Chapter 1 - Seraphine

The newsroom always smelled faintly of burnt coffee, printer ink, and a hint of desperation. Phones rang off the hook, keyboards clacked in a manic symphony, and someone was always yelling about a deadline that was already ten minutes past due. The hum of fluorescent lights buzzed overhead like a swarm of angry bees, matching the nervous energy that seemed permanently trapped inside these walls.

My corner of the chaos was wedged between the copy machine that coughed out paper dust and a stack of boxes no one had bothered to unpack since last year’s “budget restructuring.” My computer screen flickered like it was gasping for life as I scrolled through yet another local puff piece—missing cats, a charity bake sale, a ribbon-cutting for a new car wash. The kind of fluff they threw my way because apparently I had the face for feel-good, not the fire for front-page.

I was halfway through editing a paragraph about “homemade lemon bars for a cause” when it happened.

“Vale!”

The bark of my name cracked across the newsroom like a whip. Heads popped up from cubicles. The gossip stopped mid-sentence.

I looked up and there he was—Mr. Brantley, my editor-in-chief, leaning against the doorway to his office. His suspenders were stretched so tight across his belly they looked ready to snap. His scalp glistened under the fluorescent lights with enough grease to season a skillet, and his tie hung limp around his neck like a noose that had given up on its job.

The man was a walking fossil of bad habits and worse opinions—wearing cheap cologne, with yellowed teeth, and a smirk that made my skin crawl.

“Yes, sir?” I called, forcing my voice to stay even.

“Office. Now.”

He didn’t wait for a reply—just turned and lumbered back inside his cave.

Someone muttered, “Dead woman walking,” as I stood. Typical.

Brantley’s office smelled like every bad decision he’d ever made—stale cigarette smoke, spilled bourbon, and too much cologne trying to hide it all. The blinds were half-drawn, slicing the room into dusty stripes of light. His desk was a chaotic sprawl of newspapers, half-eaten takeout containers, and a framed photo of him shaking hands with some washed-up politician.

He didn’t even glance up when I walked in. “Close the door.”

The click of it shutting behind me sounded final.

I stood there clutching my notepad like a shield. “You wanted to see me?”

“Sit.”

I didn’t. He finally looked up, eyes narrowing as if I’d personally insulted him by breathing his air. “You’ve been begging for something more serious than bake sales, haven’t you?”

I hesitated. “I wouldn’t say begging—”

He waved a hand, cutting me off. “Good. Then consider this divine intervention.”

He reached down, rummaged through a pile of folders, and slapped a thick manila file onto his desk. Papers fluttered, scattering like startled birds.

“What’s this?” I asked.

“Your new assignment.”

I stepped closer, the air thick with his cigarette haze, and flipped open the folder. My heart stopped.

Inside were police reports, crime scene photos, and missing person flyers. All women. All local. Each smiling from a grainy photo that someone had probably taken right before they disappeared.

My throat went dry. “This is the missing women’s case.”

“Smart girl,” Brantley said, leaning back in his squeaky chair. “You’ll be covering it. Effective immediately.”

“You’re joking.”

He arched a brow. “Do I look like I’m joking?”

I studied him—sweaty brow, crooked tie, coffee stains on his shirt. “Honestly? You look like you haven’t had a serious thought since Nixon resigned.”

His grin vanished. “Watch your mouth, Vale.”

I didn’t back down. “James was covering this story.” My voice hardened. “You remember James? The reporter who’s been missing for three weeks?”

Brantley’s shrug was infuriatingly casual. “Yeah, shame about that. But the story’s still hot. Someone’s got to keep it alive.”

“You’re giving me his case?” I said, incredulous. “You’re just tossing me into it like bait?”

“You said you wanted real work.” His tone was smooth, almost bored. “Consider this your shot. Prove to me—and everyone else—that you’re more than fluff pieces and photo captions.”

“That’s not what I—”

“Isn’t it?” He leaned forward, elbows sinking into the clutter on his desk. “You’ve been crying for opportunity since you walked in here. Congratulations. You got it.”

I laughed, sharp and humorless. “No, what I got is a death sentence. You don’t care what happens to me.”

“I care about results,” he said simply, lighting a cigarette. “You bring me something worth printing, I’ll care plenty. Now stop whining and do your job. You wanted to play with the big boys? Well—here’s your sandbox.”

The condescension dripped off every word.

Hearing him say that meant two things.

One, no one else in this office was brave—or stupid—enough to take the story.

Two, my boss didn’t care if I lived or died.

I snapped the folder shut, the sound loud in the stale air. “You’ll regret this.”

He smiled lazily. “Sweetheart, I already do.”

That was my cue to leave before I said something that got me fired—or worse, arrested for assault.

I turned toward the door, voice steady even though my hands were shaking. “Thank you for this opportunity, sir.”

He raised his cigarette in a mock salute. “That’s the spirit. Try not to end up on the front page yourself.”

The door clicked shut behind me, and I finally exhaled.

Outside, the newsroom buzzed on as if nothing had happened. I moved past the curious glances, clutching the file against my chest like a life raft. My reflection caught in the hallway window—tall, red hair pulled back too tight, freckles scattered across pale skin, and curves I’d spent half my life trying to disguise under blazers that didn’t quite fit.

Brantley saw all of that when he looked at me. Not my ambition. Not my work ethic. Just a body, he thought, that didn’t belong in his world.

And maybe that used to bother me. Maybe it still did. But something inside me—something hot, defiant, and angry—flared to life as I stared down at that manila folder.

He thought this assignment would chew me up and spit me out like it did James. He thought fear would keep me in my place.

He was wrong.

This wasn’t just a story anymore. It was my chance.

And when I brought the truth to light, the only thing missing from the front page would be his smug grin.

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