MasukI did not respond to Priya’s text that night.
I made dinner instead. Pasta again, because apparently that was what I did now when something unsettled me. I stood in my narrow kitchen and boiled water and told myself it was fine. That it was just a professional overlap. That the design world in New York was not actually that large, and this kind of thing happened all the time, and it did not mean anything. The pasta was good. The reasoning was not. I knew Dominic. I knew how he operated. He did not do coincidences. He did not let things happen to him, he arranged them, quietly, from a distance, with the specific patience of a man who had spent his entire adult life turning situations to his advantage. The Hargrove account had a Hartley subsidiary attached to it, and he had made sure I knew before anyone else told me. Which meant he had been watching closely enough to know in the first place. That was not nothing. I washed the dishes. Dried them. Put them away. Went to bed. I lay there a while, staring at the ceiling, and then I picked up my phone and texted Camille. I told her about Priya’s message. Three sentences, plain and factual. Her reply came in under a minute. He is absolutely doing this on purpose and I need you to know that I am not even a little bit surprised. I put the phone face-down and closed my eyes. *** In the morning I got up early, made coffee, and decided that whatever Dominic was doing, it was not going to touch my work. The Hargrove brief was still sitting on my kitchen counter where I had left it the night before. I opened it while the coffee brewed and read through my own notes with fresh eyes. The line I had written in the margin was still there. What does it feel like to arrive somewhere and actually feel it? I circled it. Then I got dressed and went to work. Nicolas called a project meeting at nine. The whole team around the communal table, coffees in hand, the Hargrove brief printed and laid out between us. Nicolas ran meetings the way I wished all meetings were run. Direct. No filler. Everyone’s voice actually in the room. “Selene has creative lead,” he said. I already knew that. But hearing it said in front of the team made it real in a different way. Dax nodded like it made sense. Petra had already pulled up a research folder she’d clearly been building since the night before. Ro had three open tabs and the barely contained energy of someone who had been thinking about this since breakfast. I put my notebook on the table. “Hargrove is trying to be everything,” I said. “That’s the problem. Their current branding tries to speak to everyone, which means it lands with nobody. I want to narrow the story. I want someone to walk into a Hargrove property and feel like the hotel already knows them. Not luxury for luxury’s sake. Familiarity. Warmth. The feeling of arriving somewhere that was expecting you.” The room was quiet for a second. Then Petra said, “That’s the brief nobody wrote but everyone felt.” Dax leaned back in his chair. “It’s going to be harder to sell to the client than a standard refresh.” “I know,” I said. “Let’s make it impossible to say no to.” Nicolas had not said anything yet. I glanced at him. He was watching me with an expression that was hard to read, somewhere between professional approval and something quieter. He caught me looking. Nodded once. “Let’s build it,” he said. We worked through the morning. By noon we had a rough creative direction and a presentation skeleton with real bones. I was in the middle of pulling reference images when my work email opened to a new message. The sender was listed as Hartley Industries, Office of the CEO. My hand went still on the mouse. I read it once. Then again. Formal. Short. It stated that as the Hartley subsidiary attached to the Hargrove account, Hartley Industries would require a liaison point of contact at Crane & Aldous Creative for project coordination. It requested the assigned contact reach out to schedule an initial alignment call at their earliest convenience. It was signed by Priya, on Dominic’s behalf. I sat with it a moment. My coffee had gone cold at my elbow. Somewhere across the room Ro was laughing at something Dax had said, and the sound felt very far away. I forwarded the email to Nicolas with one line. Saw this come in. Wanted you to see it before I responded. His reply came four minutes later. Thanks for flagging. You okay to handle the liaison role given your history, or do you want me to reassign? I stared at that question longer than it should have taken. The easy answer was to ask him to reassign it. Clean. Professional. No drama. Nobody would question it. Nicolas would handle it without making me explain, and that would be the end of it. I typed back. I can handle it. I hit send before I could think about it too much. *** That afternoon I drafted a response to the Hartley Industries email. Short. Professional. Zero personal warmth, zero hostility. I proposed three time slots for an initial alignment call the following week. I addressed it to Priya. I did not address it to Dominic, and I did not acknowledge that I knew there was any connection beyond a professional one. I read it over twice. Sent it. Went back to my mood board. At five o’clock, as people packed up around me, my personal phone buzzed on the desk. Not a text this time. A call. Dominic’s name did not come up on the screen. I had deleted his contact months ago. But I knew the number. Four years of marriage leaves certain things in your memory whether you want them there or not. I let it ring. It rang six times and went to voicemail. I put my phone in my bag. Said goodnight to Petra. Took the stairs down to the street. The evening was cool, the city was doing its loud indifferent thing all around me, and I walked toward the subway telling myself I had made the right call. My phone buzzed again at the bottom of the stairs. A voicemail notification. I stood on the platform with the train coming in hot and loud, and I pressed play. His voice came through the speaker. Low. Careful. The way it got when he was choosing every word before he let it out. “Selene. I know you saw the email. I know you know what this is.” A pause. Not a dramatic one. Just a man collecting himself before he kept going. “I’m not trying to make your life difficult. I just need you to know that I’m not going away.” Another pause. Longer. “Not this time.” The train doors opened. I got on. I did not delete the voicemail.Nobody slept.By six in the morning we were all still at Fletcher’s townhouse, coffee going cold in mismatched mugs, Petra’s leg propped up and iced for the third time. Camille had fallen asleep sitting up around four and woken with a crick in her neck she kept rubbing without noticing she was doing it. Adrienne paced the length of the room in slow circles, phone pressed to her ear more often than not.