Claire left the Westbrook Tower with the sensation that she had stepped out of one world and into another. The setting sun painted Los Angeles in bruised pink and gold, but she hardly saw it. Her reflection flashed in every window she passed: dark hair pinned back, sharp eyes, lips set in a line she couldn't quite relax. She looked like a woman in control. She felt like a woman who had just touched fire with her bare hands.
Her phone buzzed. She checked the screen. It's Danny.
She considered letting it ring. She considered the thinness in his voice the last time they spoke, the way he always called at the worst possible times. But guilt, that old familiar leash, tightened, and she answered.
"Claire," Danny said, his tone a brittle mix of relief and need. "Hey, You busy?"
"I was," she said, weaving through the crowd toward her car. "What's wrong?"
"I just… I need to see you."
The way he said it, soft and cracked at the edges, made her stomach knot. "Danny, not tonight. I've got work to file."
"It won't take long," he pleaded. "Please, Claire. Just ten minutes."
She pressed her lips together. Ten minutes with Danny often became an hour of patching over his mistakes. But she also remembered the boy who used to follow her with toy swords, swearing he would protect her forever. That boy was long gone, but she could never fully forget him.
"Fine," she said at last. "Text me the address."
By the time she reached the dim café on Sunset Boulevard, her mind had replayed the interview with Leo Westbrook half a dozen times. His voice lingered, his words echoing in the chambers of her thoughts. "You're not what I expected". Damn him for planting the idea that he had seen her more clearly than most men ever did.
Danny sat at the back, hunched over a chipped mug. His blond hair was too long, his shirt rumpled. When he looked up, his eyes darted in that nervous way she knew too well.
"Claire," he said, forcing a smile. "You came."
"I said I would," she replied, sliding into the seat opposite him. "Now tell me why."
He hesitated, then leaned forward, lowering his voice. "I owe some people. Bad people."
Her jaw clenched. "Danny"
"Don't," he cut in quickly. "Don't start with the lecture. I just need some time. A week, maybe. Then I'll have the money."
"A week for what?" she demanded. "To get deeper into trouble? To let them bleed you more?"
Danny's hands tightened around the mug. "You don't understand. These guys; they're connected."
"Connected how?"
He swallowed hard, eyes flicking away. "Westbrook. His circle. Not him, exactly, but people he does business with. Claire, you don't know what you're dealing with."
The name hit her chest like a stone. "Leo Westbrook?"
Danny nodded, then scrubbed his face with his hands. "You have to stay away from him. Promise me."
Claire let out a short, humorless laugh. "Too late."
Danny's head snapped up. "What do you mean, too late?"
"I met him today. Interviewed him."
Danny stared at her as if she had just confessed to stepping into a lion's den on purpose. "God, Claire. Do you have a death wish?"
She leaned back, crossing her arms. "Relax. He doesn't scare me."
Danny's voice cracked. "He should."
Something in his tone, pure fear, raw and unguarded, sent a chill through her. Danny never admitted fear, not even when he should.
She softened, leaning forward. "What did you do?"
"I borrowed," he whispered. "Too much. And they made it clear, if I don't pay, they'll take it out of me. Or out of you."
Claire's pulse quickened. "Me?"
"They know who you are. They know you don't scare easily. That makes you a target."
For a long moment, she said nothing. The noise of the café, the clink of spoons, the hiss of the espresso machine blurred around her.
Leo Westbrook's words returned, dark and measured. "Careful, Miss Sullivan. You're wandering into a minefield."
She had laughed at the time. Now, the laughter stuck in her throat.
"Danny," she said finally, her voice low, "you have to tell me who these people are."
He shook his head frantically. "I can't. If I talk, I'm done."
"You're already done if you don't."
"Claire, please," he begged. "Just stay away from him. Promise me that much."
She looked at her brother, at the boy she used to protect, at the man who had made himself fragile with choices he couldn't undo. And she realized the story she thought she wanted, the exposé on Leo Westbrook, the ruthless billionaire was suddenly tied to something more dangerous, more personal.
She couldn't promise. Not when her instincts screamed that walking away now would only leave her blind.
Instead, she reached across the table, covering Danny's trembling hands with hers. "I'll fix this," she whispered.
"Claire"
"I said I'll fix it."
Her phone buzzed again. A message from Maggie: How did it go with Westbrook? Did you survive the dragon's den?
Claire stared at the screen, then typed back one word: "Barely"
As she slipped the phone away, she caught her reflection again in the café window. Same sharp eyes, same pressed mouth. But this time, she saw something different flickering in her gaze, something she hadn't expected.
Not fear.
Curiosity.
Dangerous curiosity.
And beneath it, the faint, reluctant admission she had no intention of sharing with anyone: Leo Westbrook was already under her skin.
She stood, kissed Danny's head in a rare, protective gesture, and walked out.
The city air hit her like smoke. She inhaled, squared her shoulders, and set her course.
She wasn't
leaving Leo Westbrook's world. She was going back in.