LOGINElena
"Looking for something?" I had exactly one heartbeat to decide. My mind ran through every lie I owned in that single second, discarding each one before it fully formed, because I could see in his face that he already knew most of the ones I might reach for. "A dress," I said finally. "I lent Sophia one, months ago. I thought I'd take it back before I forgot which one it was." It was thin. The kind of lie that only works if the person hearing it wants to believe it, and I had no idea, standing there with my pulse hammering in my throat, whether Marcus wanted to believe anything I said anymore. He looked at me a long moment. Long enough that the silence had a weight to it, pressing down on my chest until I could barely draw a full breath. "Did you find what you needed?" he asked. "No. I think it's at the cleaners." "Sophia keeps her room tidy, doesn't she." His eyes moved past me, to the closet I'd just closed, to the shoes lined up almost exactly the way I'd left them, and something cold slid down my spine at that word almost. "Tidier than you'd expect, for someone who claims she barely has time to breathe most days." "I wouldn't know," I said. "It's not my room." "No," he agreed softly. "It isn't." He didn't move from the doorway. I stood in the middle of another woman's bedroom with my husband blocking the only way out, and somewhere underneath the fear, some small broken part of me still ached at how strange it was to be afraid of a man whose hand I used to reach for in the dark without even waking up. "You've seemed curious lately," he said. "About a lot of things." "I've been tired, Marcus. Tired people notice strange things. It doesn't mean there's anything to notice." Something moved behind his eyes and I thought, for one unbearable second, that he was going to say the word accident, and my whole body braced for it the way you brace for a blow you can't dodge. He didn't. He just kept looking at me the way he used to look at a contract he suspected had a clause hidden somewhere he hadn't caught yet. "I missed my flight," he said instead. I blinked. Of everything I had braced for, that wasn't it. "You're supposed to be in Geneva." "Forgot a file. Turned around at the gate." He said it lightly, a man who ran an empire on precision simply forgetting something for once. "Since I was back, I thought I'd have one more coffee with my wife before I go." I searched his face for the lie in that and found, as always, nothing I could hold onto. That was the worst part of loving a man who had spent his whole life learning to be unreadable. I never knew, not once, if I was looking at the truth or a very good imitation of it wearing the truth's clothes. "That's thoughtful," I said, and my voice came out steadier than I felt. "Isn't it." He stepped back from the doorway at last, and I made myself walk past him slowly, evenly, though every part of me wanted to run. "I'll head to the airport again in an hour. Take the evening flight instead. Don't wait up." He left. I heard his footsteps go down the stairs, unhurried, and I stood in the hallway outside Sophia's door with my back against the wall until my legs finally agreed to carry me back to my own room. I sat on the edge of my bed and put my face in my hands, and for just a moment I let myself feel the full size of how alone I was in all of this. There was no one in that house I could tell any of it to. Sophia was a stranger wearing a face I used to trust. Marcus was the thing I was hiding from. And somewhere two rooms away sat a dead man's photograph, a face I could not stop seeing every time I closed my eyes, and not one person left to say his name to out loud. I picked up my phone before I'd fully decided to. Damian answered on the second ring. "This is early for you." "I need to see you tonight." My voice cracked in a way I hadn't planned for. "Not for the files. Not for any of it. I just need to not be in this house." A pause, then, quieter than I expected, "Address in twenty minutes." Marcus's car left for the airport a little after that, gravel crunching under the tires the same way it had that morning, and I watched from the window with my arms wrapped around myself, trying to believe it this time. The restaurant was small, tucked down a side street I'd never noticed before. We sat at a corner table, and for the first while it felt less like dinner and more like two people laying evidence out between them, comparing what they knew, what it had cost them, how much further either of us could go before we ran out of road. Somewhere in the second hour it drifted into something else. He asked about my childhood, and I found myself telling him about summers at my grandmother's house, before either of my parents were gone, before any of this, and he listened in a way Marcus never had, like the answer actually mattered and wasn't just information he could use against me later. He told me about growing up with nothing, about the first deal he closed at nineteen wearing a suit that didn't fit and a lie about his age, and something in the telling of it made me laugh. A real laugh, sudden and startled out of me, the kind that catches you off guard because some part of you had genuinely forgotten your body still knew how to make that sound. I sat there with my hand pressed over my mouth, stunned by my own laughter, my eyes stinging with something that wasn't sadness for once, and Damian watched me do it with an expression I didn't have a name for yet. "You should do that more," he said quietly. "I don't have much time left to do it with," I said, and the words landed heavier than I meant them to. The moment went soft and quiet at once, and neither of us tried to fill the silence after. It was late when I finally left. We said goodnight at the door, and he didn't try to walk me to my car, which I understood without either of us needing to say why. Too visible. Too much of a story for anyone watching to write. I pulled out onto the street and had gone two blocks before I noticed the black SUV behind me. I told myself it was nothing. A thousand black SUVs moved through this city every night, and I was tired, and my mind had been finding danger in every shadow for two weeks straight. I took a turn I didn't need to take, just to prove myself wrong. The SUV turned with me. My hands went tight on the wheel, my heart slamming so hard it hurt. At the next light I watched it in the mirror, sitting two cars back, engine idling, no plate I could make out in the dark. The light changed and I drove on, and two intersections later I checked again out of some compulsion I couldn't stop myself from obeying. It was still there. My chest went tight in a way that had nothing to do with the cancer this time. I drove the rest of the way faster than I should have, checking the mirror every few seconds, my mind cycling through every person who might want to know exactly where I'd been that night