Not yet

1443 Words
The divorce papers were still on her kitchen table when she got home. She had not touched them since the night they were delivered. She had walked past them that morning without looking. She walked past them now. She put her bag down, filled a glass of water, drank it standing at the sink, and then turned and looked at them. Marshall Owen Vane. Petitioner. Nine years reduced to a word. Petitioner. As if their marriage had been a complaint he was finally getting around to filing. She pulled out the chair and sat down and read every page properly this time. Not skimming. Not managing. Reading. There were clauses she had not absorbed the first night, things she needed to understand before she put her name on anything. She was not a lawyer but she was not stupid either, and she had learned the hard way that signing things without reading them was how you ended up nine years deep in a life built on someone else's lies. She read for forty minutes. Then she put the papers in a folder and put the folder in her bag. She would get a lawyer. Somehow. She would figure it out. She always figured it out. * * * Monday came fast. She dropped Dave at school, took the bus across the city, and walked into the Harlow Group building at seven fifty-eight. The same receptionist from last week was at the desk. This time she smiled without the recalibration. "Mr. Harlow's assistant will come down for you," she said. "Can I get you anything while you wait?" "I'm fine. Thank you." She was not fine. Her stomach had been tight since she woke up. Not about the job itself. She knew she could do the job. It was everything layered underneath it, Mac not knowing who she was in the full sense, Sandra knowing exactly who she was, Marshall's Friday deadline sitting unanswered in her phone, the specific vertigo of walking into a building where she was both hired and hunted. She kept her face even and her posture straight and waited. The assistant was a young man named Paul, efficient and pleasant, who walked her through the fourteenth floor with the focused energy of someone who had been given a checklist and intended to complete it. Her desk was outside Mac's office. Her computer was already set up. Her access card was loaded. Everything was ready, which told her Mac had made sure of it personally rather than leaving it to HR. She was still processing that when his office door opened. "Paul." Mac's voice, without looking up from whatever he was holding. "Push the nine o'clock to nine-thirty. I need the Alcott file before it." Then he looked up and saw Cloe and stopped. A beat. Something moved through his expression too quickly for her to name it. "Ms. Vane," he said. "You found it." "I was two minutes early." "I noticed." He held the door open wider. "Come in. I'll walk you through the week." * * * She learned three things about Mac Harlow in the first hour. He was precise. He did not repeat himself and he did not over-explain. He told her what he needed once and expected it to be understood and actioned, which suited her completely because she had never needed things said twice. He was fair. He did not speak to her the way some men in his position spoke to staff, from above, from behind glass. He spoke to her directly, as an equal in competence if not in title, and he listened when she asked a question rather than simply waiting for her to finish. And he noticed things. Small things. When she hesitated over the filing system he had inherited from his previous assistant he caught it immediately. "It doesn't make sense," he said. "Change it to whatever works for you." When she quietly rerouted a scheduling conflict before it became one he glanced at her from his doorway and said nothing, but the look on his face said enough. By eleven she was settled. By one she was efficient. By three she had restructured his correspondence inbox in a way that made Paul stop at her desk and say, "I've been trying to fix that for six months." She was almost beginning to feel like she could breathe in this building. Then the lift doors opened and Sandra walked in. * * * She did not see Cloe immediately. She was on her phone, heels clicking across the floor, one hand lifting in a small wave at Paul as she moved toward Mac's office with the ease of someone who had walked this floor a hundred times and considered it partially hers. Cloe sat very still. Everything in her went quiet. The specific quiet of an animal that has heard something in the dark and has not yet decided whether to run. She did not run. She turned back to her screen and kept typing. Sandra ended her call. Her footsteps slowed. Then stopped. "I'm sorry." Sandra's voice was pleasant and sharp at the same time, the way expensive knives were pleasant to look at. "You're at the desk outside my brother's office." Cloe looked up. She met Sandra's eyes and held them. "I am," she said. Sandra's face did not change. That was the impressive and terrifying thing about her. She absorbed the shock of it without a flicker and in its place put something colder and more controlled. "Mac hired you," Sandra said. Not a question. "He did." "After I called." "After you called," Cloe confirmed. Sandra looked at her for a long moment. Behind that composed face something was moving fast. Cloe could see the calculations happening, what she knew, what Mac knew, what he did not know yet, what it would cost her if he found out and how quickly she needed to prevent that. "You're making a mistake," Sandra said quietly. "Whatever you think you're doing here." "I'm doing my job," Cloe said. "That's all." Sandra leaned forward slightly, just enough, and lowered her voice so it did not carry past the two of them. "Marshall told me about you. He told me everything." A pause loaded with intention. "Including the things you wouldn't want my brother to know." The air between them went very still. Cloe did not look away. She did not flinch. She thought about Dave at school right now, about the appointment in five days, about the contract in her bag with the health coverage clause, and she kept her face completely neutral. "Then I suppose," Cloe said, "we both have things the other wouldn't want Mac to know." Sandra straightened. Something behind her eyes shifted, a line crossed that could not be uncrossed. She smiled. The kind of smile that did not mean anything good. "Enjoy your first day," she said. She walked into Mac's office and closed the door. Cloe turned back to her screen. Her hands were steady. Her heart was not. She had just drawn a line with a woman who had far more to lose than she did and far more weapons to use. She had done it deliberately, in Mac's building, on her first day. She did not know yet if that had been brave or catastrophic. Forty minutes later Mac's office door opened. Sandra left without looking at her. Mac stood in his doorway and watched his sister go, his jaw set in a way that had not been there that morning. Then he looked at Cloe. "My sister says she knows you," he said. His voice was even. Careful. "From before." Cloe met his eyes. "Does she," she said. It was not a question and they both knew it. Mac studied her face for a long moment, looking for the shape of something he did not yet have a name for. "Is there something I should know, Ms. Vane?" he asked. The question sat between them like a door she could open or close. She thought about everything on the other side of it. Marshall. The promotion. Nine years. The cousin. All of it connected to the man standing in front of her by a thread he could not see yet but that she could feel pulling tighter with every passing second. "Not yet," she said. Mac was quiet for a moment. Then he nodded once and went back inside. Cloe stared at his closed door. Not yet. She had just told Mac Harlow there was something coming. She had no idea how long she had before Sandra told him her version first.
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