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The story centers on Aria Vale, a 24 years old, petite but striking, with storm-gray eyes and long chestnut hair, she keeps tucked behind hoodies and hats. She's a woman who moves like a shadow: gentle, quiet, graceful, yet always bracing for danger. She works as a barista under a fake name, blending into the background. She's attractive not because she tries, but because she's a mystery wrapped in sorrow. She carries a secret that once destroyed her life, and will again if she's found. Her composure is soft, kind, withdrawn, she never raises her voice, yet her silence screams that she's been broken before. She believes love is a luxury she'll never taste again, she doesn't know that her greatest danger is no longer her past, but the man determined to uncover it. Damian Blackwell is a 32 years old 6'3", sharply sculpted, cold-eyed billionaire CEO of Blackwell Industries, a global investigative-security empire with jet-black hair, steel-blue eyes, tailored suits worth more than Aria's entire life savings. He is composed, controlled, and unreadable. A man who never smiles unless he's already won. Attractive for his dominance, his power, his unbending presence. One look from him feels like he sees everything you've ever tried to hide. Net worth: $48 billion Known as "The Ghost Hunter" in elite circles because he can find anyone, anywhere. But for the first time, he encounters someone who doesn't want to be found and that makes him obsessed. When Damian meets Aria, he notices something instantly, her fear. Not fear of him, but fear of being seen. He wasn't meant to notice her. He wasn't meant to care. He definitely wasn't meant to protect her. But when Aria is attacked outside her apartment, Damian steps in and realizes the men were not strangers. They were hunting her. And Aria knows exactly why. Now Damian wants answers. Aria wants escape. But danger wants her dead. She changed her name. She erased her past. She made herself invisible. Yet she captured the attention of the one man in the world who was never supposed to find her. And Damian? He's willing to burn entire empires just to keep her.
The bell above the café door jingled, soft, harmless, ordinary.
But my spine stiffened anyway.
Not again.
Morning rush hadn't started yet, and the quiet shop smelled of roasted beans, sugar, and the cinnamon buns I'd pulled out only ten minutes ago. Everything was normal, except the thud of my heart and the way my fingers trembled slightly against the espresso machine.
I forced myself to breathe.
People came and went.
People didn't stay.
People didn't look too closely.
That was why I chose this job.
"Aria?" My manager, Linda, poked her head from the back. "The grinder's acting up again. Can you handle the front?"
"Yeah." My voice came out steady, thank God. "I've got it."
I turned back to the counter just as someone stepped inside.
A tall shadow entered first. Then a man.
My chest tightened.
He wasn't like the usual early customers, students from the nearby college, office workers, older couples with newspaper habits. This man looked as if he'd stepped out of a different world entirely, one paved in marble and money.
His presence shifted the air.
Dark suit. Crisp white shirt. Coat thrown over one arm.
Hair as black as night.
Shoulders broad, posture straight, confidence cool and ruthless.
And his eyes, cold, unreadable blue, swept the café like they were scanning for targets.
I dropped my gaze quickly.
Don't notice me.
Don't remember me.
Don't look too closely.
"What can I get for you?" I asked, voice soft, polite, neutral, the tone that made people treat me like furniture.
His attention landed on me.
And stayed there.
Most men looked at me. This one looked through me like he was assessing details I didn't even know I had.
My hands curled under the counter.
"Black coffee," he said. His voice was deep, smooth, and expensive. Every syllable sounded like it came from a man used to giving orders and having them followed.
"Any particular roast?" I reached for the pot.
"Whichever one you didn't burn."
Heat rushed to my face before I realized he was teasing, or maybe he wasn't. His expression didn't change, but the faintest angle at his mouth suggested the possibility.
I poured the coffee, trying not to spill, trying not to let him see how his presence rattled me.
"Four dollars," I said.
He pulled out a black metal card. Not titanium. Something rarer. The type only billionaires carried.
My breath hitched.
Not good.
Not good at all.
I tapped the payment through and handed back his card. My fingers brushed his light, accidental.
Pain shot up my arm.
Not physical.
Memory.
A hand grabbing me. A cold voice demanding I stop running.
A flash of headlights.
Blood.
A promise I'd never let anyone close enough to touch me again.
I jerked back.
His eyes narrowed almost imperceptibly, noticing everything I tried to hide.
"Long morning?" he asked.
No.
Not a question.
A test.
"I'm fine," I whispered.
He didn't believe me. I could see it.
He wasn't the type of man who believed anything that didn't match what his eyes told him.
And his eyes told him I was lying.
Still, he accepted the cup and turned,
But he didn't leave.
He sat at the corner table. The one facing the exit. The one where you could see everyone who walked in.
My pulse raced.
Men like him didn't sit in cafés like this. They passed through, or they sent assistants. They didn't linger.
Unless they were waiting for someone.
Unless they were watching.
I swallowed hard.
He's not here for you.
You're just being paranoid.
Focus. Work. Breathe.
Minutes passed. Customers trickled in. I took orders. Cleaned counters. Breathed through the tension.
But the man stayed.
His gaze flicked up every time I moved.
Like he wasn't watching the café.
He was watching me.
At 9:15, the quiet shattered.
The door slammed open, and two men stumbled inside, rough, angry, eyes wild like they'd been searching the streets for something.
Or someone.
My stomach dropped.
Not them. Please, not them.
They weren't the men from my nightmares, different faces, different builds, but the look in their eyes was the same.
Predatory.
Focused.
Linda came out from the back, startled. "Can I help you?"
They didn't hear her. Their attention swept the café.
Swept the customers.
Swept toward me.
I stepped back instinctively, heart pounding so hard I thought it would burst out.
The taller one frowned. "She's not here."
