The darkness was heavy and suffocating.
Gabrielle felt like she was falling down a bottomless concrete shaft. The wind roared in her ears. The memory of the street rushing up to meet her face played on a loop in her mind.
Just as the panic threatened to crush her chest, a warm light pierced the blackness.
A voice spoke. It was low, rough, and incredibly gentle. It sounded like it was coming from a different lifetime.
"I am sorry I was late," the man's voice said.
The sound vibrated against her skin. It was filled with a raw, bleeding agony.
In the dream, a large, calloused hand wrapped around her freezing fingers. The heat from his palm seeped into her bones, chasing away the chill of Johan's apartment.
"I should have been there sooner," the voice continued, breaking slightly under the weight of a profound, unspoken grief. "I promise you, I will not lose you again."
The words washed over her like a sedative. The falling sensation stopped. She felt safe.
A warm, damp cloth gently wiped the dried tears from her cheeks. The touch was so reverent it made her chest ache.
"Gabby, do not be afraid," the voice whispered, right next to her ear. "I am here. No one will ever hurt you again."
In the physical world, Colvin sat in the leather chair beside the hospital bed. He held Gabrielle's limp hand in both of his. He pressed his forehead against her knuckles.
The words he had just spoken were the confession he had choked down for five years.
He knew she was unconscious. He knew she could not hear him. This was his penance.
The heavy wooden door of the VIP suite clicked open. Nurse Chloe Baxter stepped into the room. She saw the billionaire holding the unconscious woman's hand and immediately stopped in her tracks. She kept her eyes glued to her clipboard.
Colvin lifted his head. The raw vulnerability vanished from his face in a fraction of a second. His blue eyes turned back to ice.
He gently placed Gabrielle's hand back on the mattress. He stood up and walked over to the nurse.
"When she wakes up, you will not mention my name," Colvin said. His tone left no room for negotiation. "You will tell her a good Samaritan delivery driver found her and brought her in."
Chloe blinked, confused, but she nodded quickly. "Understood, Mr. Sykes."
Colvin turned and looked at Gabrielle one last time. He needed to leave before she opened her eyes. He could not let her see him. Not yet.
He walked out of the room, the door clicking shut behind him.
Hours later, the morning sun sliced through the blinds and hit the foot of the bed.
Gabrielle's eyelashes fluttered. She groaned softly as a dull ache throbbed behind her temples. She forced her eyes open.
The ceiling was bright white. The faint smell of antiseptic stung her nose.
She tried to sit up and realized she was wearing a soft cotton hospital gown. The scratchy gray suit was gone.
Panic flared in her chest. She remembered the street. She remembered falling.
And then she remembered the smell of cedar and the sharp jawline. She remembered the voice in her dream talking about a library.
She rubbed her forehead. It was just a hallucination. Her brain was misfiring from stress.
The door pushed open. Nurse Chloe walked in with a warm smile.
"Ms. Webb, you are awake," Chloe said. "How are you feeling?"
Gabrielle pushed herself up against the pillows. Her muscles felt weak.
"Why am I here?" Gabrielle asked.
"You collapsed on the street last night," Chloe explained, checking the monitor. "The doctor said it was extreme exhaustion and severe malnutrition. Your body just shut down."
Gabrielle swallowed hard. Her throat was dry.
"Who brought me here?" Gabrielle asked.
Chloe maintained her perfectly trained smile.
She almost slipped and said 'your boyfriend', but the memory of Alex Rivers handing her a very thick envelope of cash stopped the words in her throat.
It was a very kind older delivery driver, Chloe lied smoothly. He saw you fall and used his phone to call the ambulance. He even used a prepaid credit card to cover your emergency room deposit before slipping away.
The lie was flawless. It explained the hospital and the money.
"A delivery driver?" Gabrielle asked.
She frowned. She tried to picture the man who caught her, but the memory was blurry. The sharp jawline and the expensive suit did not match an older man delivering food.
She let out a breath. Her mind was playing tricks on her. The voice in the dark was just a comforting illusion her brain created to cope with the trauma.
A rush of gratitude warmed her chest. On the worst night of her life, a complete stranger had saved her.
"Did he leave a name?" Gabrielle asked. "I need to pay him back."
"He did not leave a name," Chloe said. She reached into her pocket and pulled out a small white card. "But he said if you wanted to thank him, you could make a donation to the New York Children's Charity Fund."
Chloe handed the card to Gabrielle. Alex Rivers had printed it three hours ago.
Gabrielle stared at the card. Her respect for the phantom driver deepened.
She picked up her phone from the bedside table. She opened her banking app. She typed in the charity's routing number and transferred one hundred thousand dollars. In the memo line, she typed: Thank you to the kind Doordash driver.
Two miles away, in the penthouse office of Sykes Capital, Colvin's phone buzzed on his desk.
He picked it up. It was an automated text from the charity fund confirming the massive donation.
He read the memo line. A rare, genuine smile broke across his face. It was a smile filled with helpless affection.
He had successfully hidden his identity, but now the woman he loved thought he delivered tacos for a living.
Back in the hospital, Gabrielle swung her legs over the side of the bed. She felt unsteady, but she could not stay here. She had to start her own agency. She had to rebuild her life.
She found her clothes folded in a plastic bag. She put the wrinkled suit back on. She did not care how she looked anymore.
She signed the discharge papers, refused the hospital's offer to call a car, and ordered an Uber on her phone.
She climbed into the back of the Honda Accord and leaned her head against the cold window.
Her phone started ringing.
The caller ID flashed: Aunt Brenda.
Gabrielle frowned. Her aunt Brenda Sutkowski never called unless she wanted something expensive.
Gabrielle answered the phone. "Hello?"
"Gabrielle! You ungrateful little brat!" Brenda's shrill voice screamed through the speaker. "You finally pick up!"
Gabrielle pulled the phone away from her ear. "Aunt Brenda, what is wrong?"
"What is wrong?" Brenda shrieked. "Your uncle's company is going bankrupt! We are ruined! And it is all your fault!"
Gabrielle's stomach hollowed out. Marcus Thorne's manufacturing company was the pride of her mother's family.
"How is that possible?" Gabrielle asked, sitting up straight. "Uncle Marcus just landed a massive European contract last month."
"Because of you!" Brenda sobbed loudly. "Because you refused to honor the marriage pact with the Sykes family! Now karma is punishing us!"
Gabrielle's jaw tightened. She had fought this battle a hundred times. "I told you years ago that I would never acknowledge that archaic, feudal verbal agreement!" she snapped back, her voice laced with steel. "Do not try to hijack my life with a ghost's promise!"
"Have you forgotten the rule your grandfather made on his deathbed?" Brenda yelled, ignoring her completely.
"The Thorne family and the Sykes family must intermarry! It is time for you to pay your debt!"