The morning sun hit the floorboards of the SoHo loft, but it didn't feel warm. Vivian was pacing. She had her iPad in one hand and a coffee in the other, the liquid sloshing over the rim as she gestured wildly.
"This is a targeted hit, Claire!" Vivian yelled, pointing at the screen. "Look at the hashtag! ClaireCopycat is trending! Someone bought bots. Someone paid for this narrative."
Claire was sitting on an overturned crate, scrolling through her own phone. The comments were vicious. People hated her. They didn't just think she was a copycat; they thought she was a fraud. Aurora is a god, you're just a gold digger. Leave the art to the artists. Go back to your sugar daddy.
Vivian slammed her coffee down. "I'm calling the lawyers. I'm suing that blog for defamation. I'm-"
"Viv." Claire's voice cut through the panic. "Stop."
Vivian froze. "Stop? Claire, they are dragging your name through the mud. This isn't just bad press; this is character assassination."
Claire looked up from her phone. Her face was perfectly calm. "It's free press."
Vivian stared at her. "Excuse me?"
"Do you know how much it costs to buy this kind of engagement?" Claire asked, standing up. She walked over to the table and poured herself a glass of water. "Everyone is talking about Aurora. They're defending Aurora. They're angry because they think I'm disrespecting their idol."
"They think you're trying to piggyback off Aurora's legacy," Vivian corrected, her voice strained. "Claire, why did you use her tags? This is PR suicide."
"Exactly," Claire said. "And when the truth comes out, the pivot will be seismic. They won't just accept the work; they will beg for forgiveness. The bigger the lie they believe now, the harder the fall will be later." She took a sip of water. "Let them talk. I have work to do."
Vivian opened her mouth, then closed it. She looked at the iPad, then at Claire. A slow, understanding smile crept onto her face. "You're ice cold," she said. "I forgot who I was dealing with."
Claire turned and walked toward the back of the loft. She had converted the small, windowless bathroom into a temporary darkroom. The door was heavy, sealed with black tape to keep out the light. She pushed it open and stepped inside, closing the door behind her.
The room was bathed in a dim, red glow. The air was thick with the smell of developer and stop bath. It was a smell that made Claire's shoulders drop. It was the smell of control. The outside world-the hate, the comments, the gossip-ceased to exist here. Here, there was only the paper, the chemicals, and the light.
She pulled on a pair of rubber gloves. She picked up a sheet of exposed photo paper from the light-safe box and slid it into the tray of developer. She gripped the edges of the tray and began to rock it back and forth, the liquid sloshing gently over the paper.
At first, the paper was blank. Just a white void. Then, slowly, like a ghost rising from the mist, an image began to appear. The dark grays deepened into blacks. The lines sharpened. A face emerged from the chemical bath. It was a shot she had taken months ago, a candid portrait of a powerful man looking completely broken.
She watched the image solidify. The metallic tang of the fixer filled her nose. She didn't hear the notifications buzzing on her phone. She didn't hear Vivian yelling at someone on the phone in the other room. She only saw the picture. She only saw the truth.
Across the city, in the Carroll Industries building, Axel sat behind his massive desk. His two phones were sitting side by side. One was buzzing with work emails; the other was silent. He stared at the silent phone. It was the phone Claire had the number to. It was the phone she was supposed to call.
He had watched the news this morning. He had read the comments. He knew she was being destroyed online. He had waited for the call. He expected her to call in tears, begging him to make it stop, offering anything if he would just make the world be nice to her again.
He glanced at the clock. It was 2:00 PM. He pulled the phone closer. The screen was dark. He tapped it. No notifications. No missed calls.
He leaned back in his chair. He drummed his fingers on the desk. Maybe she was embarrassed. Maybe she was waiting for the right time. He could wait. He was a patient man.
An hour passed. The sun shifted, casting long shadows across the office floor. Axel stopped drumming his fingers. He just stared at the phone.
At 4:30 PM, he picked up the phone. He went to his contacts. He found Claire. He didn't want to call her. He just wanted to see her name on his screen. He wanted to feel the power of knowing she would answer on the first ring.
He hit the call button. He held the phone to his ear.
Ring.
Ring.
Ring.
"The number you have reached is not in service."
Axel pulled the phone away from his ear. He stared at the screen. The call ended. He hit the call button again.
"The number you have reached is not in service."
