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Wrong Number
Wrong Number
Author: Sonia Armani

Mistake 1

Author: Sonia Armani
last update publish date: 2026-02-14 16:30:00

WRONG NUMBER

“Shit!” Arielle Lawson cursed under her breath as her bag slipped off the bar counter, spilling its entire contents across the floor for the uninterested crowd of Midnight Halo Lounge, Manhattan to see.

She stared at the mess absentmindedly through her increasingly blurry vision, wondering how she was supposed to gather whatever remained of her dignity. A part of her knew that if she stood up too quickly, she’d land face-first on the cold, filthy tiled floor. Her legs were already betraying her, softened by whisky and regret.

Before she could attempt standing, the familiar bartender, Mick, stepped forward and crouched to help her scoop her belongings back into her bag.

“Are you about to leave, ma’am?” he asked politely as he handed it to her, but Arielle caught the disguised relief in his eyes.

After all, she was the woman who had walked in wearing corporate attire, ordered whisky shots, and spent the last four and a half hours mumbling and sobbing.

Was she embarrassed? Of course. She wanted to sprint out of the club and never return.

This—this right here—was why she always despised alcohol. She could never understand the joy people claimed to find in those terrible-tasting liquids that turned them into sloppy caricatures of themselves, only to reward them with migraines and shame the next morning.

She had spent 26 years avoiding even a gulp of the vile poison… until six months ago. Now it was the tool she used to smother her thoughts, fears, and emotions, enveloping her in a cocoon that protected her from having to think about what had happened.

“Ma’am? Ma’am!” Mick’s voice sliced through her spiraling thoughts.

She stared blankly at him for a few seconds before mumbling, “Mmm?” Her head swayed gently as she tried to gather the remnants of her fogged brain. If she hoped to make it back to her apartment alive, she needed to at least be able to walk in a straight line.

What had she been thinking? Coming alone to a nightclub in the middle of Manhattan at this hour?

Chloe and Daniella would finish her when she got home.

They had been worried about her drinking ever since her insane breakup. Arielle had tried—truly—to get herself together for the sake of her job. She had even stayed sober for two months. But today had been… disastrous.

First was the early morning call from her mother asking, yet again, when her “supposed wedding” would finally hold. A topic Arielle had been running from. Her mother kept pressing, insisting she and Daniel should have finalized a new date by now. She’d already informed nearly everyone they knew about the upcoming wedding.

That alone nearly triggered Arielle into a panic attack at 6 a.m.

Then, during lunch break, Instagram—armed with its usual cruelty—that damned, no-good app—did its bit in taunting her with pictures of Daniel and Miss Right on their fifth trip together.

Yes, she had been counting.

What broke her wasn’t even the trip. It was the location.

Greece.

Their planned honeymoon destination.

But instead of crying at work, she had powered through her tasks, held herself together, and slipped into Midnight Halo immediately after closing hours.

“I asked if you’re ready to leave. I could help you book an Uber,” Mick repeated, eyeing her as though she might crumble off the stool.

Arielle took her bag and gave him a lazy smile. “Thank you. Don’t worry, I’ll call someone to pick me up.”

Relieved, he returned to his post.

She stared at the blank screen of her phone for ten minutes. She knew she should call her roommates—who were probably panicking by now. But she also knew she wouldn’t.

Her drunk self had one instinct. One terrible, humiliating instinct.

She was going to call Daniel.

After four years of dating and three years of engagement, she still hoped—pathetically—that maybe he’d pick up. Maybe he’d listen. Maybe if he heard how unsafe she felt… how terrified she was of telling her mother the truth… how broken she felt since he left just two weeks before their white wedding—even after they had legally registered the marriage.

Just maybe, he’d hear her out.

It was her self-sabotaging, alcohol-induced ritual. The venomous habit that bit her every time she tried to bury it. Chloe once called it a masochistic addiction. Embarrassing. Painful. Demeaning. And she always woke up the next day questioning her self-worth.

“Fuck,” she whispered harshly, attracting a nearby couple as she scrolled frantically for his number. Had she renamed it out of anger and forgotten?

Then it clicked.

This was definitely Daniella’s work. That girl had threatened to delete his number during one of Arielle’s drunken episodes back at their apartment.

A frustrated sob escaped her lips.

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  • Wrong Number    Mistake 28

    "I need you to fuck me” she whispered, desperate for sensation, for presence, for proof of life in the midst of unraveling mystery. "I need to feel something real. Now."He lifted her, carried her to the bedroom, stripped them both with urgent hands. This wasn't careful, wasn't controlled—this was need, raw and mutual, him entering her hard and deep before they reached the bed, her back against the wall, legs wrapped around his waist."Look at me," he demanded, thrusting, relentless. "Stay with me. Don't go where I can't follow."She held his gaze, saw her own fear and hunger reflected, and came with his name breaking from her lips, her nails drawing blood on his shoulders.After, they lay tangled, breathing hard, the photograph forgotten on the other side of the apartment.But not gone.Never gone.They worked in parallel.Kael reached out to contacts he hadn't used in years—old men in European cities, intermediaries who remembered names, archives that didn't exist in official record

