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The pitch deck sticks to my palms. I press my thighs together under the conference table, wipe my hands on my skirt when no one's tracking me. Annika, the woman I'm replacing, wore a size four. I'm eight. The waistband bites a red trench into my stomach every time I inhale, and I've been inhaling plenty because the air in here is thin and tastes of other people's sweat.
The fluorescents buzz. Not a hum. A buzz. Like a horsefly beating itself dead against a windowpane. "I'm sorry, who are you?" The man across the table has jewels and a tie that costs more than my monthly rent on the east side. He studies me like an entreé he didn't order. "Lena. I'm subbing for Annika. Sinus infection." My voice spikes higher than I intend. I clear my throat. "I have the Henderson projections." "Annika has the Henderson projections." "Annika emailed them to me at six this morning. Between sneezes." I slide the deck across the table. The wood gleams like a frozen lake. "Pages four through seven." He doesn't glance at it. He glances at his phone. Fine. Furniture. I lean back in a chair that cost more than my father's last PET scan and try to remember why I said yes to this gig. The money. The money that dissolves into medical bills before it touches my account. The door opens. I don't hear it so much as feel it. The cold air displacing, carrying a burn of scotch and something starched, something with weight. The fluorescents sharpen their buzz, or maybe that's blood rushing to my eardrums. Julian Croft. He's taller than the CNBC footage suggests. Leaner. Everything about him is sharp. Look at his square jaw, cheekbones, the knife-edge of his shoulders inside a charcoal suit someone probably flew in from Milan and wept over. His hair is dark, pushed back with either zero effort or extreme precision. I can't tell. His eyes are pale blue, but in the dead light of the boardroom they read gray. I mean frostbite gray. He doesn't look at me. He looks through me, past me, toward the real people. That's fine to me. Invisible is my default setting across a dozen offices in this city. I mean I like being a temp ghost who reforms footnotes and retrieves coffee no one thanks her for. Then he stops. His gaze catches on my face. A quarter second, or less. Enough for my stomach to execute a slow, unwelcome rotation. "Where's Annika?" Jowls supplies the answer. "Sick. This is the replacement." Julian Croft doesn't nod. He moves to the head of the table and settles. The motion is fluid, efficient. Nothing wasted. He doesn't check his phone. He doesn't riffle papers. He folds his hands and begins to speak. "We're discussing the Henderson merger. Some of you prepared. Most of you didn't. If you didn't, stay silent. It saves minutes." His voice. It's low and level, stripped of the performative bark men in rooms like this usually deploy. He doesn't need volume. He knows bodies will lean in to catch every syllable. I lean in. I catch myself mid-lean and snap backward, spine striking the chair. My heart knocks a warning rhythm against my ribs, forcing myself to pay attention because I know he registers things. The meeting dissolves into figures and planning. I track maybe sixty percent. The rest of the time, I'm fixed on Julian Croft's hands. The way a single finger taps the table when someone drones. The way he interrupts with a question that shears through padding. "Mr. Keller." Jowls. His name is Keller. "You propose we increase the offer by twelve percent based on a projection you haven't verified. Is that strategy or a prayer?" Keller's neck flushes. "It's a calculated—" "It's a prayer. I don't pray in boardrooms. Next." My mouth was thoroughly dried up. I'm not the target, and still my pulse thuds in my throat. I flatten my palms against my skirt. The fabric is damp. The meeting terminates without ceremony. Julian Croft rises, buttons his jacket, moves toward the door. People scatter. I stay seated, waiting for the room to empty so I can gather the decks and dissolve back to the temp agency where I'm a row on a spreadsheet. I reach for the Henderson file. My hand tremors as adrenaline comes down, I tell myself it has nothing to do with the man stationed at the door, discussing quarterly earnings in a low thrum I can feel at the base of my spine. His pen sits at the table's edge. The Montblanc in black, and looks heavy. I watched him initially during Keller's dismantling. He left it. I grab the file. My elbow catches the pen. It rolls. I lunged, but