LOGINMorning light spilled across the floor like gold dust, but it felt cold against my skin. I hadn’t slept. My body was heavy, and my mind was trapped between fear and foolish hope.
The clock read 7:12 a.m., a reminder that the world didn’t pause for broken people. I sat at the edge of the bed, staring at the phone on my nightstand. One call. One decision. That was all it would take to change everything.
I thought about Clara, her laughter, school, her anger about finishing school, and the way she believed I could fix everything. I thought about the eviction notice folded neatly under my pillow, as if pretending not to see it could make it disappear.
Then I thought of Damien Voss. His voice was steady and commanding. His eyes, sharp enough to cut through walls.
His promise: You’ll never have to beg again.
My finger trembled as I dialed the number in the message from last night.
A voice answered instantly, professional and calm. “This is Voss Enterprise.” “Yes, Miss Torres?”
“Yes.” Mr. Voss was expecting your call. Your contract will be ready by ten. Don’t be late.
By 9:58 a.m., I was standing again in the marble lobby of Voss Tower, my stomach twisting into knots. My clothes were neatly pressed, the best I could manage, but beside the people around me, I still looked like I didn’t belong.
The elevator doors opened to the twenty-eighth floor. As soon as I stepped out, a woman approached, tall, efficient, and impossibly elegant. “Miss Torres?” she asked Mr.
“Yes.” I’m Sophia, Mr. Voss’s executive assistant. Follow me.
Her heels clicked like a metronome, each step echoing my nerves. She led me through a glass corridor into an office that made last night’s meeting room look modest.
Damien was there standing by the window, back turned, phone in hand. His posture alone commanded silence.
When he finally turned, his gaze locked onto me like he’d been expecting every movement I’d make.
“You came,” he said, a faint smirk touching his lips.
“You made it clear I didn’t have much choice,” I replied before I could stop myself.
Something—amusement, in his eyes amusement, maybe. “You’ll learn, Miss Torres, that I don’t deal in choices. Only consequences.”
Sophia handed him a folder and quietly exited, leaving us alone.
He gestured to the chair opposite his desk. “Sit.”
The contract was already thick, bound, and legal. My name is printed neatly at the top of the page.
“Read it carefully,” he said. Every clause matters.
I skimmed through the pages, my pulse quickening with each line. Confidentiality agreements. Relocation clauses. Personal discretion. 24/7 availability.
And one line that made me pause:
The employee shall submit to direct supervision and guidance under the employer’s discretion as deemed necessary for the company's interests.” My brows furrowed. What does this mean?
“It means,” he said, stepping around the desk to stand beside me, that when I give instructions, you follow them. No questions. No delays. He was close enough that I could feel the warmth of his body and smell that faint, dark scent, tinged with cedar, smoke, and control. My pulse stuttered.
“This is more than a job,” he continued. “It’s a test. I need to know how far your loyalty extends.”
I forced myself to meet his gaze. “And what happens if I fail your test?”
His lips curved slightly. Then you won’t work for anyone again.
My throat went dry; words weren’t a threat, they were the truth, delivered like law.
He handed me a pen. “Sign it, Elena.”
Hearing my name in his voice did something strange to me and made the air heavier and the space smaller.
I hesitated, staring at the line waiting for my signature. Everything in me screamed to walk away.
But then I thought of Clara. Of the notice. Of the cold nights waiting outside the door.
I signed.
Damien’s expression didn’t change, but something in his eyes darkened with satisfaction, maybe. “Good.”
He took the paper, flipped the company and the next page, and signed his name in quick, deliberate strokes. Damien Voss.
Even his handwriting looked expensive.
“Your housing has been arranged,” he said, passing a keycard across the desk. You’ll move into one of the residences by tonight. You start tomorrow morning.”
“Residences?” I repeated.
“You’ll find it convenient,” he replied simply. And secure.
Something “secure,” but the way he said “secure” made my stomach twist. He stepped closer again, his gaze flicking over me like a silent assessment. “You’ll need to look the part. I’ll have my assistant send over wardrobe details.”
“I can handle my own clothes,” I said quickly, trying to hold onto some fragment of dignity.
His smile was faint but sharp. “You’ll learn soon, Miss TorresClara; the first time isn’t about what you can handle. It’s about what I expect.”
The words landed heavily, not cruelly, but absolutely. He turned back toward the window, hands in his pockets, his voice calm. “You can go.”
I stood, clutching the contract folder. “That’s it?”
“For now.” He didn’t turn around. “But one mordoor. ng…” I paused at the door. “When you walk into my world, leave your fear outside. It slows people down.”
I wanted to tell him I left, that fear was all I had left, but the words never came. Outside, the air felt colder, sharper. My heart raced as I walked out of the building, clutching the folder like a lifeline. I had a job. A home. A chance.
So why did it feel like I’d just signed something far more dangerous than a contract?
That night, I stood before the sleek, modern, and spotless apartment. The city glittered outside like temptation itself.
keycard and fingers over the keycard, then the contract inside my bag.
I had everything I’d begged for. Stability. Safety. Opportunity. So why did I feel like the walls were already closing in?
My phone buzzed.
A new message.
> DAMIEN VOSS: “Be ready by 7 AM. Wear black. And Elena…”
“Don’t be late.”
A shiver ran through me, not just of fear, but something darker. Because for the first time, I wasn’t sure if I wanted to run from him… or toward him.
