Hannah Price had been told it was only one folder.
That was the phrase Mr Caldwell used when he wanted something awkward to sound ordinary.
Only one folder.

Only one drive.
Only one quick errand before she went home and reheated whatever she had left in the fridge.
By four o’clock, the sky over the office windows had already gone the colour of old tin.
Rain slid down the glass in hard silver lines, and the office lights hummed above rows of desks where everyone pretended not to notice how quickly the weather was turning.
Hannah noticed.
She always noticed practical things.
She noticed when the photocopier tray was nearly empty before anyone else did.
She noticed which clients made the reception staff nervous.
She noticed that Mr Caldwell did not ask a senior manager to deliver the sealed folder, or a driver, or one of the men who liked to laugh loudly in the lift.
He called her in instead.
His office smelled faintly of expensive coffee and the cologne he wore too heavily.
The folder sat on his desk, cream-coloured, sealed, and marked with nothing but a printed label.
Quarterly reports.
The words should have been dull enough to send anyone to sleep.
Mr Caldwell tapped the folder with two fingers.
“This needs to go to Mr Relli tonight.”
Hannah kept her face polite.
“The weather’s getting quite bad.”
“It is important.”
He said it in the tone men used when they wanted obedience to look like professionalism.
She glanced towards the window again.
Cars were already crawling through the rain below.
“Could it be emailed?”
Mr Caldwell gave her a thin smile.
“If it could be emailed, Miss Price, I would have emailed it.”
There was nothing to say to that without losing more than the argument.
Hannah needed the job.
Boring paid rent.
Boring kept food in the cupboard.
Boring meant she could still help her little sister when money ran short.
So she took the folder, tucked it beneath her coat, and told herself that one uncomfortable evening was not the end of the world.
The world waited until she was alone on the private road to disagree.
The rain became violent once she left the main road.
Not ordinary rain.
Not the sort that made people complain lightly in queues or shake umbrellas in shop doorways.
This rain arrived with purpose.
It hammered the windscreen until the wipers seemed less like tools and more like a small, failing apology.
The road narrowed between black trees.
Every flash of lightning turned the branches into hooked fingers, and every dip in the tarmac held more water than the last.
Hannah leaned forward over the steering wheel, trying to keep sight of the road markings.
Her phone had lost signal some time earlier.
At first she thought it would return after the next bend.
Then the next.
Then she stopped looking.
The folder stayed dry under her coat on the passenger seat.
It annoyed her, how safe the papers were while everything else went wrong.
She had never been to Enzo Relli’s estate before.
Very few people from Caldwell and Associates had.
His name travelled through the office like weather: rarely spoken loudly, always felt.
In daylight, he was a private investor.
A logistics magnate.
A silent partner in companies whose names appeared on invoices and shipping paperwork and serious-looking meeting agendas.
At night, when the senior staff had gone and the assistants rinsed mugs in the little office kitchen, there was another version.
Mafia boss.
The words were never said as a joke.
Not really.
No one described him like a film villain.
No one made silly voices or talked about cigars and dramatic threats.
They spoke of him as a man who could sit quietly in a room and make everyone remember what they owed.
Hannah had seen him once.
A boardroom door had been left open by mistake, and she had been sent in with printed copies no one had bothered to request until the meeting was already tense.
Enzo Relli sat at the far end of the table in a dark shirt, saying nothing.
That was what struck her most.
Other men filled silence because they feared it.
He owned it.
Mr Caldwell had stood when Enzo entered.
Mr Caldwell did not stand for anyone he considered beneath him, which was nearly everyone.
That had told Hannah more than gossip ever could.
Now the same man had sent her alone to Relli’s estate in a storm with a folder that could supposedly not wait until morning.
The car gave a sudden cough.
Hannah’s heart lurched before the engine did.
The dashboard flickered.
The steering became heavy beneath her hands.
“No,” she whispered.
The car rolled another few feet and stopped with a soft, sickening shudder.
She pressed the accelerator.
Nothing.
She turned the key again.
The engine clicked, coughed once, and died properly.
For several seconds, Hannah sat in the dark and listened to the rain punish the roof.
It is strange how quickly a car can stop feeling like shelter.
One moment it is a little room of glass and metal.
The next it is a box filling with cold fear.
Water crawled around the tyres.
Ahead, barely visible through the rain, stood the iron gates of the Relli estate.
They were taller than she expected.
She did not like that they were her only option.
She tried her phone again.
No service.
Of course.
She looked at the folder.
Then at the gates.
Then at the rising water.
Practicality won.
It often did, with Hannah.