it was too far, and I was too slow. The pen tips over the edge and strikes marble with a crack that splits the air like a bone fracturing. Silence floods the room. I drop. The marble bites through my tights, cold and immediate. The pen has vanished under the table. I scramble, fingers closing around the barrel just as a shadow swallows the light. Julian Croft crouches beside me. He's close. Close enough that I catch the scotch on his breath, the starch in his collar, something beneath both—smoky, warm, staggering. His eyes level with mine. Gray. Unreadable. The red neon orb of the Penobscot Building pulses through the window behind him, a slow heartbeat against the Detroit skyline. He doesn't take the pen. He waits. Heat crawls up the back of my neck and spills downward. My hand vibrates as I extend his absurd, precious pen. He doesn't move, nor blink. Just watches me, crouched on the floor of a boardroom with a temp who can't clear a table without detonating something. "You break it, you buy it." His voice runs quiet. Conversational. It hooks something in my chest and tugs. "And you can't afford it." He rises. He takes the pen from my frozen fingers without grazing my skin. He walks out. I stay on my knees, heart hammering, thighs clamped together, skin firing. The fluorescents buzz overhead. The Penobscot orb bleeds red through the glass. I should be mortified. I am mortified. But beneath the mortification, beneath the shame and the adrenaline and the cold marble bruising my kneecaps, something liquid and hot and completely unacceptable unspools low in my stomach. What the hell is wrong with you? I don't know. I don't know anything except this: Julian Croft didn't fire me. He didn't even register anger. He registered interest. And I'm still on the floor, clutching the ghost of his pen, my pulse drumming in places it has no jurisdiction. The fluorescents buzz. I haul myself upright, gather the files, walk out on legs that feel borrowed. The city exhales around me. Rain slicks Woodward Avenue. The Penobscot orb glows red through the mist, a steady, watching eye. I press my forehead to the cold glass of the elevator and force a breath. My phone buzzes. The temp agency. How'd it go? Need you for another one tomorrow. I type back: Fine. Yes. I don't mention the pen. The crouch. The way his voice landed behind my navel and nested there. The elevator drops. My reflection stares back at me in the brushed steel doors, and I see a flushed, dilated stranger. I look away. At 3:17 AM, my phone will light up on the nightstand. An unknown number. A summons. But I don't know that yet. Right now, there's only the rain, the red neon, and the heat still crawling slow up my sternum like a hand I can't— I stop. I didn't finish the sentence. I finish the walk to the parking structure, where my Civic smells like old coffee and the driver's seat is still molded to someone else's spine. I sit in the dark. Keys in my lap. Engine off. The rain drums the roof. I press my palm flat against my sternum, right where the heat refuses to fade, and I hold it there like pressure on a wound.I wake to cold sheets and the kind of quiet that means I'm alone.The space beside me holds the shape of a body that isn't there. I flatten my palm against the mattress anyway, searching for leftover warmth, and find nothing but expensive cotton and the shallow dent of my own weight. He left hours ago. Maybe minutes after I fell asleep.The bathroom is larger than my entire apartment on Van Dyke. Marble climbs the walls and spreads across the floor and wraps the counter in gray veins that look like frozen lightning. A shower with three heads. A tub deep enough to submerge a grown man. I stand at the sink with the water running, waiting for it to heat, and my reflection stops me cold.My lips are swollen. Pink and puffy and raw. The kind of damage that doesn't come from lipstick. There's a purple shadow on my collarbone that I don't remember getting. A red scrape beneath my jaw where his stubble dragged. My hair looks like a nest. My eyes are glassy and too wide.I jerk my face away.T
