Gracia stretched in the office, a small, triumphant smile on her face. She had the evidence. Tomorrow would be a good show. It was a stark contrast to three days earlier, when the world had felt like it was ending.
The time on the bottom right of the computer screen read 9:58 AM.
Gracia Maxwell stared at the numbers until they blurred. Her fingers tapped a nervous, erratic rhythm against the worn plastic edge of her keyboard. It was a physical tic she had developed over the last three years, a way to channel the excess adrenaline that constantly flooded her system.
Around her, the marketing department was a hive of hushed panic. People were not working. They were huddled in small clusters, their voices low, their eyes darting toward the glass doors of the executive elevator bank.
"It's a bloodbath," Tess whispered, sliding her chair into Gracia's cubicle. The wheels squeaked against the thin gray carpet. "My source in HR said the new CEO isn't just trimming the fat. He's amputating limbs."
Gracia felt her stomach cramp. A sharp, twisting pain that had nothing to do with hunger and everything to do with the letter from the insurance company sitting on her kitchen counter.
"I can't lose this," Gracia murmured, more to herself than to Tess. "I just renewed the policy."
Tess looked at her with pity. That look was common. Everyone knew Gracia as the single mom who counted pennies, the woman who wore thrift store blazers and brought soggy sandwiches from home. They didn't know about the private clinic bills or the specialist fees for Birdie.
"Maybe marketing is safe," Tess offered weakly. "We generate revenue."
The double doors at the front of the room swung open. The department head, a man named Miller who usually sweated through his shirts by noon, walked in. He clapped his hands, the sound sharp and jarring in the tense air.
"Town Hall. Five minutes. Top floor. Everyone."
The command was absolute.
Gracia grabbed her notebook. Her knuckles were white as she clutched it against her chest like a shield. She joined the stream of bodies moving toward the elevators. She made sure to stay at the back, pressing herself against the wall. She hated crowds. Crowds meant unpredictable variables.
The elevator ride was suffocating. Too many bodies. Too much cheap cologne and fear. Gracia was pressed against the cold metal back wall. She closed her eyes and counted backward from ten, visualizing Birdie's face. For her. Just keep your head down.
The top-floor conference room was a cavern of glass and steel. Floor-to-ceiling windows offered a panoramic view of the Manhattan skyline, but the sky was gray and heavy, pressing down on the city.
Gracia found a spot behind a structural pillar in the far back corner. The shadows were deeper here. She could see the podium, but hopefully, no one at the podium could see her.
The room fell silent. It wasn't a gradual hush; it was instant, as if the air had been sucked out of the space.
The doors opened again. A group of men in dark, tailored suits walked in. They moved with the easy confidence of people who signed checks rather than cashed them.
Then, he walked in.
Gracia's breath hitched in her throat. Her heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic, painful rhythm. The air she was breathing turned to poison. It wasn't just recognition; it was a full-body, cellular memory of pain.
He was taller than she remembered. Broader in the shoulders. The boyish softness that used to linger around his jawline was gone, replaced by hard angles and a scruff of dark stubble that looked intentional and expensive.
Bridger Jennings.
The ghost from the Ivy League. The man who had shattered her world and left her to pick up the pieces alone.
Gracia ducked her head, her chin almost touching her chest. Don't look here. Please, God, don't look here.
She felt dizzy. The room seemed to tilt. She hadn't seen him in five years. Not since the night she blocked his number and changed her life forever. She had thought he was still in London. She had thought she was safe in the anonymity of his family's massive conglomerate.
Bridger stepped up to the podium. He adjusted the microphone. The sound of his hand brushing the metal boomed through the speakers.
He looked out at the sea of employees. His eyes were the color of the Atlantic in winter-dark, turbulent, and utterly cold.
"Sit down," he said.
His voice was deeper. It vibrated in Gracia's bones. It was the voice that used to whisper promises in her dorm room, now stripped of all warmth.
Gracia didn't sit. There were no chairs left in her corner. She remained rigid against the pillar, making herself as small as physically possible.
Bridger spoke for ten minutes. He talked about restructuring, about efficiency, about cutting the dead weight that had dragged the company stock down. Every word was a blade. He was ruthless. He was brilliant. He was a stranger.
"We are done with complacency," Bridger said, closing the folder on the podium. "If you are not essential, you are gone."
The meeting ended abruptly. There was no Q&A. No comforting platitudes.
Bridger walked down the steps of the stage. He didn't head for the exit. He walked straight into the crowd.
The employees parted like water, terrified to touch him.
Gracia felt a surge of panic. He was walking in her direction.
Move, her brain screamed. Run.
But her legs were lead. She was frozen, a deer in the headlights of an oncoming train.
Bridger stopped five meters away to speak to a VP of Sales. Gracia let out a shaky breath. He wasn't coming for her. He didn't know she was here. Why would he? She was a nobody in a company of thousands.
She turned to slip away toward the exit.
Then she felt it. The weight of a gaze so heavy it felt like a physical touch.
Gracia turned back slowly.
Bridger was looking at her.
Their eyes locked across the heads of the terrified staff.
Time warped. The noise of the room faded into a dull roar. For three seconds, Gracia was back in Cambridge, standing in the rain, her heart breaking. She waited for the recognition. She waited for the anger. She waited for the shock.
Bridger's expression didn't change. Not a flicker. Not a twitch of a muscle.
He looked at her, through her, and then past her.
It was a look of complete and total indifference. As if she were part of the architecture. As if she were a smudge on the glass.
He turned his head and walked away, his stride long and purposeful, leaving her standing in the shadows.
Gracia slumped against the pillar. Her knees finally gave out, and she slid down a few inches before catching herself.
The indifference hurt more than the anger would have. Anger meant he still cared enough to hate her. This? This was erasure.
He had looked right at her and seen nothing.