Two words that didn't belong to this world-to this life.
They belonged to before.
To the life I had clawed my way out of, only to wake up years earlier, reliving the past I thought I'd escaped.
It wasn't possible. It couldn't be. No one knew. No one could.
And yet, when I'd looked up into Alexander Knight's cold, unreadable eyes, I'd seen something something sharp and knowing. Something that felt too deliberate to be coincidence.
Around me, the ballroom hummed back to life. Applause rippled through the air as couples drifted apart, laughter swelling again, champagne bubbling. The world was moving, but I wasn't.
He'd already stepped away, turning his back on me like the conversation had never happened, as if I hadn't just been struck by lightning.
I managed to catch my breath, voice low, barely above a whisper.
"What did you mean by that?"
He turned slightly, his expression infuriatingly calm. "Did I say something?"
My jaw tightened. "You speak in riddles."
"Only to those who can solve them."
Then he left just walked away. Smooth, silent, the crowd parting around him like the sea bowing to a storm.
And I was left in his wake, heart pounding, fury simmering beneath confusion... and, God help me, fascination.
Who was Alexander Knight, really?
And how much did he know about me?
---
The Mask I Wear
"Elena!"
The sound of my name cut through the haze, too loud, too bright.
Richard.
Of course.
I turned, forcing a smile as he wove through the crowd, his face the perfect portrait of charm and concern.
"There you are," he said, slipping his hand around my elbow like he owned me. "You disappeared. I was worried."
I didn't miss the flicker of irritation in his eyes when I didn't melt under his touch.
"I was dancing," I said flatly, letting my arm drop out of his hold.
His smile stiffened. "With Knight?" His gaze darted toward Alexander's retreating figure, his voice laced with bitterness. "Of all people... he's hardly your type. Cold. Closed-off. He has no warmth to offer a woman like you."
Once, I would've believed him. I'd defended Richard against every whisper, every warning. I'd told myself that arrogance was confidence, and jealousy was love.
But I saw him now truly saw him.
A man who couldn't stand not being the center of a woman's universe.
"Perhaps I like cold men," I said sweetly, just to watch him flinch.
He blinked, caught off guard. "You're teasing me."
"Am I?"
For a heartbeat, something ugly cracked through his smile a flash of control, of irritation. Then it vanished. "Elena," he began, tone soft but heavy, "we should talk. Privately. There's something important I need to discuss with you."
Ah, there it was. The trap.
I already knew what he wanted: to test his influence, to tighten his strings. He couldn't stand the idea that I'd slipped one from his grasp.
"Later," I said, my tone light but final. "I need some air."
His jaw flexed. "At least let me"
"No." I smiled, sharper this time. "Enjoy the party, Richard."
And I walked away.
Not running. Not flustered. Just walking graceful, poised, deliberate.
Leaving him standing behind me, hands curling uselessly at his sides.
---
The Garden Encounter
The doors opened onto the balcony, and cool air washed over me like absolution.
The night beyond the ballroom was quiet, save for the hum of crickets and the distant murmur of the orchestra inside. Lanterns glowed softly among the roses, painting everything in silver and gold.
I leaned against the marble railing, trying to steady my pulse.
How did Alexander Knight know?
He couldn't. He shouldn't.
Maybe it was coincidence. Maybe it was instinct. Maybe he was the kind of man who could read weakness the way others read words.
But that sentence those exact words had been mine once. My own whispered warning to myself before death claimed me.
"You shouldn't let him corner you."
The voice slid through the night, low and smooth.
I spun.
Alexander stood half in shadow, one hand in his pocket, the other resting casually against a column. The moonlight carved silver across his face, catching the edge of his jaw, the sharp curve of his mouth.
"You follow me?" I demanded. My voice sounded steadier than I felt.
"Observation," he said. "Not following. I told you, I don't judge. I observe."
"I'm not something to be observed, Mr. Knight."
"No," he agreed. "But you are something to be understood."
He stepped forward, the soft gravel crunching under his shoes. Each step seemed to narrow the space between us, until I could feel the quiet intensity radiating off him.
My heart thudded. "And what have you 'understood,' exactly?"
His eyes met mine, unwavering. "That you're hiding something."
The air thickened.
"That the girl everyone thinks is naïve isn't naïve at all."
I swallowed hard, the world tilting just slightly. He couldn't know. He didn't.
Still, it felt as if he were peeling away every mask I'd carefully reconstructed.
"Maybe I'm just wiser than I look," I managed.
His lips curved faintly. "Or maybe you've lived enough to know the cost of a wrong choice."
That again. The same phrasing. My pulse jumped. "You keep saying that," I whispered. "Why?"
"Because it's true."
His tone was quiet, but it hit with the weight of prophecy.
"You speak as if" I stopped myself, breath catching. "No. You're fishing."
He studied me for a moment, eyes dark and calm. Then, softly almost too softly to hear he said,
"Perhaps. Or perhaps I already know the story you're desperate to hide."
The words cut deeper than I expected.
Because even though I knew he couldn't possibly know the truth, the certainty in his voice made me doubt my own reality.
---
The Cliff Between Us
Silence stretched between us thick, electric. The night air hummed with it.
I forced a small, defiant smile. "I don't scare easily, Mr. Knight."
"Good."
His reply came low, deliberate, brushing the edge of my control.
"Because fear won't save you from what's coming."
A chill prickled down my arms. "What's coming?" I whispered.
His eyes flicked back toward the ballroom, where I could just barely hear Richard's laugh. Then they returned to me cold steel locking onto mine.
"You already know."
And with that, he turned and walked into the darkness, his figure dissolving into the moonlit shadows until only his scent clean, cold, and sharp lingered.
I stood frozen, every breath trembling.
The garden suddenly felt too quiet. The roses too still. The stars too bright.
Because I realized something in that moment:
Whatever game Alexander Knight was playing, I was already a part of it.
And I didn't even know the rules.
---
I gripped the marble railing, nails biting into my palms as the wind swept through the garden. The roses swayed like whispers soft, secretive, conspiratorial.
Alexander Knight knew too much.
Richard Hale was tightening his grip again.
And me?
I was standing in the middle of a storm I thought I'd escaped.
My secret the truth of what I'd lived and lost wasn't safe anymore.
Because if Alexander truly did know my past...
Then my second chance might already be unraveling.