(Yvette POV)
I woke up before my alarm.
That alone was unusual.
The pale Parisian light filtered through the thin curtains, brushing softly against the ceiling, the edges of furniture, my skin. For a few seconds, I lay still, listening—to the hum of the city waking up, to my own breathing, to the unfamiliar sensation of calm sitting comfortably in my chest.
Not excitent.
Not anticipation.
Just... ease.
My mind drifted back to the night before without effort.
The river.
The quiet walk.
The way Brent had listened—really listened—without pushing, without asking for more than I could give.
I want to know you more.
The words echoed faintly, not with pressure, but with warmth.
I sat up slowly, brushing my hair back, and let out a small breath that almost sounded like a laugh.
When was the last ti a morning had started like this?
Back then—before everything broke—I used to wake up early too. In a different life. Before the weight of expectation and disappointnt pressed itself into my bones. Before love had learned how to hurt.
I pushed the thought away gently.
This life is different, I reminded myself. And I chose it.
I moved through my routine with unhurried care. Coffee brewed. Notes reviewed. Knife roll checked. Everything in its place.
When I stepped outside, the air was cool and crisp, carrying the scent of rain from the night before. Paris looked unassuming in the morning—almost fragile. I liked it best like this.
As I walked toward the institute, my phone buzzed once.
A ssage from Joseph.
Joseph:
Did you sleep well?
I paused, fingers hovering over the screen.
:
I did. Hope you did too.
Three dots appeared. Disappeared. Then nothing.
I slipped the phone back into my bag and continued on, unaware that the quiet between ssages would soon grow heavier than either of us expected.
The kitchen buzzed with its usual controlled chaos.
Students moved with purpose, voices overlapping, tal clinking against tal. The rhythm felt familiar now—less like a test, more like a language I was finally learning to speak fluently.
Élise was already at our station, sleeves rolled, posture relaxed.
"Morning," she said.
"Morning," I replied, setting my things down.
Camille was present—but distant.
She didn’t look at when I arrived. Didn’t smirk. Didn’t whisper.
She simply worked.
That alone would have unsettled a week ago. Now, it registered as sothing else.
Caution.
The practical went smoothly. No disruptions. No misplaced ingredients. No subtle provocations masked as accidents.
Still, I felt it.
Not hostility—but awareness.
When the instructor announced the schedule for the next two weeks, a small ripple passed through the room.
"We’ll have a visiting sponsor later this month," he said casually. "Along with a guest lecture tied to international hospitality leadership."
A few students perked up.
Élise’s hand paused mid-motion.
"Who?" soone asked.
The instructor glanced at his notes. "The Vale Group."
The na slid into the air like a blade dropped gently onto water.
Most students reacted with excitent—whispers, impressed murmurs, curiosity lighting their faces.
Élise didn’t move.
Her jaw tightened—just barely.
I leaned closer. "Do you know them?"
She nodded once. "Enough to be cautious."
Before I could ask more, class resud. But the word Vale lingered, echoing faintly in my thoughts, like sothing I’d heard once in passing and never thought I’d need to rember.
Lunch ca and went without incident.
It wasn’t until later, when I was packing up for the day, that the unease sharpened.
An email notification blinked on my screen.
From: Academic Administration
Subject: Sponsorship Liaison Update
I opened it.
Nothing alarming. Just procedural language. A note about increased visibility, potential networking opportunities, a request for availability confirmations.
Still, my fingers hovered over the trackpad longer than necessary.
Visibility.
The word sat wrong.
As I left the institute, Brent was already waiting across the street.
He smiled when he saw —but his eyes searched my face more carefully than usual.
"Long day?" he asked.
"Not particularly," I replied. "Why?"
"No reason," he said. Then, after a beat, "Did anything... unusual happen?"
I frowned slightly. "Define unusual."
He hesitated, then shook his head. "We’ll talk later."
The way he said it—controlled, asured—sent a faint chill through .
We walked in silence for a few minutes before I spoke again.
"Do you know a company called Vale Group?" I asked lightly.
Brent stopped.
I turned back toward him, confused.
He was still smiling—but it didn’t reach his eyes.
"Yes," he said carefully. "Why?"
"They’re sponsoring sothing at the institute."
A pause.
Then, "Did they contact you directly?"
"No," I replied. "Not yet."
His shoulders relaxed—only slightly.
"That’s good," he said.
I studied him. "Brent... what aren’t you saying?"
He t my gaze, sothing guarded flickering across his expression.
"Just this," he said quietly. "So ripples don’t look like waves until they’re already close."
The city continued moving around us, unaware.
And so was I.
For now.
We didn’t walk far after that.
