LOGINAt The Elevator
MARCUS pushed through the sliding doors of the Springfield Plaza Mall, the blast of cold air-conditioning hitting his rough face as he stepped inside. It was still morning, the weekday crowd thin, but Marcus carried himself like the busiest person in the building, his heavy boots thudding against the polished floor, his broad shoulders rolling with a false sense of importance. He didn’t bother adjusting his wrinkled flannel shirt or the baseball cap sitting crookedly on his head. He was here for one thing, and one thing only.
Liquor.
He took the escalator up to the second floor, headed straight into the liquor store, and grabbed a handheld basket without greeting anyone. He moved down the aisle like he owned the place, snatching two bottles of Jack Daniel’s off the shelf, then adding a bottle of Jim Beam for good measure. He stared at the labels, satisfied, the corners of his mouth lifting in a grin that revealed his uneven, nicotine-stained teeth.
He placed the bottles on the counter, paid, stuffed the receipt into his pocket, and turned to leave.
But halfway to the exit of the store, he paused.
A thought struck him— one he found brilliant, clever, downright strategic.
Why go straight home when he could make a stop first?
He could swing by Elena’s workplace, call her out in front of her coworkers, and tell her she needed to take the rest of the day off. Her husband needed breakfast— homemade breakfast— and she was going to come home and make it.
He chuckled under his breath, shaking his head smugly.
“Man, I’m a damn genius,” he muttered.
On impulse, he veered into the supermarket attached to the mall. He didn’t even look at the signs overhead; he simply grabbed items the way a man grabs things when he knows someone else will be doing the cooking.
He began tossing groceries into his cart: a pack of baby spinach, a bag of shredded carrots, two large beefsteak tomatoes, a bottle of Cajun seasoning, one medium-sized yellow onion, a pack of chicken thighs, a small bag of russet potatoes, a loaf of sourdough bread he already planned to tear into on the drive, and a six-pack of generic soda.
The cashier offered a polite, rehearsed smile as she packed everything into a brown paper grocery bag, but Marcus didn’t even look at her. He drummed his fingers impatiently, staring past her like she was furniture. When she pushed the bag toward him, he grunted, grabbed it by the top, and walked off without a word.
Exiting the mall, he walked toward the parking lot with a swagger— quick, heavy steps that suggested irritation at anyone walking too slowly or daring to cross his path. He carried the groceries in one hand, the liquor bottles in the other, his lips still curled into that self-satisfied smirk.
The sun beat down on the asphalt, making the heat rise in shimmers, but Marcus barely noticed. He headed straight for his beat-up silver sedan parked crookedly across two lines— a habit he refused to change. He yanked the back door open and dropped the paper bag onto the seat with zero care, the potatoes rolling to the edge. Then he placed the liquor down more carefully, almost reverently, as if it were the only thing in his life worth protecting.
As he slammed the door shut, he muttered under his breath, the words low, harsh, and meant only for himself:
“Elena better be ready. I’m coming to get her. She is gonna go home and make me some real food this morning.”
***
Elena burst out of the restroom like a hunted animal, her breath sharp and ragged as she sprinted down the hallway. Her shoes slapped against the polished office floor, the fluorescent lights blurring above her, the world narrowing into nothing but fear, pure, primal fear.
Was this how her morning would really go?
She didn’t stop until she reached the wide-open working floor where dozens of employees sat at their desks, typing, talking, and focusing on screens. The moment she stumbled into the space, people looked up— first annoyed at the disruption, then startled at her trembling form.
“Help me… help me, I just walked—”
“Elena?”
The voice cut through the room like a blade dipped in ice.
It was cold, controlled, and unmistakable.
She froze mid-sentence.
He was there. Eamon. Walking through the doorway as though he had simply taken a calm stroll from his office. His left hand fumbled absently with the button of his suit jacket, as if this were just another Friday morning for him. His right hand shoved in his pocket.
Her heart fell straight through her body.
