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Chapter 4 -Damien’s POV

Author: Miss E
last update publish date: 2026-05-07 04:49:38

I knew the sound of every person who had ever worked in this penthouse.

Mrs. Hale walked like she was always running late, short quick steps, always slightly rushed even when there was no reason to rush. My previous assistant, Marcus, dragged his left foot slightly, a habit he was probably not even aware of. The one before him wore shoes that squeaked on the hardwood, which lasted exactly nine days before I told her to change them and she quit instead.

I catalogued people by sound. It was practical. It was necessary. It was not, under any circumstances, something I did out of interest.

Noah Carter had been in my home for four days.

I knew his footsteps already.

That was not unusual. What was unusual was that I had started to notice things beyond the footsteps. The specific way he set things down, careful, deliberate, never careless, like he understood that objects had places and those places mattered. The sound of him in the kitchen in the early morning, quiet and unhurried, moving efficiently without the nervous energy most people brought into spaces that weren’t theirs yet.

He moved like he was trying not to take up too much room.

I noticed that on day two and then told myself I hadn’t.

He brought my coffee at exactly six twenty-eight every morning. Not six thirty. Not six twenty-five. Six twenty-eight, which meant he had worked out the exact time it took to walk from the kitchen to my office and planned for it. He set the cup down on the right side of my desk, two inches from the corner, without being told that was where I preferred it.

I hadn’t told him that.

He had simply watched and adjusted.

On day three I tested him. I moved the cup myself, slightly, after he set it down. Just to see. He came back an hour later to collect it and paused. I heard the pause. Then he moved it back to exactly where it should be without a word.

I sat with that for longer than made sense.

He was also very careful about sound. He didn’t play music. He took his phone calls in his room with the door closed. He walked through the penthouse like he understood that this was my space and that sound in my space was something I experienced differently than most people.

No one had ever thought about that without being told.

Not once. Not in three years.

It bothered me in a way I couldn’t quite place. Like a sound just outside the range of hearing. There but impossible to pin down.

On day four I was on a call with my legal team when I heard him stop outside my office door. He had been about to knock, I could tell from the slight change in his footsteps, and then he heard my voice and stopped. Waited. When the call ended twenty minutes later he knocked twice, evenly, and came in to tell me my one o’clock had been moved by Mrs. Hale.

He could have sent a message. He came in person because he wanted to make sure I had received it.

“You could have texted,” I said.

“You don’t always check your phone during calls,” he said. “I’ve noticed.”

“You’ve been here four days.”

“I know,” he said simply.

He left before I could respond.

I sat in my office after the door closed and did something I hadn’t done in a long time.

I thought about someone.

Not about what they could do for me or what they were failing to do or how quickly I expected them to quit. I thought about Noah Carter specifically, the particular way he existed in this space, quietly and carefully and with a level of attention that should have meant nothing but didn’t.

I thought about the phone call on day one.

I hadn’t meant to hear it. I had been in the hallway and his door hadn’t been fully closed and his voice came through, low and steady, saying I’ll figure it out with the specific calm of someone who was not figuring it out and knew it.

I thought about the number on that hospital bill. I hadn’t seen it. But I knew what a medical crisis sounded like in someone’s voice. I knew the weight of it.

I knew what it felt like to have something happen to your body that you couldn’t control and have to keep going anyway.

I pulled that thought back sharply.

That was not a relevant comparison. That was not something I was going to do.

“Mr. Carter,” I said.

He appeared in the doorway within seconds, which meant he had been nearby. Close without crowding, present without intruding. I didn’t know how he did that.

“Sir.”

“My four o’clock ran over yesterday. I need the Henderson files on my desk before three today.”

“They’re already there,” he said. “Left side. Twelve inches from the edge.”

I said nothing.

“Is that all?” he asked.

“Yes,” I said.

He left again.

I turned back to my work.

The Henderson files were exactly where he said. Twelve inches from the edge. He had measured. Or he had learned my system well enough in four days that he didn’t need to.

I sat with that.

I was noticing him.

The thought arrived quietly, without drama, which made it worse. I was noticing the sound of him and the specific way he moved and the fact that he had measured twelve inches to place a file exactly where I needed it.

I did not notice people.

I catalogued them. I assessed them. I kept track of them the way I kept track of everything in this space, because control required information and information required awareness.

This was awareness.

This was simply awareness.

I was almost certain of it

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