Brent guided into a quieter street café—not one of the tourist-heavy ones, but a narrow place tucked between two bookshops, the kind where locals linger and no one rushes you out. The sll of espresso and baked sugar wrapped around us as we took a corner table.
Only when we sat did he speak again.
"Vale Group isn’t just a company," he said, voice low. "It’s a strategy."
I blinked. "That’s... ominous."
He didn’t smile.
"They specialize in acquisitions that look consensual on paper," he continued. "Partnerships that turn predatory six months later. They invest, integrate, then replace."
"Replace whom?" I asked.
"Whoever’s inconvenient." he replied.
My fingers curled around my cup. "And why does that matter to ?"
Brent studied carefully before answering.
"Because Sebastian Vale doesn’t move unless there’s sothing worth taking," he said. "And when he does, he prefers leverage over force."
The na landed heavier this ti.
"Sebastian Vale?" I repeated.
"Yes." Brent’s gaze sharpened. "And if Vale Group is sniffing around your institute, it’s not because they care about culinary education."
I frowned. "Then why—"
"Visibility," he interrupted gently. "Talent scouting. Brand alignnt. Soft access to future assets."
I let out a slow breath. "You’re saying... ?"
"I’m saying you’re visible. And visibility attracts attention" he corrected. "You were the forr CEO of the Hamilton Group, a rival company for the Vale Group. Not all of it good."
The café noise faded slightly as my thoughts caught up.
"I thought Paris was supposed to be... simpler," I admitted quietly.
Brent’s expression softened. "It still can be. But you deserve to know the water you’re standing in."
I nodded once.
The peace I’d felt that morning didn’t disappear—but it thinned, stretched just enough for unease to seep through.
Across the city of Paris, in a private suite overlooking the Seine, Diane Jenkins stood by the window with a glass of champagne she hadn’t touched.
Paris suited her.
Not the wide-eyed wonder of it—but the indifference. The way the city didn’t care who you were, only how well you played the ga.
"You’re quieter than usual," a voice remarked behind her.
Sebastian Vale sat casually on the edge of the table, jacket discarded, sleeves rolled back. He looked relaxed in the way n did when they knew the room belonged to them.
"I’m thinking," Diane replied.
"That’s never a bad sign," he said mildly. "Unless you’re hesitating."
She turned, eting his gaze. "She’s settled in faster than I expected."
Sebastian smiled faintly. "Yvette Matthews?"
The na tasted deliberate on his tongue.
"Yes," Diane said. "She’s building a support system. Friends. Allies."
"And?" he prompted.
"And she’s still not aware of how wide the board is," Diane replied. "Which makes now the perfect ti."
Sebastian rose, moving toward her with unhurried steps. "Then we don’t rush," he said. "We let her believe Paris is safe."
He stopped in front of her, lifting her chin with one finger—not unkindly, but possessively.
"You brought value," he continued. "Information. Patterns. Weak points."
Diane didn’t flinch. "And you promised a chance."
His smile sharpened. "I promised you relevance."
That was close enough.
Diane watched the city lights blur below as Sebastian turned back to the table, opening a file on his tablet.
"Vale Group’s presence at the institute will remain indirect for now," he said. "No overt contact. No pressure."
She nodded. "She trusts her surroundings."
"Good," he replied. "Trust makes people careless."
"And Brent?" Diane asked casually.
Sebastian glanced up. "The lawyer?"
"The one who stays close," she said. "Too close."
A pause.
"An anchor," Sebastian mused. "Anchors can be cut. Or they can be weighted."
Diane’s fingers tightened around her glass.
"And Joseph Hamilton?" she asked.
Sebastian’s eyes flickered with interest. "Still circling from afar. Quite sentintal."
Her lips curved. "That sentint can be used."
Sebastian smiled fully now.
"Everything can," he said.
That night, I cooked slowly.
Not because I needed to—but because the motion helped think.
Chopping. Sautéing. Adjusting heat. Each step grounded in sothing tangible, sothing real. Brent’s words replayed in fragnts, threading through my thoughts.
Visibility.
Leverage.
Attention.
I plated the food carefully, even though no one was there to see it.
As I ate, my phone buzzed.
A ssage from Joseph.
Joseph:
I had a strange feeling today. Like sothing’s shifting. Are you alright?
I stared at the screen for a long mont.
:
I’m okay. Just... learning new things.
A lie. Or maybe just an incomplete truth.
Outside, Paris glowed as it always had—beautiful, indifferent, alive.
I stood by the window and watched the lights ripple across the river.
The calm was still there.
But now I knew—it wasn’t untouched.
Sothing had already stepped into the water.
And it was moving toward .
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