"Tech CEO Convicted in Boyfriend's Death"
"LuxeConnect Founder Gets 20 Years for Murder"
"Ubud Trial: Guilty Verdict Shocks Silicon Valley"
I opened the first article. It was five years old. The photo showed a younger version of her. Polished, confident, standing in front of a sleek office building. A world away from the shattered woman I had pulled from the flames.
The article traced her rise. Founder of LuxeConnect. A visionary in luxury tech. Millions in projected valuation. Then Marcus Chen, her boyfriend, was found dead in Vincent Hale's office with a single gunshot to the chest. Her fingerprints on the gun. Gunshot residue on her clothes.
Chen.
Do not trust anyone named Chen.
That was what she had said.
I kept reading. Witnesses had heard them fight. The prosecution's case looked airtight. But her defense insisted she had been framed. They claimed Marcus had uncovered financial crimes at Hale's company. They claimed Hale was the real killer.
The jury had not cared. Guilty. Twenty years.
She had served five.
I clicked on her mugshot. The picture hit hard. Hollow eyes. Sunken cheeks. She looked like someone who had been stripped of everything that made her human.
Another article detailed the collapse of LuxeConnect. Investors gone. Staff gone. Her entire dream was gone.
I opened a profile on Vincent Hale. Wealthy. Charming. Connected. The kind of man who hid knives behind handshakes. A glossy photo showed him smiling with perfect ease. His eyes were lifeless.
If Marcus had uncovered something dangerous, I could see Hale silencing him. And framing someone else. But why Anastasia? Why choose her as the perfect scapegoat?
I watched an old interview of hers. She talked about LuxeConnect with bright, passionate eyes.
"I want to prove you can build something meaningful without compromising your values," she had said. "Success and integrity should work together."
The irony stung.
I closed my laptop. Dawn was creeping in. Hours had passed.
Nothing changed what had already happened. Someone had tied her up and left her to die. Innocent or guilty, she had not deserved that. And if she really had been framed, she had already paid for a crime she never committed.
How does someone survive that?
I thought about the way she looked at Detective Morris. Guarded. Braced for judgment. Like someone who had learned the truth was dangerous.
My phone rang. I flinched.
Five in the morning. Unknown number.
I answered. "Hello?"
"Mr. Cross?" A nervous woman. "I am calling from Memorial Hospital. About Anastasia Ubud. You are listed as her emergency contact."
I was not, but I let it go. "Is she alright?"
"She is stable. She is being discharged, but she has nowhere to go. She gave us your number. We hoped you might help."
She had not given them anything. Someone was trying to help her. Likely Linda.
"I will be there in an hour," I said.
"Thank you, Mr. Cross."
I hung up. This was reckless. I barely knew her. She had enemies. A past full of shadows. Smart men would walk away.
But I kept remembering her mugshot. Those hollow eyes. And Linda's words. She could use someone on her side for once.
Too late to think. I was already driving.
When I found her room, the nurse was finishing discharge instructions.
"You will need to follow up with your primary care doctor in two weeks," the nurse said.
"I do not have one," Anastasia murmured.
"Oh. Then you can call this number to find one in your network."
"I do not have insurance."
The nurse faltered. "There are community clinics with sliding scales."
"Right. Thank you."
The nurse left. Anastasia saw me. Her face did not change. No relief. Only exhaustion.
"They called you," she said.
"Yes."
"I did not ask them to."
"I know."
She stood slowly, wincing. "I should go."
"Where?"
"Not your problem."
"Anastasia."
"Please do not." She lifted a hand. "You saved my life. I am grateful. But this is where it ends. You do not want to be involved with me."
"A little late for that."
"No. You can still walk away."
"Can I?"
She studied me, searching for my angle.
"I know who you are," I said. "I looked it up."
Her face drained. "Then you know you should stay away."
"I know someone framed you. And someone tried to kill you two nights ago. Linda told me about Hale and Marcus."
"Linda talks too much."
"She cares about you."
"She does not know me."
"Neither do I. But I know you did not deserve any of this."
"You do not know anything."
"Then tell me."
"For what? So you can play the hero? I do not need saving, Ethan."
"Everyone needs help sometimes."
"Not from strangers who think they understand."
She was right. I did not understand. I had never lost everything. Never gone to prison. Never had the world turn its back.
"You are right," I said. "I do not understand. But I want to help anyway."
"I do not want your help."
"Where will you go?"
Silence.
"Do you have money? A place to stay? Anyone to call?"
Nothing.
I breathed in. "I have a proposition. My grandfather is older now. He needs help around the house. Medication. Meals. It is a live-in position."
"You are offering me a job."
"Yes."
"As a caretaker."
"Yes."
She let out a small laugh with no warmth. "So you think you can fix the broken ex con by giving her purpose."
"I think you need safety. And I think he needs company."
"I am not a charity case."
"It is not charity. It is work."
"Why?" Her gaze sharpened. "Why do you care?"
I searched for the answer.
"Because someone tried to kill you. And they might try again. You are about to walk out of here with nothing. That does not sit right with me."
"Not your problem."
"Maybe not. But I am choosing to make it my problem."
"You will regret it."
"Probably."
She stared, calculating. Pride heavy in her eyes.
Pride won.
"No," she said. "Thank you, but no. I will figure something out."
"Anastasia."
"I said no." She grabbed the plastic bag with her things. "I appreciate what you did. Truly. But I cannot accept your help."
She limped past me.
I hesitated. My grandfather's voice whispered in my mind. You cannot save everyone. Some people do not want saving.
Then I remembered her whisper in that burning warehouse. Do not trust anyone named Chen. She had warned me when she could barely breathe.
I followed her.
She reached the elevator. I caught up.
"At least let me drive you."
"I will take a cab."
"With what money?"
She pressed the button harder than necessary. "I will manage."
The doors opened. She walked in. I stepped inside as well.
"You are not going to leave me alone, are you?" she said.
"No."
"Stubborn."
"You have no idea."
The elevator dropped in silence. At the ground floor she headed outside. I stayed behind her.
A cab waited. She got in quickly and gave the driver an address too softly for me to hear.
I watched the cab pull into traffic. That should have been the end. Her choice was made. My role is finished.
But something prickled at me. A quiet alarm that would not shut off.
I went to my car. Started the engine. And then I saw it.
A black SUV with tinted windows. Two cars behind the cab. Pulling out of the lot.
Following.
My grip tightened. Maybe a coincidence. Maybe nothing.
The cab turned left. The SUV turned left.
The cab went straight. The SUV went straight.
Not a coincidence.
Someone was following Anastasia.
And she did not know.