The sun was setting behind the glass towers of the city, casting long shadows through the office window where Lou Scott sat at her desk, staring blankly at her computer. The city below was buzzing with life, but inside this high-rise, the only noise was the faint hum of air conditioning. Her office was immaculate, every paper perfectly aligned, the desk free of any clutter, the perfect reflection of the life she had curated. A life built meticulously, step by step, lie by lie.
For years, Lou had constructed a facade of success. The job, the friends, the lifestyle — none of it was real. It was all woven together from half-truths and deceit, a shimmering illusion that made her untouchable. But something had shifted. For weeks now, she had sensed a creeping presence, like a shadow following her every move. It started small — an unfamiliar face in the lobby, a glance that lingered too long at the coffee shop — but soon, the coincidences became impossible to ignore.
She minimized the spreadsheet on her screen and opened her email. Her heart skipped a beat when she saw it — another anonymous message.
"We know what you did.”
The same words had arrived in her inbox every day for the past two weeks. No signature, no subject line, just those four simple words. At first, she ignored them, brushing them off as spam or some misguided attempt at intimidation. But as the days passed, she couldn’t shake the feeling that someone was watching her, that someone knew the truth. And the truth was dangerous.
Lou's phone buzzed on the desk, jolting her out of her thoughts. It was a text from Dale, her boyfriend.
“Dinner at 7? Or are you working late again?”
She hesitated, fingers hovering over the keyboard. Dale, like everything else in her life, was part of the facade. She had met him a year ago at a charity gala, another event where she had pretended to be someone she wasn't — an executive at a company she had never worked for, the daughter of a wealthy family she had never known. Dale had fallen for the version of Lou she had created- sophisticated, successful, and mysterious. She played the role so well that sometimes, even she believed it. But lately, the weight of her lies was becoming unbearable.
“I’ll be late,” she typed back, her chest tightening with guilt. She knew she was running out of excuses, running out of time.
As the clock ticked closer to six, Lou stood and gathered her things, feeling the eyes of her coworkers as she left the office. Outside, the air was thick with the scent of rain, and the streets were bustling with the usual rush-hour chaos. She hailed a cab and gave the driver an address she hadn’t visited in years.
The apartment building was run-down, a far cry from the polished world she now inhabited. She hadn’t been back here since she left her old life behind, but now she had no choice. Lou climbed the narrow stairs to the third floor, the familiar creak of the wood underfoot making her heart pound. She reached door 3C, took a deep breath, and knocked.
The door swung open almost immediately, and Lou was face to face with a woman she hadn’t seen in over a decade.
“Lou,” the woman said, her voice dripping with disdain. “I was wondering when you’d come crawling back.”
“Hello, Katy,” Lou replied, trying to keep her voice steady.
Katy leaned against the doorframe, her arms crossed. She hadn’t changed much. The same sharp eyes, the same hardened expression. “So, what brings you back to this dump? Slumming it for old times’ sake?”
Lou swallowed hard. “I need your help.”
Katy laughed, a cold, bitter sound. “Of course you do. After all these years, now you need me. What is it this time? Another one of your little schemes gone wrong?”
“It’s serious,” Lou said, stepping closer. “Someone is threatening me. They know… they know everything.”
Katy's smile faded, and for a moment, she looked almost concerned. “Everything?”
Lou nodded. “Everything. The fake degrees, the stolen money, the lies about my family. They know it all. And I think they’re going to expose me.”
Katy stared at her for a long moment, then stepped aside to let her in. The apartment was just as Lou remembered it — small, cluttered, and reeking of cigarette smoke. Katy closed the door behind them and gestured for Lou to sit.
“Alright,” Katy said, lighting a cigarette and taking a long drag. “Start from the beginning.”
Lou told her everything. The emails, the strange encounters, the growing sense of dread that someone was pulling the strings behind the scenes, someone who wanted to see her fall. Katy listened in silence, her eyes narrowing as Lou recounted the details.
When she was finished, Katy stubbed out her cigarette and leaned forward. “You don’t think this is just some prank? Some jealous coworker trying to mess with you?”
“I thought that at first,” Lou said, her voice trembling. “But this is different. Whoever this is, they’re not just threatening me. They know things — things only someone from my past could know.”
Katy leaned back, exhaling a plume of smoke. “So, you think it’s someone from the old days? Someone who knew you before you became ‘Lou Scott’?”
Lou nodded. “It has to be.”
Katy tapped her fingers on the table, deep in thought. “Well, that narrows it down. Not many people knew about your little reinvention. There’s me, obviously. And then there’s…”
She trailed off, her eyes widening.
“What?” Lou asked, panic rising in her chest.
Katy shook her head slowly. “No. It can’t be him. He’s dead.”
“Who?” Lou demanded, her voice rising. “Who are you talking about?”
Katy hesitated, then finally spoke. “Chico.”
Lou felt the blood drain from her face. Chico. The one person who had helped her orchestrate the biggest lie of her life. The one person who knew all her secrets because he had been part of them. And the one person who had supposedly died in a car accident five years ago.
