Masuk
I was already shutting my laptop when they blocked the door.
Not one person. Two. Claire from legal and Ryan from the projects team, both standing there like they'd planned exactly where to put their feet. Like they'd been waiting for five o'clock on purpose.
"Nora." Claire’s voice was flat. "We need a minute."
I looked between them. "I was literally just leaving —"
"It won't take long."
What was going on?
By the time they walked me back to the main floor, half the office was still there. End of day stragglers. People who should have been packing up their bags, but weren't. They were watching. Some pretending not to, which was worse.
Sienna was already standing at the front.
She had printed documents in her hand. She always printed things when she wanted them to feel official, real and hard to argue with.
"We've been made aware," she started, loud enough for the whole room, "that confidential details from the Meridian project were leaked to a competitor. The Meridian pitch. The one we've been building for four months."
Wait, the Meridian Project? How did that happen??
"It was traced back to an internal source." She looked at me. Just for a second, then away like she hadn't already decided. "Nora, your login credentials were used to access the files the night they were sent."
"What?" The word came out strange. "That — no. No, that's wrong…."
"The IT report —"
"I don't care what the report says!" My voice cracked on the last word and I hated it. I pressed my nails into my palm and kept going. "I didn't touch those files. Someone used my login. Someone had to have —"
"Do you have any proof of that?"
Silence.
I looked around the room. All those faces I knew. David who sat three desks from mine. Amara who I bought birthday cake for last month. People who knew me, who had worked beside me for months, and not one of them opened their mouth.
"I'm telling you I didn't do it," I said. "Isn't that enough to at least —"
"It's not." Sienna cut me off cleanly. No heat in it. Just a door closing. "Nora, the new CEO is resuming tomorrow. If you cannot come in with something concrete; evidence, documentation, anything that clears your name, then you need to start thinking about clearing your desk."
Wait, what?
"You're firing me?” I couldn't believe what was happening.
"We're giving you until tomorrow."
"That's the same thing. You've already decided!" My voice was shaking now. I could hear it. "You've all already decided and you're standing there with your little printed paper like this is some kind of —" I stopped. Swallowed. My eyes were burning and I was not going to do this in front of all of them. "This is wrong. Whatever you found, whoever put my name on it, this is wrong and I will prove it."
Nobody said anything.
I grabbed my bag off the desk.
“I promise you, I did not do it.”
My hands were shaking so badly I knocked my water bottle over and just left it. I didn't look at anyone on my way to the elevator. I stared at the floor and I breathed through my nose and I kept telling myself, “hold it together, just hold it together until you get outside”.
The elevator doors closed.
Then I pressed my back against the wall and let out the ugliest, most broken sound I had ever heard come out of my own body.
---
The evening air hit me like a slap.
I stood outside the building for maybe thirty seconds before my legs started moving on their own. I didn't have a direction. I just needed to not be standing still.
They were accusing me of confidential breach. Hell, if I wasn't able to prove my innocence, I'd end up leaving my job.
No, no, no.
My phone buzzed.
Mum.
I stared at her name on the screen and pressed decline.
I couldn't. Not right now. She would ask how my day was and I would completely fall apart on a public pavement. I could not do that right now.
I flagged down a cab.
I got in and gave my address and turned my face toward the window and let the tears come properly now that no one I knew could see me. Silent ones. The kind that just kept falling no matter how many times I wiped them away with the back of my hand.
Four months. That was how long the Meridian project ran. Four months of staying late, of skipping lunch, of turning down drinks with friends because I had revisions to finish. My work was in that pitch. My actual work. And now my name was being used to burn it to the ground.
Why would I do that. What would I even get from —
Suddenly something clicked.
The drafts.
I sat up straight, so fast that the cab driver glanced at me in the mirror.
The design drafts. I had saved early versions of the Meridian concept files on Daniel's laptop three weeks ago when mine was being repaired. I'd sent them to myself but never deleted the folder on his drive. Timestamps, original file metadata, version history — all of it sitting there, untouched, exactly as I had built it from the beginning.
That was proof.
That was real, actual proof that I was on that project from day one, working in good faith, not selling anything to anyone.
"Sorry —" I leaned forward. "Can you turn around? I need to go somewhere else first."
---
Daniel's building looked the same as it always did.
I paid the driver and got out and told myself to calm down. My eyes were still swollen. I probably looked like something that had been dragged backwards through a bad week. It didn't matter. I just needed the laptop. I just needed the files and then I could fix this.
The main door was unlocked. I took the stairs.
I've had a key to his place for six months. He gave it to me on a Tuesday, casual, like it was nothing. In case you're ever here before me. I kept it on the same ring as my work lanyard and I never thought about it too much.
I thought about a lot of things I probably should have looked at closer.
I got to his floor and walked down the hall to his door.
I raised my hand to knock.
Then stopped.
I don't know what made me stop. Some part of me that heard it before the rest of me was willing to.
A sound. Low. Coming through the door.
And then another.
I stood completely still in that hallway.
My hand was still raised in the air.
And then a voice— breathless, unmistakable, a voice I had known since I was fifteen years old —
"Daniel —"
The key was already in my hand.
