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Chapter 2

Author: Dorian
last update publish date: 2026-03-26 15:22:25

He reached into his jacket.

My body went rigid. Every instinct screamed at me to run, to get back in my car, to floor it and never look back. But my legs wouldn't move. I was frozen there on the empty street, watching his hand disappear into the dark fabric, waiting for something I couldn't name.

He pulled out a business card.

Black. Thick paper. Silver lettering. He held it between two fingers, not offering it yet, just letting me see it.

My heart was still pounding, but the spike of pure terror subsided into something almost worse. Confusion. Fear, still there, but mixed with the slow realization that I had no good options. None.

"Adrian Volkov," he said, and even his name sounded like a warning. "That's who I am. Since you asked."

"I didn't ask."

"You implied." He turned the card over in his fingers, examining it like he was deciding whether I deserved to touch it. "You also accused me of following you, vandalized my property, and created a situation that could have gotten both of us killed. All because you were scared."

I opened my mouth to respond, but nothing came out. Because he was right. I had done all of those things. And now I was standing here, shaking, with no money and no plan and a car that was about to fall apart.

"I'm not following you," he said flatly. "I don't need to follow anyone. If I wanted to find you, Miss Vance, I would find you. I wouldn't need to skulk around in a sedan for two weeks."

The way he said my name made my skin prickle. I hadn't told him my name.

"You just said my name," I said slowly. "I didn't tell you my name."

He looked at me for a long moment. Then his mouth curved into something that wasn't quite a smile.

"It's on your registration," he said. "Which is in your glove compartment. Which I can see from here because your door is still open." He nodded toward my car. "I'm not stalking you. I'm observant. There's a difference."

I wanted to argue. I wanted to point out that I'd seen his car behind me for two weeks, that I'd memorized the license plate, that I wasn't crazy. But the way he was looking at me, calm and patient and completely unbothered, made doubt creep in around the edges of my certainty.

What if I was wrong? What if it was a coincidence? What if I'd just rammed my car into a stranger's vehicle because I was tired and scared and my brain had put together a pattern that wasn't there?

"What's it going to be, Miss Vance?"

I blinked. "What?"

He held up the card again. "We can do this the official way. I call the police. They come. They take statements. They run your information. You explain to them why you made an illegal U‑turn and deliberately caused an accident. Maybe they believe you were scared. Maybe they don't. Either way, you're looking at fines, court costs, a mark on your record that will make it very hard to find work in any field that requires background checks."

He paused. Let that sink in.

"Or," he continued, "we can handle this privately. You come to my office tomorrow. We discuss terms. You work off what you owe. No police. No record. No one has to know this happened."

I stared at him. "Work it off how?"

"That depends on what you're capable of." He stepped closer, and this time I did back up, my shoulders hitting the side of my car. He stopped a foot away, close enough that I could see the faint lines at the corners of his eyes, the way his jaw was set like stone. "You said you'd do anything to pay the debt. I'm giving you the chance to prove it."

My throat was dry. "I don't even know what you do."

"Volkov Enterprises. Real estate. Development. Investments." He said it like that explained everything. "I need someone with attention to detail. Someone who can be discreet. Someone who understands what happens when they don't hold up their end of an agreement."

He held out the card.

I didn't take it.

"You followed me," I said again, quieter this time. "I know you did. I saw you."

He sighed, soft and exasperated, like I was a child insisting on a bedtime story that wasn't true. "You saw a black sedan. In a city with hundreds of thousands of cars. And you decided it was following you because you're stressed, because your sister is a mess, because you're one bad week away from losing everything, and your brain needed somewhere to put that fear."

I flinched. Because he knew about Mia. About my apartment. About all of it. And he was right about that too, which made everything worse.

"I looked into you," he said, answering the question I hadn't asked. "After you hit my car, I looked at your registration, your insurance, your license. It took thirty seconds to find your social media, another thirty to figure out your financial situation. You're not subtle, Miss Vance. You're not careful. You leave traces everywhere you go."

He let that hang in the air between us.

"So when you tell me I've been following you," he continued, "what you're really telling me is that you've been looking over your shoulder for two weeks, waiting for something bad to happen, and tonight you decided to make it happen yourself. You picked a fight with a stranger on an empty road because you were tired of being scared."

My hands were shaking. My whole body was shaking. Because he was dissecting me, peeling back layers I didn't even know I had, and I couldn't stop him.

"I'm not the one you should be afraid of," he said quietly. "But I am the one you owe forty‑two thousand dollars. And I am the one who can make this go away, or make it much, much worse."

