Chapter 1: The Man She Shouldn't Remember
The silk beneath her fingers was the first warning.
Aria's eyes snapped open before her mind caught up. Gold ceiling. Crystal chandelier. Sheets that cost more than her monthly rent. Nothing in this room belonged to her. Nothing in this room belonged to anyone she knew.
She sat up fast. The sheet pooled at her waist.
Then she saw her body.
Bruises painted her ribs. Her hips. The tender skin inside both wrists. A dark crescent mark sat low on her neck, shaped by a mouth she couldn't picture. Her clothes were nowhere in sight. Her phone. Her purse. Her shoes. All gone.
What happened to me?
She pressed her palms to her temples and clawed for memory. Last night came in fragments—a bar called The Half Moon. Two shots of tequila. A third she didn't order. Then nothing. A void where hours should have been.
The bathroom was marble and blinding white. She found a robe behind the door and wrapped herself in it. The belt cinched so tight her ribs ached.
The mirror showed a stranger.
Her lips were swollen. Her eyes were glassy and distant. The mark on her neck sat directly over her pulse, purple deepening to bruise. Someone had been inside this body while she was gone. Someone had touched everywhere. Someone had stayed.
A single rose in a crystal vase stood on the nightstand. A hotel key card rested beside it. No note. No name. Just the logo of a hotel she had never visited.
Someone had arranged this.
Someone had watched her sleep.
She found the door and stepped into a hallway so quiet it felt staged. No voices. No footsteps. Just closed doors and carpet that swallowed every sound.
"Hello?"
Her voice died against the walls.
She walked toward the elevator. Her legs moved strangely—not weak, but knowing. Like her muscles remembered positions her brain had erased.
The elevator opened before she pressed the button.
He was inside.
Dark suit. Open collar. Hair disheveled in a way that cost effort. His jaw could have been carved from marble, and his eyes—grey, sharp, hungry—locked onto hers like she was the only thing in the world that mattered.
He did not look surprised to see her.
He looked like he had been waiting.
"You're awake." His voice was low. Rough. Used.
Aria's feet rooted to the floor. "Who are you?"
Something crossed his face. Fast. Almost flinching. Then it vanished beneath a mask so smooth it felt like a threat.
"Get in, Aria."
He knew her name.
She stepped backward. "No. You tell me who you are. You tell me what happened. You tell me why I'm wearing a robe in a hotel room I don't remember, with bruises I don't remember getting—"
His eyes dropped to her neck.
The mask cracked.
Just once. Just enough.
"Those weren't—" He stopped. Swallowed. When he spoke again, his voice was quieter. "Please. We can't talk in the hallway. Get in the elevator."
"We can't talk at all until you tell me your name."
He was silent for three heartbeats. Then he stepped out of the elevator. Toward her.
Aria's back hit the wall.
He stopped a foot away. Close enough that she could smell cedar and whiskey and something darker underneath. His hand rose. She flinched. He only pressed the call button again.
The doors stayed open.
"My name is Damien." His voice dropped lower. "And I am not going to hurt you. But you need to come with me right now. Because every second you stand in this hallway, someone is watching. Someone who wants to use you against me."
"Use me how?"
His gaze traced her face like he was memorizing it. Like he had done this before. Like he was doing it for the last time.
"You were not supposed to wake up alone," he said. "I was supposed to be there. I made a mistake. And now I have to fix it before someone else does."
The words made no sense. None of this made sense. And yet—
Her body was not afraid of him.
That was the most terrifying part.
Her pulse had slowed when he stepped closer. Her shoulders had dropped. Something deep in her bones recognized him even as her mind screamed danger.
What did he do to me?
What did I let him do?
The elevator dinged again.
Damien extended his hand. Palm up. Fingers slightly curled. Not grabbing. Asking.
"I cannot give you back your memories," he said. "But I can promise you this—you will not find the answers alone. And running will not help. I will find you, Aria. I have already done it once."
She should run.
Every rational instinct said turn, sprint, find stairs, escape.
But her hand lifted.
Her fingers reached toward his.
She did not know why. She could not explain it. But something beneath her fear—something older than memory—whispered that this man was not a stranger. He was a question her body had already answered.
The moment her palm touched his, his fingers closed around her. Warm. Steady. Absolute.
"There you are," he murmured.
He pulled her into the elevator.
The doors slid shut.
Her reflection stared back from the polished steel—swollen lips, bruised neck, hollow eyes. She did not recognize the woman looking at her.
The elevator began to descend.
Damien did not let go of her hand.
And somewhere between the nineteenth floor and the lobby, Aria understood that she had just made a choice she could not take back. She had stepped into an elevator with a man whose name she had learned thirty seconds ago. She had no memory of last night. No memory of how she arrived. No memory of why her body belonged to someone she should fear.
But his thumb was tracing slow circles against her skin.
And she was not pulling away.
The doors opened into a parking garage. Dark. Empty. A black car waited with its engine running.
Damien led her toward it.
"Where are we going?"
He opened the passenger door. Waited.
"Home," he said. "Not yours. Mine. You are not safe alone tonight."
"I don't even know you."
He looked at her then. Really looked. His mask slipped entirely for one raw second. Beneath it, she saw exhaustion. Regret. Something that looked terrifyingly like love.
"You knew me once," he said. "For one night. And I have spent every day since trying to earn it."
Aria got into the car.
She did not know why.
But as Damien closed the door and walked around to the driver's seat, she caught her reflection in the window one last time.
The woman staring back was not afraid.
She was curious.
And that was far more dangerous.
The engine purred to life. The garage lights flickered overhead. Damien glanced at her before pulling out of the space.
"Buckle up," he said. "This is going to be a long night."
Aria fastened her seatbelt.
The car pulled into the street.
And somewhere in the back of her mind, behind the void where her memories should have been, a voice whispered:
You have done this before.
You chose him before.
You will choose him again.
She did not know if the voice was telling the truth.
But as Damien's hand reached across the console and rested on her knee—warm, possessive, familiar—she realized she did not want to find out tonight.
Tomorrow.
Tomorrow she would demand answers.
Tonight, she just wanted to feel something other than lost.
The city lights blurred past the window.
Damien's hand stayed where it was.
And Aria let him drive her into the dark.