The flight to Seattle feels longer than it should.I've been on this route twice before—once full of hope and fear, once running away from both. This time, I don't know what I'm full of. Just a desperate need for answers to questions I haven't fully formed yet.Rachel drove me to the airport, made me promise to call her the moment I land, and told me she loves me no matter what happens.Clara sent a text: "Be brave. But also be honest. Those aren't always the same thing."Dr. Chen's last words in our session yesterday: "Remember, you're not going there to fix anything or prove anything. You're going to get information. To see what's real. Whatever you discover, trust yourself to handle it."I'm trying to trust myself.God, I'm trying.I don't tell Damien I'm coming.Part of me wants to show up at his office, dramatic and cinematic, like this is some movie where grand gestures solve everything.But real life isn't a movie. And I'm too old for grand gestures.So instead, I text him from
Three months later, the case is over.Reed settled two weeks before trial—not because we were weak, but because Christine's team uncovered evidence so damning he had no choice. Emails proving he'd orchestrated not just my situation, but a decade-long pattern of corporate sabotage across the industry.The settlement includes a public apology, financial restitution to all identified victims, and permanent injunctions preventing him from certain business practices. His firm is under investigation. His reputation is destroyed.We won.It should feel triumphant.Instead, I'm sitting in my Boston apartment on a Friday afternoon, staring at the news coverage, feeling absolutely nothing.I didn't attend the settlement conference. Worked everything remotely from Boston like I said I would. Damien handled the in-person negotiations. We communicated through lawyers and carefully worded emails. Professional. Distant. Exactly what I said I needed.It's been ninety-three days since I left Seattle.
Week two in Seattle, I miss Clara's graduation celebration.I'm on a video call with her, watching her show off her master's degree, and I can see the hurt in her eyes even though she's trying to hide it."It's okay," she says. "I know the case is important.""It's not okay. I should be there. I promised I'd be there.""Elena, you're fighting for something that matters. I get it."But I can hear what she's not saying: You chose the case. You chose Damien. You chose Seattle over me.After we hang up, I sit in my hotel room and cry. Not quiet tears—the ugly, gasping kind that come from realizing you've become exactly what you swore you wouldn't be.Someone who sacrifices everything for a man who isn't even hers.Rachel calls an hour later."Clara told me.""I fucked up.""Yeah, you did. But more importantly, you're fucking up right now. Elena, you've been in Seattle for two weeks and you've already rearranged your entire life around this case. Around Damien.""The case is important—""T
Day five in Seattle, the cracks start showing.We're in the conference room reviewing depositions when Damien snaps at one of the junior lawyers over a minor procedural question."That's not how discovery works. Did you even read the filing guidelines?"The lawyer—a woman named Sarah who's been working eighteen-hour days—looks stung. "I did, but the opposing counsel's interpretation—""Their interpretation doesn't matter. The rules are clear. This is basic shit, Sarah.""Damien," I interrupt. "Can I talk to you? Privately?"He looks irritated but follows me into his office."What was that?" I ask once the door closes."What was what?""You just humiliated Sarah in front of everyone for a mistake that's barely even a mistake.""She should know better—""She does know better. She's brilliant and exhausted and you just treated her like she's incompetent because you're stressed about the case." I cross my arms. "This is what you do. When you're overwhelmed, you get controlling and harsh.
Day two in Seattle, I wake up to seventeen missed calls.All from the same Boston number. I call back immediately, heart pounding."Elena Torres," a man's voice answers. Professional, clipped. "This is Detective James Morrison with Boston PD. We need you to come in for questioning regarding Marcus Reed."My stomach drops. "Questioning about what?""Mr. Reed filed a police report yesterday alleging criminal harassment and intimidation. He claims you've been coordinating with Damien Voss to threaten him, damage his property, and interfere with his business operations.""That's absurd. I'm in Seattle working on our legal defense—""Which is why we need to talk to you. Can you be available for a video interview today?"I sit up, fully awake now. "Am I being charged with something?""Not at this time. But Mr. Reed has provided what he claims is evidence, and we're required to investigate. The sooner we can speak with you, the sooner we can determine if there's any merit to his claims."I c
Monday morning, I fly to Seattle.It's the first time I've been back since everything imploded. The city looks the same—grey skies, rain-slicked streets, mountains in the distance—but I'm different. We both are.Damien's office building rises ahead of me, glass and steel against storm clouds. I stand on the sidewalk for a full minute, gathering courage, before I walk through the doors.The receptionist recognizes me. "Ms. Torres. Mr. Voss is expecting you. Twelfth floor, corner office."The elevator ride feels eternal. My reflection in the mirrored walls shows someone trying very hard to look composed—tailored suit, hair perfect, makeup flawless. Professional armor for a meeting that's anything but professional.The doors open.And there he is.Damien's standing in the hallway like he was waiting, like he couldn't stay in his office knowing I was in the building. He looks thinner than I remember, tired around the eyes, grey more pronounced at his temples. The lawsuit has aged him."El
The sound of my heels echoed down the marble hallway like a countdown to something I couldn’t escape. My palms were damp, my chest tight, but I forced myself to keep walking, chin up, back straight, toward the tall glass doors of Damien Voss’s office.I’d spent the entire night trying to understand
The alarm buzzed at exactly 6:00 a.m., slicing through the silence of my new apartment. I’d barely slept. My body was in bed, but my mind had been pacing all night, haunted by the memory of Damien Voss’s eyes and the sharp command in his last message.> “Be ready by 7 AM. Wear black. And Elena… Don
The notice came written in white, cruel, clean, and final.“Eviction Notice.”The words screamed louder than any slap could. My rent was two months late, and Mrs. Jenkins, my landlady, had finally run out of sympathy. The paper trembled in my hand as if mocking my last thread of stability.I sank o
The sound of my name cracked through the office like a whip.“Elena Torres!”Dozens of heads turned toward me. Fingers paused mid-typing, whispers rippled through the cubicles like a low current of electricity. My stomach tightened as I rose from my chair, dread pressing against my commitment. I clu