The penthouse door closes and the sound registers in my spine. Not a slam. Not a click. A soft, pneumatic hush that says the room itself has been waiting.Julian walks past me without a word. He crosses to the sideboard where the decanter waits and pours two fingers of scotch into a glass that catches the last light. The Penobscot Building's red orb hasn't fired yet. The sky outside the window wall is the color of old steel, that particular Detroit gray that hangs over the river before the lights kick on at 5:47 PM exactly.I stay near the door. My boots are still laced. My coat is still buttoned. I'm gripping the strap of my bag like it's the last solid thing in the room."Take off the dress."His voice is low and even. He doesn't turn around."I'm not wearing a dress."He turns. The glass stops halfway to his mouth. His eyes travel over me and my jeans and my sweater and my scuffed boots and my coat I haven't removed. The assessment takes half a second and I feel it in my teeth."Ta
Sleep doesn't arrive.The word Acquired sits on my phone at 2:17 AM, and by 5:30 I've quit the sheets. I'm at the kitchen in borrowed sweatpants, drinking black coffee from a machine that cost more than my father's last three rounds of chemo. The coffee is brutally good. I resent it for that.The Penobscot Building's red orb dissolves into November dawn while gray light bleeds over the river. The freight trains have stopped their night-long moan. The city hangs in that bruised hour before the morning commute ignites.My phone buzzes, but not from Julian. It is the agency.“Marchetti, removed from active roster per client request. Outstanding pay processed. Good luck.”I read it twice. The coffee turns sour in my stomach. Removed. Not resigned. Julian's hand, shutting a door I didn't know I was still propping open.The second text lands at 8:47 AM.Bentley. Underground garage. Noon.No greeting. No signature. Coordinates and a summons. I don't reply. He doesn't need a reply. He needs
The tailor measured me Tuesday, silent and surgical, her tape cinching my hips, my bust, the width of my shoulders. She never inquired about preference. She'd only nodded. "He'll approve."He'll approve. As if the dress was never intended for me. As if I was the hanger.The dress lands at 4:30 PM on a Saturday in a box that outweighs my suitcase.Marcus Webb brought it. He positions it on the bed—the bed, possessive pronoun, as if I've earned it and withdraws without a single statement. The Black matte box is unmarked except for a silver emblem I don't recognize. When I lift the lid, the tissue paper rasps with the crispness of freshness.Emerald. Not green. Emerald. The precise shade of the vein in Julian Croft's forearm, the one I've been tracking for days.I removed the dress. The silk crepe slides through my fingers, liquid weight. A column, sleeveless, neckline made to plummet just far enough. No sequins. No ornament. The statement is the color, the drape, the way the fabric swal
The knot in my right shoulder has been tightening for hours. I woke up with it. I sleep on it. It's the only proof I have that time is passing.Seventy-two hours in a bed that isn't mine, sheets reeking of cedar and nothing human. Seventy-two hours of delivery pad thai because I can't bring myself to open the Refrigerator stocked with food I didn't purchase. Seventy-two hours of Julian Croft evaporating into his empire and leaving me suspended in this room of glass and marble, a security detail tracking my bladder breaks, a phone that hasn't vibrated with a single text from him.I signed at 4:52 AM Wednesday. He watched the ink dry. Then he'd taken the Montblanc—the same one, I registered, the one I dropped—and countersigned without ceremony, or acknowledging at all. Just nib on paper, the document vanishing into a leather folio, and a tilt of his chin toward the door where Marcus Webb, head of security, had materialized like he'd been breathing in the hallway the entire time."Marcus
The elevator doors retract. The forty-second floor exhales a silence that isn't soft—it's the silence of a building emptied of witnesses. The corridor unspools in both directions, lit only by the emergency track lighting and the city's ambient bleed through the floor-to-ceiling glass at the far end. Detroit glitters below: sodium-orange grids, the black coil of the river, the Penobscot Building's red orb throbbing its metronome beat. Beyond it, the Guardian Building's green-tipped spire glows steady as a vigil candle.My heels strike polished concrete. Too loud. I adjust my weight to the balls of my feet, muffling—then I stop myself. He summoned you. Stop creeping.His office occupies the corridor's end. I know because I checked the directory in the elevator this afternoon, after the pen, after the crouch, after I swore I'd never set foot in this tower again. The door is a slab of frosted glass. Light seeps through it in a warm, amber, unexpected way. I expected surgical blue-white. T







