تسجيل الدخولThe Ghost of Eight Years
Brielle I stayed in that bathroom stall even after Arlo and Lorna left. My hands squeezed the mop handle so tightly my knuckles turned white while my brain replayed every single word they said. Jacob did well by killing his parents in that house fire. The words bounced around my skull like a curse. A house fire. But Marcello told me my father killed them. My breathing turned uneven again. No. No, no, no. Had he really destroyed my life over a lie? I squeezed my eyes shut for a second, trying to think like an investigator instead of a traumatised woman spiralling in a public restroom. Facts first. I didn’t know who Arlo and Lorna were and I didn’t know if they were telling the truth. And I definitely couldn’t run to Marcello Hayes and scream that I overheard strangers confessing to murder in a toilet stall. Especially not after eight years, especially not after everything. A loud knock sounded against the restroom door, nearly making me jump out of my skin. “Miss Atwick?” a woman’s voice called. “Are you done in there? Mr Rossi said the executive hall still needs cleaning.” Shit. “Y-Yeah!” I quickly grabbed my supplies. “Coming!” I waited until her footsteps faded before stepping out carefully. The restroom looked normal, like two people hadn’t casually discussed murder beside the sinks five minutes ago. I moved toward the mirror and splashed water on my face. My reflection stared back at me, pale and unsettled. “Get it together, Brielle,” I whispered. “You have a job to do.” The executive floor was ridiculously luxurious. Dark marble floors, gold detailing and Tall glass windows overlooking the city. Even the air smelled expensive. I pushed my cleaning cart quietly down the hallway, keeping my head lowered the same way every employee here did whenever someone important walked by. The trick to undercover work wasn’t blending in. It was becoming forgettable. A secretary hurried past me carrying files. Two men in suits argued near the elevators. Someone laughed from inside an office. Yet underneath all this polished luxury was something rotten enough for them to investigate. I turned to another hallway and stopped in front of a large set of double doors. CEO. The gold lettering practically mocked me. Marcello Hayes. My stomach twisted. Eight years later, seeing his name still did horrible things to me. I hated that. Hated that my body still remembered him. The warmth of his hands, the sound of his voice late at night. The way he’d pull me against his chest, as if I belonged there after ruining my entire life. I swallowed hard and forced the memories down. This wasn’t the time. I adjusted my gloves and started wiping down the nearby wall frames when the elevator behind me dinged. Footsteps sounded across the floor, my instincts immediately screamed at me to keep my head down. “Move the meeting to seven,” a deep voice said smoothly. “I won’t be available before then.” My hand froze mid-wipe. No. No way. That voice, a chill crawled up my spine. I knew that voice better than I knew my own. Slowly, against my own judgement, I looked up. And there he was. Marcello Hayes. Time hit him unfairly well. The last time I’d seen him, he was twenty-eight and devastatingly handsome. Now? Now he looked lethal. A tailored black suit clung to his broad frame like it had been stitched onto him personally. His dark hair was pushed back neatly, exposing sharp cheekbones and those familiar green eyes that used to look at me like I was both a burden and a temptation. The air around him felt heavier somehow. More dangerous. Two men walked behind him, talking quietly, but Marcello barely acknowledged them as he walked down the hall. Confident and untouchable. My chest tightened painfully. For one stupid second, memories crashed into me so hard I forgot how to breathe. His hands on my waist. His mouth against my neck. The sound of him laughing softly at something I’d said years ago. I hated myself for remembering any of it. Then his eyes landed on me, Everything inside me stopped. Marcello slowed slightly Not enough to draw attention. But enough. His eyes swept over me once. Twice. Recognition didn’t flash immediately, Why would it? I looked nothing like the terrified eighteen-year-old girl he once locked inside a mansion. My blonde hair was darker now, cut shorter around my shoulders. I wore oversized cleaning clothes, no makeup, glasses I didn’t need and a fake name clipped onto my uniform. Still… Something in his expression shifted, A faint crease appeared between his brows. My pulse slammed violently against my ribs. Look down. LOOK DOWN, BRIELLE. I forced myself to lower my gaze and continued wiping the wall like my life depended on it. Because honestly? It probably did. The hallway fell silent except for the sound of approaching footsteps. Closer. Closer. Then they stopped directly in front of me. Oh God. I gripped the cloth tighter. “Lift your head.” That voice. Lower now. Every nerve in my body locked up. One of the guards shifted impatiently nearby but Marcello didn’t say anything else. Slowly, I looked up. Up close, he looked even worse for my sanity. Those green eyes narrowed slightly as they searched my face. I saw the exact moment unease passed through him. Not full recognition, it looked more like familiarity. “You’re new,” he said. I forced my expression into something blank and harmless. “Yes, sir.” My voice almost betrayed me. Almost. His eyes stayed on me for a bit too long. “You work under Carlo?” “Yes.” Another stretch of silence. God, he used silence like a weapon. Marcello tilted his head slightly, studying me harder. “You look nervous.” Because you murdered my parents and kidnapped me for two years, I screamed in my head. Swallowing the words before they could escape. “I’m sorry, sir, first day,” I said with a shrug. One of the men behind him chuckled. “Relax. Mr Hayes doesn’t bite.” My stomach turned at the irony. Marcello didn’t laugh. His eyes stayed on mine for another second before he finally stepped back. “Get back to work.” Relief nearly buckled my knees. “Yes, sir.” He turned smoothly and continued down the hall with the others following close behind. I stayed frozen until they disappeared behind the office doors. Only then did I release the breath I had trapped inside my lungs. Holy shit. That