Chapter Three: The Contract

846 Words
Aria Monroe’s eyes blinked open to the sound of a sharp chime. For a second, she wasn’t sure if it was real, or just another dream folded into hunger and fatigue. She had accepted the offer to go for the auction. Aria pushed herself off the floor, back aching from sleeping curled up beside the leaking fridge. A cold draft wafted through the cracked window above the sink. Her gaze lingered on the notification. Her stomach twisted, not from hunger this time, but something sharper. She hadn't really believed the application would go through. Micah’s soft footsteps padded across the peeling kitchen tiles. “Why didn’t you come to the parent-teacher thing?” he asked, his Spider-Man pajamas two sizes too short. His eyes were round and worried, always watching her a little too closely for a nine-year-old. Aria crouched down. “I had work,” she whispered, brushing his curls back. “Grown-up stuff.” Micah looked at her longer than he should have. “You look scared.” Aria tried to smile but couldn’t force it past the tightness in her jaw. …. By midday, Aria stood in the middle of a dingy thrift shop on 181st Street, sifting through racks of unwanted fabric and dreams. Sequins, torn seams and club dresses. She shoved them aside. Then she saw it— a sleek, black, halter-neck dress with no tag. It had minimal damage and was almost elegant. She would wear it for auction, she thought. The cashier eyed her as she approached. “Date night?” Aria swiped her last twenty without looking up. “Something like that.” The bathroom mirror at home was cracked from the time Micah dropped his toy truck. Aria stood in front of it now, gripping the sink’s rusted edge. Her reflection looked like someone else’s. She had a red lipstick too bold and dark circles under her eyes were still visible even beneath the concealer. Her phone buzzed again. “Your driver is en route.” Aria didn’t reply. She wiped her lipstick once, reapplied, then grabbed the dress bag and walked out. She didn’t say goodbye. Outside was a black town car idled at the curb, gleaming like it didn’t belong on this side of town. Old Miss Linda peeked from behind her curtain. The twins from 4B gawked from the stoop. The driver stepped out— a tall, expressionless, black cap low over his brow. “Miss Monroe,” he said. Aria slid into the back seat. The door shut behind her as she slid into the passenger’s seat. The ride was silent except for the faint hum of classical music. Aria’s nails dug into her palms as thoughts of fear and uncertainty ran through her mind. The driver didn’t speak. Didn’t look back. Aria glanced at the seatbelt. Buckled. It felt like a trap. Soon enough, the car descended into an underground garage beneath a gleaming skyscraper with no nameplate. The kind of building that didn’t show up on Google Maps. The driver opened her door with robotic grace. “Top floor. Use the elevator to your left. Someone will be waiting.” Aria stepped out. The air down here was colder, recycled. Her heels echoed on the marble like a countdown. Inside the elevator, Aria froze. There were no buttons. Just a glass scanner on the wall. She had come to sign the Non-disclosure Agreement. She looked at her wrist and remembered the black envelope with the band inside. Slipping it on, she raised her arm. The scanner chimed. The elevator ascended without a sound. Aria’s stomach twisted. The doors opened to a room soaked in shadows and gold. Velvet drapes. She didn’t see Madame Celeste enter. She felt like the pressure in the room shifted. “Aria Monroe,” Madame Celeste said, voice smooth and coiled. “You made it. You’re lovelier in person.” Aria stiffened. “Where am I?” Madame Celeste smiled, resting a hand on Aria’s bare shoulder. “Where futures are bought and sold.” Madame Celeste led her through a back hallway lit only by candles. Two other young women stood near the wall, one biting her nails, the other clutching her coat like armor. “One night,” Celeste began. “One bidder. One rule: say yes. Everything else is optional.” Aria’s mouth was dry. “Is this… legal?” Celeste’s laugh was low and rich. “We’re too rich to be illegal, darling.” A young assistant approached Aria, holding a velvet black mask with delicate silver threading and the contract. “They bid on mystery, not name,” the girl said, handing the contract and the mask to Aria. Aria stared at the dense text—NDA, non-disclosure, non-refusal. A clause near the bottom caught her eye: Bidder assumes full ownership rights for 24 hours. The pen trembled in her hand as she signed the contract. Aria looked at the mask for a long time. Then she took it. A black Sedan halted right before her and she stepped into the car.
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