Chapter 5

881 Words
The night air was a sharp, biting reminder that I was alive. As I slipped through the back gate of the Silas estate, the mud ruined my silk shoes, but I didn't care. Every step away from that house felt like shedding a layer of lead. I wasn't just walking into the dark; I was walking toward the only man who had ever seen my talent as a weapon rather than a charity case. In my past life, I had been so brainwashed by the "loyalty" my father preached that I viewed Mister Joe as a predator trying to lure me away from my family duties. I had ignored his letters, blocked his calls, and eventually, he had stopped asking. I had chosen a cage of gold over a throne of diamonds. I flagged a taxi at the edge of the district, my breath hitching as I gave the address to the Vanguard Tower. It was a sleek, glass needle piercing the city’s skyline, a monument to the jewelry empire that rivaled—and often crushed—my father’s stagnant business. When I stepped into the lobby, the silence was heavy and expensive. The marble floors reflected the dim night-lights, and the security guard didn't even ask for my ID; he simply gestured toward the private elevator. Mister Joe had clearly cleared the way. The elevator ascended in a stomach-turning rush. When the doors slid open, I found myself in a penthouse studio that smelled of ozone, expensive tobacco, and something metallic—the scent of raw ore and soldering tools. Near the floor-to-ceiling window, a figure stood with his back to me. He had a shock of stark white hair that caught the moonlight, his silhouette draped in a perfectly tailored charcoal suit. "Mister Joe," I said, my voice sounding smaller than I intended in the vast room. The man turned slowly. He had kind, wrinkled eyes and a smile that reached all the way to his temples. He looked like the grandfather I never had. "Oh, dear child," he chuckled, his voice raspy and warm. "You’ve mistaken me for the help. I’ve been with the firm forty years, but I’m just the gatekeeper." My brow furrowed. "Then... who?" The old man stepped aside, gesturing toward a shadow draped over a velvet armchair in the corner of the room. "The boss is waiting for you." Out of the darkness, a man stood up. In my first life, because I had only ever communicated with the firm through formal letters and the elderly secretary, I had built a mental image of 'Mister Joe' as a fossil—a man as old and dusty as the gems he traded. I was wrong. Dead wrong. The man who stepped into the light couldn't have been a day over thirty-five. He was a masterpiece of masculine precision. His hair was a deep, midnight black, swept back with a deliberate carelessness that made him look like he had just stepped off a runway—or a battlefield. But it was his eyes that stopped my heart. They were a piercing, crystalline green, the color of high-grade emeralds found deep in the earth. He was breathtakingly handsome, with a jawline sharp enough to cut the very diamonds he sold. I stood there, paralyzed, my mind screaming at my past self: How? How could you have turned this man down for a life of scraping for scraps at your father’s table? He didn't look like a businessman. He looked like a king who had found his lost crown. He walked toward me, his movements fluid and predatory, the clicking of his Italian leather shoes the only sound in the room. He stopped just inches away, radiating a heat that made the dampness of my rain-soaked dress feel suddenly heavy. I swallowed hard, trying to reclaim my composure. I was supposed to be a cold-blooded strategist now. I wasn't supposed to be a girl blushing at a handsome face. I forced my arm up, extending my hand for a professional, clinical handshake. "Hello, Mr. Joe," I said, my voice finally finding its edge. "Nice to meet you, I'm Elara Silas I called earlier, I'm here to sign." What am I saying. He didn't take my hand. He didn't even look at it. Instead, he took one more step, closing the distance until I could smell the sandalwood and dark chocolate on his skin. Before I could breathe, he reached out and pulled me into a tight, crushing hug. It wasn't a hug of a stranger or a business partner. It was the hug of someone who had been holding their breath for a decade and had finally found oxygen. His arms were like iron bands around me, his face buried in the crook of my neck. I felt him shudder—a deep, visceral tremor that vibrated through my own chest. "Elara," he whispered, his voice a low, jagged rasp. "You have no idea how long I’ve waited for you to walk through that door." I froze. The professional greeting died in my throat. This wasn't the reaction of a man seeing a talented designer for the first time. This was the reaction of a man who had lost something precious and had finally, miraculously, found it again.
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