登入And before he could do anything about it—before any of the mechanisms he'd spent years building could kick in—the terminal blurred.
And he was back. Five years ago. Heathrow. He'd been on his phone. He was always on his phone. Three decisions ahead, half present, the rest of his attention already somewhere else entirely. Evan was behind him saying something about a delayed meeting. Raiyan wasn't listening. Then—splat. Cold liquid. Everywhere. His chest. His trousers. His shoes. He stopped dead. The lid was on the floor. Ice was scattered across the marble. The coffee—all of it—was on him. The person who had walked into him was still on the phone. "I'm just strategically behind schedule," she was telling someone. Completely calm. Like she was not standing in the middle of something she had caused. "I'll call you back." The call ended. His irritation flared, sharp and automatic—then stalled. Because she looked up. Her gaze met his. Calm. Steady. Unflinching. Not startled. Not apologetic, just there. And just like that, the annoyance wavered. "Oh no," she breathed, finally registering his expression. "This is bad." She dropped her phone into her bag and stepped closer. Too close. She looked at the stain spreading across his shirt. Then at him. Then back at the stain. Like she was genuinely assessing the damage before deciding her position. "Hello, you should stay at home if you don't know how to walk," she muttered. That was when he actually saw her. A soft face that was—he didn't have an immediate category for it. Sharp features. Large hazel eyes and thick lashes that caught the terminal's light and did something specific with it, something warm and direct and slightly dangerous. Like she was reading the room even now, even here, even covered in the aftermath of her own coffee. He filed it. He always filed things. He had absolutely no idea what to do with this one. A midnight-blue silk trench coat fell neatly around her frame, the fabric shifting as she steadied herself. Beneath it, cream high-waisted trousers and ankle boots struck the floor in a hurried rhythm. Practical. Precise. Unapologetically confident. Her hair was loosely tied back, dark strands escaping a careless knot, already refusing discipline. Sunglasses rested on top of her head, pushed there without thought. A tote hung from one shoulder while she tried—unsuccessfully—to manage her bag and the remains of her iced caramel macchiato. "Fascinating," he said, his voice a low, smooth blade. "I’ll take that into account. And you should stay home until you decide whether those eyes are for navigation—or just a decorative choice." The words were already out. She didn't flinch. She met his gaze calmly, mouth curving just slightly, as if the situation amused her more than it alarmed her. "No," she said evenly. "My eyes are just on vacation." His brow lifted slightly. “Vacation?” he repeated. His irritation should have surged back—it didn't. She gestured lightly between them. "Also, the accident was front-facing. So you're at fault too." Something shifted in his chest—subtle, unwelcome. "And," she added, glancing pointedly at his shirt, "your shirt consumed my morning coffee like it was waiting for it." He exhaled once, slow and controlled, recalibrating. Her gaze followed his then—to the spreading stain, the ruined fabric. "Okay," she said, the humor dimming just a notch. "This part's on me." She reached into her bag, pulled out a small floral handkerchief, and dabbed at his chest without hesitation. Warmth beneath the fabric. Solid. Close. Raiyan stiffened. His hand closed around her wrist before he consciously decided to move. The air between them suddenly felt thin, the kind of vacuum that happens right before a storm. Raiyan’s hand was a warm, heavy shackle around her wrist. "I think," he said, his gaze dropping to her mouth for a split second before snapping back to her eyes, "you've done enough damage." She didn't flinch. She didn't even try to pull away. She just tilted her head, her pulse steady under his thumb. "...Are you always this dramatic," she asked, "or did my coffee offend you personally?" Something in him paused. That wasn't fear. That was confidence. It unsettled him more than panic ever would have. He released her wrist. He lifted his gaze slowly. "I'm trying to decide whether this was an accident... or a cry for attention." She blinked. Once. Then smiled. Not wide. Not sweet. Just enough. The kind of smile that didn't ask permission—and didn't offer apologies. Something flickered across his face. Brief. Unwelcome. Interest. "You think I spilled coffee on you for attention?" she asked lightly. "You walked into me." "Yes," she nodded. "With commitment." His jaw tightened. She was watching him with those eyes. That was the problem. That was the whole problem. Before she could react, he reached for her second cup. Her gasp was immediate. "Absolutely not." "You owe me a shirt." "You owe me emotional damage." He tipped the cup—just enough. She froze. "...Did you just sip-spill me?" He glanced at the cup. Then at her. A slow, almost thoughtful pause. A faint brow lift. "I showed restraint." "You weaponized caffeine," she accused. "That's a crime." "Prove it." "I'm a law student." His gaze flicked over her once. Slow. Assessing. “Of course you are.” "That explains the ego," she said. "That explains the attitude." He opened his mouth. Closed it. She was already looking at him with that expression—calm, waiting, like she had the next three moves ready and was giving him time to catch up. He almost said something. Almost. His jaw tightened once. Barely noticeable. The problem was she kept landing them before he could. And instead of irritating him the way it should have—the way it would have, from anyone else—he found himself not quite wanting the conversation to end. Which was new. He noticed, somewhere in the back of his mind, that the corner of his mouth had moved. Not a smirk. Not the controlled version he deployed in boardrooms. His expression shifted—just slightly. A pause in control. An actual smile. Small. Involuntary. He couldn't remember the last time that had happened. She'd done it without even trying. They stood there, closer than necessary, both damp, irritation crackling—and something else entirely. And he realized, against his will, that he was smiling. "So," she said, glancing between their ruined clothes, "we're both unhinged." His lips twitched despite himself. "I'll buy you a coffee," she added. "Out of guilt?" he asked. "Compensation for igniting your morning tantrums." No one had spoken to him like that in his adult life. "I thought it was for ruining my shirt," he replied. She smiled—slow, satisfied. "Try not to assault anyone else with beverages today.""Then ask what you're actually asking." He came close enough that she had to choose to hold her ground or step back. She held her ground. "I'm asking," he said, quieter now, "what you're trying to prove. In that courtroom. Every day." His eyes were on her face. Reading it the way he always had, the way that used to make her feel seen and trapped simultaneously. "You could have settled months ago. You could have gotten more for those families without putting them through a trial. So what is this actually about." She looked at him steadily. "Corporate accountability," she said. "Which you would know about if you'd read the environmental impact assessment that your own scientists buried." "Zoya." "That is my answer, Raiyan." “Is that all? Why didn’t Mr. Moss settle today? Everything was there. There’s no reason to drag this?” She also knew this. In fact she had wanted to settle today. The terms were reasonable. The victims would have been compensated. She had been ready. She loo
