The Storm Left Me Stranded With My Boss and Only One Bed at an Old Inn-yumihong

I thought I was having the worst Friday night of my professional life.

That was before the rain came down so hard it erased the shoulder of the road, swallowed the lane markers, and turned every mile of blacktop into something that looked less like a highway and more like a warning.

The windshield wipers moved in frantic, useless arcs.

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The heater pushed out air that smelled faintly of wet leather, burnt dust, and the paper coffee cup Dominic Cain had forgotten in the cup holder two hours earlier.

My phone was hot in my hand, slick from my damp fingers, and the battery icon glowed red at 8%.

I had never hated a color so much in my life.

“Anything?” Dominic asked from the driver’s seat.

He said it calmly, of course.

Dominic always sounded calm, even when the world was coming apart around him.

That was one of the things I resented most about him.

He could walk into a boardroom twenty minutes late with a smile and a story, and by the time he sat down, people forgot they had been angry.

He could take a disaster, tilt his head, and make everyone believe he had planned it that way.

He could say my name like it belonged to him, even though I had spent three years proving it did not.

“Define anything,” I said, scrolling through motel listings with a thumb that was starting to shake.

A crooked neon sign filled my screen.

A squat building sat under it, half-hidden by weeds and darkness, the kind of place that made even the photos look nervous.

“If you mean a motel that looks like the last place a documentary crew would search, yes, I found something.”

I turned the phone toward him.

Dominic glanced over.

The storm flashed across his face in silver bursts, sharping his cheekbones and making him look both too expensive and too tired for the inside of a rental car.

“What about that one?” he asked.

I let out a laugh that sounded close to panic.

“That one is forty miles the wrong direction on a road that is currently auditioning to become part of the ocean.”

I scrolled down to the reviews.

“There is exactly one recent review,” I added. “It says RUN in all caps.”

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