The Stranger He Became

The office stretched before me like a cathedral of power, all glass and steel and impossible wealth.

Floor-to-ceiling windows wrapped around three walls, offering a view of Manhattan that made me feel dizzy—not from the height, but from the sheer audacity of claiming this much of the sky as your own.

A figure stood silhouetted against the western windows, hands clasped behind his back, perfectly still.

Even from behind, even after five years, I knew that posture. The way he held his shoulders, the slight tilt of his head when he was thinking. My heart hammered against my ribs.

"Theron?"

He didn't turn immediately. The silence stretched between us, filled only by the muted sounds of traffic forty floors below and the whisper of climate-controlled air. When he finally moved, it was with the deliberate grace of someone who had learned that every gesture carried weight.

The man who faced me was a stranger wearing Theron's face.

Gone was the boy who'd worn thrift store sweaters and shoes with worn-down heels. This Theron stood in a suit that probably cost more than I'd made in a year—charcoal gray, perfectly tailored, the kind of clothing that whispered rather than shouted its price. His dark hair was shorter now, styled with precision, and his face had lost the softness of youth. Sharp cheekbones, a jaw that could cut glass, and eyes...

God, his eyes. They'd once looked at me like I was the answer to every question he'd ever had. Now they studied me with the cold interest of an entomologist examining a specimen.

"Aurelia." My name sounded different in his mouth, clinical and distant. "You look..." His gaze traveled over me slowly, cataloging every detail of my simple black dress, my practical shoes, the way I clutched my purse like a shield. "Ordinary."

The word hit me like a slap. I'd prepared for anger, for hurt, even for hatred. But this casual dismissal, this reduction of five years of longing to a single, cutting observation—it stole the breath from my lungs.

"I know I look different," I managed, my voice smaller than I'd intended. "Five years of—"

"Five years of whatever you were doing," he interrupted, moving away from the windows with predatory grace. "Yes, I can see that."

I fumbled for the envelope in my purse, my fingers shaking. "Theron, please. I need to explain. I never wanted to leave you. I had no choice." The medical bills rustled as I pulled them out, holding them toward him like an offering. "My father's accident, the medical costs—I took the job in South America because—"

"Because you saw no future with a poor man."

His voice was silk over steel, and he didn't even glance at the papers in my hand. Instead, he began to circle me, slow and deliberate, like a shark scenting blood in the water.

"Did you think I wouldn't figure it out?" He was behind me now, his voice a whisper against my ear that made my skin crawl instead of tingle. "The timing was quite convenient, wasn't it? Just as my company was struggling, just as the bills were piling up, suddenly you received this miraculous job offer. Better money, better prospects, better than anything a failing entrepreneur could provide."

"That's not—" I spun to face him, but he'd already moved, maintaining that careful distance that made me feel like prey. "You don't understand. I was trying to protect you. If I'd told you about my father's condition, about the debt, you would have—"

"What? Abandoned my dreams to help you?" His laugh was a sound I'd never heard before—bitter and hollow, devoid of any warmth. "How noble of you to make that choice for me. How thoughtful to spare me the burden of actually caring about the woman I loved."

The past tense cut deeper than any blade. Loved. As in, no longer.

"I was twenty-two," I whispered, tears threatening to spill over. "I was scared and alone and I thought—"

"You thought you could do better." He stopped in front of his massive desk, leaning against it with casual elegance. The city sprawled behind him like a conquered kingdom. "And perhaps you were right. Look what I became without you dragging me down."

The cruelty in his voice was surgical in its precision. This wasn't the passionate anger of a wounded lover—this was something colder, more calculated. This was a man who had spent five years nurturing his hurt until it had metastasized into something monstrous.

"I came back," I said desperately. "I came back as soon as I could. Doesn't that mean anything?"

"It means you heard about my success." He pushed off from the desk, approaching me again with that same predatory grace. "Tell me, Aurelia, when exactly did you decide I was worth your time again? When the first article about Wolfe Industries hit the financial pages? When you saw my net worth in Forbes?"

"I don't care about your money!" The words exploded out of me, raw and desperate. "I never cared about money. I cared about you. I came back for you."

For a moment, something flickered across his face—surprise, maybe, or the ghost of the boy I'd once known. But it was gone so quickly I might have imagined it.

"How touching." His smile was sharp as a blade, beautiful and terrible. "In that case, you won't mind staying."

My heart leaped. "Staying?"

"Oh yes." He moved closer, close enough that I could smell his cologne—expensive, unfamiliar, nothing like the cheap aftershave he used to wear. "Since you came all this way to be with me, since money means nothing to you, you can take your place among my other... acquisitions."

The word hit me like ice water. "Acquisitions?"

"My women." He said it so casually, like he was discussing stock options. "Beautiful things I keep around for my entertainment. You'll live in my penthouse, attend my events, look pretty on my arm when I require it. In return, you'll have everything money can buy—clothes, jewelry, a lifestyle most women would kill for."

My mind reeled. "You want me to be your... your mistress?"

"One of them." His smile widened, and I saw something predatory gleaming in his eyes. "Unless, of course, you've suddenly developed standards. In which case, there's the door."

I stared at him, this stranger who wore my lover's face, and felt something die inside my chest. This was what my sacrifice had created—this cold, cruel man who spoke of women like objects to be collected.

But underneath the shock and hurt, guilt gnawed at me like acid. I had done this to him. My choices, my cowardice, my inability to trust him with the truth—I had broken something beautiful and left him to rebuild himself from the pieces. If this was who he'd become, wasn't I responsible?

Didn't I owe him this?

"I'll stay," I whispered.

His smile was triumphant and terrible. "Excellent. Julian will show you to your room and explain the... expectations. Welcome home, Aurelia."

The way he said my name made it sound like a curse.

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