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Chapter Ten: The Photograph

Author: Chloe Raven
last update publish date: 2026-07-17 05:40:58

Elena

I 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," he said, and that was worse than any anger I'd braced for. Anger I knew how to survive. This calm, patient version of him was something I had no practice with at all. "What I am is curious. Curious what you think happens next."

"Nothing happens. It was dinner."

"Was it." He stood, buttoned his jacket though he wasn't going anywhere, and crossed the room to kiss my forehead the way he had every night for five years. I sat perfectly still and let him do it, my skin crawling under a gesture that used to feel like home. He walked out like nothing had happened at all.

I sat with that photograph until it went warm and soft in my hand, my whole body shaking in a way I couldn't make stop. Then I forced myself to move, because I couldn't afford to sit still, not with whatever he'd just set in motion behind that quiet voice.

Through the wall I heard him on the phone in his study, low and even.

"It's time," was all he said. "Move it up. Whatever it takes."

No name. No explanation. Just an order, and the sound of it settled into my stomach like a stone.

I climbed the stairs and got as far as my bedroom floor before the fear finally caught up with me. I pressed my hand over my mouth and let it out fast and ugly for one whole minute, tears I didn't even try to explain to myself, grief for a marriage I still sometimes forgot was already over. Then I wiped my face and reached for my phone before the feeling could slow me down any further.

Damian's message was already waiting.

*Someone accessed my firm's private servers tonight. While we were at dinner. Did you tell anyone where we were going?*

My stomach dropped. "No one," I typed back, my hands trembling so badly I had to correct the words twice. "I didn't tell a soul."

*Then how did they know where to hit both of us at once.*

I stared at that question with no answer to give it. I called him instead of typing another word.

He picked up on the first ring. "You're not asleep."

"Someone's inside your servers and my husband just handed me a photograph of us leaving dinner and told me he's known about you for weeks." My voice came out fast and breathless, nothing like the calm I usually managed to fake for Marcus. "I don't understand how he moves this fast. I don't understand how he's always one step ahead of both of us."

"I don't know yet either," Damian said, and something in his voice had gone careful, the way you get careful right before you have to say something you don't want to say. "I'm still going through what they took. It's not good, Elena. Some of it involves you directly."

My throat went tight. "How directly."

"I'll know more by morning. I don't want to guess with you right now, not like this, not over the phone." A pause. "I'm coming to get you."

"You can't. Not tonight, not with him watching everything I do."

"I'm not asking permission." The line went dead before I could argue further.

I sat on the floor with the phone still in my hand, my heart slamming so hard I could feel it in my throat, and forced myself to think instead of panic. If Marcus had reached Damian's servers the same night he'd had me photographed at dinner, that meant he hadn't been reacting to tonight at all. He'd planned this before I ever walked into that restaurant. The photograph wasn't a discovery. It was a performance, timed to land exactly when it would hurt the most.

I stood and went to the window, wrapping my arms around myself, needing to feel something solid even if it was only my own body. The street below sat empty, porch light throwing its long yellow stripe across the drive, and for one foolish moment I let myself believe I'd imagined the whole night. That none of it was real. That I could just climb into bed and wake up tomorrow as someone whose biggest problem was tiredness.

Then headlights swept up the drive, too fast, and my whole body went rigid.

Not Damian's car. A black SUV, the same one, or one just like it, that had followed me home hours earlier. It didn't pull in. It stopped at the end of the drive, engine running, lights cutting off almost immediately, and sat there in the dark like it was waiting for something, or someone.

My hands started shaking again, worse this time, my chest so tight I could barely draw breath. I grabbed my phone to call Damian back and stopped cold at the sound of footsteps on the stairs behind me.

Marcus.

I turned fast, shoving the phone into my pocket before he could see the screen, and found him standing in the doorway in his robe, watching me with an expression I couldn't read at all.

"Everything alright?" he asked. "You look pale."

"Just tired," I said, my voice barely holding together.

He walked past me to the window, and for one terrible second I thought he was going to see the SUV sitting at the end of our own driveway, and I would have no way at all to explain what that meant, no lie fast enough to cover it. But he only glanced out briefly, then drew the curtain closed himself, slow and deliberate, blocking the view completely.

"You should sleep," he said, and there was something in the way he said it, something almost gentle, almost like the man I married once believed in loving me. "Whatever's out there will still be there in the morning."

I froze. He hadn't said whoever. He'd said whatever.

Like he already knew exactly what was sitting at the end of our drive, because he was the one who'd put it there.

He climbed into bed like nothing at all was wrong, like he hadn't just confirmed, in four quiet words, that every fear I'd had that night was real, and that he was the one holding the strings on all of it. I stood at the window a moment longer, staring at the gap in the curtain he hadn't quite closed, watching the faint dark shape of the SUV still sitting there.

Then, as I watched, its headlights came on again.

And it began to move. Not away. Toward the gate.

My phone buzzed once against my leg, silent, and I pulled it out with my heart in my throat, my whole body cold with a fear I didn't have a name for yet.

A text. Not from Damian.

*He knows you called him tonight. He knows everything you said. Get out of that house before morning.*

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