She grabbed her handbag, shoved the folder under her coat, and pushed the driver’s door open.
Rain slapped her so hard she gasped.
Cold water soaked through her blouse in seconds.
Her hair stuck to her face.
One heel sank into mud when she stepped out, and she nearly lost the shoe altogether.
She muttered a word she would not have used in the office, pulled herself upright, and hurried towards the intercom.
The metal button was slick under her thumb.
She pressed once.
Nothing.
She pressed again.
Static cracked.
She pressed a third time and hated how desperate the movement looked, even though there was no one there to see it.
Then a voice came through.
Deep.
Calm.
Irritated in a way that suggested interruption was a rare and dangerous thing.
“Who is this?”
Hannah closed her eyes for half a second.
Not a guard.
Him.
“Mr Relli?” she called, pitching her voice over the storm. “It’s Hannah Price from Caldwell and Associates. My car’s broken down on your road. Mr Caldwell sent me with the quarterly reports. I need help.”
Silence followed.
It had weight.
Hannah felt humiliation creep up her throat.
She imagined how she must look: soaked, muddy, trembling, clutching paperwork as if it were a shield.
Then the intercom clicked.
The gates began to move.
Slowly.
With a groan that seemed to come from somewhere beneath the road.
“Follow the drive,” Enzo Relli said. “Don’t stop.”
So she ran.
The drive was longer than it had looked from the gate.
Rain blurred the lamps along the edges until they became soft golden smears.
The house emerged by degrees, first as a darker shape against the sky, then as stone, glass, angles, and light.
It was not charming.
It was not warm in the way old houses liked to pretend.
It looked guarded.
Cameras sat discreetly under the eaves.
The windows glowed, but not generously.
Hannah stumbled up the steps, breath burning, wet shoes slipping on stone.
The front door opened before she knocked.
Enzo Relli stood in the doorway.
He was taller than she remembered.
That was her first foolish thought.
Her second was that no man should look that composed while the sky tore itself apart behind her.
He wore a black shirt open at the throat, the sleeves rolled to his elbows.
Tattoos climbed his forearms in dark lines.
His hair was damp at the temples, as if he had stepped outside only long enough to look at the storm and decide it was beneath him.
His eyes moved over her once.
Not slowly.
Not rudely.
Efficiently.
Soaked hair.
Ruined shoes.
Shivering hands.
Folder pressed flat beneath her coat.
His jaw tightened.
“Get inside.”
Hannah obeyed before pride had time to form an objection.
Warmth struck her like another kind of weather.
The hallway smelled of wood polish, smoke, and rain carried in on her coat.
She stood on the polished floor and watched water drip from her sleeves onto something that probably cost more than her rent.
“I’m sorry,” she said automatically. “I didn’t mean to—”
“Stop apologising.”
He did not raise his voice.
That made the words firmer.
Hannah shut her mouth.
Enzo looked past her, out into the storm, then closed the door with deliberate care.
The click of the latch felt final.
A woman appeared from a side passage, older, neatly dressed, her expression controlled but not unkind.
She took one look at Hannah and moved at once.
“Towels,” Enzo said.
“I’ve got them,” the woman replied.
No one asked if Hannah wanted to sit.
A chair was simply pulled nearer the fire in the adjoining room.
A thick towel was pressed into her hands.
A blanket followed.
Someone set a glass beside her, amber liquid catching the light.
Whisky.
Hannah would normally have refused while working.
Her teeth chattered too hard to perform dignity.
She took a small sip and coughed as it burned down her throat.
Enzo watched with something that was not amusement.
Concern, perhaps.
Though he seemed displeased by the discovery.
“You drove through that for Caldwell?”
The question sounded simple.
It was not.
“He said the reports had to be delivered in person.”
“Of course he did.”
Hannah rubbed the towel over her hair.
“What does that mean?”
Enzo did not answer immediately.
He walked to the table where she had set the folder, still sealed and dry.
Beside it, her handbag lay open, showing her dead phone, a folded appointment card from the office, and a small receipt from lunch she had never had time to eat.
Objects looked more honest than people sometimes.
They made excuses difficult.
“It means Caldwell is either a fool,” Enzo said, “or he wanted me to see exactly what he was willing to risk.”
Hannah stared at him.
“Me?”
His eyes returned to hers.
“Yes.”
A log settled in the fireplace with a soft crack.
The room seemed to listen.
Hannah pulled the blanket tighter around her shoulders.
She had spent the last two years being useful at Caldwell and Associates.
Useful meant invisible when things went smoothly and available when they did not.
