
My Partner Risked My Life to Impress His Mistress
My Partner Risked My Life to Impress His Mistress Chapter 1
I gave up the front seat without being asked.
Not exactly. Liam asked — but the way he asked made it clear there was only one acceptable answer. He leaned close while the others were loading bags into the SUV, his voice low and careful, the way it got when he needed something and didn't want to call it a favor.
'Alitzel should probably ride up front. For the deal. You understand.'
I understood.
I moved to the back without a word. He didn't thank me. He was already turning toward Maximo Salazar, hand extended, smile wide, the version of Liam that existed only when someone useful was watching.
I settled into the window seat and watched the Catskills rise around us as we left the city behind. The trees thickened. The light changed. I pressed my shoulder against the door and let the cold glass touch my cheek.
Alitzel Salazar twisted in the front seat within the first ten minutes.
She had the kind of beauty that knew exactly what it was doing — sharp cheekbones, a silk blouse the color of cream, hair that fell in the specific way that costs a lot of money to look effortless. She looked at me the way someone looks at a piece of furniture they're deciding whether to keep.
'I love that jacket,' she said. The smile didn't reach her eyes. 'Very — what's the word — understated.'
Liam laughed. A short, easy sound.
I looked out the window.
'No, I mean it,' Alitzel continued, turning back to face the road but pitching her voice to carry. 'There's something so refreshing about a girl who doesn't try too hard. Not everyone needs labels, right? It's almost brave.'
The trees blurred past. Spruce and birch and the occasional flash of granite through the green.
I had been doing this for five years. The math was simple: Liam needed this deal. The Salazar family's construction portfolio was the foothold his startup had been chasing for eighteen months. Alitzel was Maximo's daughter and his most reliable social ambassador. Whatever she needed to feel — superior, unchallenged, the most interesting woman in the car — I could give her that. It cost me nothing I hadn't already learned to live without.
That's what I told myself.
The resort appeared through the trees like something from a magazine — stone and timber and wide glass windows catching the afternoon light. We unloaded. Liam walked ahead with Maximo and Alitzel, already deep in conversation about square footage and zoning projections. I carried my own bag.
---
The trail was Alitzel's idea.
A cliffside path that looped behind the resort, she said. Scenic. The kind of thing you do at a mountain retreat to prove you're the kind of person who does things at mountain retreats. Liam agreed immediately. I followed because I was still, technically, there.
The path was narrow and the stone was older than the resort's brochure suggested. I noticed the way the trail edge crumbled where boots had worn it soft. I noticed the sky had gone the particular gray that precedes something. I noticed these things the way I noticed most things — quietly, and too late to matter.
The rockslide came from above and to the left.
Not a dramatic Hollywood cascade. Just a sudden, percussive crack, and then the world tilted. Stone and loose earth and the sound of someone screaming — Alitzel, I registered distantly — and then my foot found nothing where the trail had been a second ago.
I grabbed for the rock face. My fingers found a seam and lost it. The drop opened up below me, a long gray nothing between the cliff edge and the valley floor, and I had exactly one clear thought: *this is going to hurt.*
A hand closed around my wrist.
Not a grab — a grip. Deliberate and absolute, the kind that doesn't negotiate. It hauled me back from the edge with a force that wrenched my shoulder and scraped my knees across the stone, and I came up gasping on solid ground with my heart slamming against my ribs.
The man crouching in front of me was a stranger.
He looked like someone's idea of a bad decision — neon green and red streaked through dark hair, a leather jacket that had no business being on a hiking trail, the kind of face that was used to being looked at. But his hands were already moving to my forearms, checking the scrapes with a focus that had nothing performative in it.
'Can you stand?' he asked. Calm. Like he pulled people off cliff edges regularly.
'Yes,' I said. My voice came out steadier than I expected.
He helped me to a flat section of rock and stayed close while the trail cleared — other hikers finding their footing, the dust settling, the screaming tapering into shaken silence. He didn't fill the quiet with reassurances. He just stayed.
I found Liam in the aftermath. He was still crouched over Alitzel, one arm around her shoulders, his face arranged in the expression he used for important moments. She was unhurt. Shaken, but unhurt.
He looked up when I approached. Took in the blood on my palms, the torn knee of my jeans, the way I was holding my left arm slightly away from my body.
Then he stood up and said it.
'You have to understand.' His voice was flat. Reasonable. The voice he used in pitch meetings when he needed someone to accept an uncomfortable truth. 'Your life isn't worth the liability compared to a girl from the Salazar family. It's just business.'
I looked at him for a long moment.
Five years. Five years of back seats and borrowed silence and swallowed observations. Five years of making myself smaller so he could feel larger. Five years of watching him become someone I kept finding reasons to excuse.
Something in my chest didn't break. It just — stopped. Like a clock running down.
'We're done,' I said.
No raised voice. No tears. Just the fact of it, clean and final, the way you close a door on a room you're never going back to.
Liam stared at me. The reasonable expression flickered. 'Hailey—'
I walked away.
---
The path back to the resort was longer than I remembered.
I heard footsteps behind me and didn't turn. Then they fell into pace beside me — unhurried, matching my stride exactly — and I knew without looking that it was the stranger with the grip that didn't waver.
We walked in silence for a while. The trees closed back in. The light was going gold at the edges.
'So,' I said finally. 'I survived a rockslide and got told I was a liability in the same hour.'
He laughed. A real laugh — surprised out of him, unguarded. 'That's a rough afternoon.'
'It's been a rough five years.'
He didn't push. Didn't offer a speech about my worth or his outrage on my behalf. He just walked beside me through the trees, and somehow that was the right thing.
At the lobby doors, we stopped.
'Enzo,' he said.
'Hailey.'
He nodded once, like he was filing it away somewhere careful. Then he held the door open, and I walked through it.
I didn't look back.
But I remembered the grip of his hand on my wrist for a long time after.
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