The car stopped in front of a building Aria didn't recognize.
Not a home. Not yet. The sign above the entrance read Blackwood Enterprises in letters that caught the morning light like they were carved from something precious. She had never seen this place before. She had never heard this name before.
And yet, here she was.
Damien killed the engine. I turned to face her. His expression was unreadable again, the mask back in place after whatever had cracked in the garage.
"This is where you work now."
Aria stared at him. "I don't have a job."
"You do now." He reached into his jacket and pulled out a folder. Thick. Cream-colored. Her name was typed on the front. "You start today. Nine AM. It's eight forty-five."
She didn't take the folder.
"You cannot be serious."
"I am never not serious." He placed the folder in her lap. His fingers brushed her thigh through the robe—she was still wearing the hotel robe. She had no clothes. No shoes. No identity.
"I'm in a bathrobe."
"You're in my car." He opened his door. "There are clothes in the back. Shoes. Everything you need. Get dressed. We're late."
He stepped out and walked toward the building entrance without looking back.
Aria sat in the passenger seat for thirty seconds. Then sixty. Then she climbed into the back and found a garment bag hanging from the hook. Inside, a black dress. Her size. Her style. Underneath, heels that fit perfectly and undergarments she hadn't picked out herself.
Someone had prepared this.
Someone had planned for her to wake up in that hotel room. Someone had planned for her to get into this car. Someone had planned for her to walk into this building wearing clothes she had never seen before.
Damien had planned it.
And she was going to find out why.
---
The lobby swallowed her whole.
Marble floors reflected her footsteps. A chandelier the size of her old apartment hung from the ceiling. People in designer clothes moved with the kind of urgency that suggested millions changed hands every minute. She had never worked anywhere like this. She had never even visited anywhere like this.
Damien was waiting by the elevators.
He didn't smile when he saw her in the dress. He didn't compliment her. He just scanned his badge, pressed the call button, and said:
"You report directly to me. Junior executive assistant. Your desk is outside my office. You will not ask questions about the hotel. You will not tell anyone we have met before today. You will not mention the bruises."
The elevator arrived.
"Get in."
She got in.
The doors closed. They were alone. His presence filled the small space until she could barely breathe.
"Why me?" she asked.
He didn't look at her. "Because you're qualified."
"I haven't finished my degree."
"Your resume says otherwise."
"I never sent you my resume."
The elevator stopped. The doors opened onto a floor that looked more like a penthouse apartment than an office. Dark wood. Leather furniture. A single vase of black roses on a marble console.
Behind a curved desk sat a woman who belonged in a magazine. Blonde. Elegant. Watching Aria with eyes that missed nothing.
Lydia.
"Mr. Blackwood." The woman stood. Smiled. "Your new assistant has arrived."
"She has." Damien stepped out of the elevator. "Lydia, this is Aria Chen. Aria, Lydia Cross. She runs this floor. Everything you need, you ask her. Everything you don't need, you also ask her."
Lydia extended her hand. Her grip was warm and firm and assessing.
"Welcome to Blackwood Enterprises. You're going to fit right in."
The words should have been comforting. Instead, they felt like a verdict.
---
The desk outside Damien's office was smaller than she expected.
A computer. A phone. A single notepad with her name embossed at the top. Everything had been prepared. Everything had been arranged. She was sitting in a job she had never applied for, working for a man she had met less than two hours ago, wearing clothes someone else had chosen.
And she still didn't remember anything.
Lydia appeared with a stack of folders. "These are Mr. Blackwood's weekly reports. He likes them color-coded. Red for urgent. Blue for pending. Green for completion. He does not like mistakes."
"How long have you worked for him?"
Lydia's smile didn't waver. "Long enough to know better than to answer personal questions on the first day."
"Where did I come from?"
The smile faltered. Just once.
"You came from the interview. Two days ago. Mr. Blackwood conducted it personally."
Aria's blood went cold. "I don't remember any interview."
Lydia set the folders down. Her expression shifted into something that might have been pity or might have been warning.
"You wouldn't," she said quietly. "He doesn't like people remembering things they shouldn't."
She walked away before Aria could ask what that meant.
---
The first hour passed in a haze of passwords and logins and systems that made no sense. The second hour brought a flood of emails she didn't understand. The third hour brought Damien.
He appeared in her doorway without warning. No knock. No footsteps. Just his shadow falling across her desk.
"Lunch."
Aria looked up. "I'm not hungry."
"Not optional." He held up a takeout bag. Two containers. Two sets of chopsticks. "My office. Now."
She followed him because refusing felt like admitting she was afraid. And she was afraid. But she was also furious. And furious was easier to carry.
His office was all glass and light. The city sprawled beneath them like a kingdom he owned. He probably did own it. She wouldn't be surprised.
He set the containers on a small table near the windows. Sat down. Gestured for her to join him.
She stayed standing.
"You need to tell me what's happening."
He opened his container. Noodles. Steam rose between them.
"I hired you because you needed a job and I needed someone I could trust."
"You don't know me."
"I know you better than you know yourself."
Aria's hands clenched at her sides. "That's not an answer."
"It's the only one you're getting." He picked up his chopsticks. "Sit down. Eat. We have a meeting at two and you need to look less like you've been crying."
"I haven't been crying."
"You have been. Your mascara is smudged. You didn't reapply after the car. There's a mirror in the bathroom down the hall. Fix it before the meeting."
She wanted to throw the noodles at his head.
Instead, she sat. She ate. She watched him watch her. His eyes never left her face. Every bite she took, his gaze followed. Every time she looked up, he was already looking.
"Why do you keep staring at me?"
He set his chopsticks down.
"Because I spent three years trying to find you. And now that you're here, I'm afraid you'll disappear again."
The words landed somewhere soft inside her chest.
"I don't remember you."
"I know."
"Then why do I feel like I should?"
Something cracked across his face. Pain. Hope. Hunger. All three at once.
"Because your body remembers," he said quietly. "Even when your mind won't let it."
He stood. I walked to his desk. Picked up a photograph in a silver frame. Handed it to her without looking at it.
Aria took it.
Two people stood on a beach at sunset. The woman was her. Younger. Laughing. Her hair was longer and her face was softer and she looked happy in a way Aria couldn't remember ever feeling.
The man beside her had his arm around her waist.
Damien. Younger. Also laughing. His hair was messier and his jaw was less sharp and his eyes were full of something Aria had never seen in them before.
Joy.
"This was three years ago," he said. "Two weeks before you disappeared."
"I didn't disappear. I'm right here."
He took the photograph back. Placed it carefully on his desk. I turned to face her.
"You disappeared from my life," he said. "And I have been trying to find my way back to you ever since."
The meeting at two o'clock was a blur of faces and names and handshakes she wouldn't remember. But Damien's words followed her through every conversation, every introduction, every moment she spent pretending she belonged here.
I have been trying to find my way back to you.
She didn't remember him.
But her chest ached like she did.
And that was the most terrifying part of all.