and exactly who I'd been with. By the time I turned into the drive the SUV was gone, or had peeled off somewhere I hadn't noticed, and I sat in the car outside my own house for a full minute just breathing, waiting for my hands to stop shaking enough to trust myself walking inside. The house was quiet when I let myself in. Marcus's flight to Geneva should have had him in the air for nearly two hours by then, somewhere over water, unreachable. Instead a single lamp burned low in the living room, and he sat in his reading chair with a book open on his knee, still in his shirt from that morning, tie gone, looking for all the world like a man who had spent a peaceful evening at home and never gone anywhere at all. He didn't look up from the page. "Did you enjoy dinner?" he said. I stopped in the doorway. Every part of me went completely still. I had told him nothing. Not where I was going. Not who with. Not even that I was leaving the house at all. And he was supposed to be gone.ElenaNeither of us said much after that photo. There wasn't anything to say that didn't sound like panic pretending to be a plan."We shouldn't be seen together again," Damian said, still staring at his phone. "Not until we know who's watching. I'll take a different way back.""And if it's Marcus?""Then he already knows what he needs to know. There's nothing we can do standing on this street that we can't do apart." He looked up at me. For one second his face went soft, worried, before he pulled it back. "Go home. Text me when you're inside."I drove back with my hands sore from gripping the wheel too hard. I kept checking the mirror at every light. Nothing there. That scared me more than something would have. An empty mirror just meant they were better at this than I was.The house was quiet when I got in. Quiet had stopped meaning safe a long time ago.I heard voices before I saw anyone. Low. Fast. Coming from the sitting room. Something in the sound made me stop in the hall inste
ElenaThe phone rang before I could call him. I answered so fast I nearly dropped it."Sorry," Damian said, before I could even speak. "Someone tried to get into my systems the second your message came through. I had to shut everything down first.""So it's not just me," I said, and something in my chest that had been braced for an hour finally let go, just slightly."It's not just you." A pause. "We can't talk like this anymore. Not on phones. I'll send you an address."I looked at the closed bathroom door like it might have ears of its own. "I don't know how I get out of this house without him knowing.""You'll find a way," he said, simple, no weight to it, and somehow that was steadier than anything gentler would have been.I sat there a long moment after he hung up, my heart still going too fast, and thought about every time in the last five years I had let fear stop me from doing the one thing I actually needed to do. I thought about the wet road that killed my parents, and how l
ElenaThe SUV sat at the end of the drive for what felt like an hour and was probably ten seconds. Then its lights swung away from the gate, and it reversed, slow and deliberate, and disappeared down the road like it had never been there at all.I stood at the window with my heart still slamming and no answers to show for it. Whoever that was, they'd wanted me to see them leave as much as they'd wanted me to see them arrive.I didn't sleep. I lay next to Marcus with my eyes open in the dark, replaying the night in pieces, the photograph, his voice saying *whatever's out there*, the curtain he'd closed himself without ever once looking surprised. Somewhere around four I finally drifted, and when I woke he was already gone, his side of the bed cold, like he'd never been there at all.Had he been there at all.I sat up too fast, my head swimming, and tried to remember the actual feeling of him beside me instead of the story I'd told myself about it. I remembered the weight of the mattres
ElenaI heard my own heartbeat before I heard anything else.Marcus didn't look up from his book. "You went out," he said, turning a page. "That's allowed, Elena. You're a grown woman.""I didn't think I needed permission."He looked up slowly. "No. You don't." A pause. "Did you eat well?""Fine.""Was it busy?""Not really."He nodded like I'd confirmed something rather than answered a question, and I felt the floor tilt slightly beneath me. He reached for a folded sheet of paper on the side table and slid it across the coffee table without a word.I opened it with fingers gone cold.A photograph. Grainy but clear. Me, stepping out of the restaurant. Damian's hand at the small of my back, guiding me past a step I hadn't even noticed. Nothing, and also everything."I've known about Cross for weeks," Marcus said quietly. "Tonight just confirmed the timeline."I couldn't make my mouth work. My whole chest had gone tight, like something had reached in and taken hold of it."I'm not angry
Elena"Looking for something?"I had exactly one heartbeat to decide. My mind ran through every lie I owned in that single second, discarding each one before it fully formed, because I could see in his face that he already knew most of the ones I might reach for."A dress," I said finally. "I lent Sophia one, months ago. I thought I'd take it back before I forgot which one it was."It was thin. The kind of lie that only works if the person hearing it wants to believe it, and I had no idea, standing there with my pulse hammering in my throat, whether Marcus wanted to believe anything I said anymore.He looked at me a long moment. Long enough that the silence had a weight to it, pressing down on my chest until I could barely draw a full breath."Did you find what you needed?" he asked."No. I think it's at the cleaners.""Sophia keeps her room tidy, doesn't she." His eyes moved past me, to the closet I'd just closed, to the shoes lined up almost exactly the way I'd left them, and someth
ElenaThe phone buzzed again in my hand and I nearly threw it across the room.Another message. Same blank number.*You should look closer to home. She knows more than she's telling you.*I read it twice, my pulse hammering so hard I could feel it behind my eyes, in that same place the cancer liked to sit. She. There was only one she it could mean in this house, and my stomach dropped straight through the floor, taking something with it I hadn't realized I still had left to lose. A small, stupid hope that at least Sophia's cruelty toward me had limits.I didn't sleep. I lay there running through every conversation I'd ever had with her, every cup of tea, every morning she'd asked if I was alright and I'd believed she meant it, searching for the one moment I'd missed something. By four in the morning I gave up and just lay there in the dark, listening to Marcus breathe beside me, waiting for the house to wake up around us both.He left for the airport at six. A Geneva trip, gone until







