(Ryan's POV)
I don't usually care about new hires.
Messengers, interns, rotating associates—most of them blur together. But today, while reviewing facility access logs, something catches my eye: a familiar name, newly listed on the clearance roster.
Henry Manuel.
The name makes something sharp prick at the back of my mind.
I've heard it before.31Please respect copyright.PENANAFngwbCQWpO
Where?31Please respect copyright.PENANAKyAg00WKUv
Who mentioned it?
And then it hits me—Stacy.31Please respect copyright.PENANASsLMmMlX9V
A passing comment weeks ago.
"That man has the nerve to show his face now? After what he did to Sam when she was pregnant?"
My breath slows.31Please respect copyright.PENANAMfF1RUtLka
My hands still.
I search the internal system. No picture. Just basic details.
College dropout. Emergency hire. No references listed.
But I don't need a picture.
Because not even an hour later, while heading to the lower admin floor, I see him.
Slouched by the copier. Wearing a lanyard. Face hollow.
And then I watch Samantha walk past the hallway.31Please respect copyright.PENANAAlsj89n9Ow
She doesn't look at him. Doesn't see him.
But he does.
And the look on his face?
Regret. Familiarity.31Please respect copyright.PENANAPlThmX0Itb
Loss.
It confirms everything.
Later that afternoon, I'm in my office. Blinds half-drawn. Phone silent.
I reread the staff record like it'll rewrite itself.
Henry Manuel.31Please respect copyright.PENANAGxZGG5OYra
The man who walked out on Samantha.31Please respect copyright.PENANALenF8y3iq5
The man who left her to raise a child alone while she was still practically a girl herself.31Please respect copyright.PENANAy5qvC2NtqW
The man who lives in the past like it still owes him something.
I grip my pen too tightly. Snap the cap.31Please respect copyright.PENANALAbmXqT9tG
Don't even care.
Because now I know why Samantha tenses when people talk about "deadbeat dads" or why she works twice as hard just to be seen. I know why her walls are so high.
He put them there.
By the time I catch up with her at the elevator, she's already halfway through her third coffee.
She doesn't notice me until I speak.
"You knew he was applying here."
She pauses. Doesn't even ask who.
"I saw him on the lower floor," I add. "And I know who he is."
She exhales slowly. "I didn't ask for your opinion."
"I'm not giving one."
Silence.
Then, she whispers, "Did you tell anyone?"
"No."
More silence.
Then: "Good."
The elevator dings. She steps in. So do I.
"I'll handle it if he causes problems," I say quietly. "You won't have to."
She doesn't look at me, but something in her shoulders relaxes. Just slightly.
"That's not your job," she says.
I glance at her.
"No," I answer. "It's not. But I still want to."
And for the first time since I met her, Samantha doesn't argue.
31Please respect copyright.PENANACrDsBu4Skv