Dawn Summers sat behind a desk buried under mountains of legal files. As an Assistant District Attorney, her life was dictated by facts, evidence, and cold, hard logic. She needed this job. She needed the grueling hours and the endless stream of petty theft cases to keep her brain occupied. If she stopped working, if she allowed herself even a second of idle time, the memories she had spent five years burying would claw their way back to the surface.
Her fingers, pale and slender, gripped a yellow highlighter. The plastic casing felt hard against her skin.
She dragged the neon tip across a crucial line of witness testimony. The highlighter made a sharp, scratching sound against the crisp white paper. It was a grounding noise. It was the sound of order in a world she constantly fought to keep under control.
Suddenly, the screen of her phone, lying face-up next to a stack of manila folders, lit up.
A violent vibration shattered the quiet of the office. The device rattled against the wooden desk like a warning siren.
Dawn paused. She slowly lowered the highlighter. Her eyes darted to the glowing screen. The caller ID flashed a name she knew all too well: Allyson Patton.
Allyson was her best friend, a woman who belonged to a world of trust funds and country clubs-a world Dawn had only ever observed from the outside, a world she had forcefully excised from her life.
Dawn swiped her thumb across the glass screen to answer the call. She pressed the cold metal of the phone against her ear.
"Dawn!"
Allyson's voice exploded through the speaker, a high-pitched shriek of pure, unadulterated excitement.
Dawn flinched. She instinctively pulled the phone an inch away from her ear to protect her eardrums. She raised her free hand, pressing two fingers against her temple, rubbing the spot where a dull ache was beginning to form.
"Allyson, it's past midnight. I'm reviewing a grand larceny case," Dawn said, her voice a practiced, steady monotone. It was the voice she used in the courtroom to project absolute authority and calm.
"Forget your boring cases!" Allyson yelled over the line. "Tomorrow night. Manhattan. The Grand Plaza Club. There is a massive alumni mixer, and you are coming with me."
Dawn let out a soft, exhausted sigh. She leaned back in her cheap office chair, the springs creaking under her weight. The Grand Plaza Club was an exclusive venue where the city's elite gathered to flaunt their generational wealth. It was the last place a public servant with a mountain of student debt belonged.
She opened her mouth, ready to formulate a polite but firm excuse about needing to prepare for a preliminary hearing.
"Don't even think about saying no," Allyson interrupted, her tone suddenly shifting from excited to conspiratorial. "Because he is back."
Dawn's breath caught in her throat.
"Arlo Hammond flew back into the country this morning," Allyson announced.
The name hit Dawn like a physical blow to the chest.
Her heart, which had been beating at a steady, rhythmic pace, violently skipped a beat. For two full seconds, her lungs completely forgot how to process oxygen. The air in the office suddenly felt too thin, too cold.
Arlo Hammond.
The heir to the Hammond empire. The boy who had owned the city since he was born. The boy who had completely dismantled her soul five years ago.
Dawn's fingers tightened around the phone. She squeezed the device so hard that her knuckles turned a stark, bone-white. The edges of the phone dug painfully into her palm, but she welcomed the physical discomfort. It distracted her from the sudden, agonizing knot twisting in her stomach.
A sharp, familiar cramp seized her abdomen. It was a nervous tic, a somatic response to extreme stress that she had developed years ago. Her stomach muscles contracted violently, sending a wave of nausea up her throat.
Images she had locked away flashed behind her eyes without her permission. A torrential downpour. A tear-stained face. The taillights of a sports car disappearing into the dark, leaving her standing alone in a puddle of her own shattered dignity.
She squeezed her eyes shut. She forced herself to inhale a deep, jagged breath of the stale office air.
Do not break, she ordered herself. You are not that pathetic little girl anymore.
She clamped her teeth down hard on the soft inside of her lower lip. She bit down until the sharp, metallic taste of fresh blood bloomed on her tongue. The pain was sharp and grounding. It pulled her back from the edge of a full-blown panic attack.
She opened her eyes. The fluorescent lights seemed harsher now. She swallowed the blood, forcing her vocal cords to relax. When she finally spoke, she made sure her voice was completely devoid of any emotion. It was a flat, dead sound.
"So what?" Dawn asked.
"So what?" Allyson scoffed, clearly entirely oblivious to the fact that her best friend was currently fighting a war inside her own body. "Dawn, the guy was ruthless to you. And now he's parading around the city like he owns the place-which, technically, his family does. He's on the cover of Forbes, for God's sake. I just thought you'd want to know."
Dawn sat perfectly still. She didn't interrupt. She let Allyson ramble on about Arlo's recent acquisitions and his rumored supermodel girlfriends. She let the words wash over her, focusing entirely on driving her fingernails into the flesh of her palm to maintain her composure.
"I'll be there," Dawn suddenly cut in, her voice slicing through Allyson's chatter.
Allyson paused, clearly surprised. "Wait, really? You'll come?"
"Yes. Text me the time," Dawn said.
She didn't wait for a response. She pulled the phone away from her ear and tapped the red end-call button.
She immediately flipped the phone over, slamming it face-down onto the desk as if the device itself were burning her skin.
Her body slumped back against the chair. All the energy drained from her limbs. She was trembling. Fine, uncontrollable tremors shook her hands.
She sat there for a long moment, letting the silence of the office wrap around her. But the silence couldn't drown out the loud, frantic beating of her own heart.
She suddenly snapped her eyes open. The vulnerability was gone, replaced by a hardened, defensive glare. She pushed herself up from the desk. Her legs felt slightly numb, but she forced herself to walk across the room toward the small, cheap mirror hanging on the back of the office door.
She stared at her reflection. She saw a woman in a practical, inexpensive blazer, with tired eyes and a pale face. That woman would not survive tomorrow night.
If Arlo Hammond was back, if she had to stand in the same room as the man who had ruined her, she could not look like a victim. She needed armor. She needed a facade so flawless that he wouldn't be able to find a single crack.
She stared at her own eyes in the mirror, making a silent vow. Tomorrow, she would put on a dress that cost more than her monthly rent. She would wear a smile made of pure ice. She would walk into that club, and she would prove to him-and to herself-that she was completely, entirely over him.