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Level B2

Author: Mike
last update publish date: 2026-05-17 03:21:19

9pm: Parking garage. Level B2.

Elma’s hands were sweaty against the strap of her PM bag. The leather was old, scuffed at the edges, the kind of bag that had survived more than she had this month. Her palm stuck to it every time she adjusted her grip. She wiped it on her jeans and tried to ignore how her fingers trembled.

The elevator doors slid open with a groan that echoed too loud in the empty space. The sound scraped down her spine. For a second she thought about stepping back, letting the doors close, pretending the email never came. But it had her name. It had her schedule. It knew she worked late on floor 12. If someone wanted her gone, she needed to see their face before they made the next move.

Cold air hit her face the moment she stepped out. It smelled of oil, stale concrete, and something metallic that made her stomach turn. Like old blood or copper left in water too long. The air was dry, but it clung to her skin anyway, making the hairs on her arms stand up.

She told herself it was stupid to come. That Linda would have said it was stupid. Linda would have called her ten times and shown up with pepper spray and a lecture about stranger danger and “you’re better than this, Elma.” That even Nathan would tell her not to meet strangers in parking garages at night. Nathan, with his doctor’s calm voice and the way he looked at her like she was one wrong step from breaking.

But the email had no sender. No number to call. Just an order: Meet me at the parking garage. Level B2. Come alone.

If she ignored it, they’d come to her. And next time it wouldn’t be an email.

The fluorescent lights overhead flickered once, twice, then settled into a weak yellow glow. The sound was faint, a high buzz that sat behind her teeth. Shadows stretched long across the concrete floor, warped and uneven, thrown by the pillars spaced every twenty feet. Only three cars sat in the whole section. Two were covered in dust, like they hadn’t moved in weeks. The third was a silver sedan with one flat tire. Her footsteps echoed. Each one sounded like a warning, bouncing off the walls and coming back louder than it should.

She counted her steps. Twenty-three to the center. She made herself walk slowly. Running would look like fear. And fear was what they wanted.

Meet me at the parking garage. Level B2. Come alone.

No name. No number. Just an order.

Elma kept her hand close to her bag. Inside was nothing but her phone and the photo of her parents. The photo was creased at the corners, the edges soft from being pulled out too many times. It felt like something, at least. Proof that she’d come from somewhere that wasn’t this. That she wasn’t just the girl who got fired and kicked out and called a thief.

She reached the center of the floor and stopped. The air here felt heavier. Stale. Like it hadn’t moved in hours.

A figure stepped out from behind a concrete pillar.

Tall. Broad shoulders. A suit that still looked expensive even at this hour, the fabric catching the dim light without a wrinkle. No rush in his movement. No hurry. Like he’d been waiting there for twenty minutes and it didn’t bother him at all.

Joseph.

Elma’s blood went cold. It wasn’t the kind of cold that made you shiver. It was the kind that settled in your chest and made it hard to breathe. Her lungs felt too small. Her chest tightened so fast she almost couldn’t draw air.

Of course it was him. Who else would bother chasing her down here? Who else had the time and the hatred to make sure she never got a second chance? Who else had access to her work schedule and the authority to make sure no one questioned him on B2 at night?

Joseph stopped ten feet away. Close enough that she could see the polish on his shoes, unmarked by the dust on the floor. He didn’t look angry. That was worse. He looked amused. Like this was a game he’d already won, and she was just playing out the last move for his entertainment.

“I told you to stay away,” Joseph said, his voice low and smooth, like he was talking to a dog that wouldn’t stop barking. Each word was measured, clipped, controlled. “You don’t listen, do you?”

Elma forced herself to stand taller. Her legs shook under her jeans, but she locked her knees and made her chin lift. If she looked down, it would be over. “What do you want, Joseph?”

“What I always wanted,” he said, taking a slow step forward. The sound of his shoe on concrete was deliberate. Measured. “You gone. Out of this city. Out of Hayes Corp. Out of my life.”

“You sent that email,” Elma said. The words came out steadier than she felt. “You’ve been trying to ruin me since you lied to Aunt Marian.”

Joseph smiled. It wasn’t a real smile. It didn’t reach his eyes. It was the kind of smile people used right before they struck, the kind that said I know something you don’t, and you’re about to find out.

