LOGINAria’s POV
The Beaumont Group Tower was exactly the kind of building that made you straighten your posture without being told to. Forty-two floors of glass and steel rising above the financial district like what had decided the skyline needed restructuring and had simply gone ahead and done it. The lobby alone was made of marble floors, a reception desk that stretched the width of a small apartment, lighting that somehow managed to be both dramatic and tasteful without trying too hard. The category of people who worked here operated in a different level of existence from the one I was coming from. I signed in at the security desk in my navy blue dungaree work uniform with the company logo engraved almost invisible on the chest. I was directed to the facilities manager, a brisk woman named Helen who met me in the lobby with a laminated access schedule. “Quarterly service,” she confirmed, scanning the paperwork my cousin’s company had submitted. “You’ll start on the lower basement level and work upward. Floors one through six today, the rest scheduled across the next two visits.” She handed me a temporary access card. “Keep to the service corridors where they’re marked. Executive floors are highly restricted, your card won’t open those anyway, so it’s a non-issue.” “Understood,” I said. She was already walking back toward the elevators before I finished the word. ********** The lower basement smelled like every other corporate building’s basement, recycled air, cleaning products and the faint ghost of a thousand catered lunches passing through the service entrance over years of daily operation. I got to work immediately, moving through the scheduled areas with focused attention. I hummed a blues sound track that drifted into my head on its own as I worked. The process ran on its own track while my mind suddenly drifted to Arthur. He had called twice this week with his usual warmth, attention and questions about Bryan. His usual unhurried interest in the most ordinary details of our lives. But underneath the warmth, for the past week or so, there had been a quality of attention that was slightly more careful than usual, issuing more deliberateness in the way he listened that felt different from his normal listening, like a man who was paying attention to specific things. Arthur was kind and generous and had given us more in the past several weeks than any help other people had rendered in years. The idea that something was off felt ungrateful and the least I would want Arthur to see me as, is being ungrateful. I moved through the basement levels and into the ground floor service corridor, following Helen’s access schedule with cautious attention, noting each area on the clipboard as I cleared it. The ground floor service corridor connected at its far end to a short stretch of the main corridor before the next service access point. Helen had noted it as unavoidable on the schedule, it’s a ten-second walk between two service doors that happened to pass through a publicly accessible section of the building. I pushed through the service door and into the main corridor. It was quiet at this end, the building’s main foot traffic moved through the central atrium on the other side, and this corridor served mostly as a connection point between the lobby wing and the conference rooms. I was three steps from the next service door when a group of four men came around the corner. All of them were in suits, moving with the coordinated efficiency of people in mid-conversation. I stepped slightly to the right to give them enough room to pass. The man at the center of the group was saying something about quarterly projections, his voice low and even, directed at the man to his left who was nodding and making notes on a tablet. None of them looked up yet. Then the man at the center looked up. His gaze swept the corridor in the automatic way of someone who processed his surroundings without consciously deciding to and it got to me briefly, the way it would have crossed anyone else in that corridor and moved on. Except that it didn’t move on, it came back, though not with recognition. There was nothing in his expression that indicated he knew me. But behind those dark eyes of his, sharp, still and momentarily arrested, caught on mine with a steadiness that had no business belonging to a two-second exchange between strangers. I knew that face faintly. The thought flashed through my mind before I could stop it, bypassing the rational part of my brain entirely and landing somewhere less orderly. I knew it the way you knew a song with the body’s memory, the kind that lived below conscious recall and operated on its own timeline. I was already through the service door before the thought finished forming, the door closing behind me with a quiet click that felt louder than it should have been. My hand went still on the handle of the door at the other side, my heart rumbling in a way I hadn’t given it permission to do. I stood still in the service corridor. This face faintly reminded me of someone, the same way faces did sometimes, my brain pattern-matching without permission, pulling fragments from old memories and laying them over new ones without caring whether the fit was accurate. I picked up my clipboard and moved to the next area on the schedule but his face lingered in my brain through the rest of the morning like it had caught on something I had not yet decoded.Aria’s POVThe expanded contract notice was sent to my cousin’s company inbox three days after my first visit to Beaumont Group Tower.Derek had called me on phone about it personally, which he rarely did for routine updates, his voice carrying the particular excitement of a small business owner who had just been handed something larger than he had expected. “Monthly visits instead of quarterly,” he said happily. “Same team, same access, better rate. Whatever you did in that building, Aria, do it again.”“I didn’t do anything special, I only cleaned it,” I said. “The way I always do.”“Well, clean it with that same energy every month,” he said, and hung up before I could point out that pest control didn’t really have an energy component.I had thought about it afterward briefly, the jump from quarterly to monthly was unusual for a building that size. The kind of decision that usually came from a specific complaint or recommendation rather than general satisfaction with a first visit.