“No… no, no…” she whispered, backing away, words tumbling out in terror. The employees stared, eyes flicking between her and the CEO with confusion and growing unease.
“Go… to… hell. I quit.”
A collective gasp rippled across the room.
Eamon’s jaw tightened, not in anger, but something far more unreadable.
“You can’t quit,” he said, his voice a low winter chill. “Not you.”
Her lips parted, ready to shout back, when suddenly—
A sharp beam of light.
A flicker, faint, brief, but unmistakably unnatural, flashed across the space.
And instantly, every employee who had been watching began turning away, one after the other. Their expressions went blank. Their movements synchronized like puppets being pulled on invisible strings.
They stood, gathered their belongings, and walked out in silence.
Her terror skyrocketed.
“No— no, no, no!” Elena cried, reaching toward them helplessly. “Don’t leave! Please!”
But they didn’t even look at her. They filed out of the hall as though guided by something unseen, something she couldn’t understand.
When the last one disappeared around the corner, she turned back.
Eamon stood exactly where he had been, hands now folded neatly behind him, a faint curl of interest at the corner of his lips.
He was enjoying the fear radiating off her.
“You… you… stay away from me,” she stammered, lifting her right hand between them as though her trembling fingers could stop him.
He took one slow step forward.
She bolted.
Her legs nearly buckled with panic as she sprinted toward the elevators, stabbing at the button repeatedly with shaking fingers.
“Come on, come on!” she breathed desperately.
The silver doors finally slid open with an agonizing slowness.
Her breath caught in her throat.
He was inside. Standing still. His back turned to her, shoulders relaxed as if he had been waiting for her to find him there.
He turned his head slightly, then fully, eyes locking with hers.
“So,” he said quietly, hands still behind him, voice echoing faintly inside the metal walls, “why can’t I touch you?”
She stumbled backwards, nearly losing her balance.
“Look, I don’t know,” she choked out. “Just don’t touch me.”
“I won’t,” he replied calmly. “Not until I figure out who you are.” His gaze sharpened and darkened. “Until then, you won’t leave my side.”
He slipped his hands into his pockets, it looked casual but that was terrifying.
Her eyes widened.
“So what do you suggest? Hold hands?”
Eamon’s expression barely shifted.
“Let’s skip the touching,” he said smoothly, lifting his left hand slightly.
There and then, instinct screamed.
Before he could react further, Elena snapped her gaze to his hand, grabbed it with her left hand, and clamped down tight.
His skin sizzled beneath her touch.
A burn— raw, blistering and impossible.
Eamon winced sharply.
Using the moment, she yanked him out of the elevator with all the strength terror gave her, then darted inside. The doors slid closed instantly.
He stood outside, watching her with unreadable eyes as the elevator sealed shut.
A Bargain.TIARA arrived at exactly ten in the morning, and Elena couldn't help the easily smile that slid over over her face. Elena watched her through the glass door before buzzing her in. She looked worse than she had at the mall. Thinner and paler, in a way that even sleep could not fix."Hey..." She began softly, "Please, sit and make yourself comfortable."Tiara sat with her hands were folded in her lap. Her eyes kept moving around the office towards the window, the bookshelf, the photograph of Evan on the desk."I'm not going to hurt you," Elena noted her uneasiness."I know.""Do you?"Tiara looked at her. "You could have destroyed me months ago if you wanted to, but you didn't.""I was busy." Elena shrugged. "Divorce proceedings, custody cases, and work. I've had a lot on my plate.""And how about now when you're the CEO of this big company?" Tiara's voice was quiet. "I know you, Elena. I grew up with you. You don't do anything without a reason."Elena leaned back in her cha
EmptyTHE shop was empty again for the third time this week, and it was just Wednesday. All the hope she thought she had to pay the landlord by the end of the week were dashed. Women walked past the shop day by day... Young women with money, time, and hair that needed to be made, but none of them paused in front of her shop. Even her faithful customers turned up their nose before walking past her shop, as if she'd done.Three days now and not a single customer.She pressed her hand to her stomach. The bump was small still, easy to hide, but she felt it every morning. The nausea. The weight. The thing growing inside her that Marcus had called a problem."Get rid of it," he had said. "We can't afford a baby right now."But he could afford the car, the apartment, the nights out that she wasn't invited to anymore. Her phone sat on the counter. There were no messages, no calls, and even her mother had stopped answering two weeks ago."You slept with your cousin's husband," her mother had s