“Lies work, Elma,” he said. “Look at you. Homeless. Jobless. Now working a dead-end job in the corner of my company.”

The words hit like a slap, sharp and stinging, but Elma didn’t flinch. Not this time. She’d heard worse in the last week. She’d heard “you’re not family” and “get your things and leave” and “don’t call us again.” This was just another version of the same thing.

“I’m not quitting,” she said.

“You will,” Joseph said, and now he was close enough that she could see the cold in his eyes. Flat. Empty. No anger, no regret. Just calculation. “Because if you don’t, I’ll make sure everyone knows what you really are. A thief. A seductress. A girl who ruins families.”

Elma’s hands clenched into fists at her sides. Her nails bit into her palms hard enough to sting. She thought about the night he grabbed her wrist in the hallway, his grip too tight, his voice too low. About the way he’d walked into her room without knocking, like the space wasn’t hers. About the lie he told Aunt Marian that tore her life apart in one afternoon.

“You’re the one who tried to touch me that night,” she said, voice shaking but clear. She made herself say it out loud, here, where the walls would hold it. “I have nothing to be ashamed of.”

Joseph laughed. It echoed off the concrete walls, bouncing back wrong, distorted. The sound made the air feel thinner.

“And who’s going to believe you?” he said. He took another step, and now there were only six feet between them. “The orphan against the man who runs a department at Hayes Corp? The girl with no family against the man who signs the checks?”

Elma opened her mouth to answer, but nothing came out. Because he was right. In this city, in this company, his word meant more than hers. It always had. Her name was a rumor. His name was on the building directory.

Her throat felt tight. She swallowed, and it felt like swallowing glass. All the things she wanted to say—about the lies, about the night she locked her door and cried until she couldn’t breathe, about the way she’d kept coming to work anyway—got stuck behind the fact that no one would listen.

Before she could think of a response, headlights cut through the garage. Bright, sharp, blinding. The light hit the wet patch on the floor and threw it back into her eyes.

Both of them turned.

Nathan’s black SUV rolled to a stop a few feet away. The tires made no sound on the concrete. The engine cut off, and the sudden quiet felt louder than the motor had been. The driver’s door opened.

Nathan stepped out. He was still in his doctor’s coat, white against the dark, the fabric catching the light from the headlights. His face was hard in a way Elma had never seen before. Not calm. Not professional. Hard, like stone.

“Joseph,” Nathan said. His voice carried, flat and even, but there was an edge under it that hadn’t been there before. “Step away from her. Now.”

Joseph straightened, surprised but not scared. If anything, he looked entertained. Like a cat watching a smaller animal try to fight back.

“Nathan,” Joseph said, spreading his hands like they were old friends. Like this was a coincidence and not an ambush. “Didn’t know you were into charity cases.”

“I’m into the truth,” Nathan said. He didn’t move toward them. He didn’t need to. His presence changed the air between them anyway. “And I know what you did.”

Joseph’s smile faltered for half a second. It was fast, almost invisible, but Elma saw it. The mask slipped. “Watch your mouth, boy. I can bury you too.”

“Try it,” Nathan said, and his voice was flat, final. No room for negotiation. No room for Joseph’s games. “Elma, get in the car.”

Elma hesitated. Her eyes flicked between Nathan and Joseph. If she ran to Nathan, it would look like she needed saving. Like she couldn’t stand on her own. If she stayed, Joseph might actually do something stupid. And she was tired of being the reason men decided to act like this.

Nathan didn’t wait. He opened the passenger door and held it for her. His coat shifted with the movement, and for a second she saw the edge of something hard in his pocket. A phone, maybe. A key. Something solid.

“Get in, Elma,” he said quietly. Not a command this time. A request that didn’t leave room for refusal. “Now.”

Something in his tone made her move. Maybe it was the fact that he’d shown up at all. Maybe it was the way Joseph’s eyes narrowed when Nathan spoke. She walked past Joseph without looking at him, heart pounding so hard she could feel it in her throat. Her bag bumped against her hip.

She slid into the seat. The leather was cold against her legs. The door shut behind her with a solid thud, and the sound felt like a door closing on the last ten minutes of her life.

Through the window, she saw Joseph watching. He wasn’t smiling anymore.

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