Chapter One

554 Words
The music was too loud. Hazel pushed through the crowd, her head spinning as lights flashed over sweaty bodies. She regretted coming here already. Clubs were never her thing. Too noisy. Too many people. Too many places to get lost. She just wanted the bathroom. Someone bumped into her shoulder, hard. Hazel stumbled, her drink spilling over her hand. “Sorry,” she muttered, even though the other person was already gone. She scanned the hallway again. The bathroom sign was nowhere in sight. Instead, she saw a narrow corridor, dimly lit, almost hidden behind a black velvet curtain. No people. No noise. Just quiet. Relief washed through her. Hazel slipped past the curtain. The music faded instantly. Her steps slowed as the hallway opened into a large office. Floor-to-ceiling windows. Dark leather chairs. A heavy desk in the center of the room. She froze. Someone was inside. A man stood near the desk, his back to her, phone pressed to his ear. His voice was calm, low, but sharp enough to make her skin prickle. “This deal doesn’t leave this room,” he said. “If it does, you’re finished.” Hazel’s heart slammed against her chest. She took a step back. The door clicked shut behind her. The man turned. Green eyes locked onto hers. Time stopped. “What do you think you’re doing?” he asked. His voice was quiet now. Controlled. Dangerous. “I—I’m sorry,” Hazel said quickly. “I was just looking for the bathroom. I didn’t mean to—” “You don’t walk into private offices by accident,” he said. Her throat went dry. “I swear,” she whispered. “I’ll leave.” He didn’t move. He studied her like she was a problem he hadn’t planned for. His gaze dropped briefly to the phone still in his hand, then back to her face. “What did you hear?” he asked. Hazel shook her head too fast. “Nothing.” A pause. Then he smiled. Not warm. Not kind. “Lie again,” he said, “and I’ll know.” Tears burned her eyes, but she forced them back. “Please,” she said. “I won’t say anything. I didn’t see anything. I don’t even know who you are.” That was true. The man stepped closer. Hazel’s back hit the door. He reached past her, not touching, and picked up something that fell. Her student ID. Her stomach dropped. He looked at it slowly. “Hazel,” he read. “College student. Communications major.” She felt exposed. Small. Stupid. He slipped the card into his pocket. “You were never here,” he said. “This conversation never happened.” She nodded immediately. “Good,” he said. “Because if your name comes up anywhere near this deal…” He leaned in, his voice barely above a whisper. “I will ruin your very ordinary life.” Hazel couldn’t breathe. “Leave.” She didn’t hesitate. Hazel rushed out, her legs shaking as she fled down the hallway, back into the noise, back into the lights. But the feeling didn’t fade. Even as she rejoined the crowd. Even as the music swallowed her whole. Hazel knew one thing with terrifying certainty. Her life had already changed.
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