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Chapter 1 - THE RED LIGHT

James's POV

The coffee is cold. Has been cold for twenty minutes. James doesn't notice.

His eyes scan the quarterly earnings report on his phone while his Mercedes crawls through Fifth Avenue traffic. Numbers blur past. Percentages. Market shares. All the things that matter more than the coffee. More than sleep. More than the fact that his hands are shaking a little.

He hasn't slept properly in four days.

The office will be chaos when he gets there. The Hong Kong deal fell through. They lost fifty million in revenue yesterday. His board is questioning his leadership. His competitors are circling like sharks. Everything he built is being tested and he needs to be ready to fight.

So he doesn't notice the delivery truck two lanes over. He doesn't see the driver's head bent down toward his phone. He doesn't see the moment that driver's eyes leave the road completely.

The light ahead turns yellow.

James eases his foot onto the brake. Smooth. Controlled. Just like everything else in his life. He's stopped at this intersection a hundred times. Maybe a thousand. Red light. Wait. Green light. Go. The rhythm of the city, the rhythm of his day.

His phone buzzes. A message from Marcus.

"Emergency board meeting moved to 8 AM. They want answers."

James's jaw tightens. Of course they do. They always want answers. Like he can control everything. Like he can predict the market. Like he can stop the world from falling apart just because he built something that matters.

The red light stares at him from the traffic signal.

He's close now. So close to turning this thing around. One more deal. One smart move. That's all it takes. He can feel it. He can taste it. The comeback will be legendary. They'll write articles about how James Ashford survived the worst quarter in Ashford Industries history and came out stronger.

That thought makes him feel almost normal.

Almost.

Something flickers in his peripheral vision.

Movement. Fast. Wrong.

James looks up from his phone too late. The delivery truck is enormous. Red and massive and not stopping. The driver's face is blank. Confused. Like he just realized the light was red maybe three seconds too late.

Time does something weird.

It slows down and speeds up at the same time. James has maybe half a second to understand what's happening. His brain registers the threat. His hands move toward the steering wheel. His foot moves toward the gas pedal.

But none of it matters because the truck is already here.

The impact is louder than anything James has ever heard. Louder than shouting. Louder than his own heart. The sound of metal twisting and breaking and destroying itself. His Mercedes crumples like paper. The driver's side where James sits takes the full force.

His body jerks sideways. Hard. Violent. Pain explodes everywhere at once but he can't process it fast enough. Can't understand it. Can't do anything but hold on to consciousness for one more second and one more second after that.

The world spins.

Glass shatters. Metal screams. Someone is honking a horn but the sound is muffled like he's underwater. James's head hits the window. Not gently. Not slow. Hard and fast and final.

The pain is immense.

Then it fades.

Then there's nothing at all.

Darkness.

Not scary darkness. Just empty. Like closing your eyes and forgetting to open them.

Time moves but James can't measure it. Could be seconds. Could be hours. Could be days. There's no way to know. No way to feel. Just the darkness and the sense that something very bad happened and he's still caught in the middle of it.

Voices.

Distant at first. Echoing like they're coming from very far away.

"Male. Thirty-eight. Driver side impact. Severe trauma to the left side. He's losing blood."

More words. Medical words. Scary words. James tries to understand them but they slip away before they make sense.

"Get him in the ambulance. Now."

Movement. Pressure. Pain again but dull this time. Pushed through fog. James tries to speak but nothing comes out. His mouth won't work. His body won't work. He's trapped inside himself watching everything happen from somewhere very far away.

The sirens are loud.

Then they're everywhere.

White light.

Blinding. Harsh. Unforgiving.

James squints against it. His eyes hurt. His head hurts. Everything hurts in a way that feels distant and close at the same time. Like his body is complaining from far away and he's just now starting to hear it.

Beeping.

Steady beeping. Machines. Heart monitor. The sound of staying alive.

He tries to move his hand but his arm is heavy. Useless. He tries to speak but his throat is destroyed. Sandpaper and broken glass and the memory of screaming though he can't remember screaming.

A doctor comes into focus. Young. Female. Concerned in that way doctors are when they're about to tell you something bad.

"Welcome back," the doctor says and smiles a smile that doesn't reach her eyes. "You've been unconscious for three days."

Three days.

The words don't make sense at first. Then they do. Then they don't again.

"The collision should have killed you," the doctor continues. She's checking machines. Making notes. Doing all the things doctors do to avoid telling you the real truth. "Your car took the full impact on the driver's side. Most people don't survive that."

James tries to remember the collision.

He remembers the truck.

He remembers the sound.

He remembers pain.

Everything after that is gone.

"You have a traumatic brain injury," the doctor says. She's looking at him now. Straight in the eyes like she's searching for something. "We need to monitor you carefully over the next few weeks. There may be memory loss. We won't know the full extent until you're more stable."

Memory loss.

The words should scare him but they don't. Nothing feels real right now. The white room. The beeping machines. The doctor's voice explaining what's wrong with him. It's all happening to someone else. Some other James. Some other person in this hospital bed.

Not him.

Not the man who built an empire.

Not the man who was about to save his company.

"How long until I can work?" he asks. His voice sounds like it belongs to a stranger.

The doctor exchanges a look with the nurse standing beside her. The kind of look that means they've already decided the answer and they're not sure he'll like it.

"Let's focus on recovery first," the doctor says carefully. "Everything else can wait."

But James knows better.

Everything else can't wait.

The board meeting is in four days. The Hong Kong deal needs salvaging. The competitors are still circling. The company is still falling apart and he's lying in a hospital bed like his body matters more than his business.

He closes his eyes.

In the darkness behind his eyelids, he remembers something.

Blue.

A woman in blue.

She's smiling at something he said. She's real in his mind in a way nothing else is right now. Clear. Bright. Important.

James doesn't know who she is.

But he knows in that moment, deep in the part of himself that survived the crash, that he's forgotten something that matters. Something that mattered before the truck hit. Something that's been gone for longer than three days.

His eyes snap open.

He needs to know who that woman is.

He needs to know what he's lost.

And he needs to figure out both things before his life falls apart completely.

Because falling asleep and hitting your head is one thing.

Waking up to find your entire world has disappeared while you weren't looking is something else entirely.

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