"Check again," the other grunted. "Boss said she comes in the mornings."
Boss?
No.
No, no, no.
My hand tightened around the metal counter edge until my knuckles turned white.
The billionaire, still seated, slowly put his cup down.
I tried to keep my gaze anywhere but on the two strangers.
I tried to act like I wasn't suffocating with fear.
One of them brushed past the counter and stopped too close.
"You."
His breath smelled of alcohol and cigarettes.
"Have you seen a girl around twenty-four?" he asked, describing features too close to mine. "She's small. Brown hair. Gray eyes. Looks harmless."
My entire body froze.
Linda frowned. "Sir, please don't harass my staff."
The man slammed a hand on the counter, making sugar packets jump.
The billionaire stood.
Not abruptly. Not recklessly.
Slowly. Deliberately.
Like someone deciding whether a problem was worth removing.
The men noticed him then.
"Who the fuck are you?" one snapped.
He didn't answer.
He didn't need to.
His presence answered for him.
He walked toward them with unsettling calm, as if nothing about the situation scared or surprised him.
He stopped only a step away.
"You're blocking my view," he said quietly.
The shorter man scoffed. "Back off, rich boy. This isn't your..."
He didn't finish the sentence.
The billionaire grabbed him by the wrist, twisted, and forced him to his knees before anyone could blink.
The man screamed.
The café gasped.
I covered my mouth.
The tall one lunged, but the billionaire shoved the kneeling one into him, sending both crashing into a table.
"Leave," he said, voice cold as a blade. "Before you embarrass yourselves further."
The men scrambled to their feet, eyes wide, not with pain, but recognition.
"Shit," one whispered. "He's Blackwell."
My knees almost buckled.
Blackwell?
Damian Blackwell?tdt
I'd heard the name whispered in news snippets, gossip, online rumors.
A billionaire with a worldwide investigative empire.
A man who could find anyone.
A man who erased enemies quietly and efficiently.
A man with a reputation for uncovering secrets.
The men backed toward the door.
"This isn't over," one hissed, not at him.
At me.
My pulse stopped.
"Let's go," the other said, dragging him away.
The door slammed behind them.
The café went terrifyingly silent.
Linda looked shaken. Customers murmured. Someone asked if they should call the police.
But the billionaire, Damian, didn't look at them.
He looked at me.
Like someone who had found something unexpected.
Something important.
Something dangerous.
I backed up until the counter dug into my spine.
"Are you hurt?" he asked.
His voice was softer now, but no less intense.
"N-no," I managed.
"Good," he said. "Because I have questions."
"I don't..."
"You knew them."
A statement, not a guess.
"I didn't," I whispered.
He stepped closer.
Not threatening.
But consuming.
"You're lying," he said.
I shook my head, panic rising like static under my skin.
"I heard everything. They weren't looking for someone, they were looking for you."
I felt the room closing in.
Linda touched my shoulder. "Aria... do you know what that was about?"
My mouth opened, but no words came out.
Damian's gaze hardened with sharp, unsettling interest.
"You should tell the truth now," he said. "While you can still control the story."
Control the story.
That was the problem.
My story wasn't safe.
My story wasn't mine.
And if he knew it,
My life would unravel.
"I don't know anything," I whispered again.
Damian didn't blink. Didn't move.
But his voice dropped to something dark and certain.
"You're in danger," he said. "Real danger. And you're too afraid to admit it."
His eyes pierced mine.
"Which makes me wonder..."
He leaned closer, so quietly I barely heard him.
"...what exactly are you running from, Aria?"
My skin went cold.
He knew my name.
I never told him.
The room tilted. The air vanished.
"How?"
"That's my job," he said softly. "Finding people who don't want to be found."
My knees wobbled.
No.
Not him.
Not someone like him.
Not a man who could uncover anything.
I stepped back. "Please... stay away from me."
Instead of stepping back, he closed the remaining distance.
"After what I saw? Not a chance."
My chest tightened. "Why?"
His eyes flicked to where the men had been moments ago.
"Because whoever they work for," he said, "isn't done looking for you."
He paused.
"And neither am I."
I turned to run, but the café door burst open again.
A shadow filled the doorway.
It wasn't the men from earlier.
It was worse. Much worse.
Damian's expression changed, cold, lethal, instantly alert.
"Aria," he said quietly, "get behind me."
I didn't move.
Because I knew the man standing in the doorway.
I knew the face.
I knew the voice that followed:
"Hello, Aria.
Did you really think you could disappear?"
Chapter 1 The Man Who Should Have Walked Past Me
01/12/2025
Chapter 2 The Man From the Shadows
01/12/2025
Chapter 3 The Billionaire Who Was Never Meant to Find Me
01/12/2025
Chapter 4 The Billionaire's Fate
01/12/2025
Chapter 5 The Moment Everything Shifts
01/12/2025
Chapter 6 The Door That Should Never Have Opened
01/12/2025
Chapter 7 The Way He Looks At Me
01/12/2025
Chapter 8 The Man Who Shouldn't Be Here
01/12/2025
Chapter 9 The Moment Everything Shatters
01/12/2025
Chapter 10 The Price Of Her Freedom
01/12/2025
Chapter 11 Stolen Away
01/12/2025
Chapter 12 The Truth That Was Never Buried
01/12/2025
Chapter 13 The Hunter at the Door
01/12/2025
Chapter 14 The Ghost Wearing a Pulse
01/12/2025
Chapter 15 The Choice That Was Never Hers
01/12/2025
Chapter 16 Fire in the Blood
01/12/2025
Chapter 17 When Monsters Collide
01/12/2025
Chapter 18 Blood Oaths
04/12/2025
Chapter 19 The Weapon I Never Meant to Be
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