로그인~ Amara ~
"You aren't actually going to do this," Noah said. He was standing in my doorway, his shoulder leaning against the frame. He had a dish towel in his hand, and he was twisting it between his fingers. It was a nervous habit he’d had since we were kids. I didn't look up from my suitcase. I was trying to fit my favorite sweater into the corner, but the sleeve kept popping back out. "I already said I would, Noah," I replied. My voice was flat. I didn't want to give him any emotion to grab onto. "It’s a contract, not a death sentence," he snapped, throwing the towel onto my bed. "But it feels like one. You’re twenty-four. You’re supposed to be starting a life, not selling one to a man who thinks people are line items on a ledger." "If I don't do this, Dad loses the warehouse," I said. I finally got the sweater to stay down and zipped the bag. The sound of the zipper felt like a final seal. "If he loses the warehouse, he loses himself. And you? You’ll be paying off his failures for the next thirty years. I won’t let that happen." "So you’ll just be a ghost in a big house instead?" Noah asked. He stepped into the room, making it feel even smaller than it was. "I saw the look on Dad’s face. He’s relieved. It makes me sick, Amara. He should be protecting you, not the trucks." "He is protecting us," I said, though the words felt heavy in my mouth. "In the only way he knows how. He’s a logistics man. He solved the problem." "You aren't a problem to be solved," Noah whispered. I didn't have an answer for that. I turned away and walked to the window. The street was dark now. The black sedan was gone, but the ghost of it still seemed to be parked at the curb. I could still see the faint marks in the gravel where the tires had been. "I need you to promise me something," Noah said after a long silence. "What?" "If he touches you—if he even raises his voice—you call me. I don't care about the debt. I don't care about the warehouse. I will come get you." I turned back and gave him that small, tight smile I used when I needed to end a conversation. "The contract says he wants a 'stable' image, Noah. He’s a billionaire. He doesn't need to raise his voice to get what he wants. He just signs a check." Noah didn't smile back. "That's what scares me. Silence is your specialty, Amara. You’re going into a house full of it. I'm afraid you’ll disappear completely." "I’m already gone," I thought, but I didn't say it. He left a few minutes later, taking his frustration and the dish towel with him. I heard his footsteps heavy on the stairs, then the sound of the fridge opening and closing downstairs. Life was continuing in this house, even as I was preparing to be excised from it. I sat on my bed and looked around. I’d lived in this room since I was five. There was a stain on the carpet near the closet where I’d spilled ink in middle school. There was the scratch on the baseboard from when Noah and I were wrestling and he hit the corner of his desk. Every inch of this space was a map of a life that was about to end. I stood up and began my final walk through the house. I went to the kitchen first. The grocery bag from earlier was still on the counter, though the perishables were gone. I touched the cool laminate of the countertop. I thought about all the mornings I’d stood here making coffee, trying to be quiet so I wouldn't wake Dad up before his alarm. I’d spent twenty-four years trying not to be a burden. It turned out that being a "non-burden" was exactly what made me valuable to the Moores. I moved to the living room. The envelope was gone. Dad must have taken it back to his office. The armchair where he sat looked slumped and tired, just like him. I looked at the hallway of photographs. The grandfather with the trucks. The young father with the dark hair. The Christmas party. I stared at the people in the party photo. They looked so happy. They had no idea that ten years later, their jobs would be gone and the boss’s daughter would be traded to a man she’d never met to pay for the lights. I felt a surge of something—not anger, but a deep, hollow sadness. It was the weight of a legacy that had become too heavy to carry. I walked toward my father’s office. The door was cracked open again. "Dad?" I whispered. He was sitting at his desk. He wasn't looking at ledgers this time. He was just staring at the wall. When he saw me, he straightened up and tried to look like the man in the photographs. "Amara. You should be sleeping. The car will be here early." "I know. I just wanted to... I don't know." He stood up and walked around the desk. He looked at me for a long time. For a second, I thought he might tell me to stay. I thought he might say that the warehouse wasn't worth my life. "You’re a good girl, Amara," he said instead. "You’ve always been the one I didn't have to worry about." "Because