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Chapter 1 - CHAPTER 1

I did not plan to be there that night.

If I had known how much it would change my life, I would have turned around the moment I reached the hotel entrance. I would have ignored the ache in my chest, the exhaustion in my bones, and the loneliness that had followed me for months. But life does not warn you before it shifts. It just happens.

The rain had been heavy, soaking my clothes as I hurried inside, my hair damp, my shoes slipping slightly on the polished floor. The place smelled like money and confidence, things I was not used to. I stood near the entrance for a moment, unsure of myself, wondering if I should leave.

That was when I saw him.

He was leaning against the bar, tall, broad shouldered, dressed in a dark suit that looked like it had never known hardship. His face was sharp, serious, eyes distant like he was somewhere else entirely. He did not look like someone who noticed people like me. Men like him usually passed through lives without touching them.

But his eyes met mine.

It was brief, almost accidental, yet something settled low in my stomach. I looked away first, embarrassed by the intensity of it. I told myself it was nothing, just tiredness, just curiosity.

I ordered the cheapest drink and took a seat at the far end of the bar. I did not even notice when he moved closer until his voice reached me.

"You look like you want to disappear."

I turned, startled.

He was closer than I expected. Too close. His voice was calm, deep, not unkind, but not warm either.

"I am fine," I said quickly.

He studied me like he did not believe me. "People who are fine do not look like that."

I should have left. I knew that. But instead, I stayed.

"I had a long day," I said.

"So did I."

Silence stretched between us, not uncomfortable, just heavy. I noticed then that his eyes were darker up close, his expression controlled, almost guarded. There was something lonely about him, something familiar.

We talked. About nothing important. About the weather, the city, work in vague terms. I did not tell him my name. He did not tell me his. It felt safer that way, like this night existed outside reality.

When he smiled, just slightly, it surprised me. It softened his face in a way that made my chest tighten.

One drink turned into two. Then three.

The rain did not stop.

I do not remember who suggested going upstairs. Maybe it was mutual. Maybe it was inevitable. All I remember is the elevator doors closing and the quiet tension that filled the small space. He did not touch me then, but I felt his presence everywhere.

The room was dim, warm, quiet. He removed his jacket slowly, deliberately. I looked away, suddenly nervous.

"Are you sure," he asked.

I nodded. I was sure. Or at least, I thought I was.

That night was not about love. It was about escape. About two strangers finding comfort in each other without questions, without promises. I did not look at his face much. I did not want to remember it. I told myself this was just one night, something that would fade with morning light.

I fell asleep before dawn.

When I woke up, the room was quiet. Too quiet.

Panic hit me first. Then clarity.

I sat up, my heart racing, memories crashing into me all at once. I looked toward the bed beside me. He was still asleep, turned away from me, his face hidden. I watched him for a moment, the steady rise and fall of his chest, the weight of what I had done pressing down on me.

This was a mistake.

I did not belong here. I did not belong with him. Whatever this was, it was not mine to keep.

I gathered my clothes quickly, my hands shaking as I dressed. I took one last look at him, still unable to see his face clearly. Then I left.

I did not leave a note. I did not look back.

I told myself I would forget him.

I was wrong.

Months later, life had returned to what it had always been. Struggle. Long days. Quiet nights. I lived in a small apartment, shared walls, borrowed time, borrowed strength. I worked wherever I could, saved whatever little I earned.

When I saw the job posting, I almost laughed.

Blackwood Enterprises.

The name meant nothing to me then. The building did.

The interview day arrived faster than I expected. I wore my best clothes, simple and clean, my hair pulled back neatly. I told myself this was just an interview. Nothing more.

The office was massive, intimidating. People moved with purpose, confidence. I felt small.

When they called my name, I stood and followed the assistant into a glass walled office.

He was standing by the window.

My breath caught.

I did not recognize him at first. Not fully. But my body did. My heart reacted before my mind did, a sudden tightening, a strange pull that made no sense.

He turned.

Our eyes met.

The room seemed to shrink.

There was something familiar about him, something that made my chest ache. But I could not place it. His face was calm, unreadable, cold even. There was no recognition in his eyes.

"Sit," he said.

His voice sent a shiver through me.

I sat.

"You are Nia Daniels," he said, glancing at the file.

"Yes," I replied.

"I am Alexander Blackwood."

The name hit me harder than it should have.

CEO. Billionaire. Untouchable.

Of course he was.

He asked questions. About my education. My experience. My strengths. I answered carefully, aware of his gaze, the way it lingered longer than necessary. There was tension there, unspoken, confusing.

At the end, he nodded once. "We will contact you."

I stood, my legs unsteady.

As I turned to leave, his voice stopped me.

"Have we met before."

My heart slammed against my ribs.

I forced myself to breathe. "No."

He studied me for a long moment, like he was searching for something he could not find. Then he looked away.

"You may go."

I left the building shaking.

Days later, I got the call.

I got the job.

I told myself it was luck. I told myself the past stayed buried.

I had no idea fate was just beginning.