Claire stared at the blank document on her laptop, the cursor pulsing like a taunt. The soft hum of the machine seemed to mock her silence. She had replayed her interview with Leo Westbrook twice already, her notes scattered across the desk in a chaotic sprawl of shorthand and half-legible thoughts. Usually, words came easily. She could cut men down with a single line, expose hypocrisy in neat, devastating paragraphs. But tonight, everything she tried sounded shallow, unfinished, too safe.
"Too safe." That was the problem. She wasn't chasing safety. She wanted the story that would shatter reputations, the piece that would set her name alight in the industry. Yet every time she typed, she saw his face: unreadable, calm, as though he had already anticipated each of her moves. It was infuriating, like trying to outplay a chess master who never raised a hand yet always ended with checkmate.
The doorbell rang, sharp in the quiet, and startled her so much she snapped the laptop shut. She crossed the small apartment quickly and peered through the peephole. Maggie, her editor and closest thing to a friend, stood in the hall, holding a bottle of wine like a peace offering.
Claire opened the door. "You didn't call."
"You never answer when I do," Maggie replied, brushing past her with the ease of someone who didn't need permission. "Consider this an intervention."
Claire folded her arms. "Against what, exactly?"
"Against you brooding like a ghost." Maggie kicked off her heels, collapsed onto the couch, and waved the bottle. "Open this. Then tell me what Westbrook did to put that haunted look on your face."
Claire arched a brow but fetched two glasses from the cabinet. When she returned, Maggie had already flipped open the laptop. "Still blank," she observed with a ong sigh. "That's not like you."
"I'm processing," Claire said, pouring the wine.
"You're stalling," Maggie corrected. She took a generous sip, then leaned forward, elbows braced on her knees. "Come on. Was he boring? Intimidating? Did he try to buy you off?"
Claire's lips twitched despite herself. "All of the above. And none of the above."
Maggie frowned. "That's not an answer."
"No," Claire admitted, settling into the chair opposite. "It's not."
For a moment, neither spoke. The city hummed outside her window, traffic horns, the wail of a siren, laughter spilling from a nearby bar. The noises pressed faintly against the walls, reminders of a restless world moving on without her.
Finally Maggie said, "You're rattled."
"I don't rattle," Claire snapped before she could stop herself. The sharpness of her own tone made her wince.
Maggie grinned knowingly. "Oh, you definitely rattle. The question is, why?"
Claire drained half her glass in one swallow, buying herself time. "Because he's not the man I expected. He's… different."
"Different how?"
Claire hesitated, rolling the stem of her glass between her fingers. Words were her trade, yet suddenly she found herself groping for them. "He doesn't bluff. Most men posture, brag, try to impress or intimidate. He doesn't need to. He waits. He studies. And when he speaks, it's like he's already sliced through your defenses before you open your mouth."
Maggie gave a low whistle. "So he got under your skin."
Claire shot her a sharp look. "Don't start."
"I'm not starting anything," Maggie said, tone feigning innocence. "But if Westbrook has you off balance, that's either very good for your story, or very bad for your heart."
"I don't have time for either."
"Then why," Maggie asked softly, "do you look like you're thinking about him right now?"
Claire set her glass down with a firm clink. "Because my brother is drowning, Maggie. He borrowed money from people tied to Westbrook's circle. I can't afford to think about anything else."
Maggie's smile faded. "Danny again."
"Yes." The word came out low, bitter. "He's in deeper trouble this time. And if I walk away from this story, I lose my only chance to understand what kind of web he's caught in."
Maggie tilted her head. "So this isn't just a professional chase anymore."
"It never was," Claire said quietly.
They sat in silence for a while, the wine glasses cooling in their hands, the weight of her admission settling like a stone in the room.
At last, Maggie said, "Then you need to be careful. Men like Westbrook"
"Don't say it," Claire cut in. "I already know."
But she didn't. Not really. She knew the myth of Leo Westbrook, the ruthless billionaire who built his empire on wreckage and whispered deals. She didn't know the man who had sat across from her and looked at her as though she were both a challenge and a prize, whose voice unsettled her not because it threatened, but because it never needed to.
Her phone buzzed, breaking the silence. She glanced at it, and her breath caught. A text from an unknown number:
You left too quickly. Dinner tomorrow. 8 p.m. My driver will collect you.
Maggie leaned over before Claire could hide it. "Is that"
"Yes," Claire said, snapping the phone shut.
"Are you going?"
"I'd be insane too," Claire replied.
"But you will."
Claire didn't answer.
Because she didn't know. Every instinct screamed that stepping back into his world would tangle her in ways she might not escape. Yet she remembered Danny's pale face, the tremor in his hands, the shame in his voice. If Westbrook's empire touched the men who threatened her brother, then staying away wasn't an option.
She rose and paced the narrow living room, glass in hand, eyes fixed on the floor as though the scuffed wood might offer guidance. "If I go, it's for the story. And for Danny."
"And maybe," Maggie said quietly, "for yourself."
Claire turned sharply, ready to snap, but Maggie's expression was soft, not mocking.
"Be honest, Claire. Part of you wants to see him again."
Claire swallowed the last of her wine and set the empty glass down with deliberate care. "Wanting has nothing to do with it."
Maggie said nothing. She didn't have to.
Hours later, long after Maggie had left, the apartment was silent except for the faint hum of the refrigerator and the ticking of the cheap wall clock. Claire lay awake on her narrow bed, staring at the ceiling, her phone face down on the nightstand. She could still feel the weight of his gaze from the interview, steady and unflinching, as though he had already marked her for something she hadn't yet named.
She turned onto her side, pulled the blanket higher, and closed her eyes. She told herself it was all for Danny, for the story, for the truth she had always chased.
But alone in the dark, with no one left to overhear, she admitted what she couldn't confess to anyone else.
She did want to see him
again.
And that terrified her more than anything.