Useful meant staying late because someone forgot to print papers.
Useful meant answering phones with a pleasant voice while men behind glass doors decided what her time was worth.
But this felt different.
Not careless.
Chosen.
A kettle clicked off somewhere behind her on a tray, absurdly domestic in that room of expensive shadows.
The older woman poured hot water into two plain mugs and said nothing.
Steam lifted between them.
It should have made the scene feel safer.
It did not.
Enzo reached for one mug and set it near Hannah without touching her.
“Drink that slowly.”
“You give orders a lot.”
“So I’ve been told.”
The smallest line appeared at the corner of his mouth, then vanished.
Hannah would have laughed if she had not been so cold.
Instead she wrapped her hands around the mug and let the heat sting life back into her fingers.
The rain went on throwing itself at the windows.
At some point, the older woman stepped out and returned with dry socks, a folded jumper, and the sort of practical expression that allowed no embarrassment.
“You’ll catch your death sitting like that,” she said.
It was the first ordinary sentence Hannah had heard since leaving the office.
It nearly undid her.
“Thank you,” Hannah whispered.
The woman nodded and looked to Enzo.
“The lower road’s gone.”
“I know.”
“And the service mast?”
“Down.”
The woman’s mouth tightened.
Hannah turned between them.
“What does that mean exactly?”
Enzo’s answer came without decoration.
“You can’t leave tonight.”
The words landed softly and stayed.
Hannah put the mug down before she dropped it.
“The car?”
“Dead.”
“The road?”
“Flooded.”
“My phone?”
“Not until the mast comes back.”
“So I’m trapped here.”
He held her gaze.
“You’re staying here.”
The difference was small.
It mattered.
Hannah heard the correction and hated that it steadied her.
There are moments when fear changes shape without disappearing.
It stops being a wild animal in the chest and becomes a list.
Dry clothes.
A locked door.
Morning.
Proof.
She looked at the sealed folder on the table.
“What is in there?” she asked.
“Quarterly reports, apparently.”
“You don’t believe that.”
“I believe very little that comes from Caldwell’s hand.”
His voice stayed even, but the room chilled around the name.
Hannah thought of Mr Caldwell’s smile.
The way he had tapped the folder.
Only one folder.
Only one drive.
Only one secretary who could be spared.
She looked back at Enzo.
“Why would he send me?”
“That is the question.”
The older woman returned to collect the wet towels.
Her eyes went to Hannah’s ruined shoes, then the folder, then Enzo’s face.
Something passed silently between them.
Hannah caught it and felt her shoulders tighten.
“What?” she asked.
The woman looked away first.
Enzo did not.
“Nothing you need to answer tonight.”
“That is not reassuring.”
“No.”
“At least you’re honest.”
“Usually.”
The storm made the windows pulse.
For an hour, perhaps two, time became strange.
Hannah changed in a small bathroom with separate taps that ran either freezing cold or scalding hot, because apparently even wealth could not solve everything in Britain.
She wore the borrowed jumper over her damp skirt and tried not to think about how exposed she felt without her proper clothes.
When she returned, Enzo was on the phone near the window, getting no further than anyone else.
He did not swear.
He simply ended the call and stared out into the rain with such stillness that anger seemed to gather around him rather than inside him.
The older woman, whose name Hannah learned was Lucia, brought a tray with tea, plain biscuits, and a little plate of sandwiches no one had asked for.
Hannah ate because practicality returned before dignity.
Enzo did not comment.
That was one of the first things she noticed about him after the fear began to thin.
He did not fill silence for sport.
He did not tease her for shaking.
He did not ask questions designed to make her smaller.
He watched everything, but he did not make a performance of looking.
That restraint was almost more dangerous than charm.
Charm could be dismissed.
Restraint made a person lean closer.
When the clock passed midnight, Lucia came back with a careful expression.
“The west rooms are cold,” she said.
Enzo looked at her sharply.
“How cold?”
“Too cold for a guest. The lower rooms have water coming in. Two upstairs fireplaces won’t draw.”
Hannah understood only part of it.
She understood enough to sit straighter.
Enzo looked towards the hallway.
“There is one room ready?”
Lucia’s pause was small.
“Yes.”
Hannah did not like the pause.
Enzo saw that she had noticed.
“Come on,” he said.
He picked up a lamp, though the corridor lights were on, and led her upstairs.
The house changed at night.
Downstairs it had been imposing.
Upstairs it was quieter, more personal, and somehow more threatening because of it.
The runner beneath Hannah’s feet was old and soft.
Rain flashed against tall windows.