I never said anything?" I asked. He winced, just a little. "Because you’re strong. You have a quiet strength. Gideon Moore... he’s a hard man, from what I hear. But he’s fair. This will be a good thing for you. A fresh start. No more worrying about bills." "I’ll be worrying about other things, Dad." "Three years," he said, patting my hand. "It’ll go by in a blink. And then you’ll be set for life. We all will be." I nodded because it was easier than arguing. I leaned in and hugged him. He smelled like old paper and the cheap coffee I’d bought that morning. I wondered if I’d ever smell that again. In Gideon Moore’s world, everything probably smelled like expensive cologne and cold air. I went back to my room. I didn't undress. I just lay on top of the covers and watched the shadows of the tree branches move across the ceiling. My mind kept going back to page nine of the contract. Family Assets. The wording had been so dense. It mentioned the warehouse, the trucks, and the land. But there was something else in there—a clause about "future valuations" and "transfer of management." I wasn't a business expert, but I’d spent enough time around my father’s ledgers to know when a sentence was trying to hide something. Did Dad know? Or was he so blinded by the debt forgiveness that he didn't care what was in the fine print? I thought about Gideon Moore. I’d seen him on the news. He always looked like he was carved out of marble. He didn't smile. He didn't fidget. He just existed in a space and commanded it. Tomorrow, I would be his wife. I would be the woman standing next to him in the photographs. I reached out and touched the nightstand, feeling the crack in the wood. "Three years," I whispered to the empty room. It sounded like a long time. I closed my eyes and tried to imagine Moore Crest. I imagined a house where the floors didn't creak and the heaters actually worked. I imagined a life where I didn't have to count pennies at the grocery store. It sounded like a dream, but I knew better. Every luxury came with a price. My price was my voice. I drifted off into a light, restless sleep around 4:00 AM. When I woke up, the sun was just beginning to hit the neighbor's fence. It was 7:00 AM. The car would be here in three hours. I got out of bed and walked to the mirror I’d never replaced. I looked at the empty space on the wall where my reflection should have been. "Manageable," I told the wall. "It’s all manageable." I went to the kitchen to make one last pot of the cheapest coffee on the shelf.~ Chloe ~I stood by the large window in my suite at the Grand Hotel, looking out at the city lights. The emerald silk robe clung to my skin. A bottle of whiskey and two glasses waited on the low table. I checked my watch again. Gideon was late, but he would come. He always came when the board pushed hard enough.The knock finally sounded. I opened the door. Gideon stood there in his simple sweater and jeans. His hair was messy and his eyes looked tired. He stepped inside without a word."You wanted to talk," he said. His voice was low and rough. "So talk. Then leave Amara's business alone."I closed the door and locked it. I poured whiskey into both glasses. "Sit down, Gideon. You look like you haven't slept in days."He stayed standing. "The audits stop tonight. The zoning threats end. Kline Logistics is not your target."I handed him a glass. He took it but did not drink right away. I sipped mine slowly and watched him."You still think you can play the hero," I said. "Hauling brea
~ Amara ~The morning sun hit the warehouse floor in long, pale streaks. I stood by the window of my office and watched the dust motes dance. For months, this view had made me feel powerful. The blue trucks were lined up. The drivers were ready. We had three new contracts. Life in Linden Row was supposed to be the prize for surviving the Moore family. But as I watched a white sedan pull into the lot, I felt a familiar chill in my spine. It was followed by two more. They were government cars. Sarah burst into the room. Her face was pale. She was clutching a tablet to her chest like a shield."Ms. Kline, we have a problem," she said. Her voice was thin."What kind of problem, Sarah?" I asked. I did not move from the window."The City Safety Bureau is outside," she replied. "They have an injunction. They are halting all truck movements immediately."I turned around fast. "On what grounds? We just passed the state inspection two months ago.""They are already recording the license plates,
