He hadn't reached for me. Not yet. His attention had been consumed by Selene's presence, by the deceit that had tangled around her like a perfect, poisonous web. But I could see it , the recognition struggling to surface in his stormy grey eyes, threatening to break through the armor he had built so meticulously.
And I couldn't afford to wait.
I needed to be proactive. I needed to be seen, truly seen before Selene could manipulate him into believing her lies completely.
The sunlight filtering through the skyscraper's windows painted the marble floors in gold, a cruel reminder of the stark, unyielding world we navigated.
I forced myself to breathe deeply, grounding myself in the rhythm of my heels against the polished tiles, reminding myself that I belonged here if not in this office, at least in this story.
Selene's laughter echoed again, light and precise, like the clink of a crystal glass in a silent room.
I turned to see her glide past, radiant and untouchable, her eyes flicking toward me with that infuriating mixture of amusement and superiority. She thrived on control, and today she had it in spades.
Cassian remained near his office, watching the floor with that predatory precision I had come to associate with him.
And yet, every so often, his gaze strayed toward me. Recognition hovered at the edges of his mind, brushing past like a phantom he could not quite grasp.
I clenched my fists under my desk. If only I could make him remember, make him feel what I had felt the day I had saved him. Make him understand that this was more than coincidence. That I was more than a shadow in his life.
The boardroom doors opened abruptly, and I felt a shiver of anticipation. Selene entered first, flawless in her tailored suit, her platinum hair catching the light as she moved. Cassian followed, his posture rigid, the storm within him barely contained.
"Cassian," Selene said softly, her voice like honey laced with venom, "I trust you've reviewed the projections for the Vale Dominion merger?"
"Yes," he replied, voice clipped, eyes never leaving the papers before him. "And the numbers do not reflect the risk I anticipated."
She leaned slightly closer, her smile sharp as a blade. "Perhaps your analysis was too harsh. Perhaps someone else's perspective is necessary."
My pulse quickened. I knew what she was implying. She wanted me, the girl standing in the shadows, the one he had almost recognized to be invisible, to disappear from his awareness entirely.
I rose from my chair, forcing myself into the open, heart pounding. "Sir," I said, my voice steady despite the tremor beneath it. "If I may, I believe I have insights that could adjust the projections favorably."
Selene's eyes flicked toward me, a flash of irritation barely masked by her smile. Cassian's gaze followed mine, locking onto me fully this time.
There it was the flicker, the brief spark of curiosity and something deeper, buried beneath years of control.
He motioned toward the chair across from him. "Speak," he said, voice low, commanding attention.
I stepped forward, every muscle taut with tension. "The merger projections do not account for regional market fluctuations," I began, outlining my calculations, my strategies, and my reasoning.
"By adjusting the approach to the West Sector, we can mitigate risks while increasing projected returns by seven percent."
Cassian's brow furrowed slightly, his sharp mind absorbing every word. "And you've verified this data?"
"Yes, sir. Multiple sources, cross-referenced. The risks are manageable."
Selene's smile had vanished, replaced by a calculated mask of composure. "Impressive," she said lightly, almost reluctantly. "But this is the first I've heard of your involvement."
Cassian's stormy grey eyes flicked to her, then back to me. "It's not the first time I've noticed competence," he said, his voice low, controlled. "It is the first time I've seen it applied effectively in this situation."
I swallowed, heart racing. The acknowledgment was intoxicating, terrifying, and... dangerous.
As I continued to present my analysis, I caught his gaze several times, and each time the spark grew. Recognition danced at the edges of his mind, brushing against the memories of a boy and a girl, a playground, rusted swings, and whispered promises of light in broken glass.
And yet Selene was never far.
She leaned closer, voice soft but cutting. "Cassian, the girl who helped you as a child... are you sure she is the right person to trust now? After all, people change."
Her words were carefully constructed, designed to plant seeds of doubt. And for a fleeting moment, I felt my resolve waver. But then I saw it the flicker of longing in his eyes, the tiny hesitation in his movements, the way his hand trembled just slightly when he brushed a paper aside.
He remembered.
I knew it.
But he wouldn't admit it. Not yet.
The meeting ended, papers shuffled, chairs scraped against the floor. Selene gave a small nod to Cassian, her smile sharp as it lingered in the air. And then she left, her exit as controlled and calculated as her entrance.
I remained standing, waiting for him to speak, to acknowledge, to bridge the gap between memory and reality.
Finally, he leaned back in his chair, eyes dark with storm and uncertainty. "Why now?" he asked, voice low, almost a whisper meant only for me.
I stepped closer, careful to respect the space between us, yet unwilling to retreat. "Because you need to remember," I said softly. "Because the truth can't be hidden forever, not from you, not from me, not from what we once shared."
Cassian's jaw tightened, his hand gripping the armrest of his chair. "You expect me to accept this... just like that? After all these years? That you're the girl I've been searching for?"
I met his gaze fully, unwavering. "I expect you to look at me," I said firmly, "to see beyond the years, beyond the scars, beyond the lies Selene has woven around us."
He exhaled slowly, stormy eyes never leaving mine. "And if I choose not to?"
"Then you will continue to live in a shadow of a memory," I said. "And I will continue to survive in silence. But neither of us deserves that."
A tense silence filled the room. The city stretched beyond the windows, oblivious to the quiet collision of past and present happening within these walls.
Then, without warning, his hand shot out not toward Selene, not toward the boardroom papers, but toward me. A subtle movement, small, but deliberate. And in that instant, I felt the invisible tether of our past reconnect, binding us in ways that words could never capture.
But before I could reach him, the office door slammed open. Selene entered again, her eyes flashing with something unreadable triumph? Rage? I couldn't tell.
"You really think you can rewrite history, Cassian?" she said, voice soft, venomous, and calculated. "Do you think you can trust what you barely understand?"
Cassian's hand froze in midair. The spark between us faltered. And I realized, with a jolt, that this was only the beginning.
Because Selene had not only planted doubt, she had set a trap. And we had both walked straight into it.
The next steps would decide everything: truth or deception, love or betrayal, memory or erasure.
And none of us could predict which side would emerge victorious.