was too close. Way too close. My hands trembled violently now. Not from fear alone. From anger. Because after everything… After eight whole years… One look at Marcello Hayes still had the power to wreck me completely. I hated him for that. And somehow, deep down, that wasn’t even the worst part. The worst part was the split second when our eyes met, a tiny broken piece of me had still remembered what it felt like to be with him.THE PHOTOGRAPHBrielleFor one horrible second, I simply stared.Tiny shards of glass glittered across the hardwood floor. The photograph lay face down among the debris, its frame split cleanly.Slowly, my eyes lifted.Arlo De Ville hadn’t moved from where he stood.If anything, his expression had only grown much more annoyed, as though whatever restraint he normally kept in place had been quietly stripped away the moment I stepped into this room.His eyes dropped to the broken frame, then returned to my face.The silence stretched between us.Heavy and unforgiving.“What exactly are you doing in my office?” he asked.My mouth opened, but nothing came out at first. My throat felt tight, dry, like the air had changed the moment he spoke.“I…” I forced the word out, then tried again, more steadily. “I’m sorry. I got lost. I didn’t mean to come in here.”Even as I said it, I could hear how thin it sounded. How convenient.Arlo’s jaw tightened slightly, though he didn’t respond immediatel
Behind Closed DoorsBrielleDinner was just as uncomfortable as I had expected it to be, maybe even worse in ways I couldn’t immediately name.The dining room itself was big. large enough to host a wedding reception but somehow, the table was small enough that everyone was close enough to pass the salt.Carissa spent most of the meal trying, and failing, to pull me into conversations I had absolutely no desire to be part of.I was sitting across from Marcello, and I tried my very best to ignore his face every time I raised my head.Not once did Carissa's parents ask why their daughter had invited a cleaner to sit at their table. They were too well-mannered for something so blunt.Instead, the disapproval was obvious in the pauses that followed whenever Carissa addressed me, in the way Lorna’s eyes narrowed just slightly every time I spoke.I wasn’t family. I wasn’t even a guest.I was here to assistCarissa is all.The only person who seemed genuinely pleased I was present was Carissa.
FAMILIAR QUESTIONSBrielle“We’ve met before, haven’t we?”Every muscle in my body locked.For a split second, my mind completely emptied. The years of training came back into place.I frowned, looking confused. “Me?”Marcello stared. “No,” he said dryly. “The person standing behind you.”I blinked.His expression remained completely unamused. I looked over my shoulder again, The hallway was empty.When I turned back, Marcello was already walking away. “You coming?”For one glorious moment, I considered saying no. Unfortunately, I wasn’t stupid.Running away would only make me look suspicious and I'd rather not get lost in this house.The corridor stretched ahead of us and neither spoke for a while.Fine by me.If I never had another conversation with Marcello Hayes again, I could die happy.Or at least happier.The silence lasted almost three minutes.Then, “How long have you worked for Mario Incorporated?”There it was. I knew it.Resisting the urge to roll my eyes, “Not very long.”
RECOGNITIONBrielleThe De Ville estate was ridiculous.That was the first thought that entered my mind as the gates slowly opened.The second was that whoever designed the place had clearly never heard the phrase too much.Walls made of stone stretched across the land, and perfectly maintained gardens and fountains sat between rows of trimmed hedges.And somewhere in the distance, I wasn't sure if I saw horses.Carissa laughed softly as I stared through the car window.“You should’ve seen your face.”I looked away from the estate to her. “How big is this place?” I asked, genuinely interested.“Honestly? I stopped counting years ago.”The closer we got, the larger it seemed. It wasn’t a mansion, calling it a mansion felt insulting.This looked like something that belonged in history books.Old stone, tall windows, and other Victorian-era features. The kind of home built by people who never worried about money.Ever.The driver parked near the entrance. Before I could properly process
Unwanted FriendshipBrielleThe next morning, I spent ten full minutes staring at the temporary reassignment form before finally accepting that it wasn’t a joke.Unfortunately.By eight-thirty, I was standing outside one of the guest suites on the upper floor.Not carrying a mop or hauling trash bags through basement corridors.Apparently, I had been re-promoted to whatever this was.A member of staff hurried past me carrying garment bags.Another rolled a rack of dresses toward one of the suites.The entire floor looked more like a luxury hotel than a corporate building.I checked the room number again to be sure, Still correct? Great.A woman stepped out of the suite.“Miss Atwick?”“Yes.” I nodded.“Perfect. Miss De Ville is inside.” she disappeared before I could ask any questions. I stood there for a second. Then knocked.“Come in.” a sing-songy voice echoed from inside.I pushed the door open and holy, the suite was enormous. From where I stood, I could see the sitting area occu
REQUESTEDBrielleThomas had insisted on a video call rather than an in-person meeting.Probably because flying me back and forth across countries every time he wanted an update would bankrupt the department.He looked annoyed at the online meeting.That wasn’t unusual.The man spent most of his life looking annoyed that he had a permanent crease on his forehead.Still, the second I logged in, I knew this wasn’t going to be a pleasant meeting.He didn’t offer me a greeting and that was never a good sign.Instead, he held up a thin file, dropped it onto his desk and folded his arms.“Do you enjoy attracting attention?”I blinked. “Good morning to you too,” I said, with a wavering smile.His expression didn’t change.“That wasn’t an answer, Arwen.”I sighed.“No.”He opened the file.“Because according to reports I've been getting, you’ve managed to fall into an executive meeting, get reassigned, and become the subject of multiple complaints in less than two weeks, and there's a case of