The OfficeELENA was in her office when they arrived without an appointment on a Thursday afternoon. Her eyebrows pulled together in a frown when she saw their names, and she felt an inexplicable anger filing her chest.Her assistant's message was still lighting up her screen:*There are two people in reception, they say they know you, I told them to wait but they're...*She didn't finish reading the message when the door opened.Clinton Brooks came in first, in the suit he reserved for occasions he wanted to communicate authority. Martha was a step behind him, wearing the expression Elena recognized from holiday dinners, like she had already made up her mind on how this conversation would go even if the other person didn't agree with her.Elena set her pen down and did not stand. She was not going to give them the benefit of making her look small and doubt herself. She had met these two people eleven times in eight years of marriage. She had watched them watch Marcus charm rooms. She
The filesELENA was cooped up in Eamon's house after she was discharged from the hospital because he wanted to monitor her health himself and make sure she wasn't stressing herself out. He even took out the liberty to have Karen visit her in the house just so he could explain why she couldn't start work immediately.Dr. Karen had understood and promised to get her a new assistant who would take care of things while Elena was away, and also give her updates on the current project they were working on."That's okay. You can ask Michelle in the meantime to fill in that position."Dr. Karen's expression changed slightly before she shook her head."Michelle resigned," Karen said tiredly.Elena leaned back into the sofa with a frown etched on her face. "When?""This morning. She walked into HR at eight and handed over her badge. She didn't give any concrete reason, but the letter said she was pursuing other opportunities." "Other opportunities meaning?""I investigated, and it turns out sh
The CollapseHER dream was different this time. It wasn't in the kitchen or the old apartment again. This time she was back in the parking garage where Marcus had his hands on her shoulders, but his face kept shifting... From Marcus, then a man she didn't recognize, then Marcus again. His voice seemed to be coming from everywhere all at once."They'll come for Evan. They'll come for everyone you love.""I will kill Evan. And that bastard boyfriend of yours."Each sentence was more sinister than the other, and even when she tried to run, her legs seemed stuck. She couldn't move even if she tried to."You think he can protect you?"Tears streamed down her eyes as Elena opened her mouth to scream, but nothing came out. She was just there, helpless, while the horror of everything kept repeating itself.*Elena woke up to Evan shaking her arm, trying to wake her up with tears in his eyes."Mom, wake up please." he was crying louder than she was screaming. "Stop screaming mommy, wake up."E
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When Walls FallTHE Saturday morning sun had barely crested the horizon when Elena’s peace was shattered. She had been enjoying a quiet breakfast with Evan— pancakes, syrup, and the boy’s endless chatter about dinosaurs, when an insistent knock at the front door startled her.“Mom? Who is it?” Evan
Ghosts Don't Stay Buried HER eyes twitched the instant she saw it.It was a DM.And from Marcus.Her fingers went cold as she stared at the name she had tried and still failed to erase from her life. Her heart already knew before her mind could catch up. Slowly, she tapped the message.It was a vi
Shadows and LightMARCUS’S laughter echoed in the dimly lit gambling lounge, clinking glasses and the roar of slot machines forming a chaotic symphony around him. Cigarette smoke curled lazily toward the low ceiling, and the scent of cheap whiskey filled the room. He leaned back in his chair, swirl
Just The Three of ThemTHE evening settled gently over the city.By a few minutes to seven, Elena and Evan were ready. Nothing extravagant— just simple, neat elegance. Elena wore a soft knee-length dress in muted tones, her hair pulled back loosely, face fresh and unforced. Evan looked impossibly h







