The Woman Who Vanished for Three Years Walked Into His Company on Her First Day-yumihong

The office smelled like burnt coffee and printer heat when the doors opened.

Leather soles struck polished tile in slow, measured steps, and every chair in the secretary room scraped back at once. No one needed an introduction. Fear moved faster than words there.

Thẩm Dĩ An looked up with a pen still in her hand and saw the man she had accidentally fallen into, kicked, touched, and fled from a week earlier walking in under the cold morning light like the building itself belonged to him.

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It did.

Cố Ngôn Dật did not pause. He did not smile properly. His gaze crossed the room, found her, and stayed there just long enough to make her stomach drop.

‘Good morning, Assistant Shen.’

Then he walked past her and into the executive suite that had stayed closed all week.

Her phone vibrated under the desk before she could breathe again.

The screen showed the same blank white profile photo she had been avoiding.

Three years. One hundred and nine calls. Twenty-eight emails. One night outside your grandmother’s gate. 8 p.m. Rooftop. This time, do not run.

Her fingers went so cold she nearly dropped the phone.

Before any of this, before the black suit and the locked office and the message that made her hands shake, Cố Ngôn Dật had been the boy across the door.

Their mothers had shared recipes, gossip, and the kind of shameless affection that makes children grow up half in one home and half in the other. When Dĩ An was ten, she used to hammer on his door at 6:30 every morning because he was impossible to wake. When she was fourteen, he fixed her bike chain in the rain and called her ungrateful when she thanked him. When she was seventeen, he stood outside her exam hall with warm soy milk because she always forgot breakfast on important days.

He had never spoken gently, but he had always shown up.

That was why the silence that followed hurt so much.

The summer before he left to study abroad, everyone around them joked that their families would skip introductions and go straight to planning a wedding. Dĩ An had laughed louder than anyone, then gone home and stared at her ceiling until dawn.

She liked him. She had liked him long enough for it to feel stitched into her bones. She liked the way he remembered her math weakness and her favorite dumpling filling. She liked the way he looked bored with the world and patient only with her.

Then came the night that ruined everything.

It was the Qixi festival, hot and crowded, with paper lanterns hanging over the street and sugar smoke in the air. Dĩ An had been tipsy, emotional, and stupid enough to think courage and alcohol were the same thing.

Later, half hidden behind a food stall, she saw Cố Ngôn Dật holding a pale pink envelope.

On the front was Lâm Vãn’s handwriting.

Dĩ An knew that handwriting. She had borrowed notes from it for years.

Cố Ngôn Dật was looking for someone in the crowd, his jaw tight, the envelope in his hand. In her chest, something folded in on itself. She did not wait for context. She did not ask one question.

By sunrise, she had blocked him everywhere.

A week later, he was gone.

At the time, it felt like survival. Looking back, it looked more like fear wearing good manners.

Monday dragged like punishment.

Every sound felt too sharp. The click of keyboards. The hiss of the copier. The soft, terrified tone her coworkers used whenever the CEO’s office line lit up. Dĩ An made three spelling mistakes in one email, spilled tea on a printed report, and nearly called her section chief ‘Mom.’

At lunch, her team leader, Trương Khắc, sat across from her with his tray untouched.

‘You did not know him before this job, right?’ he asked carefully.

She nearly choked on her rice. ‘Why would you ask that?’

‘Because the boss never looks at people twice,’ he said. ‘He looked at you once and the room lost ten degrees.’

Vương Lãng, who feared gossip less than unemployment, leaned over with a whisper. ‘He approved your hire personally. HR thought that was strange.’

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