The gates of the Sterling Estate didn't just open; they retreated. They were towering iron structures that seemed to groan under the weight of the history they protected. Elara Vance sat in the back of the black town car, her fingers twisting the hem of her modest blazer. She was twenty-four, a graduate of child psychology with a debt load that felt like a physical weight, and she was about to walk into the lion’s den.
"Mr. Sterling is a stickler for punctuality," the driver, a man named Harris who looked like he hadn't smiled since the nineties, muttered. "And silence. He likes silence."
Elara nodded, her throat dry. She had seen Alaric Sterling on the cover of Forbes and Vogue Business. He was the "Ice King of Wall Street," a man who had turned a struggling shipping empire into a global tech and real estate juggernaut before his thirtieth birthday. But to Elara, he was just a father who couldn't keep a nanny for more than a month.
The car pulled up to a sprawling glass-and-steel mansion that overlooked the Hudson River. It looked less like a home and more like a museum of modern loneliness.
Inside, the air smelled of expensive sandalwood and filtered oxygen. She was led to a study where the walls were lined with books that looked like they had never been read. At the desk sat Alaric. He was more striking in person—his hair was the color of midnight, and his features looked as though they had been carved from marble by a sculptor who didn't believe in mercy.
"Miss Vance," he said, not looking up from his tablet. His voice was a rich, low vibration. "Your references are impeccable. Dr. Aris says you have a 'soft touch' with difficult cases."
"I don't think children are 'cases,' Mr. Sterling," Elara said.
Alaric stopped. He looked up, and for a moment, the air left the room. His eyes were a piercing, glacial blue. "Leo is not a normal child. He hasn't spoken a word since his mother passed two years ago. He is the heir to this firm. He needs discipline and a path back to functionality. Can you provide that?"
"He needs a person, not a program," Elara countered, her heart hammering.
Alaric leaned back, his gaze raking over her. He wasn't used to being challenged. A slow, dangerous curiosity flickered in his eyes. "You have thirty days. If there is no progress, Harris will drive you back to the city. My assistant will show you to your quarters."
He went back to his tablet. The interview was over. But as Elara turned to leave, she felt his eyes on her back—a heat that contradicted his cold demeanor.