Elena Moretti had a kind of beauty that demanded attention, though not in the way magazines or billboards promised.
It wasn’t just the curve of her cheekbones, or the glossy fall of chestnut hair that caught the light like dark wine, or even her eyes — deep green, flecked with amber, the kind of eyes that never looked past you but into you, stripping away pretenses.
No, Elena’s beauty was something harder to define. It was in the aura she carried — a blend of elegance and restraint, like a symphony held just before the crescendo. She could walk into a room full of flashing diamonds and laughter, and without a word, heads would turn. Men stared because they couldn’t help themselves. Women stared because they couldn’t decide if they envied her or wanted to be her friend.
But what made Elena unforgettable wasn’t her appearance. It was the sharpness in her gaze, the quiet intelligence in her voice, the way she seemed to belong in two worlds at once — the polished circles of the elite where her career demanded she tread, and the softer, hidden one where she was simply a woman searching for something that never seemed to stay.
That evening, Elena sat by her apartment window, the glow of the city bathing her in fractured light. Her reflection in the glass was too perfect, too untouchable, almost like a painting. She often wondered if that was how others saw her — flawless, poised, untouchable. And she hated it.
Because beneath the polished exterior, Elena carried scars.
Scars that couldn’t be seen in her graceful posture or the tailored dress hugging her figure. Scars that whispered in the dark when no one else was listening.
The city stretched beneath her — tall towers like jagged teeth against the horizon, neon signs flickering promises of joy no one really believed. Elena wrapped her silk robe tighter around herself, but it wasn’t the autumn chill that unsettled her.
It was a memory.
And memory had claws.
Two years had passed since Damian Voss’s death, yet Elena could still summon his presence as if he lingered in the room. Sometimes she hated how easy it was. How a smell, a shadow, a note of music could pull her back into his orbit, even from the grave.
Tonight, the trigger was a song — faint, drifting up from the street below. The same one that had played the night Damian first kissed her.
Her lips tingled at the thought. Her stomach twisted.
She remembered everything.
The sweep of his hand against her jaw. The way his eyes burned into hers, dark and consuming, like he’d been waiting his entire life for that moment. The warmth of his mouth on hers, not rushed, not hesitant — but reverent, like she was both holy and dangerous, and he intended to worship her anyway.
At the time, Elena had mistaken it for love. The kind of love that novels promised and films immortalized. The kind of love that made ordinary days shimmer with new color. And, for a while, that was exactly what it had been.
Elena rose from the chair, pacing the room as if her body could escape the memories her mind refused to release. The apartment, though modern and filled with curated art, was not silent. Silence was impossible here.
There were echoes.
The glass of wine that had shattered last night without warning.
The mirror that seemed to ripple when she looked too long.
The flicker of movement caught just at the edge of her vision.
She told herself it was exhaustion, imagination, the tricks of a grieving mind. She told herself that. And yet, every time she glanced over her shoulder, her heart thudded against her ribs as if bracing for someone to be standing there.
Someone like Damian.
But Damian was gone.
She had buried him in her heart with trembling hands, swearing never to let him consume her again. Because Damian Voss had not just been her lover. He had been her undoing.
The world had only ever seen the billionaire with a magnetic smile, the man whose empire stretched across continents, whose presence could electrify an entire room. But Elena had seen more. She had seen the man behind the charm. The man who loved with an intensity so consuming it smothered her. The man who could make her feel like the only woman alive — and the most trapped.
And the cruelest truth of all? A part of her still longed for him.
The clock ticked toward midnight.
Elena poured herself a glass of red wine, the liquid catching the light like blood, and carried it to the living room. She sat on the edge of the couch, legs folded beneath her, eyes roaming the gallery of photographs on the wall.
Smiles. Vacations. Sunlit mornings. Damian’s arm around her, his lips pressed to her temple, his eyes locked on her like she was his religion. She hated that she still loved those memories. Hated that they warmed her even as they burned.
The wine glass trembled in her hand. She set it down before it spilled — only for it to topple anyway, sliding off the edge of the table and shattering on the floor.
Elena froze.
She hadn’t touched it.
The silence that followed wasn’t empty. It was heavy. Breathing. Her gaze darted to the mirror across the room. For the briefest instant, she swore she saw him there. Damian’s reflection. Tall, dark, smiling the way he used to in the beginning. Her breath caught.
When she blinked, the image was gone. The mirror was empty.
Her rational mind scrambled for excuses — gravity, coincidence, fatigue. But her body knew better. Her scars knew better.
Because for one fleeting moment, she had felt it.
Damian was here.
Elena retreated to her bedroom, heart still pounding, trying to convince herself she was imagining it all. She lay down, willing her mind to silence, but sleep refused to come. Instead, memory swept over her again, warm and merciless.
Paris. The café. His laugh.
The night in Rome when he carried her across the piazza because her heels had blistered her feet.
The way he whispered her name, low and rough, against her skin in the dark.
Love and fear braided so tightly together she could no longer tell them apart.
She pressed a pillow against her chest, clutching it as though it could shield her from the truth.
The truth was simple, and terrifying.
Her scars hadn’t healed. They had only hidden. And Damian — whether in memory, dream, or something darker — was back to reopen them.