“We go in together,” Dominic said. “Nobody splits off.”“Someone should stay with Petra,” Camille said. “She can’t run if something happens.”“I can run fine,” Petra said, already shifting to sit up straighter.“You limped into a coffee shop yesterday.”“I limped into a coffee shop after fighting off a man twice my size in a parking garage. I think I’ve earned the right to decide for myself.”“That’s not the point.”“It is exactly the point.”“Enough.” Dominic’s voice cut through both of them, sharp, his hand raised slightly like he could physically stop the argument. “We’re not doing t
My phone rang while Fletcher was still staring at his ruined list.Unknown number. Not the same one as before.I looked at Dominic. He nodded once, tight, and reached over to put it on speaker before I’d even decided to answer. Camille and Petra both went still on the couch, and Fletcher set down his pen, his whole body angled toward the phone now instead of the paper.I picked up. “Hello.”“Selene Whitmore.” The voice was calm, almost pleasant, nothing like I’d imagined from a recording and a string of threats. “I’ve been wanting to actually talk to you for some time now.”My whole body went cold. Dominic’s hand found my shoulder, steadying, his grip tightening with every word that came through the speaker. Fletcher rose halfway out of his chair before catching himself and sitting back down, hands flat on his knees like he needed something to hold onto that wasn’t a phone he had no control over.“Marcus Reyes,” I said.“You know my name. Good. Saves us both some time.”“What do you w
Fletcher opened the door before we even reached it, like he’d been standing there waiting.“I got Dominic’s message,” he said. “Come in. All of you.”His townhouse felt different this time. Warmer somehow, lived in, lamps already lit in the front room like he’d known we would need light more than anything else tonight. He’d set out water glasses on the table without being asked, more of them than the five of us needed, like he’d been preparing for a crowd larger than the one that actually showed up.Petra limped in last, leaning heavily on Camille, and Fletcher’s eyes went to her leg immediately.“Sit,” he said, pulling a cushion from another chair and setting it under the coffee table for her foot before anyone else had even taken off their coat. “I’ll get ice.”Dominic set the picture frame down on the coffee table without a word. Fletcher paused halfway to the kitchen, looked at it, and something crossed his face I couldn’t quite read.“Rosalind,” he said quietly.“You knew her,” I
“Everyone out of the apartment. Now.”The specialist’s voice left no room for argument. She was already moving toward the door, the box cradled carefully in both gloved hands, her body angled to keep it as far from her own chest as possible.Dominic grabbed my arm and pulled me back into the hallway. Camille had Petra’s other side, half carrying her, and we all pressed against the far wall as the specialist carried the box past us, slow, deliberate, each step measured like the floor itself might betray her.“Stairwell,” she said. “Not the elevator. Go.”We went.I don’t remember most of the stairs. I remember Dominic’s hand never leaving mine, gripping so tight it hurt, and I remember Petra’s breath coming in short gasps beside me, her hurt ankle screaming with every step but her mouth never once complaining. Camille’s arm stayed locked around Petra’s waist the whole way down, both of them moving as one unsteady unit past floor after floor of doors that stayed shut, neighbors with no
The waiting was the worst part.Camille kept both hands wrapped around mine, tight enough to hurt, and neither of us said anything for a long time. The garage entrance sat there in the dark, swallowing the world, giving nothing back. Somewhere above us, four floors up maybe, or five, I couldn’t tell anymore, three people I loved were looking for a fourth.I counted the seconds by my own pulse, because it was the only clock I had that felt honest.Then my phone rang.Dominic.I answered so fast I nearly dropped it. “Tell me.”“We found her.” His voice was rough, out of breath. “Selene, we found her.”“Is she okay?”A pause that lasted too long. I heard footsteps on his end, uneven, someone half walking and half being carried.“She’s alive,” he said. “She’s hurt. Not too bad, I don’t think, but she’s scared and she’s shaking and she needs a hospital.”“What happened?”“Reyes never showed up. He sent someone else instead. She got separated from the security team in a stairwell, someone g
“How long before he realizes you’re not coming,” Dominic asked.Petra checked the time on her phone, hands still shaking. “I don’t know. Twenty minutes, maybe. He said to hurry.”“Where does he want to meet you.”“A parking garage on Forty-Second. Level three. He said to come alone.”“We call the police,” Dominic said. “Now. With everything we have.”“That takes time we don’t have,” Adrienne said. “I still have contacts from the Solstice days. People who move faster than a report.”Petra had gone very still, listening to them argue about her like she wasn’t standing right there.“What if I go,” she said quietly.“Absolutely not,” Dominic said.“He thinks I’m still on his side,” Petra said. “If I show up wired, with people watching from a distance, he might say something on tape we can actually use tonight instead of six months from now. Let me do something that helps instead of just apologizing to you for the rest of my life.”Dominic pulled out his own phone and called his father’s s