  • Wrong Number    Mistake 27

    "What about my father?"Camille turned. Her face was wet, aged, stripped of the competence she wore like armor."He was powerful. Charismatic. Dangerous in ways I didn't understand until too late." She laughed, joyless. "I was young. Stupid. Though love could tame violence. When I realized it couldn't, I took you and ran. Changed our names. Hide.""Changed our names?""Lawson was my mother's maiden name. Before that..." Camille stopped. Shook her head. "It doesn't matter. He's gone. Dead, probably. It has been for years.""But?""But I see it in you. The attraction to darkness. The need to fix what can't be fixed." She moved to Arielle, touched her face with trembling hands. "Please. Don't repeat my mistakes. Don't let him destroy you."Arielle thought of Kael. Of his hands, gentle and violent. Of his honesty, brutal and rare. On the way he looked at her like she was the first real thing in a lifetime of performance."He's not destroying me, Mom. He's... seeing me. Really see me.""Th

  • Wrong Number    Mistake 26

    Then Kael's voice, amplified, everywhere and nowhere: "You won't kill her. You need her. Alive, you have leverage. Dead, you have nothing." "I'll do it!" "You won't." Arielle spoke softly, almost sympathetically. "Because you're not a killer, Marcus. You're a businessman. You calculate risk, return, probability. Killing me has negative expected value." His grip tightened. "Then what? We stand here until—" "Until you listen." She reached into her pocket, was slow, careful, and withdrew papers. "Your financial structures. The shells, the loans, the laundering. I found them all. And in thirty minutes, unless I make a call, every document goes to the FBI, the SEC, and the New York Times." "You're bluffing." "Try me." She met his eyes. "I've killed a man with information before. You're already dead. I'm just offering you the choice of how." Vance stared at her. And saw what Kael had seen—what Daniel had missed, what her mother feared, what she herself was only beginning to understan

  • Wrong Number    Mistake 25

    The StormThe attack came at 4 a.m.Arielle woke to the sound of breaking glass, Kael already moving, gun in hand from the nightstand. He pushed her behind him, toward the bathroom, the safe room built into the penthouse's core."Stay there. Lock the door. Don't come out until—""I'm not hiding." She grabbed her clothes, the knife, and her phone. "We face this together."He looked at her—really looked—and nodded. "Together."They moved through the dark apartment, silent, coordinated. Three intruders, she counted from the sounds. Professional, but not silent enough. Kael's world had made her learn the difference.The first man died in the kitchen. Kael's shot, precise, no hesitation. The second fell to Arielle's knife, thrown with desperate accuracy, catching him in the throat as he rounded the corner.The third ran.They pursued, down the fire stairs, into the street. He had a car waiting, engine running, and almost escaped.Almost.Kael's second shot took out the tire. The crash was

  • Wrong Number    Mistake 24

    The InterruptionThe day went as planned.Kael to his meeting, Arielle to her laptop, tracing Vance's financial structures through layers of corporate obfuscation. She found three shell companies, two questionable loans, one connection to a known money launderer. Enough for leverage, maybe. Enough to start.She was compiling the report when the door opened.Not Kael—too early. Elena, the driver, looked apologetic."Ms. Lawson. There's a situation. Mr. Virelli asked me to bring you to him.""Where?""Warehouse district. He said..." Elena hesitated. "He said to tell you it's not a trap. But to come prepared."Prepared. Arielle dressed quickly—practical clothes, flat shoes, the knife Kael had given her last week tucked into her boot. She didn't ask how Elena knew to check the bedroom, how much she'd heard, how much she knew.Some things she was learning were better not questioned.The warehouse was cold, cavernous, lit by a single bulb hanging from the ceiling. Kael stood beneath it, jac

  • Wrong Number    Mistake 22

    The Morning AfterShe woke to his mouth on her thigh.Arielle blinked, disoriented, the gray light of dawn filtering through industrial windows. Kael was between her legs, sheets pushed back, tracing patterns on her skin with lips and tongue and occasional teeth."Good morning," he murmured, not stopping."What time—""Early." He looked up, eyes dark with intent. "You were sleeping. I was hungry.""Lemme see if we have some gi…..""No ……For you." He kissed higher and she felt his smirk against her skin, closer to where she was already wet, already wanting. "Always you."She should have protested. Should have suggested coffee, planning, the war waiting outside these walls. Instead, she threaded her fingers through his hair and guided him where she needed him.He was skilled. Unsurprisingly. The control that governed his business, his violence, his entire life—he applied it here, learning her responses, her rhythms, the exact pressure that made her gasp. Two fingers inside her, curling,

  • Wrong Number    Mistake 23

    The Reunion Three weeks of separation. Three weeks of dead drops and coded messages and pretending her heart wasn't in pieces. Three weeks of walking past his building without looking up, of deleting his number from her phone only to memorize it, of becoming so good at the performance that she sta

  • Wrong Number    Mistake 21

    The PerformanceThe first week was the hardest.Arielle moved back to her apartment—publicly, dramatically, after a "fight" with Kael that her neighbors definitely heard through thin walls. She threw his dark blue scarf in a trash can on the corner where photographers from gossip sites could find i

  • Wrong Number    Chapter 20

    The Morning After the TrapArielle couldn't sleep.She lay in Kael's bed, his arm heavy across her waist, listening to him breathe. The bar kept replaying—Vance's smile, the crushed wire, the certainty that they'd been outplayed.Kael stirred, pulled her closer without waking. Even in sleep, he rea

  • Wrong Number    Mistake 6

    The Man Behind the VoiceSleep never came.Not even close.Arielle had spent the entire night curled at the far end of her couch, staring at the dark screen of her television while the events of the night replayed in relentless loops inside her head.The alley.The rain.The man collapsing.And the

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