~ Selene ~The plastic chair felt cold against my legs. I sat in the visiting room of the Ravenport Women’s Correctional Facility. The air smelled like old bleach and burnt coffee. It was a gross smell. It made me want to cover my nose with a silk scarf. But I did not have my silk scarves anymore. I did not have my designer handbags or my weekly appointments at the luxury spa. I looked at my reflection in the thick glass partition. My hair was flat and dry. My eyes looked tired and small. I was wearing a coat I bought at a common department store. It was not a Moore coat. It was a coat for a nobody. I hated the texture of the fabric. It felt like a punishment.I looked at the guard by the door. He had a heavy belt and big boots. He looked at me like I was just another visitor. He did not know who I was. He did not know that I used to run the social circles of this city. I hated him for that. I hated everyone in this building. But mostly, I hated Amara Kline. She was the reason I was s
~ Gideon ~I adjusted the cuffs of a shirt I no longer wanted to wear. The starched fabric felt like a second skin I had tried to shed in the streets of Linden Row. I stood outside the Metropolitan Club, a gray stone building that breathed wealth and exclusion. The heavy brass doors were a barrier between the honesty of the bakery and the lies of my past. I took a slow breath. The Ravenport air was thick with the scent of rain and city exhaust. I pushed the door open. The silence inside was different than the silence of Amara’s studio. Her studio was peaceful, but this was a heavy, calculated stillness. It felt like a vacuum. I walked past the portraits of dead men who thought they owned the world. My work boots made a dull, heavy sound on the thick Persian rugs. I reached the private dining room at the end of the long, dark hallway.Rolan and three other board members sat around a long mahogany table. Chloe sat in the corner, her legs crossed. She wore a sharp black suit that looked
~ Amara ~The emerald silk of Chloe’s gown looked like a neon sign in my dim studio. It was the color of Moore pride. It was the color of the life I had left. I gripped the edge of my drafting table. The wood felt rough against my palms. The scent of her perfume was heavy and sweet. It felt like a physical weight in the small room. Gideon stood between us. His back was to me. I could see the tension in his shoulders. He looked like a man caught in a crossfire. Chloe was the architect of his old world. She held the digital recorder like a heavy weapon."Why are you silent, Gideon?" Chloe asked. Her voice was smooth like expensive wine. "The board is waiting. Rolan is losing his grip on the investors. They want the King back.""I am not that man anymore," Gideon said. His voice was low. It sounded like it came from deep in his chest."You are hauling bread," Chloe laughed. It was a sharp, jagged sound. "You are fixing routes for a baker. You think that makes you a man? It makes you a tr
~ Gideon ~I walked slowly away from the bakery with flour still clinging to my rough hands. The sun was setting over Linden Row, casting long, honey-colored shadows across the cracked sidewalks. My mind was still stuck on the incident from this morning. Those associates from Helix Tower had looked at me like I was a broken machine. They recorded me with their phones, laughing at my canvas apron and boots. I told myself their opinions did not matter, but I could feel the old, familiar "eraser" tension returning to my jaw. I was trying to be a different man, but the world kept trying to pull me back into the gray. I needed to see Amara. I needed her light to drown out the echoes of their mockery. I needed to see her face. I climbed the stairs to her studio, my boots heavy on the old wood. As I reached her landing, a scent hit me. It was not the turpentine and herbal soap I expected. It was a thick, floral perfume. It smelled like expensive galas, cold marble, and a past I tried to bury
~ Amara ~The boutique smelled of lilies and expensive floor wax. It was a scent that usually made me feel like I was intruding on someone else’s life. Today, it felt like a cage. Selene had practically dragged me here, her hand firm on my elbow as she guided me through the glass doors of 'L’Étoile
~ Amara ~ The Obsidian was a place built of polished black stone and the kind of hushed, expensive air that made me want to hold my breath. It was the centerpiece of Raventport’s dining scene, a cathedral for people who traded in power and didn't mind the cold. I sat at the circular table, my back
~ Amara Kline ~ The heavy oak door of my suite clicked shut, the sound echoing through the sterile perfection of the east wing. I didn't turn on the lamps. I didn’t want to see the cream-colored silk wallpaper or the silver-framed mirrors that reflected a woman I no longer recognized. Instead, I l
~ Amara ~ The silence in Moore Crest usually felt like a heavy blanket, but today it felt like a noose. I stood in the center of my bedroom, the twelve-page contract crumpled in my hand. The ink on the page was dry and permanent, unlike the promises my father had made to me back in Linden Row. He







