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Stay Silent, Don’t Speak, Danger Awaits: The Young Woman Without…

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29October2025

Stay still, dont say a word, youre in danger.
The ragclad girl with tangled hair and grimestained cheeks yanked the tycoon into a deadend alley and pressed her lips to his in a frantic bid to save his life and that was the end of it.

Stay still. Dont speak. Youre in danger.

Those words sliced through the night like a cold blade. I, Ethan Cross, chief executive of CrossTech Industries, felt my heart seize. Just moments before I had slipped out of my car onto a dim path behind The Savoy, trying to dodge the throng of photographers waiting for me at the entrance. Now a dishevelled teenager, her hair in knots, her face smudged with dirt, was dragging me into the shadows.

Before I could even ask who she was, she had already pressed her mouth to mine.

For an instant everything halted. The smell of rain, the tremor of my hands on the collar of my shirt, the distant hum of trafficall melted into a deafening silence. Then a black limousine roared past the alley, its windows smoked, lights off. A man leaned out of the window, scanning the street. My pulse hammered. Whoever they were, they were after me

The girlbarely twenty, wearing a torn hoodiesidestepped first.

Youre safe now, she whispered. Youd have been spotted if youd looked up.

I blinked, bewildered. Who are you?

It doesnt matter, she replied, stepping back. You shouldnt be out here alone. Not tonight.

I could have run. Something in her voicesteady, firm despite the chillmade me stay. Did you know they were after me?

I notice things, she said simply. When you live on the streets you learn to watch before you move.

Her name, I learned later, was Poppy Hart. Shed been homeless for two years, sleeping by the railway station. And that night she had saved the life of one of the richest men in London.

Im not a man who lets debts linger or questions go unanswered.

That night was not the end of our story. It was only the beginning.

Three days later I tracked her down again. I put my security team on her traila difficult task, as Poppy stayed off the radar, sleeping in different shelters each night. When I finally saw her in front of a community centre, she seemed smaller than I remembered, but her eyessharp, grey, unflinching met mine instantly.

Didnt I tell you not to follow? she snapped.

You saved my life, I said. At least let me thank you properly.

She didnt want my money. People like you give charity to feel better about yourselves. Im not after handouts.

Then work for me, I offered. You have instincts most people never develop.

She laughed, a sharp, humorless sound. You want to hire a homeless girl who sleeps under bridges?

Yes, I replied, straightforward.

Weeks passed before she begrudgingly accepted a temporary role on my security team. At first the staff despised her. A woman with no background check, no degree, no permanent address had no place in our world. Yet Poppy possessed something they lacked: intuition. She could sense when something was offa stranger loitering too long, a car parked too close.

Soon I realised she wasnt just protecting me; she was showing me how blind I had become. You live behind a pane of glass, she once said. People see you, but you dont see them.

I began to listento her, to her colleagues, even to the city that had built my empire. As weeks turned into months, my respect for her grew. Wed share latenight coffee in my office, our laughter echoing off the windows. She never flirted, but when she smiled, I forgot the power I wielded and how little it truly mattered.

Then, one night, the same dark black sedan appeared outside her apartment block. This time, the target was Poppy.

The bullet meant for me found her instead.

In a flash there was a crack of shattered glass, a scream swallowed by the street. My security team tackled the shooter before he could reach the pavement, but all I saw was Poppy collapse onto the marble floor, blood blooming on her sleeve.

Stay with me, I urged, pressing my hand to the wound. Her eyes fluttered, hazy yet calm. I cant seem to stay away from trouble, she whispered weakly.

The hospital lights seemed endless. Hours passed before a doctor finally emerged, saying she would liveif she survived at all. I spent the whole night outside her room, the words Id once said to her looping in my mind: You live behind a pane of glass. He was right. I had built walls of money and reputation to keep the world out; she had shattered them with a single, desperate kiss.

Five weeks later, when Poppy finally woke, I was there. Youre dismissed, I said softly, trying to reclaim some semblance of control.

She smiled faintly. You cant fire yourself. Ive made you head of my personal security.

She rolled her eyes. Youre impossible.

Maybe, I admitted. But I owe you my life, twice over.

While she recovered, I arranged quietly for a modest flat, a stipend for university tuition, and a fresh start not as a favour, but because I trusted someone who could see beyond my glass.

A week later we walked together through HydePark, leaves rustling like whispered secrets. She turned to me. You could have stayed in your tower. Why did you come down?

I looked at her and answered, Because sometimes the person who saves you doesnt pull you out of danger. They pull you out of yourself.

Lesson learned: wealth and position are only as solid as the honesty of the eyes that look back at you.

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