He watched her face as she read it.
He had become something of an expert on Gladys Stone's expressions over the years, not by design but by the particular helplessness of a man who cannot stop paying attention to someone. He knew the polite version of her face and the sharp version. He knew the way her jaw set when she was composing herself and the way her eyes went very still when something had genuinely landed. They were very still now.
The photograph showed the two of them outside the Harlow fundraiser eighteen months ago, a moment he remembered with uncomfortable precision.
She had said something that made him laugh and he had looked at her the way he spent years training himself not to look at her in public. The way that made it obvious.
The handwriting on the back of her copy said: He's been watching you.
His said: She's not as protected as he thinks.
"Someone has been watching us," she said. "For at least eighteen months."
"At least."
She folded the photograph and held it out. He took it. Their fingers didn't touch, she was always precise about that but the air between them did the thing it always did when they were within arm's reach.
"Who would do this," she said.
"Someone with resources and professional surveillance. Someone who knows enough about the three of us to know exactly which images would land." He slid the photograph back into his jacket. "I came to the building today to tell Dave. I saw you first and changed my mind."
"Why?"
"Because whoever sent these is using our dynamic as a weapon. I needed to understand what we were dealing with before putting Dave in the middle of it."
She nodded slowly.
The evening foot traffic moved around them and she stood completely still, assembling something in her head, the rapid quiet intelligence she deployed when she was past the emotional part and into the practical one.
"We can't tell him yet," she said.
"I know."
"He'll shut everything down, pull me off Calloway. Make decisions about my life based on a threat I haven't consented to be protected from."
"That was my thinking."
"So we figure out who it is first." She looked at him. "Together."
The word landed with particular weight. She looked like she knew it had.
"Together," he said.
They found a small bar two blocks from the building. It was quiet, half empty, the kind of place neither of them would normally choose and that suited them perfectly for that reason.
They took a corner table away from the window and ordered without looking at the menu and sat in the particular silence they had always managed in each other's company despite everything that made it complicated.
Gerald watched her turn her glass slowly on the table. She was thinking, he could always tell, the slight inward focus, the way the rest of her went quiet while her mind moved quickly.
"The email," she said without looking up. "Between you and Dave. Three years ago."
"You found it."
"He told you to stay away from me." Now she looked up. "And you agreed."
"I did."
"Why?"
He considered the question. "Because at the time I believed his reasons were purely protective."
"At the time." She caught it immediately. "And now?"
"Now I think his reasons were more complicated than he admitted to either of us."
She held his gaze for a moment then looked back at her glass. The bar was quiet around them, low music, murmured conversations, the kind of anonymity that made honesty easier.
"The Hartley tip," she said. "The blue graphs. The things you've been doing quietly, for a while." She paused. "Why didn't you tell me?"
"Because you would have told Dave."
"Maybe."
"You would have." He said it without accusation. "And then I would have had to sit through a conversation about appropriate boundaries without saying what I actually wanted to say."
She looked at him. "What did you want to say?"
The question sat between them. He had walked up to this edge before, had stood here and stepped back, honoring the promise, maintaining the distance. Tonight felt different because tonight she was asking.
"That I have been paying attention to your life for three years," he said quietly. "Not because Dave asked me to stay away and I was monitoring the boundary. Because I couldn't stop." He held her gaze. "That every time I engineered a reason to be in the same room as you I told myself it was incidental. It was never incidental."
She didn't look away, the thing she did, that particular stillness when something had fully landed and settled over her face.
"Gerald"
"I'm not asking you for anything," he said. "I'm answering your question."
She was quiet for a moment, then she reached across the table and turned his hand over slowly, deliberately and traced one finger across his palm. The lightest possible touch but It undid him completely.
"I've been paying attention too," she said quietly. "In case that wasn't obvious."
"It wasn't." He turned his hand and caught her fingers. "You're very good at composed."
"So are you." Her thumb moved across his knuckles. "We've been performing indifference at each other for three years."
"Badly."
She almost smiled. "Badly," she agreed.
He looked at her without the careful management, without the practiced distance and she let him. The bar noise faded to something irrelevant. He reached up with his free hand and touched her jaw, the lightest possible thing, and she went very still but didn't pull back.
"I've wanted to do that for an embarrassingly long time," he said.
"Just that?"
"Among other things."
Her breath shifted. He felt it, the slight change, the awareness moving through her — and he leaned forward slowly, giving her every opportunity to close the distance herself or step back entirely and she closed it.
The kiss was nothing like the one at the corporate event, that had been urgent, breaking open. This was deliberate and slow. The kind of kiss that asks a question and waits for the full answer. Her hand came up to his chest and he felt her fingers curl into his shirt and thought with complete clarity that he was done pretending this was manageable.
When they broke apart she kept her eyes closed for a moment, then she opened them and looked at him and whatever she was about to say….
Her phone buzzed on the table. She glanced at it.
A message from an unknown number.
Stop, you're being watched right now. Look up.
They both looked toward the bar window simultaneously.
Across the street, the third floor, it was a dark window except for the faint glow of a phone screen. And a silhouette that had been there the entire time.
Gladys's hand tightened on his.
"Gerald." Her voice was very quiet. "I know who that is."





