlled privacy. Heavy curtains frame the skyline. Security swept the room an hour ago. Staff signed NDAs before noon. Phones stay outside these walls. Nothing leaves this table unless I allow it. Usually that comforts me. Tonight my fingers drum once against the whiskey glass before I stop them. Across the room, the city burns gold beneath the dark. Manhattan always looks clean from above. Distance hides the rot. Matteo steps beside me quietly. "Car's three minutes out.” I check my watch anyway. Then again thirty seconds later. Matteo notices. Says nothing. Smart man. The guest list tonight is small by design. Senator Williams. David Chang. Elena Vasquez. Three people who built e