Nora's POV For a second I genuinely forgot how to do anything. Not just breathe. Everything. Think, blink, move, exist. All of it just stopped, I couldn't explain how. His tongue traced the seam of my lips, soft but sure, and I opened for him before my brain could even catch up. The kiss got deeper right away—warm and a little messy. A rush of heat flooded my chest and spilled down my spine, making my knees feel weirdly unsteady. I stood there staring at him, and he stood there looking back at me while kissing me. The room was completely silent, and my brain was offering me absolutely nothing useful. Then everything came back at once. My eyes went wide and I pushed against his chest and took two steps back so fast I nearly lost my balance. "What the hell?!" My voice came out louder than I meant it to. Cael didn't flinch, didn't move, didn't even look particularly surprised, which somehow made everything worse. I pointed at him. "You—" Nothing came out. I tried again. "Yo
Nora's POVFor a second I genuinely forgot how to do anything.Not just breathe. Everything. Think, blink, move, exist. All of it just stopped, I couldn't explain how.His tongue traced the seam of my lips, soft but sure, and I opened for him before my brain could even catch up. The kiss got deeper right away—warm and a little messy. A rush of heat flooded my chest and spilled down my spine, making my knees feel weirdly unsteady.I stood there staring at him, and he stood there looking back at me while kissing me. The room was completely silent, and my brain was offering me absolutely nothing useful.Then everything came back at once.My eyes went wide and I pushed against his chest and took two steps back so fast I nearly lost my balance."What the hell?!"My voice came out louder than I meant it to. Cael didn't flinch, didn't move, didn't even look particularly surprised, which somehow made everything worse.I pointed at him."You—"Nothing came out.I tried again."You—"Still not
I woke up already annoyed. Not because something was wrong exactly, just because my head was too loud and sleep had felt less like rest and more like drifting in and out of thoughts I hadn't asked for.Leon, the house, the silence. Sixteen-year-old me standing in a hallway holding a watch nobody wanted.I turned on my side and muttered, "Stop it," to absolutely no one. "It was years ago. It's nothing now."I waited for my brain to agree.It didn't.And then, as if one problem wasn't enough, another face slipped in without permission.Cael.I groaned into my pillow."Fantastic," I said out loud. "One man I don't understand and one man I don't want to see again. Great combination, Nora. Very healthy."What was wrong with me??I sat up, rubbed my face, and decided that today was going to be a professional day. Strictly professional. No replaying last night's dinner, no thinking about the way he'd looked at me across that table, and absolutely no thinking about him stepping close outside
I didn't even remember putting the phone down.Mom's voice was still sitting somewhere in my head, soft and hopeful in a way that made everything worse.*Leon is coming back.*The words just stayed there. Didn't move, didn't fade, just settled somewhere behind my eyes like they'd found a place and decided not to leave.I turned onto my side and stared at nothing in particular."Of course," I muttered.My eyes burned a little. Not enough to cry, just enough to be annoying. Maybe it was frustration, maybe it was just too many things happening in one day. I closed my eyes.And then the memories started. Not because I wanted them to.... just because they did.---I was sixteen when my mom brought me into the Vance house for the first time.I still remember holding her hand too tightly at the gate, looking up at the building and feeling something I couldn't name properly. It wasn't fear exactly. More like the feeling you get when you already know something isn't going to go the way you ho
The laughter was still in my chest when my mom's voice shifted. Not dramatically or all at once. It was just a small change in tone, the kind I'd learned to notice over the years. Like she was about to say something she'd been working up to for a while. "Nora." "Mm?" "I need to tell you something." I stopped smiling. "Okay." She paused. Then, carefully, "Leon is coming back." The name landed in my chest like something cold. Wait, who??? For a second I didn't say anything, just lay there on my bed staring at the ceiling, feeling the warmth of the last few minutes drain out of the room completely. "Leon....?" I repeated. "Yes." Her voice had gone gentle in that specific way she used when she already knew she was walking into something difficult. "He called last week. He's been abroad for a while but he's coming home, and I thought... I thought it would be nice if we all—" I frowned and cut in. "No." "Nora—" "Mom." "Just.... listen to me for a second." I sat up slowly, my
Nora's POVThe moment I shut my apartment door behind me, I leaned against it and closed my eyes.Then groaned."Oh my God!!!"I covered my face with both hands, standing there like an idiot in my own hallway."What are we?"I said it out loud, heard how it sounded, and immediately wished I hadn't."Why would I say that????" I muttered, pushing myself off the door and walking toward my room. "Out of everything. And that was what came out????"Not goodnight. Not thank you for dinner. Not even a normal, functional goodbye like a normal, functional person. No. I had looked directly at Cael Draven and asked what we were like some confused teenager who'd never spoken to a man before.I dropped face-first onto my bed."Smooth, Nora. Very smooth!"I stayed like that for a solid minute before rolling onto my back and staring at the ceiling. The embarrassment hadn't faded at all, which was annoying, because embarrassment was supposed to get smaller the more you thought about it.This one kept
Nora's POV The next morning, I woke up with my face buried deep inside my pillow and sunlight pushing through the thin curtains of my apartment.For one full second, I forgot everything.The office, the accusations, the humiliation, the CEO.Then my eyes snapped open."Oh God."I rolled over immed
My phone kept ringing across the bed. Unknown Number. I stared at it for a second before grabbing it, then frowned. It wasn't unknown anymore. Mom. I let out a breath slowly before answering. "Hello?"
Nora's POVMr. Shawn caught up with me just as I reached the elevator."Nora."I stopped but didn't turn immediately.Honestly, I didn't know if I was still angry or just tired. Probably both.When I finally faced him, he looked uncomfortable again. Not manager uncomfortable. Human uncomfortable. T
Cael's POV“I hate this.”Nora's voice was sharp with frustration.Then she turned and walked toward the door before I could answer.I watched her go. She was trying to look angry when half the time she looked nervous instead.The door opened.Then I spoke calmly.“You’re also leaving without half







