INKED IMAGINATION
The doors opened without warning.
No knock.
No announcement.
Just the quiet, controlled sound of power walking into a room that had not invited it.
I looked up.
And there he was.
Stellan Voss.
He didnโt hurry. He never did. Every movement looked intentional, like speed itself was beneath him unless absolutely necessary.
Dark suit.
Perfect posture.
Cold silver eyes that didnโt scan the roomโthey assessed it.
Then they landed on me.
He stopped a few steps inside the office.
Not close enough to be casual.
Not far enough to be cautious.
Exactly calibrated.
โSo,โ he said softly. โYouโre alive.โ
I tilted my head slightly.
โI get that a lot today.โ
A pause.
Something almost like amusement crossed his face, but it didnโt reach his eyes.
โI was told you nearly drowned last night.โ
โBad rumor,โ I said. โI hate exaggerations.โ
He moved further in.
The air changed when he did. Not physically. But the room felt smaller, like it had accepted his presence as final.
His gaze dropped briefly to the documents on my desk.
Then to the open laptop.
Then back to me.
โYou found it,โ he said.
I didnโt ask what โitโ was.
Because I already knew.
โThe veto clause?โ I replied.
A fractional pause.
โYes.โ
I leaned back in the chair.
โIt was very generous of your legal team to miss it.โ
His expression didnโt shift.
But something behind his eyes recalculated.
Always calculating.
Always.
โThat clause is outdated,โ he said.
โNo,โ I replied. โItโs just inconvenient for you.โ
Silence.
The kind that tests whether someone needs to fill it.
I didnโt.
Neither did he.
Finally, he said, โYou are not behaving like Zara Monteiro.โ
I smiled faintly.
โThatโs the second time Iโve heard that today.โ
โAnd the first?โ
โSomeone said I looked different.โ
He studied me for a moment longer than necessary.
Noticing.
Comparing.
Sorting through the version of me he had built in his head versus the one sitting in front of him.
โYou know what I think happened?โ he said.
โIโm dying to hear.โ
โI think you are panicking,โ he said calmly. โAnd this is what panic looks like when someone is trying to imitate confidence.โ
I nodded slowly.
โThatโs interesting.โ
Then I stood up.
Not quickly.
Not defensively.
Justโฆ deliberately.
And I walked around the desk.
Stopped just enough distance away that neither of us was intruding.
โYou sent men to drown me,โ I said.
No emotion.
Just fact.
For the first time, something flickered across his expression.
Not guilt.
Not regret.
Annoyance.
โYes,โ he said simply.
Honesty.
At least that.
โAnd yet here you are,โ I continued, โstanding in my office instead of denying it.โ
โI donโt waste time denying outcomes,โ he replied.
โGood,โ I said. โThen we can skip the performance.โ
His eyes narrowed slightly.
โPerformance?โ
I nodded toward the chair he had been sitting in a second ago.
โYou came here expecting a woman who would be afraid of you.โ
A pause.
โAnd?โ
โAnd Iโm not her.โ
Silence again.
This one lasted longer.
Outside, the city continued moving like nothing important was happening inside this room.
He finally said, โWhat do you want?โ
Straight to it.
No theatrics.
I respected that.
โI want you to undo what you started,โ I said. โSell the shares back. Public withdrawal. No profit. No leverage.โ
โAnd if I refuse?โ
I met his gaze.
For the first time, I let him see something very clear.
Not anger.
Not fear.
Clarity.
โThen you lose everything slowly,โ I said. โLegally. Publicly. And in a way your board will never recover from.โ
A faint exhale through his nose.
Almost a laugh.
โYouโre threatening me.โ
โNo,โ I corrected. โIโm describing your options.โ
Another pause.
Then he said, quieter now:
โYouโve changed.โ
โYes,โ I said.
โThat version of you,โ he continued, โwould not have survived this long.โ
โI didnโt survive as her,โ I said. โThatโs the point.โ
Something shifted in his posture then.
Just slightly.
Not defeat.
Not submission.
Reassessment.
He was finally looking at me like I was real instead of predictable.
That was progress.
He reached into his jacket.
I didnโt move.
Didnโt react.
He placed his phone on the desk between us.
Turned it on speaker.
โPrepare the share reversal documents,โ he said into it.
A pause.
โAll thirty percent. Acquisition price.โ
Another pause.
Then he added, โAnd draft a withdrawal statement.โ
He ended the call.
The room went quiet again.
He looked at me.
โYou overestimate how much I care about losing,โ he said.
โI donโt,โ I replied. โI just understand what you canโt afford to lose.โ
That landed.
Not emotionally.
Strategically.
He understood the difference.
A long silence stretched between us.
Then he said, โI underestimated you.โ
โYes,โ I said.
โWonโt happen again.โ
โGood,โ I said. โIt shouldnโt.โ
I turned slightly toward the door.
Then paused.
โOne more thing,โ I added.
He looked at me.
I met his eyes.
โIf you ever send someone after me again,โ I said calmly, โdonโt miss.โ
A beat.
Then I walked past him.
Out of the office.
No urgency.
No fear.
Behind me, I heard him exhale once.
Like someone realizing a calculation had changed mid-equation.
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