“He’s dead,” Lou whispered, more to herself than to Katy. “I went to his funeral. I saw the body.”
“Did you?” Katy asked, her voice laced with suspicion. “Did you really?”
Lou's mind raced, memories flooding back — Chico's smirk as they forged documents, the way he always seemed to be one step ahead of everyone else. Could it be possible? Could he have faked his death just as easily as they had faked everything else?
“I need to find him,” Lou said, standing abruptly. “If he’s alive, he’s the only one who can stop this.”
Katy nodded slowly, though doubt flickered in her eyes. “If he’s alive, he’s not going to be happy to see you.”
Lou knew that was true. She had betrayed Chico in the end, cut him out of the biggest score they had ever pulled, leaving him to take the fall when things went south. If he was alive, he would have every reason to want revenge.
But she had no choice. If Chico was behind the emails, if he was the one pulling the strings, she had to face him. Because if her past was catching up to her, Chico would be the final reckoning.
Lou spent the next two days tracking down leads, scouring old contacts, and piecing together fragments of information about Chico's whereabouts. Every step felt like peeling back layers of her old life, exposing the rot underneath. By the time she found him, she wasn’t sure she was ready to confront what came next.
Chico was living in a small house on the outskirts of the city, far from the luxury he had once aspired to. Lou parked her car down the street and walked the rest of the way, her heart pounding in her chest. She stood outside his door for what felt like an eternity before finally knocking.
The door opened slowly, revealing a man who was a shadow of the Chico she once knew. His hair was longer, his face gaunt, but his eyes… his eyes were the same. Sharp, calculating, and filled with hatred.
“Lou,” he said, his voice cold. “I’ve been expecting you.”
“I figured you might be behind this,” she said, trying to keep her voice steady. “The emails, the threats… it was you, wasn’t it?”
Chico smirked. “Of course it was. Did you really think you could get away with what you did?”
“I had no choice,” Lou said, stepping closer. “You were going to ruin everything. I had to cut you out.”
“And now I’m going to ruin you,” Chico said, his voice low and venomous. “I’ve waited a long time for this, Lou. To see your perfect little life crumble.”
Lou felt a surge of desperation. “It doesn’t have to be like this. We can fix this. We can… we can work together again.”
Lou stood in the dimly lit room, her eyes fixed on Chico, who lounged in the chair like he owned the place. His smirk only made her more uneasy, though she tried to mask it. The air between them was thick with tension, the kind that had been building for weeks.
“I know what you’ve been up to,” Chico said, his voice low but steady. “You thought you could keep it all hidden, didn’t you?”
Lou crossed her arms, defiant, though her heart pounded in her chest. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
Chico chuckled, leaning forward, his elbows resting on his knees. “You don’t? Let me spell it out for you, then. All those little side deals. All that money you’ve been stashing away, thinking no one would notice. I’ve been watching. I know everything.”
Lou’s face paled for a fraction of a second, but she recovered quickly. “So what? You think anyone would believe you over me? You’ve got nothing.”
Chico’s grin widened, as if he’d been waiting for that moment. “Oh, I’ve got plenty. And I don’t need anyone to believe me, Lou. Because it’s not about what they believe. It’s about what I’ve already done.”
Lou felt a chill run down her spine. She took a step forward, her voice hard. “What do you mean? What have you done?”
Chico’s eyes gleamed with something dark, something she hadn’t seen in him before. “Not only have I exposed you, Lou, but I’ve already moved in on everything. You think you’ve got assets left to hide? Think again. They’re mine now. Every cent, every property.”
Lou’s breath hitched, her throat tightening as she realized how deep Chico’s trap ran. “You’re bluffing.”
“Am I?” Chico leaned back, his expression unreadable now. “Go ahead. Call your bank. Check your accounts. Oh, and one more thing…” He paused, savoring the moment. “Dale. He’s been helping me. In fact, he came to me first.”
Lou’s heart stopped. “What…?”
Chico tilted his head, his smirk fading into something colder. “Dale’s known about this for months. He’s been feeding me information, making sure I get what I need. He always said you underestimated him.”
Lou staggered back, her mind racing, the betrayal sinking in. Dale? How could he?
Chico stood up, his shadow looming over her. “You thought you had it all under control, Lou. But now, you’re in my hands. The question is, what are you going to do about it?”
Lou’s mouth went dry, but before she could speak, Chico turned his back to her, heading for the door.
“Wait—” Lou called out, but Chico was already gone, the door clicking shut behind him.
She stood there, frozen, the weight of what had just happened crashing over her. She had lost everything, and worse, she had no idea what Chico would do next — or what Dale had already set in motion.
The room seemed to close in around her as the reality of her situation sunk in. And then, as if on cue, her phone buzzed in her pocket.
With trembling hands, she pulled it out.
It was a message from Dale. One word.
“Sorry.”
Lou stared at the screen, her heart pounding as a new wave of dread washed over her. This was far from over.
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1 comment
'Sorry' sounds serious.
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