I didn't sleep that night.
Every time I closed my eyes, I heard those words again. She's too protective. She's hiding something.
The voices twisted in my head, louder in the silence, circling like vultures. They didn't know how right they were. And if Adrian listened, if he pushed even a little then everything I'd spent years protecting would collapse in an instant.
By morning, my nerves were raw, my body trembling from the strain of pretending.
I dressed my daughter quietly, smoothing her tangled hair, forcing a smile when she clung to me. She was pale today, but her cough had softened. I told myself it was a good sign, though the rattle in her chest betrayed the lie.
"Mama, why are you shaking?" she asked, pressing her small, warm hand against mine. Her dark eyes studied me, too perceptive for a child her age.
I swallowed hard, stretching my lips into what I hoped was a reassuring grin. "Just cold, baby. Just cold."
But it wasn't the cold. It was him. Adrian.
His shadow was everywhere, on the street corner where I swore I saw a figure linger too long, in the dark tint of passing cars that made my pulse stutter, in the hushed whispers of neighbors who had noticed the sleek black vehicle parked near the building. People like us didn't see cars like that unless trouble followed.
I kissed my daughter's forehead before leaving her with Mrs. Ada. The kiss lingered longer than usual, my lips pressed against her skin as if I could absorb her warmth, her innocence, her life into me. My chest ached with the need to tell her everything and the desperate fear of what would happen if I did.
The bar felt different that day. Tighter. Smaller. Every creak of the door made me flinch, my heart leaping into my throat, expecting him to walk in. But hours passed, and he didn't show. Relief and disappointment tangled inside me, leaving me raw, unsettled.
I hated myself for the disappointment most of all.
Late afternoon, when the noise of the bar blurred into a dull roar in my ears, I slipped into the storage room just to breathe. Just five minutes. Just a moment to close my eyes and remember who I was before all of this.
The shelves smelled of stale beer and dust. Boxes leaned precariously against the walls. I leaned back against one, inhaling, exhaling, trying to find some shred of calm.
And then I opened my eyes.
He was there.
Adrian leaned against the far shelves like he had been waiting all along, his arms folded across his chest, his black suit immaculate despite the grime of the room. The cramped space seemed too small, too thin, to hold him. His presence filled every inch of it, pressing against my lungs until breathing became a conscious effort.
"You're jumpy," he said quietly, his gaze fixed on me. "What are you afraid of?"
My spine stiffened. My palms went clammy. "Get out."
He didn't move. Instead, he tilted his head, studying me the way a predator studies its prey not out of hunger, but out of certainty. He knew he'd catch me eventually.
"You've changed, Elena," he said after a long silence. His voice was low, thoughtful, threaded with something I couldn't name. "Stronger. Harder. But I know that look in your eyes. You're hiding something."
My stomach lurched.
I forced a laugh, brittle and hollow. "What are you talking about?"
His expression didn't shift. He didn't smile, didn't soften. "Don't lie to me." His voice dropped lower, sharp as broken glass. "I can smell lies."
I wrapped my arms around myself, nails digging crescents into my skin. The walls felt like they were closing in.
"Not everything is about you, Adrian," I said, the words breaking on my tongue. "Not every secret belongs to you."
His jaw tightened, his eyes narrowing in that way I remembered too well. For a long moment, silence stretched between us, heavy, suffocating. My pulse pounded in my ears, each beat a countdown to disaster.
Then he stepped closer.
The air shifted instantly. He moved with a confidence that was both terrifying and intoxicating, the kind of presence that could silence a room without a word. He didn't touch me, but he didn't have to. His nearness was enough to send a shiver down my spine.
"I don't like being shut out," he murmured. His voice was quiet, but it carried weight, that dangerous softness that made my knees want to buckle. "You should know that by now."
The memory slammed into me before I could stop it. A younger version of myself, foolish and wide-eyed, believing every promise he whispered in the dark. Believing I could change him. That love could anchor him to something softer. That we had a future outside of blood and shadows.
And then the betrayal. The night I walked away, my heart bleeding, swearing I'd never let him near me again.
My fists clenched at my sides. "You don't get to demand anything from me." My voice shook, but the words were steady, sharp. "Not anymore."
His eyes burned into mine, dangerous, hungry, unrelenting. There was no softness there, no mercy, only certainty.
"We'll see about that."
Then he turned and walked out, leaving the scent of him behind, the echo of his presence clinging to the room.
The silence he left was worse than the confrontation. It pressed down on me, heavy, suffocating. My knees buckled, and I sank against the wall, trembling. My chest ached, my breath shallow and ragged.
He was closing in.
Every wall I had built, every lie I had told, every fragile thread holding my life together-it was all beginning to crack.
And no matter how fiercely I fought, I knew it was only a matter of time before Adrian Moretti discovered the truth.