Portraits she refused to study watched from the walls.
She kept the sealed folder tucked beneath her arm.
It had become ridiculous not to open it.
It had also become impossible.
Some doors stood closed.
Others had towels shoved along the bottom to block creeping water.
Lucia moved ahead of them, carrying folded linen with the tense efficiency of a woman who had handled worse nights than this.
At the end of the corridor, Enzo stopped outside a door.
Warm light showed beneath it.
He reached for the handle, then paused.
It was the first time Hannah had seen him hesitate.
A dangerous man pausing over a bedroom door did nothing helpful for her nerves.
“There’s a problem,” he said.
Hannah’s fingers tightened on the folder.
“What kind of problem?”
He opened the door.
The room beyond was beautiful in a severe, old-fashioned way.
A fire burned in the grate.
Rain tapped hard at the windows.
A dark wardrobe stood against one wall, and a single tea mug rested on the bedside table as if someone had tried to make the room kind at the last minute.
In the centre stood one bed.
Large, yes.
Still one.
Hannah stared at it.
Enzo remained in the doorway.
He did not cross the threshold.
“One room,” he said.
The storm struck the windows again, loud enough to make the glass shiver.
Then, after a pause that seemed to stretch through the whole house, he added, “One bed.”
Hannah turned to him slowly.
She was too tired to hide every emotion from her face.
Of all the things she had feared that evening, this one felt almost absurd.
Almost.
“I can sleep in a chair.”
“No.”
Her chin lifted.
“You are going to have to stop saying no as if it settles things.”
Enzo looked at the chair near the fire.
“It is not fit for sleeping.”
“I’ve slept in worse places.”
“That does not recommend them.”
“I am not sharing a bed with you.”
“I did not ask you to.”
The answer stopped her.
He stepped back, not forward.
“You take the room. Lock the door. I’ll be outside.”
Hannah looked at the corridor behind him.
“You would sleep in the hallway?”
“I have done worse.”
His own words, handed back without a smile.
Something in her chest shifted in a way she did not welcome.
Before she could answer, a sound came from below.
Three hard knocks.
Not thunder.
Not pipes.
Knocking.
The entire house seemed to hold its breath.
Lucia appeared at the far end of the corridor, her face suddenly pale.
“No one should be at that door,” she said.
Enzo was already moving.
Hannah followed because fear had become momentum.
They reached the bend in the stairs together.
From there, she could see the front hallway below, bright under practical lamps, rain shining against the glass panels of the door.
A figure stood outside.
A man in a soaked coat.
His face was blurred by rain, but his hand was clear.
He was holding up a set of car keys.
Hannah’s car keys.
For a second, she did not understand what she was seeing.
Her keys should have been in the ignition of her dead car on the flooded road.
They should not have been in the hand of a stranger at Enzo Relli’s front door after midnight.
Her breath caught so sharply it hurt.
Lucia made a small sound below and gripped the banister.
Not shock.
Recognition.
That was worse.
Enzo stopped one step ahead of Hannah.
His body changed, though he barely moved.
The quiet in him sharpened into something that made the air feel thin.
“Do you know him?” Hannah whispered.
Enzo did not look back.
The man outside knocked again, slower this time, as if he knew everyone inside was watching.
Water streamed from his sleeve.
The keys glinted under the porch light.
Hannah’s sealed folder slipped slightly in her grip, the paper edge bending beneath her fingers.
She suddenly remembered Mr Caldwell saying the reports had to be delivered in person.
She remembered the dead phone.
The empty private road.
The engine failing too neatly, too completely, just within sight of the gates.
Only one folder.
Only one drive.
Only one choice left to her in the storm.
Enzo’s voice, when it came, was so controlled it frightened her more than shouting would have.
“That,” he said, watching the man at the door, “is the man who made sure your car stopped.”
The knock came one last time.
Then the man outside lifted his other hand.
In it was a second envelope.
Cream-coloured.
Sealed.
Matching the folder Hannah had carried through the rain.
Lucia whispered something under her breath.
Hannah could not make out the words, but she saw the older woman’s knees soften as if the floor had shifted beneath her.
Enzo reached back without looking and put one hand in front of Hannah, not touching her, only stopping her from taking another step down.
For the first time since she had walked into his house, Hannah understood that the room, the bed, the storm, even the folder under her arm, were only the outside edges of something larger.
Something Mr Caldwell had started.
Something Enzo Relli had expected, perhaps, but not like this.
And something that now had Hannah’s name written into it whether she wanted it or not.
The man outside smiled through the rain.
Then he pressed the keys flat against the glass.