LOGIN“Selene.” His voice came through low and careful. Like a man who had rehearsed how to say a single word.
I stood at the counter with both hands around the phone and did not say anything back. Outside the windows the city was doing its early morning thing. Grey. Slow. Indifferent. “Selene.” Again. Lower this time. “I’m here,” I said. A pause. I had spent four years learning his silences. This was the kind where he was deciding how much to show. “I didn’t think you’d pick up,” he said. “I almost didn’t.” Another pause. Longer. “I called because I needed to hear your voice.” A breath. “Not for any reason. I just needed to know you were okay.” My throat tightened. I pressed my lips together and looked at the counter. “I’m okay,” I said. “You signed the same day.” “You filed.” My voice stayed flat. “What were you expecting from me?” He went quiet. Long enough that I heard the hum of the city through the glass. “I don’t know,” he said. My grip loosened on the phone. Just slightly. Just enough that I noticed. “There’s something I should have told you,” he said. “A long time ago.” I waited. “The bookshop. The one in the West Village. The rebrand you did in year three.” My hands went still. “I found it online. A design blog had featured it. I almost scrolled past.” A pause. “But the style looked like yours.” I did not breathe. “I went to see it,” he said. “In person. Your name was in the corner of the window.” The counter was cold under my palms. “You walked past my work,” I said. “Yes.” “And you never said anything.” “No.” I closed my eyes. And just like that I was back there. November. Year three. Eleven forty-five at night. I had worked on that bookshop for six weeks. A family. Three generations. Almost no money. The kind of people who brought homemade food to meetings and apologized for every email. I took the job because something in it cracked open a part of me that had been shut for a long time. I worked late every night. I forgot to eat. And I built them something that held everything they already were. The night I finished, I printed it on the good heavy paper. Held it under the studio light. Looked at it for a long time. It was the best thing I had made in two years. I carried it down the hall. Dominic was in the living room. Work shirt still on, sleeves rolled, laptop open on the coffee table. He had not heard me come in. The city was dark behind him through the glass. I walked around the couch. I set the design on the table. Right in front of him. He glanced at it. “Looks good,” he said. His eyes went back to the screen. I stood there. One second. Two. Three. Hands at my sides. Looking at the top of his head. Waiting for something I could not have named. Nothing came. I picked the design back up. Walked to the studio. Slid it to the back of the bottom drawer. I never left my work out for him to see again. He could walk down a street in the West Village to see it through a window. He could not look up from a laptop to see it when I put it in his hands. “Why are you telling me this now?” I said. “Because I keep thinking about it.” He stopped. I could hear him breathing. “Because I think I owe you more than fourteen pages and a courier.” The words landed in the middle of my chest. I looked at the studio door at the end of the hall. Dark under the frame. The light I used to leave on until midnight, gone for months. He had never once asked why. My jaw ached. I had been holding it tight without realizing. “Dominic,” I said. “I know,” he said quickly. Like he already knew what was coming and wanted to stop it before it arrived. “I have to go.” Silence. “Okay,” he said. I ended the call. Set the phone face down on the marble. I pressed both palms flat against the counter and breathed. The kitchen was quiet. His keys were still on the counter from before. The folder with the signed papers was by the door. It was done. Whatever that call was, whatever his voice still did to me, it did not change anything. I pushed away from the counter. I needed to be out of this apartment before I did something I could not take back. I went to the bedroom and pulled a bag down from the top shelf. Camille’s place, maybe. A hotel. Anywhere that was not here, with his suits in the closet and his keys on the counter and the pour-over set that had always been mine and somehow stopped feeling like it was. I set the bag open on the bed. Then I heard the elevator. The doors opening at the penthouse floor. A pause. Then footsteps crossing the foyer tile. Footsteps I knew too well. My hands went still on the bag. He was supposed to be in Dubai until Friday.Petra crossed the coffee shop floor fast, weaving between tables, and stopped two feet from ours.Up close, she looked wrecked. Hair falling out of its usual clip. Eyes red like she’d been crying, or trying not to. Her hands kept moving, twisting the strap of her bag over and over, like they needed something to do that wasn’t reaching toward me.“Selene,” she said. “Please. Let me explain.”I didn’t move. Camille half stood beside me, one hand hovering like she wasn’t sure if she needed to block Petra or just be ready to. My own heart was pounding so hard I could feel it in my throat.“You have thirty seconds,” I said. My voice came out flat and cold, nothing like myself.“It’s not what you think.” Petra’s hands were shaking. She wrapped her arms around herself, hugging her own ribs like she was trying to hold herself together by force. “I didn’t want to. I need you to know that first. I did not want to.”“You showed a stranger photos of my apartment.”“I know.” Her voice cracked. “I
Camille’s phone kept buzzing.She looked down at it, frowning, then looked up at me.“Selene,” she said. “You need to see this.”I couldn’t move. The paper was still in my hand, one name staring back at me in plain black letters. My fingers had gone tight around the edges of it, creasing the paper without meaning to.Petra.“That can’t be right,” I said. My voice didn’t sound like my own. “Petra found the vendor file for me. She’s the one who dug up the old emails. She’s been helping this whole time.”“Or she’s been controlling what you found the whole time,” Adrienne said quietly. “Think about it. Who told you Reyes requested the liaison role personally? Who found the corrupted photo attached to the old file? Who always seemed to be one step ahead of you on this?”My stomach turned over. I set the paper down on the table because my hand had started shaking too hard to hold it steady.“No,” I said. “No, she brought me the vendor lead. Why would she do that if she was working with him?
