His building is not what I expected.
I expected glass and steel and a lobby designed to make ordinary people feel small. I got that part right. What I didn't expect was how fast the elevator moves, or the way the security guard at the front desk knew my name before I said it, or the fact that at eleven-fifteen on a Tuesday night there are still four people working in the open office on the thirty-eighth floor when I step out of the elevator.
Dominic Sinclair's world doesn't sleep. I file that away.
His assistant, a composed man named Holt who is not the same Gerald Holt who called me, leads me to a conference room and offers me water and tea with the practiced calm of someone who regularly manages crises at midnight. I take the water. I sit down. I wait while taking in my surroundings.
Dominic walks in three minutes later.
He's in a different suit than this morning, which means he either changed or he never went home, and looking at the set of his shoulders I'm guessing the second one. He has the focused, stripped-down energy of a typical novel CEO running on black coffee. He sits across from me, puts a tablet on the table between us, and turns it so I can see the screen.
It's a gossip blog. Mid-level, the kind with enough readers to cause damage without enough credibility to be taken seriously by real journalists. Yet.
The headline reads: SINCLAIR'S HEIR? Billionaire Recluse Linked to Mystery Pregnancy.
I read the first three paragraphs. They're vague. No name. No details about the clinic. Just enough to be a problem, sourced to someone described only as "a person familiar with the situation."
I push the tablet back. "How bad is this?"
"Right now, it's manageable," he says. "In forty-eight hours, if it gets picked up by a larger outlet, considerably less so."
"Do you know who leaked it?"
"We have a suspicion." His jaw tightens slightly. "It doesn't change what needs to happen next."
"Which is what, exactly?"
He leans forward. "We need to get ahead of it. Control the narrative before someone else does."
I look at him across the conference table at eleven-fifteen at night and I think about the word "narrative" and how it is a very clean word for a very messy situation.
"What does getting ahead of it look like?" I ask.
"It looks like us deciding what the story is before the press decides for us."
He walks me through the options. There are three.
Option one: say nothing, let it die, hope the story doesn't get legs. His PR team gives this a thirty percent chance of working.
Option two: a brief, controlled statement confirming a personal relationship and a planned pregnancy. Clean. Simple. Requires us to be seen together publicly enough to be believable.
I adjusted in my seat.
Option three: full silence backed by legal action against anyone who publishes identifying details. Expensive, slow, and tends to make stories bigger rather than smaller.
Wouldn't that be more complicated? I thought.
I listen to all three. "You're not actually giving me a choice," I say. "You're telling me option two is what you've already decided."
He doesn't deny it. He just looked at me plainly and said "Option two protects you and the baby most effectively."
"Option two requires me to pretend we're in a relationship."
"Option two requires very little pretending," he says. "We have a connection. We're both involved in this pregnancy. That's not a lie."
"It's not the whole truth either."
"No," he says. "It isn't."
I appreciate that he doesn't dress it up. I've met enough people who would have.
"What exactly would this involve?" I ask.
"Being seen together a handful of times before the story breaks. A photograph. Nothing that requires you to say anything you don't mean."
"And after the baby is born?"
"We reassess."
I look at him. "You're very comfortable making temporary arrangements."
Something crosses his face. "It's what I know how to do."
The honesty in that lands differently than I expect. Not self-pity. Just fact. The same way I say I work nights or i live alone. This is what I know how to do.
"I need to think about it," I say.
"I need an answer by morning."
"Then I'll think about it quickly." I stand up. "Is there anything else?"
He stands up too, which I notice because most people don't bother when someone else is leaving a room. Old manners or something else. I don't know him well enough yet to say.
"There's one more thing," he says.
He picks up a folder from the end of the table. Sets it in front of me. I stare at it curiously and open it.
It's a property listing. A two-bedroom apartment six blocks from St. Raphael's. Fully furnished. Available immediately.
I close the folder. "No."
"It's safer than—"
"My apartment is fine."
"Your apartment building has a broken front lock that the locksmith has been promising to fix for three weeks." He says it simply, without drama. "I had someone check."
I stare at him. "You had someone check my building."
"I had someone check your building."
The audacity of it is so complete that for a second I can't locate a response. He watches me process it with an expression that is not quite apologetic and not quite unapologetic either. Somewhere in between that I don't have a word for.
"That is a significant overstep," I say.
"Yes."
"You cannot investigate my life without asking me."
"Understood."
"I mean it, Dominic."
His first name comes out before I plan it. That's awkward. I watch him notice. He doesn't make anything of it, which I very much appreciate.
"It won't happen again without your knowledge," he says.
Not "it won't happen again" . Without your knowledge. I catch the distinction and I let it go for now because it is almost midnight and I am ten weeks pregnant and I don't have the energy to fight every battle tonight.
I pick up my bag and walk to the door.
"Ms. Navarro," he says behind me.
I turn.
"The broken lock," he says quietly. "Will you at least let me have it fixed?"
I look at him for a long moment.
Standing in a conference room at midnight, asking permission to fix a lock like it's the most important negotiation he's had all day.
"Fine," I say. "The lock."
I leave before he can turn that into anything else.
In the elevator going down I press my back against the wall and close my eyes and replay the moment I used his first name without meaning to.
The way he heard it.
The way he didn't look away.
My phone buzzes. A text from the unknown number he must have used to have Gerald call me.
It reads: "Car outside when you're ready. Non-negotiable".
I look at it for a long moment.
Then I walk out of the lobby and get into the car.
Not because he told me to.
Because for the first time since that clinic waiting room, I don't entirely want to be alone.
And that scares me more than any leaked headline ever could.