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Chapter 4: The watcher

Autor: Raven vale
last update Fecha de publicación: 2026-06-09 23:24:39

Valerie read the message three times.

Each time, the words arranged themselves the same way, clean, deliberate, stripped of anything accidental. Whoever sent it had chosen every word with precision. Not I know what you did. Not I'm watching you.

I know what you're planning.

Present tense. Active. As though they were sitting across from her.

She set the glass down slowly, stepped inside the resort room, and drew the balcony curtain behind her in one quiet motion.

She sat on the edge of the bed and stared at the unknown number.

No country code prefix she recognized.

Sent at 2:47 PM, which meant whoever it was had waited, given her just enough time to settle and exhale, before pulling the ground from under her feet.

She typed back one line:

You have the wrong person.

The reply came in under forty seconds.

Eastern outskirts. Flat land off the main road. Cash payment. Maiden name. Should I go on?

Her jaw locked.

She powered the second phone off, removed the SIM with steady hands, and sat very still.

Someone had followed her.

Not casually, this was deliberate, resourced, and precise.

She ran through her first life in cold clinical sweeps. Anthony had not hired surveillance until month four of the marriage. That window had not opened yet.

So it was not Anthony.

Three other names surfaced.

She discarded Anthony's mother immediately, the woman operated through insults and social destruction, not anonymous messages.

She discarded Ren just as fast, too emotional, too impulsive for this level of composure.

Which left a name that made her pause.

---

She checked out the following morning, one day early.

She drove back into the city with the radio off and pulled up outside the café where she and Ren met every other week.

Ren was already inside when she arrived, two coffees on the table, sunglasses in her hair, wearing the easy warmth of a woman who had not yet shown her true face.

Valerie sat down, smiled, and let Ren talk, about the reception, about a guest's offensive dress, about the scene in the bridal suite corridor that had apparently made its rounds through every table before the cake was even cut.

"Adrian looked good though," Ren said, almost too casually.

Valerie's fingers stilled around her cup.

"You think so?"

"He always does."

Ren shrugged, but her eyes moved sideways to her coffee.

A small tell.

Practiced but not perfect.

"How well do you know him?" Valerie asked lightly.

"Not well."

Too fast.

"Different circles."

Valerie let it go and filed it away.

She steered the conversation carefully toward business, who was expanding, who was struggling, where the new money was moving in the city.

Ren talked freely because she always did, because she believed Valerie was the one person in the world who was never a threat.

Twenty minutes in, Ren mentioned Adrian's feed mill.

"He's apparently scouting land on the eastern corridor," Ren said, stirring her coffee. "Some big agricultural expansion. His team has been out there all week doing assessments."

Valerie set her cup down.

His team.

All week.

Eastern corridor.

The same corridor where she had purchased her land yesterday morning.

---

She was back in her apartment by three.

She sat at the kitchen table and rebuilt the timeline with surgical precision.

Adrian's team had been on that corridor all week, which meant they had eyes on every transaction, every new acquisition, every unfamiliar face moving through that stretch of land.

When she showed up yesterday, paid cash, used a different name, and walked the boundary of a plot that sat directly adjacent to his expansion zone, someone on his team had flagged her immediately.

Not a threat.

An anomaly.

And Adrian Lead did not ignore anomalies.

She reassembled the second phone, inserted the SIM, powered it on.

The previous messages sat there, cold and waiting.

She stared at the last one, Stop now, while you still can, and something shifted in her reading of it.

Not a threat.

A test.

The kind of opening move a precise, calculating man made when he wanted to see what a person was made of.

She typed slowly:

If you know what I'm planning, you know I won't stop.

She hit send and set the phone face up on the table.

One minute. Two. Five.

She made tea, stood at the counter watching the phone, and told herself she did not care either way.

Then it buzzed.

She crossed the room and picked it up.

Then we should meet. Tomorrow. 9AM. Lead Feed Mill, eastern office. Come alone.

Valerie read it twice.

Her pulse was steady.

Her mind was already three moves ahead, already calculating what it meant that Adrian Lead wanted to sit across from her before she had even properly begun, already turning over the extraordinary fact that the man she had spent months in her first life watching from a distance was now the one reaching toward her first.

She typed back:

I'll be there.

She set the phone down and picked up her tea.

Outside the window the city moved on, indifferent and loud, and Valerie stood in the quiet of her kitchen and felt the first real shift of her carefully laid plan, not a crack, not a complication, but something more dangerous than either.

An acceleration.

She was supposed to spend months building slowly toward Adrian Lead.

Poultry, feed mill, collaboration, proximity, patience.

A careful, measured approach designed to look organic and unplanned.

Instead she had fourteen hours.

She set her tea down, opened her notes app, and began rewriting everything.

Then her original phone lit up on the counter.

Anthony.

Where are you? My father wants to meet his new daughter in law. Dinner. Tomorrow 9AM.

Valerie stared at both phones.

Two meetings. Same time. Same morning.

One she could not afford to miss.

The other she could not afford to skip.

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