Xavier’s POV“Ivanna,” I said, straightening slightly in my chair, the warmth in my voice arriving a beat later than it should have.“You sound surprised to hear from me,” she said, a teasing edge under the words that didn’t quite mask the sharper tone underneath.“Long day,” I said. “What is it?”“I heard you were back from Thailand.” She gave a deliberate pause and continued. “You didn’t bother to call or check on me.”“It’s been a heavy landing week. Work backed up faster than I expected.” I defended myself.“Of course it did.” She let the silence stretch just long enough to make her point without needing to state it directly. “My father would like to schedule dinner. Just the four of us; you, me, him, and Arthur. And to pick up where the Grandview evening left off.”The Grandview evening. The same one I had been avoiding for years now. I was not following that thread right now, not with Ivanna’s voice in my ear.“I’ll check my calendar,” I said.“Xavier.” Her voice dropped, losing
Xavier’s POVI had been in the middle of a sentence when I saw her. It was her eyes that made me almost stop mid-sentence.Her eyes were dark, expressive, the kind that carried whatever their owner was feeling whether she intended them to or not. But they had caught mine in that corridor with a directness that didn’t flinch, and something in the two seconds before she looked away had moved through my chest like a current finding a wire it hadn’t known was there.I moved through it quickly and kept walking but the current stayed. I sat through two hours of afternoon meetings and felt it the entire time, not in a way that showed, just present, the way a sound stays in a room slightly longer than the source of it. Her face kept surfacing with a persistence that had nothing polite about it. The way she held the clipboard against her chest like a shield she didn’t realize she was carrying. The exact moment her eyes had came back to mine before she looked away.I knew that feeling of almos
Aria’s POVThe Beaumont Group Tower was exactly the kind of building that made you straighten your posture without being told to.Forty-two floors of glass and steel rising above the financial district like what had decided the skyline needed restructuring and had simply gone ahead and done it. The lobby alone was made of marble floors, a reception desk that stretched the width of a small apartment, lighting that somehow managed to be both dramatic and tasteful without trying too hard. The category of people who worked here operated in a different level of existence from the one I was coming from.I signed in at the security desk in my navy blue dungaree work uniform with the company logo engraved almost invisible on the chest. I was directed to the facilities manager, a brisk woman named Helen who met me in the lobby with a laminated access schedule.“Quarterly service,” she confirmed, scanning the paperwork my cousin’s company had submitted. “You’ll start on the lower basement level
Xavier’s POVI told myself, on the drive back to the penthouse that evening, that I was overthinking it.Resemblances happened. The world was full of people who shared the same jaw structures and eye shapes with strangers they had no connection with whatsoever, it was pure biology, the finite number of ways a human face could arrange itself across a global population. I had read somewhere once that every person on earth had at least seven people who shared their approximate facial architecture. The number made coincidence not just possible but statistically expected. I told myself all of this very clearly and rationally.I sat in my penthouse at eleven in the evening with a glass of scotch I hadn’t touched, staring at the city through the floor-to-ceiling windows, and my mind drifted to the little boy again. the way he tilted his head.I had a photograph on the shelf in my study, one of the few personal items I kept in the penthouse. It was a picture of my father taken when he was ar
Xavier’s POVI came back from Thailand with several unread reports, a fourteen-hour time difference still sitting behind my eyes and the particular exhaustion of a man who had spent three weeks closing a deal that should have taken two while fielding daily calls from Kingsley Sinclair about a wedding timeline I had no interest in discussing from a different continent.The penthouse felt too quiet when I landed. Too organized, like a space maintained rather than lived in. I had a driver, a housekeeper who came twice a week, and a refrigerator that contained exactly the things my nutritionist had approved, but nothing I actually wanted to eat after a fourteen-hour flight.I stayed at the penthouse for two days before I decided to visit the estate. I hadn’t called ahead, I rarely did when I came to the estate, it was still my grandfather’s house more than any other definition and it was also the closest place to home since my father died. Calling ahead to your own home felt like a formal
Aria’s POVI was halfway through reconciling a column of receipts when my phone buzzed against the desk. I almost let it go to voicemail. Mr. Murphy had already mentioned twice this month, that personal calls during work hours weren’t part of the job description he hired me for and I needed this jo
Aria’s POVI sat with the acceptance letter and the pregnancy test side by side on my desk for three days before I made the decision. It was a painful decision to make all by myself but there was no one to call.That was the part nobody warned you about, it’s not about the fear, not the morning si
ARIA’s POVThe first thing I noticed was the dead silence. The second was the pounding headache threatening to split my skull into two.I squeezed my eyes shut and buried my face deeper into the pillow. Bad idea.The unfamiliar scent hit me immediately. Cedar, warm and masculine.My eyes snapped op
XAVIER’s POVIt was five o’clock in the morning and I had ejaculated thrice already. I looked at the pretty lady on the same bed with me, I had fucked her so hard in the last few hours, as we explored different sex positionsShe was now sleeping peacefully beside me, like all her problems had been







