LOGINHer intercom buzzed again.
"Ms. Richardson? Emma Parker is here to see you."
Alex's hands dropped. "What?"
"Ms. Parker. She says you asked her to stop by?"
Alex hadn't asked Emma to stop by. Morrison must have sent her.
"Send her in."
Alex stood, smoothing down her jacket. She could do this. She could be professional. She could-
The door opened.
Emma walked in, and Alex's carefully constructed composure cracked.
Emma had changed out of her suit jacket. Her hair was still in that severe bun, but a few strands had escaped, framing her face. She carried a leather portfolio and her laptop, and her expression was carefully, deliberately blank.
"Ms. Richardson." Emma's voice was ice. "Morrison said you wanted to discuss the case."
"I.. yes. Please, sit."
Emma remained standing. "I'd prefer to stand."
"Emma…"
"Ms. Parker."
"Ms. Parker," Alex corrected herself. "I think we should address…"
"There's nothing to address. You're the senior partner. I'm the junior associate. We have a case to win. That's all this is."
"You don't actually believe that."
Emma's jaw tightened. "What I believe is irrelevant. What matters is the Bennett case. Fifty million dollars. Eight weeks to trial. High-stakes IP litigation." She pulled a document from her portfolio. "I've started preliminary research. Genovex Corp has filed fourteen similar suits in the past five years. Their win record is poor. Their expert witness is Dr. Harold Anthony, who folds under cross-examination."
She slid the document across the desk.
Alex picked it up, scanned it. The research was thorough, the analysis sharp. Emma had done in a few hours what would take most associates days.
"This is excellent work."
"I know."
The coldness in Emma's voice was a knife between Alex's ribs.
"Ms. Parker, I think we should…"
"Should what?" Emma's control cracked slightly. "Talk about it? Acknowledge that we have history? Pretend that seeing you again doesn't make me want to…" She stopped herself. "This is my career, Ms. Richardson. The career I built after you left. I'm not letting anything jeopardize it. So we're going to work together. Professionally. And when this case is over, we'll go back to never seeing each other again."
"Emma…"
"Don't." Emma's voice shook. "Don't say my name like that. Don't look at me like, like you care. You made your choice eight years ago. You chose your career over…" Again, she stopped. "It doesn't matter. What matters is winning this case."
She turned toward the door.
"Wait," Alex said desperately. "Can we at least—"
"Tomorrow. Nine AM. We present to Morrison." Emma didn't turn around. "I'll prepare the case summary. You can present the legal strategy. Keep it professional, keep it brief, and keep it focused on the work."
"Okay."
"Okay." Emma reached for the door handle, then paused. Her shoulders tensed. "Just answer me one question."
"Anything."
"Did you know?" Emma's voice was barely a whisper. "When you took this job, did you know I worked here?"
"No." Alex's throat was tight. "I swear, Emma. I had no idea."
Emma nodded once, a jerky movement. "Good. Because if you'd done this on purpose…" She didn't finish. Just opened the door and walked out.
Alex stared at the closed door, Emma's research document still in her hands.
This was going to be impossible.
Eight weeks of working closely with Emma. Eight weeks of pretending her heart wasn't breaking every time Emma looked at her with those cold, guarded eyes.
Eight weeks of living with the consequences of the worst decision she'd ever made.
Alex's phone buzzed again.
Morrison: Emma confirmed tomorrow's presentation at 9 AM. I expect you two to be a united front. First impressions matter.
A united front. Right.
Alex looked down at Emma's research. Even in her anger, even hurt and defensive, Emma had done exceptional work.
She'd always been exceptional.
And Alex had thrown that away.
The office suddenly felt too small, too confining. Alex grabbed her coat and headed for the door. She needed air. Needed space. Needed anything but the memory of Emma's voice saying “You made your choice eight years ago.”
In the elevator, alone this time, Alex let her head drop back against the wall.
She'd come to San Francisco for a fresh start.
Instead, she was facing the past she'd spent eight years running from.
And tomorrow morning, she'd have to stand next to Emma in front of Morrison and the partners and pretend everything was fine.
She wasn't sure she could do it.
The elevator doors opened on the ground floor. Alex walked out into the lobby, past attorneys and staff who greeted her, welcomed her to the firm.
She smiled and nodded, playing the part of the confident new senior partner.
But inside, she was twenty-one again. Standing in her dorm room. Looking at eighteen-year-old Emma with tears streaming down her face, asking "Why? Just tell me why?"
And Alex, terrified and closeted and convinced she was doing the right thing, saying the words that had haunted her ever since:
"This was just college, Emma. We both need to move on."
The biggest lie she'd ever told.