The robotic voice was a slap. She hadn't just ignored him. She had disconnected the line. She had erased him completely.
Axel stood up. The chair rolled back and hit the wall. He didn't feel powerful. He felt a sudden, sharp spike of fear. She wasn't playing the game. She wasn't following the script. He had fired her, and she had walked out and vanished.
He hurled the phone across the office. It hit the glass wall with a sickening crunch and clattered to the floor. The screen shattered into a spiderweb of broken glass. He stood there, chest heaving, the silence of the office pressing in on him. He had won. So why did he feel like he was the one who had been thrown away?
The private elevator doors slid open with a soft chime. Axel stepped into the penthouse, loosening his tie with one hand. The apartment was dark. Not just dim; it was a void. The heavy curtains were drawn, and the only light came from the ambient glow of the city reflecting off the hardwood floors.
He reached for the switch on the wall by the door. The one that controlled the amber lights in the entryway. The warm, welcoming lights that had been on every single night for the last three years, waiting for him to come home. His hand met empty air. He flipped the switch up. Nothing happened.
"Claire?" he called out, his voice sharp. "Claire, the lights are broken."
His voice echoed in the vast, empty space. There was no answer. There was no soft pad of bare feet on the floor. There was no smell of dinner warming on the stove.
Axel felt a muscle tick in his jaw. He walked to the main panel and flipped the master switch. The overhead LEDs blazed to life, flooding the apartment in a harsh, cold white light. He squinted, holding up a hand to shield his eyes.
The apartment looked different in this light. It looked sterile. The white leather couches looked like slabs of ice. The marble countertops gleamed like surgical steel. There were no magazines on the coffee table. There were no shoes by the door. There was no life.
He unbuttoned his jacket and pulled it off. He tossed it backward toward the velvet bench near the entrance, expecting it to be caught, or at least to land on the soft cushion where Claire usually sat to fold laundry. The jacket hit the floor with a heavy thump.
He looked back at it, frowning. He walked into the kitchen. He pulled open the door of the Sub-Zero refrigerator. He reached inside, his hand going to the second shelf on the right, where the glass pitcher of ice water with fresh mint leaves was always kept. His fingers closed around a cold plastic bottle.
He pulled it out. It was an unopened bottle of Evian. He pushed a few others aside. They were all Evian. No mint. No pitcher. He grabbed a carton of milk. He sniffed it. It was sour.
He slammed the refrigerator door shut. The glass bottles inside rattled violently. He was thirsty. He was tired. And he was annoyed that the woman who was supposed to fix everything wasn't here to do her job.
He walked into the bedroom. The bed was made, but it was perfectly made. The corners were tight. It was how the maids made it, not how Claire made it. She always left a wrinkle, a dent where she sat to read. He went to his closet and pulled open the door. He reached for his favorite silk pajamas.
He found them on the hanger. He pulled them out and held them up. The top button on the shirt was missing. There was a tiny, ragged thread where it used to be. He stared at it.
He hadn't noticed the button was missing this morning. He hadn't noticed it yesterday. Because it hadn't been missing. Claire had always sewn them back on. She had always fixed the hems, polished the shoes, and replaced the lost buttons before he even knew they were gone.
Axel dropped the pajamas on the floor. He felt a sudden, sharp pain in his chest. It wasn't heartbreak; it was panic. It was the feeling of realizing that he hadn't just lost a girlfriend. He had lost the operating system of his life.
He turned and strode back into the living room. He grabbed his phone from his pocket. He didn't want to call Hayes. He didn't want to call a tailor. He wanted to call her. He wanted to hear her voice. He wanted her to tell him it was okay and that she would fix it.
He dialed the number he had memorized.
"The number you have reached is not in service."
He hung up and dialed again.
"The number you have reached is not in service."
He roared. The sound was raw and violent, tearing from his throat. He hurled the phone across the room. It hit the floor-to-ceiling window overlooking Central Park. The glass didn't shatter-it was bulletproof-but the phone exploded, pieces of plastic and metal skittering across the floor.
He stood in the middle of the room, his chest heaving. The apartment was silent. It was a tomb. It was a monument to his own stupidity.
He looked at the destroyed phone on the floor. He looked at the sour milk in the fridge. He looked at the missing button. She was gone. She had actually left. And she had taken the warmth, the mint water, and the buttons with her.