The building was not the kind of thing you looked at by accident. Aria had passed Blackwood Tower before, on the few occasions her work took her through the financial district, and each time she had felt it rather than seen it — a shift in the quality of the light, a sense of mass that the surrounding buildings did not possess. It was tall and dark and relentlessly precise, its glass exterior absorbing the sky rather than reflecting it. It did not invite admiration. It invited acknowledgment of the fact that it existed and you did not own it.
She stood on the sidewalk outside for a full minute before going in.
The night before, she had searched the name. The results were extensive and not surprising. Lucien Blackwood, thirty-one, founder and chief executive of Blackwood Enterprises, a company with significant reach across technology infrastructure, commercial real estate, private equity, and international logistics. Born into money but apparently not content to simply inherit it. The business had grown by a factor of four under his leadership. He was rarely photographed at social events. He did not give interviews. What information existed about him was almost entirely professional, which was itself a kind of information.
She had found no obvious reason why he would want to see her. She was a freelance illustrator. She lived carefully within the boundaries of a modest income. She had no connections to finance, no family in industry, no social profile worth noting. Her digital footprint was small by design. Whatever this meeting was, it was not a professional approach.
That uncertainty was exactly why she was here. Aria had spent six years becoming someone who did not walk away from questions.
She pushed through the glass doors. The lobby was vast, cool, and almost silent in the engineered way of spaces designed to minimize echo. The floors were pale stone and the ceilings were high enough that she could not easily judge them. Everything was arranged with the kind of intention that communicated: someone cares deeply about control, and that someone has unlimited resources.
The receptionist looked up the moment Aria approached. She held out the card without speaking. The woman examined it, then looked at her, then picked up a desk phone. The conversation lasted less than thirty seconds. Within two minutes, a man appeared from a side hallway. He wore a dark suit and an expression of professional neutrality. He gestured for her to follow.
She followed because she had come this far and had no reason to stop now.
The elevator was fast and very quiet. The suited man did not attempt conversation, which she appreciated. She watched the floor numbers climb. Forty-two. The numbers were displayed in a small digital panel above the doors, pale blue against black, and she kept her eyes on them because it was better than standing in silence while someone wondered whether to speak to her.
The doors opened onto a hallway that felt entirely different from the lobby. Warmer in material, if not in feeling. Dark panels, recessed lighting, carpet that absorbed footsteps. The aesthetic was deliberate — less corporate than the lobby, more like the private quarters of a house that happened to be on the forty-second floor of a glass tower. Everything here said that the public performance was downstairs. This was where decisions were made.
She was led to a set of double doors. The suited man knocked once, opened them, and stepped aside. She walked in.
The office occupied a corner of the building, with two walls of glass giving out onto the city in two directions. From here the skyline was a kind of architecture unto itself, a densely layered human structure stretching to the horizon. She took it in for a moment because it was genuinely arresting. Then she looked at the man behind the desk.
She recognized him before she recognized his face. The stillness first. The quality of attention. The sense of someone who did not occupy space carelessly. He was looking at her the same way he had looked at her three days ago across the labor office, as if she were a piece of information he was still in the process of verifying.
He stood as she approached. He was taller than she had registered at the distance of the labor office. Broad through the shoulders, dressed in charcoal that fit the way clothing fit when it had been made for a specific body. His face was not unkind, exactly, but it was closed in the way of someone who had learned to keep things internal for so long that the internal had become the default.
He moved from behind the desk and stopped a few feet in front of her. He said something. She watched his lips with the careful, practiced attention she brought to every conversation, and she caught: I am Lucien Blackwood. Thank you for coming.
Then he turned to the desk and moved a tablet toward her. The screen already had words on it, typed in a clean, readable font.
It read: I know you are deaf. I will communicate this way today. Please sit down.
She looked at the tablet. She looked at him. He had prepared for this. He had not simply assumed that he would talk at her and she would manage. He had thought about it ahead of time, which meant he had thought about her ahead of time, which meant this meeting was not spontaneous.
She sat. She pulled her notebook from her bag and uncapped her pen. She wrote one line and turned it toward him.
Why am I here?
He read it. He typed on the tablet with the unhurried pace of someone choosing words with care. Then he angled the screen toward her.
I have a proposal for you. It is unconventional. I ask that you hear me out fully before you respond. Everything you need to know, I am prepared to tell you today.
She wrote: I am listening. But I want you to know I reserve the right to walk out.
He read it. Something crossed his face — not offense, closer to approval. He typed: That is your right. I would not try to prevent it.
She set her notebook on her knee and looked at him steadily. Outside, the city moved in silence, and the afternoon light shifted slowly across the floor between them.
He began to type.