obsession contract

1736 Words
Five Years Later The rain hadn’t stopped in hours. It slid down the gallery’s tall windows like fingers dragging down a mirror, distorting the streetlights into soft golden smears against the New York night. Each drop fell like it had purpose, striking the glass in rhythmic succession, like a clock ticking down something inevitable. The city beyond looked blurred, unreal like a painting left too long in a storm. Inside, the air was crisp, curated, and expensive. Classical piano drifted from invisible speakers, elegant and cold. The Veritas Gallery in lower Manhattan was the kind of place that smelled faintly of lemon oil and old money. Where silence wasn’t awkward it was expected. Required. Demanded. Abstract paintings lined the walls cold strokes, hollow eyes, surreal shapes that meant nothing to most but cost more than Isla Carter had made in years. Except no one here called her Isla anymore. She stood behind the front desk, posture perfect, hands folded loosely in front of her. The desk was marble. Everything in here was marble, or glass, or sleek black chrome like modernity had stripped the place of warmth on purpose. Her name tag, pinned to the left side of her slim black dress, read: Clara ellis gallery assistance She barely responded to Isla anymore. The sound of it in her own head felt like a stranger knocking. Like the memory of someone she once loved but now feared. She looked up at her reflection in the window sharp jawline, cold eyes, and auburn hair pulled into a loose knot. The dye was subtle, but deliberate. Under the gallery lights, it shimmered slightly gold at the edges. Enough to draw curiosity, not memory. She had learned how to disappear while still being seen. Behind her, two patrons murmured in front of a canvas titled Entropy in Motion a brutal mess of red and black that someone once called “raw genius.” Isla had seen worse. Written worse, once, before her name stopped being welcome in print. Her phone buzzed once against the desk. A message. She didn’t look. She never looked anymore. People still texted her some with guilt, others with bait. Old friends, hungry journalists, strangers who thought they could fish her out of hiding. She’d learned to let the phone buzz like part of the air conditioning. White noise. Static in her bones. “Clara?” a voice called. Her manager’s voice. Elise. Clipped and careful, like always. She stepped out of the back office in a severe black blazer and heels that didn’t make noise when she walked she glided instead, like a threat. “There’s a last-minute private appointment,” Elise said, frowning at her phone. “Big client. No name, but he’s cleared for access. Be polite. Don’t ask questions. Offer champagne if he wants it. You know the drill.” Clara and Isla nodded. “Understood.” She smoothed her dress. It was gallery protocol: black, tailored, elegant but forgettable. A silhouette that suggested class without identity. That’s what the gallery wanted. That’s what she wanted. To be forgettable. To be no one at all. She turned back toward the window and studied her reflection again. A blank face looked back. Not empty just distant. Hardened. Her lips didn’t tremble. Her hands didn’t shake. She’d practiced this for five years. No one here knew who she was. Not Elise. Not the gallery owner. Not the drunk photographer who’d called her “intense” at the last staff party, like it was a compliment and not a warning. They didn’t know about The Article. They didn’t know about Lucien Vale. And they didn’t know what it cost to bury your name so deep you stopped hearing it in your dreams. The front door opened behind her. She didn’t hear it. She felt it. A shift in the atmosphere. A ripple through the glass. The kind of stillness that precedes an earthquake when the air narrows its focus to a single point, and the body braces before the mind understands why. Then. Footsteps. Heavy. Slow. Sharp against the polished marble floor. She turned. Her breath caught. The rain lit him like a ghost when he stepped inside black trench coat still dripping at the hem, shoulders squared like he’d walked through a warzone untouched. The cold city light kissed his cheekbones and made his silver eyes burn brighter than they should have. Not cold. Not angry. Worse amused. Lucien Vale. Her throat closed. She hadn’t seen him in five years. Not in person. But in her dreams? In headlines? In half-finished apologies she never sent? Always. He hadn’t aged. Or maybe he had but differently. Like stone eroding into something sharper, more refined. His hair was darker now, neater, trimmed close on the sides, longer on top. The scar above his left brow one she’d never asked about was still there. A