The office looked almost like itself again.
Almost.
The desk was cleared and reorganized, the folder back in order, Diana’s chair returned to its exact position. The sofa cushion Ryan had displaced was straightened. The reading glasses were back on the desk where they belonged, which felt like a detail that mattered for reasons neither of them addressed.
Ryan gathered the last of his papers and slid them into the folder with thodical attention of soone finding usefulness in small tasks.
Diana had her back to him at the window, looking out at the city — the full dark of 1AM Manhattan, the grid lit and moving below like it always was, indifferent to everything that had happened in this room tonight.
She turned around.
She looked like herself again. Suit jacket back on, hair reset to sothing close to its morning arrangent. The composure that was just part of her face had returned from wherever it had gone.
"You’re prepared for the second eting," she said.
"I was prepared for the first one."
"More prepared then." She picked up the glasses and put them in her bag. "The consulting verifications will co back clean. They’ll look for another angle and it’ll be thinner than the first one. You hold the sa way you held today and it closes."
"I know."
She nodded. Stood behind her desk with her hands resting lightly on the surface, looking at him.
The silence arrived.
Not uncomfortable exactly — more like sothing that had weight and both of them were deciding whether to pick it up.
Diana spoke first.
"I want to say sothing," she said. "And I’d like you to let finish before you respond."
Ryan looked at her. "Okay."
"Tonight—" she started, then chose different words. "What happened tonight is sothing I haven’t allowed myself in a very long ti. Years." She kept her eyes on his directly, the way she did everything — without deflection. "I’d forgotten what it felt like to not be in control of a situation. To not want to be." A pause. "I’m not going to pretend I regret it, because I don’t. But I am going to be honest about what it was."
Ryan waited.
"I’m a married woman," she said. "We have a professional relationship. An important one, with real stakes for both of us. Those are the things that should have prevented this from happening." She paused. "They didn’t. But they’re the things that should prevent it from happening again."
She held his gaze.
"We don’t speak of this. To anyone, ever. We return to what we were before tonight and we don’t create distance that makes the change obvious." She said it precisely, the sa way she’d explained the disbursent schedule hours ago. "That’s the only version of this that makes sense."
Ryan looked at her for a mont.
"You’re right," he said.
"I know I am."
"The professional relationship is real. The stakes are even more so." He picked up his jacket from the sofa arm. "And you’re right that this shouldn’t happen again."
Diana nodded once. The relief in it was slight and controlled and present.
Ryan put his jacket on. Picked up his folder. Looked at the desk, then at the window, then at her.
Then he walked toward the door.
He passed the desk.
Reached her.
His hand found her waist from behind as he walked past — not stopping, just contact, sliding around to the small of her back and then down, gripping her once, firmly, and she made a sound that was very quiet and didn’t move away from his hand.
He turned her gently and kissed her.
She kissed him back for a mont before her hands ca to his chest — not pushing, just present.
He pulled back.
"There," he said quietly. "Last one. Out of my system."
She looked at him. The composure present and also doing considerable work.
"Goodnight, Diana," he said.
He let go and walked to the door and through it.
---
The building lobby was empty except for the night security, who nodded as Ryan ca out of the elevator. He returned it, pushed through the front doors, and walked out into 1AM Manhattan.
The city was still going. It always was at this hour — not the dayti version or the Friday night version, just the quiet persistent version that never fully stopped.
Cabs moving. Soone across the street walking a dog with energy of soone doing this because they had to not because they wanted to. A delivery driver passing on a bike.
Ryan walked to the subway.
The platform was empty except for a man at the far end reading sothing on his phone and a woman in scrubs who was either starting a shift or finishing one.
The train ca in four minutes. He got on and found a seat and rode it with his folder on his knee and the events of the day arranged in his head in the order they’d happened.
The IRS. Morales and Park. The folder doing its work.
Diana’s office. The golden light. Everything after.
He looked at his reflection in the dark window of the train car opposite — the loosened tie, the untucked shirt, the hair that had been doing its own thing since noon.
He looked like soone who had been through a long day.
He had been through a long day.
The train reached his stop. He got off and ca up the stairs to street level, the neighborhood quieter than Midtown, stillness of a residential area at 1AM where most people had sowhere to be the next morning. His building was six blocks east.
He walked.
The streets were mostly empty. A bar still running sowhere, light through a window and low music.
A couple on the other side of the road walking close together. A cat that appeared from between two parked cars, looked at Ryan with complete indifference, and continued on its own business.
He turned down the block before his building.
The alley on the left was dark, the gap between two buildings that existed purely as a spatial accident, no lighting and no particular reason for anyone to be in it.
He was past the mouth of it when it happened.
Sothing ca over his face from behind — fast, deliberate, fabric against his mouth and nose, an arm locking his own against his sides before he’d processed what was occurring.
He tried to shout.
What ca out was muffled and swallowed by the material and the darkness and the empty street.
His folder hit the ground.
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