“I’m not letting you go alone,” Dominic said again. “That’s final.”“It’s not your decision to make.”He stood up off the couch so fast it startled me. He paced to the window and back, hands dragging through his hair, jaw working the way it did when he was holding something behind his teeth.“A man broke into Wren’s house six hours ago,” he said. “With a camera. And you want to walk into a room alone with a total stranger who just admitted they’re connected to all of this.”“They’re not the one who broke in. They’re the one who’s been warning me.”“You don’t know that for certain.”“I don’t know anything for certain,” I said. “That’s exactly why I need to go.”He stopped pacing. Looked at me like I’d said something in a different language.Camille sat quiet on the other end of the couch, watching us both, arms wrapped around a mug of coffee she hadn’t touched in ten minutes. She glanced between us like she was watching a tennis match neither player was going to win.“Selene.” Dominic’
“Wren!”Nothing. Just the phone, warm against my ear, silent on the other end.Dominic grabbed my shoulders. “What’s happening. Selene, talk to me.”“I don’t know.” My voice came out thin. “The dog stopped barking. She’s not answering.”He stood up fast, phone still pressed to his own ear. “Where are you,” he said into it, sharp. “How far.”I couldn’t hear the answer. I could only hear my own heart, loud and wrong in my ears.“Wren, please,” I whispered into the phone. “Please pick up. Please say something.”Ten seconds. Fifteen. My hand had gone numb from gripping the phone so tight. I pressed it so hard against my ear it started to hurt, like the pain might somehow bring her voice back faster.Then a sound. Not Wren’s voice. A crash. A door, maybe, slamming hard against a wall. Then shouting, muffled, far away.“Wren?” I said again, my own voice cracking apart.“Selene?” Her voice again, shaking, but there, alive, real. “The police are here. They’re here, Selene, they just came thro
Camille was asleep on my couch by midnight, wine glass empty on the floor beside her, when my phone rang.Wren.I answered fast, stepping into the kitchen so I wouldn’t wake Camille. My hand was already tight around the phone before she said a single word.“Hey,” I said. “Everything okay?”“No.” Wren’s voice shook. “Selene, there’s a man outside my house.”My whole body went cold. The phone nearly slipped from my hand.“What kind of man.”“I don’t know. He’s just sitting in a car across the street. He’s been there for an hour. Biscuit won’t stop barking at the window.”Dominic came into the kitchen, still in the shirt he’d worn all day, and stopped moving the second he saw my face.“What,” he mouthed.I held up one finger. Wait.He didn’t wait well. He never had, not since the resignation, not since he’d started actually caring about things fast and hard instead of slow and careful. He came around the counter and stood close, close enough that I could feel the heat off his arm, watchi
Fletcher’s security team arrived in under twenty minutes.Two men in plain dark jackets, no logos, nothing that said who they worked for. They moved through my apartment like they’d already memorized the floor plan before walking in.“Clear,” one of them said, stepping out of the bedroom.“Clear,” said the other, from the kitchen.Dominic stood by the door the whole time, arms crossed, watching every corner they checked like he didn’t trust the word clear until he’d seen it himself.“There’s nothing here now,” the first man said. “No cameras, no devices. Whoever took that photo did it from outside, across the street, probably with a long lens.”“Probably,” Dominic said. “Can you prove it.”“Not yet. But if he came back once, he’ll come back again. People like this get comfortable.” The man handed Dominic a card. “We’ll have someone outside around the clock starting tonight.”“Twenty four hours,” Dominic said. “Not just evenings.”“Twenty four hours,” the man confirmed. “Your father wa







