Harold was still in the northeast corner of the warehouse where Marcus had positioned him...backed against the wall, two of Marcus’s people flanking him, his hands raised in the specific posture of soone who had done the calculation and understood that compliance was currently the better option. Marcus stood several feet away, his expression doing the thing it did when he was managing sothing with significant effort.
Harold saw Damien’s face when he turned.
Whatever Harold saw there made sothing happen in his expression... sothing that moved quickly through calculation and landed sowhere adjacent to fear before he controlled it. He pressed his back harder against the wall. His chin ca up with the specific defiance of soone trying to maintain dignity in an undignified position.
"Blackwood," Harold said. His voice was controlled. Barely. "Whatever you’re thinking right now..."
"Don’t," Damien said.
He walked toward Harold with the steady, unhurried pace of soone who had all the ti in the world and intended to use every second of it. Marcus’s two people stepped back...not because they’d been told to, but because they were experienced enough to read a room and understand when their role in a situation had concluded.
Marcus didn’t step back. He stayed where he was and watched with the careful attention of soone prepared to manage whatever ca next.
"You fild her," Damien said. He stopped four feet from Harold. His voice was completely even. That was the thing that happened when he reached this specific place....not the hot fury that people expected, not the explosive anger that the situation might have seed to call for, but sothing colder and more absolute that lived below all of that. "You sent it to . You wanted to watch."
Harold said nothing.
"You wanted to feel helpless," Damien continued. "You wanted to sit in my car watching footage of the person I love hurt and frightened and unable to stop it." He tilted his head slightly. "How did that work out for you?"
"You think this is over?" Harold’s voice cracked slightly on the last word. "You think walking in here with your team changes anything? I have evidence, Blackwood. Evidence against her. Against what she did. Even if you....even if sothing happens to here tonight, that evidence goes to six different people simultaneously. Journalists, lawyers, law enforcent contacts. It goes out automatically if I don’t cancel it by midnight."
"You’re lying," Damien said simply.
Harold blinked.
"A man who genuinely had that failsafe in place wouldn’t tell about it," Damien said. "He’d let it happen. The fact that you’re telling ans you’re hoping I’ll let you go in exchange for cancelling it." He looked at Harold with the specific dispassion of soone who had assessed a situation completely and found it uncomplicated. "There is no failsafe. There’s just you, trying to find an exit."
The silence that followed confird it.
Harold’s composure cracked down the middle.
What ca out from underneath wasn’t the cold, calculated nace of the man who’d sat across from Aria in this warehouse for two hours. It was sothing rawer, the specific unraveling of a person whose last card had just been called and found empty. His hands ca down from their raised position. His jaw tightened. His eyes went to the cara on its tripod, still recording, its red light still blinking.
"She deserved it," Harold said. The words ca out low and fractured and entirely genuine. "Everything I did here tonight....she deserved all of it. You understand that? She walked into my company and she dismantled everything I built and she walked away without consequence. Without a single consequence. While I lost everything." His voice was rising. "Four thousand people, Blackwood. Four thousand people lost their jobs. My reputation, my assets, my freedom....everything."
"She also," Damien said quietly, "got three hundred of your employees compensation they wouldn’t otherwise have seen. She also prevented you from doing to five other companies what you did to yours. She also...." He stopped. Shook his head. "No. I’m not going to stand here and defend her to you. She doesn’t need to defend her. She already defended herself.... sitting in that chair for two hours while you did everything you could to break her and failed completely."
Harold stared at him.
"She didn’t break," Damien said. "Not once. I watched that footage and I saw her face and she did not break. She was planning her escape even before i got here." Sothing moved in his expression....not softness, not quite, but the specific quality of a man who knew exactly who he loved and why. "You picked the wrong person to try to destroy, Harold. You were never going to win this."
He took one step forward.
Harold moved.
****
MARCUS’S POV
He saw it coming approximately one second before it happened.
Harold’s eyes had been tracking the space for the last four minutes....subtle, almost imperceptible, the specific eye movent of soone mapping exits while appearing to maintain eye contact with the person in front of them. Marcus had been watching it and calculating and waiting to see which direction Harold would commit to.
He committed left.
Not toward the southeast door, too many people between him and it. Not toward the northeast corner where his own n had been neutralized. He went for the gap between the industrial shelving and the east wall....a narrow space, barely visible in the low light, the kind of gap that soone who’d spent weeks preparing this building would know about and soone arriving for the first ti wouldn’t imdiately clock.
He was fast. Marcus had to give him that, faster than his physical condition suggested he should be, the specific speed of pure desperation.
Marcus moved at the sa mont. Cut right to intercept, covering ground with the efficiency of his training, calculated to close the gap before Harold reached the shelving....
Damien got there first.
He caught Harold by the back of his collar....one hand, montum and muscle doing the rest....and the impact as Harold was stopped mid-sprint and redirected was significant and graceless. Harold went into the shelving unit with a crash that sent old tal brackets scattering across the concrete floor.
Damien dragged him back upright.
What happened in the next five minutes was Damien Blackwood, for the first ti in Marcus’s eight years of working for him, allowed himself to be completely and entirely what he was underneath the suits and the boardrooms and the carefully maintained composure.
Harold Ashford learned sothing in those five minutes that very few people had ever learned firsthand about Damien Blackwood.
And then Marcus’s voice cut through: "Boss."
Damien stopped.
"Boss." Marcus kept his voice even.
Damien looked at him. His breathing was elevated. His expression was doing sothing Marcus had never seen on it before....sothing that was simultaneously the most human and the most dangerous he’d ever looked.
"She needs you," Marcus said simply. "Outside. Right now. She needs you more than this does."
Damien finally stopped and looked up at Marcus, Then turned back and looked down at Harold....crumpled against the base of the shelving unit, conscious, breathing, significantly worse for the last five minutes but alive....and sothing shifted in his face. The specific transition of a man being pulled back from an edge by the ntion of the one thing that mattered more than the edge itself.
He stepped back and straightened his shirt.
He looked at Marcus with the eyes of soone reassembling themselves from the inside out.
"Secure him," he said. His voice was almost steady. "Nobody leaves until I...."
His phone buzzed.
He looked at it. One second of reading, and then his face changed completely ....every trace of the cold fury replaced by sothing rawer and more urgent.
Alexander: She’s conscious but fading. dical team is with her. She’s asking for you.
Reviews
All reviews (0)