Talia Meyers stood in her corner office, gazing out at the city skyline as if it were a masterpiece she had painted herself. She had risen to the top, one calculated move after another, each step designed to ensure no one would ever know how much of her life was a lie. The late afternoon sun cast long shadows across the buildings, but it was the paper in her hand that darkened her mood.
*I know what you did. It's time to come clean, or I will.*
The words felt like a punch to the gut. She re-read them, hoping they'd change on the second pass, but they didn't. The letter was short, unsigned, and to the point. Whoever wrote it knew her secret—a secret she had worked for years to bury beneath her polished exterior.
Her phone buzzed on the desk, making her jump. She snatched it up, dialing a familiar number with shaking hands. James Patel answered after a few rings.
"It's Talia," she said, her voice sharper than intended. "We need to meet. Now."
James had always been her go-to fixer. They had met back when both of them were clawing their way out of the lower rungs of the corporate ladder, both eager to get a taste of real power. She had saved his career once, and ever since then, James had been her most reliable ally. He knew enough about her past to be dangerous, but loyalty—fueled by fear and gratitude—kept him in line.
"Same place?" he asked, already catching the urgency in her tone.
"Yes, and don’t waste time."
Talia hung up, pacing around her office. Her mind raced, replaying every carefully hidden piece of her past that could now come crashing down. She had taken someone else’s identity years ago, back when she was desperate to escape a dead-end life. She thought she had left all of it behind—the lies, the old version of herself, the person she used to be before she became *Talia Meyers*.
But the real Rebecca Hart was still out there. Or at least, someone who knew her story was.
The dimly lit bar they always met at hadn’t changed much in the past decade. Talia sat in a booth toward the back, tapping her nails on the table, the letter folded in front of her. When James arrived, his usual confident swagger seemed dampened by the tightness around his eyes.
"You look like hell," he said, sliding into the booth across from her.
"Thanks for noticing." She shoved the letter across the table. "This showed up today."
James picked it up, scanning the brief note, his expression darkening. "Shit. Do you know who sent it?"
"If I did, I wouldn’t be sitting here." Talia rubbed her temples, the headache she’d been fighting all day pounding harder now. "It’s about Rebecca. Someone knows everything."
James leaned back, staring at her. "It’s been, what, ten years? Whoever it is, they’ve waited a hell of a long time to pull this."
"Maybe they’ve only just figured it out," she muttered. "We were careful back then, James. We covered every loose end."
"Clearly not every loose end." His tone was sharp, but the fear behind it matched her own. If Talia’s past was exposed, his involvement would come to light too.
Rebecca Hart. The name wasn’t just an alias; it was a stolen life. The real Rebecca had disappeared one night in college, seemingly out of thin air. Talia had known her—casually at first, but then as a friend. Or at least that’s how Rebecca saw it. When she vanished, Talia seized the opportunity to start fresh, assuming Rebecca’s identity, leaving her own painful, small-town life behind.
She’d never thought anyone would connect the dots. After all, who would miss Rebecca? But now, it seemed like someone had.
"What do we do?" Talia asked, though the answer was clear. This person—whoever they were—had to be silenced.
"I’ll make some calls, find out what I can. But Talia..." James paused, his voice lower. "If this gets out, everything you’ve built, everything we’ve built—it’s over. You’d be lucky to just lose your job. Fraud, identity theft… prison’s not out of the question."
She swallowed, her throat dry. "I know."
"You need to act normal. Keep up appearances. I’ll see what I can dig up about this, but you can’t afford to make any mistakes right now."
The days dragged by in a haze of anxiety. Talia went through the motions of her daily life—meetings, business deals, and public appearances—all while waiting for the other shoe to drop. Her every move felt rehearsed, mechanical, as though she were playing a part in a play where she no longer remembered the lines.
And then, another letter arrived.
*It’s your last chance. Come clean, or I will. Meet me at the Rosewood Hotel, room 709, tomorrow at midnight.*
This time, the fear hit her like a freight train. The vague threats had turned into concrete demands. They wanted a meeting. They wanted her to face them. Whoever this was, they knew everything.
Talia’s mind spun with worst-case scenarios. Blackmail? Revenge? It didn’t matter. The clock was ticking.
She arrived at the Rosewood Hotel just before midnight, her heart pounding in her chest. The sleek marble lobby was practically deserted, and the elevator ride to the seventh floor felt like a slow descent into hell. Her breath was shallow, her hand clenched tightly around the small pistol in her purse. She wasn’t sure she’d use it, but she couldn’t afford to take any chances.
Room 709. The door loomed in front of her like a portal into the past, everything she had tried so hard to bury.
She knocked twice, her heart in her throat.
The door opened a crack, and Talia froze.
The woman standing there was someone she hadn’t seen in years, but she knew her face as well as her own. A face she had thought was long gone.
"Rebecca," Talia whispered.
The woman smiled, but it wasn’t a friendly smile. It was sharp, cold, full of quiet malice. "Or should I say… Talia?"
Talia took a step back, her mind reeling. Rebecca wasn’t supposed to be here. She wasn’t supposed to *exist* anymore.
"You’re supposed to be dead," Talia said, her voice barely above a whisper.
"Disappointed I’m not?" Rebecca stepped aside, motioning for Talia to come in. "I’ve been waiting a long time for this."
Talia moved into the room, her eyes darting around, searching for any sign of a trap. Rebecca closed the door softly behind her, leaning against it with a casual ease that set Talia on edge.
"You look good," Rebecca said, her tone dripping with sarcasm. "Better than when we last saw each other, huh? Turns out, stealing someone else’s life really does wonders for your skin."
"Why now?" Talia’s voice was tight, controlled, but underneath, panic was setting in. "What do you want?"
"I want my life back," Rebecca said, stepping closer, her eyes burning with years of pent-up anger. "The one you took from me."
"You were gone! You *disappeared*!" Talia’s voice cracked, all the rehearsed excuses falling apart. "I thought you were dead. I thought—"
"You thought you could become me. But I’m not dead, Talia. I’ve been watching. Waiting." Rebecca’s eyes narrowed. "And now, I’m taking what’s mine."
Talia’s fingers brushed the gun in her purse, her mind spinning with a thousand outcomes, none of them good. If Rebecca exposed her, she’d lose everything. Her career, her reputation, the life she had built—it would all collapse.
"You think you can just waltz back into my life and take it?" Talia hissed, her desperation showing now. "I made something of myself. I earned it."
"You didn’t earn *anything*. You stole it." Rebecca’s voice was sharp, cutting through Talia’s bravado. "And now it’s time to pay the price."
The room seemed to close in around them, the tension thick in the air. Talia’s hand tightened around the pistol.
"You don’t have the guts," Rebecca whispered, stepping closer. "You’ve always been a coward, hiding behind other people’s lives. But this time, there’s nowhere to hide."
Talia pulled the gun from her bag.
The shot rang out, echoing through the room.
And with it, the life Talia had stolen came crashing down, shattered by the very ghost she thought she’d left behind.
As the silence stretched, Talia realized there was no escaping the past. No matter how far she had run, it had finally caught up to her. The cost of her deception had finally come due.
You must sign up or log in to submit a comment.
0 comments