She dropped Riyana at Joseph’s at seven forty. Riyana had opinions about this. She communicated them clearly, at volume, in the elevator, and then again at the front door, and then one final time as Melissa appeared in the doorway and Riyana immediately forgot every grievance she had and walked inside without looking back. Zoya stood at the door for one second. Then she got back in the car. Forty-first floor. Eight fourteen. Alan at the elevator doors registered her arrival. “The geologist confirmed for Thursday,” he said, falling into step beside her. “Good.” “Harrison filed a motion to extend the exhibit submission deadline.” “Denied. I filed the opposition at six this morning.” She turned the corner. “What else?” “Mrs Katherine Hale wants to see you.” She did not break stride. “Why?” “Not sure.” “I will find her.” She did not find her immediately. She went to her desk first. ⸻ The exhibit chain was where she had left it. Alan had added three new
The site visit was scheduled for two hours. It ran three and a half. Not because anything went wrong. Because Amirah kept asking questions. Not performing questions — the kind associates asked to appear engaged, the kind that announced themselves as questions without actually needing answers. Real ones. The kind that required the site manager to go back to his drawings twice and recalculate something he had assumed was settled. Matthew stood slightly apart from the group and watched her work. He had brought her because Raiyan had said bring her and because the Meridian site required someone who could read a compliance gap in a structural brief and she had demonstrated in forty-one slides that she could. That was the reason. He watched her crouch down beside the eastern drainage channel in her good coat — completely unbothered about the good coat — and ask the site manager something that made the man pause for four seconds before answering. He looked at his watch. He looked bac
He looked at Zoya. She was watching him get cornered, that familiar treacherous smirk already forming like she had no intention of helping him survive it. “Don’t even think about it,” she mouthed, eyes bright with quiet amusement. That did it. Raiyan didn’t think at all after that. He set his glass down with a sharp clack that cut through the polite hum of the room and crossed the space between them in a straight line that made everything else feel irrelevant. Conversations dimmed around him without him noticing. People shifted, sensing movement, sensing intent. “I believe this is our cue,” he murmured as he reached her. Zoya blinked just once before his hand closed around her wrist. Warm. Firm. Familiar in a way that made her breath catch before she could explain why it bothered her so much. It was the same kind of grip from Heathrow. Not identical—but remembered by the body more than the mind
“Liyana already has a mother—Grandfather.” He paused. “My daughter does not need anyone else as long as I am alive,” Raiyan said. His voice came out even. Quiet. Not angry. “I raised her on my own for the past two and a half years. If she did not need a mother then, she doesn't need one now.” He looked at his grandfather directly. "Elena is like family Grandfather," Raiyan said. "She's like Amirah to me. That has never been anything else and it will never change. I won't discuss this." Zayed looked at him. Raiyan looked back. Something in his face had closed, his eyes were already dark, he was trying not to show it. "I want to sleep, Grandfather." Pleasant. Final. "Thank you for tonight. Goodnight." He went into his room. The door closed, the click of the lock sharp and heavy in the empty space. Zayed stood in the dark corridor. The warmth
The fourth Zoom meeting ended at eleven forty-seven. Raiyan didn't close the laptop. He opened a new tab. TransCom's Singapore acquisition had a licensing clause that three lawyers had looked at and not one of them had solved. He found it in four minutes, sent the correction, moved to the next agenda item. Frankfurt budget. Tokyo acquisition decision. London infrastructure review. One after another, clean and efficient, no pausing, no breathing room, no space between one thing and the next where something else could get in. His team had stopped thanking him around the third hour. They had learned — somewhere between the Singapore call and the Frankfurt debrief — that gratitude cost seconds and Raiyan Al Mansoor did not have seconds tonight. On the second screen, Evan's face was still there. Jacket off. London morning light behind him. He had been on since nine. He had a seven o'clock the next morning and was still there, co
Mei locked the door again like it would fix everything.Chain. Bolt. Handle checked twice.Zoya watched her do it and hated the part of her that wanted to believe it. Like metal and wood could negotiate with men who didn't respect "no."Kenji stood near the window, peeking through the curtain like
By noon, the Airbnb smelled like coffee that had been rewarmed one too many times. Zoya sat curled into the corner of the couch, one leg tucked under her, sweater sleeves pulled past her wrists. Her phone lay face down beside her thigh—close enough to feel, far enough to pretend it wasn’t there. S
Zoya finally turned, her glare locked and loaded. But the retort died in her throat. He looked exhausted. There were shadows under his eyes that hadn’t been there before, and his frame looked leaner under his suit. But the way he was looking at the dinner—and then at her—was so raw it made her ch
Joseph answered on the second ring. He didn’t say hello. In their world, a greeting was a wasted breath, especially between two men bound by the same ghost.“Omar.”Omar’s voice was steady, but it wasn’t calm. It was the kind of stillness that happens right before a storm levels a ci