thread of history on an otherwise unreadable face. He stopped just past the entrance, letting the door whisper shut behind him. His gaze found hers, and it was like being hit. Not touched. Hit. He smiled. Not warm. Not cruel. Something far more dangerous. “Hello... Clara,” he said, tasting the false name with the precision of someone choosing a blade. She didn’t move. Couldn’t. The last time she saw Lucien Vale, he was standing in the wreckage of his empire smoke and scandal swirling around him like a final act. She had watched it all unravel from a hotel room, hands shaking, phone ringing nonstop, her article going viral in real time. It had been justice. It had also been betrayal. Truth, she told herself, is always sharp. But some truths had claws. And they had cut her too. “Lucien,” she said finally, voice steadier than she felt. “You shouldn’t be here.” “Why not?” His tone was conversational. Casual. As if they were old friends. “This is a public gallery, isn’t it?” “You’re not just anyone.” “No. I’m not.” He stepped forward slowly, eyes scanning the gallery like a predator returning to familiar hunting grounds. The other patrons faded into the background, drifting toward the far end of the room like they could smell something unnatural in the air. He didn’t look at them. He only looked at her. “I didn’t know you were into modern art,” she said, keeping her hands behind her back to hide the tremor. “I wasn’t,” he said. “Not until tonight.” Her skin prickled. “What do you want?” He raised an eyebrow, mildly amused. “Is that any way to greet a client?” “You’re not a client.” “Oh, but I am.” Another step. She didn’t move this time. But her heartbeat stuttered loud and wrong. “You’ve changed,” he murmured. “The hair suits you. The name less so.” “You should leave.” He tilted his head slightly, like she was a puzzle he’d already solved but wasn’t done playing with. “If I wanted to destroy you, Isla I would’ve done it five years ago.” Her jaw tightened. “So why didn’t you?” He smiled again. That patient, devastating smile. “Because I wanted to wait until you were comfortable.” The words echoed inside her. He took another step forward. His voice dropped, velvet and venom. “I wanted you to believe it was over. That your little fake life was working. That you could hide behind gallery walls and borrowed names forever. I wanted you to settle. To build something small. Manageable. Safe.” He let that sink in. Then “I wanted you to think you’d won.” Her throat burned. “You came here just to gloat?” “No.” “Then what?” He leaned in. Not touching. But closer than anyone had been in years. “I came to offer you a job.” She blinked. Her heart dropped through her spine. “A job?” “Yes.” “For what?” He smiled, slower this time. Like he was savoring the taste of her confusion. “To be mine.” The words struck like glass to bone. Her voice cracked. “That’s not funny.” “It’s not a joke.” “You’re insane.” “No, Isla.” Her name coiled around her like a noose. “I’m obsessed.” She froze. Every nerve in her body rebelled at the sound of her name in his voice. He adjusted his cuffs like it was all just business. “I’ll have my lawyer send the terms in the morning,” he said. “You’ll accept.” “I won’t.” “You will.” He paused. “You’re too smart not to.” “Is this revenge?” He stopped. For a flicker of a second his expression shifted. Something like regret. Or worse longing. “No,” he said softly. “This is a continuation.” And with that, he turned. Walked out. The door closed behind him with a whisper. The rain swallowed him again. She stood there. Isla now not Clara frozen behind the marble desk, heart pounding in her ribs like a warning drum. She didn’t speak. Didn’t breathe. Didn’t blink. The glass still showed her reflection, but it was wrong. Her mouth was parted. Her hands clenched at her sides. Her eyes wide, full of something between terror and yearning. She had imagined this. Dreamed it. Feared it. But she had not prepared for the reality of Lucien Vale standing in front of her wanting her. Not to destroy. Not to humiliate. To claim. Her legs trembled. She sank onto the stool behind the counter, fists pressed into her thighs. The sound of her breathing filled the space where the music had gone silent. Behind her, Elise reappeared, frowning. “Was everything alright?” she asked. Isla didn’t turn. “Yes. Just... intense.” Elise gave a tight nod and walked away. But Isla kept staring at the door. And in her mind, Lucien’s words echoed again and again. “I don’t want to ruin you. I want to hire you.” “To be mine.” “This is a continuation.” She didn’t realize she was crying until she tasted salt. And still, she did not move.
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