He held the card out again.

I looked at it. Black, like his car, like his eyes in the dim light. Silver letters that caught the streetlight.

Then I looked at my car. The crumpled bumper. The crack in the headlight. The interior I could see through the open door, the one with the coffee stain on the passenger seat and the broken air freshener hanging from the mirror and the pile of receipts in the cupholder that represented every penny I'd scraped together for the last six months.

I thought about the phone on the kitchen counter. The one I'd come back for. The one that had led me here.

I thought about Mia on the couch, waiting for me to come home so she could tell me about her ex again, and how I'd listen and nod and pretend I had the energy to care.

I thought about the bank letter on my counter. Thirty days.

"Tomorrow," I said, and my voice didn't sound like mine. "What time?"

Something shifted in his expression. Not quite satisfaction. Something colder, something that looked like confirmation.

"Noon," he said. "The address is on the card. Don't be late."

He pressed the card into my hand, his fingers cool against my palm. Then he stepped back, turned, and walked to his car like nothing had happened. Like he hadn't just dismantled my entire life in ten minutes on an empty street.

The engine purred to life. The headlights came on, bright and unforgiving. He pulled away without another glance, leaving me standing alone with a black business card in my shaking hand and the smell of cedar still in my nose.

I watched his taillights disappear down the street. Red. Then gone.

I looked down at the card.

Adrian Volkov

Volkov Enterprises

No phone number. No email. Just an address in a part of the city I'd never been to, the kind of place where they didn't let people like me past the gate.

I stood there for a long time. The night was thick and heavy, the heat pressing in from all sides. Somewhere a dog was barking. A block over, a car door slammed. The normal sounds of a normal night, the kind of night where I drove home to watch a documentary and eat cold noodles and pretend my life wasn't falling apart.

But it was falling apart. It had been for a long time. I just hadn't been paying attention.

I got back in my car. The engine coughed when I turned the key, but it started. The bumper was hanging lower than before, scraping the asphalt when I pulled away, but it held. It had to hold. I didn't have anything else.

The drive home was a blur. I parked in my usual spot, the one under the broken streetlight, and sat with my head against the steering wheel. The card was on the passenger seat, black against the gray fabric, like a hole in the world.

I grabbed it and shoved it in my pocket. Then I climbed the stairs. Third step creaked. Hallway smelled like Mrs. Patterson's cabbage. The baby was crying somewhere, the same baby that cried every night at this time, and the light was still flickering, and nothing had changed.

But everything had changed.

I opened the door. Mia was on the couch, wrapped in a blanket, her phone in her hand. She looked up when I came in, and I saw the worry on her face before she smoothed it away.

"Hey," she said. "I thought you were gonna be back sooner. I ordered pizza. It's in the kitchen."

I stood in the doorway, looking at her. My sister. The one I'd been running from, or running for, for as long as I could remember.

"El?" She sat up, the blanket falling away. "What's wrong? You look like you saw a ghost."

I thought about the man on the street. His cold eyes. His calm voice. The way he'd taken everything I was and laid it out in front of me like evidence.

"Nothing," I said. "I'm just tired."

She didn't believe me. I could see it on her face, the way her mouth tightened, the way she started to get up.

"Mia." My voice came out sharper than I intended. "I said I'm tired."

She stopped. Sat back down. Looked at me with those big eyes that had been getting us out of trouble since we were kids, except it was never her trouble, was it? It was always mine. The rent, the bills, the phone calls from landlords, the late nights listening to her cry while I figured out how to keep us afloat.

I was so tired.

"Okay," she said quietly. "Okay. I'll be quiet."

I nodded. Walked past her to my room. Closed the door. Leaned against it.

The card was in my pocket. I pulled it out and looked at it again.

Noon. Don't be late.

I thought about not going. About packing my things, taking Mia, driving somewhere he couldn't find us. But I knew that was a lie before I even finished thinking it. He'd found me once. He'd find me again. And next time there wouldn't be an offer.

I slid down the door until I was sitting on the floor, my knees pulled to my chest, the card between my fingers.

I didn't know what tomorrow would bring. I didn't know what he wanted from me, what kind of work paid off a forty‑two thousand dollar debt, what kind of man drove a car like that and handed out cards on empty streets.

But I knew one thing.

I was already trapped. I just hadn't known it until tonight.

The card slipped from my fingers and landed on the floor, silver letters glinting in the dark.

I closed my eyes and waited for morning.

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