Present Day – Monday Afternoon**Raines came to the office at three looking like someone who had been at a hospital all morning and had not slept the night before and was not going to mention either of those things.She sat across Emma's desk in a coat she had not taken off and her hands in her lap and her eyes steady and clear in a face that was doing real work to hold itself together.Emma did not mention the hospital. She let Raines lead."Pinnacle called you," Raines said."This morning at ten fifteen. Senior counsel named Gregory Hale.""I know Gregory Hale." Raines's mouth tightened briefly. "What did he offer?"Emma told her.Raines looked at the number Emma had written on the notepad and said nothing for a moment. Then she looked up. "That is an insult.""Yes," Emma said. "It is also confirmation that they have seen something in the preliminary filings that frightened them.""They have not seen the photographs yet.""No.""When they see the photographs," Raines said carefully,
Present Day – Monday MorningMorrison was moved to a private room on Saturday afternoon.By Sunday the firm's senior partners had convened an emergency meeting. By Monday morning the twenty-second floor had the particular atmosphere of a building whose central organizing principle had been temporarily removed, everyone still doing their jobs, everything still functioning, and underneath the functioning a low buzz of uncertainty that nobody was addressing directly.Emma felt it the moment she stepped off the elevator.The way people moved was different. Slightly less certain, slightly more aware of being observed. Three separate conversations stopped when she walked past, not because of anything she had done but because she was Alex's partner and Alex was the most senior attorney currently in the building and people were doing the math.She went to her office, opened the Webster file and Worked.At nine thirty Patricia Webb appeared in her doorway."The partners have asked Alex to tak
Present Day – Friday NightThe hospital waiting room on the cardiac floor smelled like recycled air and weak coffee and the anxiety of people who had been anxious about the fate of their loved ones longer than they had expected to.Emma and Alex arrived at UCSF forty minutes after David arrived. They had changed out of their screening clothes without discussing it, both of them moving through the apartment with the quiet efficiency of people who understood that some moments did not require conversation, only presence.David was in the waiting room when they got there. Still in his work clothes, his tie loosened, sitting with his elbows on his knees and his hands clasped and his eyes on the floor. He looked up when Emma came through the door and something in his face shifted the way faces shifted when the person you had been waiting for finally arrived.Emma sat beside him. Alex took the chair on his other side."What do we know?" Emma asked."He collapsed in his office at six forty,"
Present Day – MondayEmma called Amara Osei at seven in the morning.Accra was eight hours ahead, which made it three in the afternoon there, which Raines had confirmed was the window before Amara's evening shoots began. Emma sat at the dining table with her coffee and the Webster file open and Justice on the chair beside her pretending to sleep while actually monitoring the room for developments.Amara picked up on the third ring."Ms. Parker." Her voice was warm and direct and carried the alertness of someone who had been told an important call was coming and had prepared for it. Road noise behind her, the ambient texture of a city going about its afternoon business. "Raines said you were the best. She does not say that about many people.""I appreciate that," Emma said. "I want to talk about Nairobi. The six weeks in March and April three years ago.""The screenplay," Amara said immediately. Not a question."Yes. I need you to walk me through everything you remember. Not the summar
Present Day – Saturday, Early MorningThe apartment was warm when they got in.Justice came to the door and wound between their feet with the determined thoroughness of a cat who had been alone for three hours and considered this a personal failing on their part. Emma crouched and scratched behind his ears until he decided forgiveness was available and walked away with his tail up.Alex hung up their coats. Filled a glass of water at the sink and drank half of it standing at the counter, the way she did when she was unwinding from something that had required sustained effort. Emma watched her and thought about the film and the dark theater and Alex's hand turning over in hers without being asked to."Do you want tea?" Alex asked."Please."Alex put the kettle on. They moved around the kitchen in the easy way they had developed, no choreography required, each knowing where the other was without having to look. Emma got the mugs. Alex got the tea. Justice reappeared and sat beside his em
Present Day – Friday EveningThe theater was on a side street in SoMa that Emma had walked past a hundred times without knowing what was behind the unmarked door.Inside it was nothing like a commercial cinema. Thirty seats arranged in a gentle curve, all of them upholstered in dark fabric that absorbed the light. A bar along the back wall with a bartender who knew what he was doing. Framed posters on every surface, some of films Emma recognized and several she did not, each of them bearing the quiet authority of work that had been made by people who cared more about the film than the opening weekend.The room was already half full when Emma and Alex arrived. The kind of crowd that populated industry events, creative and connected, dressed in the way of people who had stopped trying to impress anyone but had excellent taste anyway. Conversations ran at the warm low register of people who saw each other regularly and were genuinely glad to.Raines met them at the door.She had dressed
Present Day – WednesdayRaines brought coffee to the three o'clock meeting.Not the paper cups from the break room that tasted like burnt ambition. Two proper cups from the place on the corner, the good one with the green awning that Emma passed every morning on her way into the building. Emma's or
Alexandra Richardson's hands were shaking.She pressed them flat against the cool mahogany surface of her new desk and commanded them to stop. They didn't listen. The tremor traveled up her arms, settled in her chest and made her breathing shallow.Emma Parker worked here.Emma.The name ricocheted
Alex's gaze moved on as if Emma were just another face in the room, another junior associate whose name she'd learn eventually. But Emma had seen it. That moment of recognition, of surprise.Alex hadn't known Emma worked here.Which meant this nightmare was just as unexpected for her as it was for
The Monday morning light shining through the floor-to-ceiling windows of Morrison & Associates' twenty-second-floor conference room was bright and sunny, casting long shadows across the polished mahogany table. Emma Parker sat towards the end of the table, her laptop on her lap and open in front of







