If someone had told me that my first job at nineteen would involve being bullied by an eighteen-year-old girl, I would’ve laughed. Then cried. Then applied to mop floors at McDonald’s instead.
But no, fate decided I should work at Thircrosoft Company — the biggest tech firm in Los Angeles — under the one boss who could make Satan himself file a complaint with HR.
Her name? Emma Thircroft.
My boss. My nightmare. My bully.
“Winton!”
The door slammed open with enough force to rattle the glass walls. Emma strutted in like the office was her personal runway, her heels clicking like gunshots. She had the kind of face that could launch a thousand i********: accounts and the kind of attitude that could sink a thousand ships.
“Where’s my coffee?” she demanded.
I blinked at her. “Uh… I’m a computer analyst, not a Starbucks employee.”
Gasps echoed from the desks around me. My coworkers froze like meerkats spotting a hawk.
Emma’s eyes narrowed dangerously. “Then consider this… a promotion to coffee-fetching specialist.” She tossed a crumpled dollar bill onto my desk.
I picked it up between two fingers. “Wow. One whole dollar. At this rate, I’ll be a millionaire by the time I’m eighty.”
A few stifled laughs erupted. Emma shot them a glare so sharp the room went silent again. She leaned closer, her perfume like roses dipped in venom.
“You think you’re funny, Winton?” she asked softly.
“Sometimes. Mostly when I’m asleep.”
Her smile didn’t reach her eyes. “Coffee. Black. Two sugars. You’ve got five minutes.”
And just like that, I was promoted from computer genius to errand boy.
---
The break room looked innocent enough — until I met the coffee machine. It had more buttons than the space shuttle and made sounds that suggested it hated me personally.
“Alright, buddy,” I muttered, jabbing buttons at random. “Just give me something dark and caffeinated. Preferably not explosive.”
The machine hissed, clanked, and finally coughed out a liquid that looked like coffee but smelled like regret.
I carried the cup back carefully, praying Emma’s wrath wouldn’t involve physical violence.
She took one sip, gagged, and spat it back into the cup. “What is this?”
“Character development,” I said. “It builds patience.”
Her glare could’ve melted steel. “You’re impossible.”
“Thanks. I try.”
For a moment, I thought she might hurl the cup at my head. But then her phone buzzed. She glanced at the screen, and something strange happened: the smirk disappeared. Her fingers trembled slightly as she shoved the phone into her bag.
“I’m leaving early,” she muttered, standing so fast her chair squeaked.
I frowned. “Everything okay?”
Her eyes flicked to me — sharp, unreadable — then away. “None of your business, Winton.”
And just like that, she was gone.
I should’ve gone back to my computer. I should’ve minded my own business. But the look on her face stuck with me. It wasn’t the look of a bully getting her daily thrill. It was fear.
And I had no idea yet, but that moment was the beginning of everything.
Scene 3 – Following the Boss
Emma didn’t just leave. She bolted.
One minute she was strutting across the office like a queen, the next she was halfway down the hallway with her phone clutched so tightly it looked like she was trying to crush it into diamonds.
I stared at her empty chair.
Normal employees don’t scare me. They yell, they glare, they threaten to call HR because I “accidentally” compared their spreadsheet to cave paintings—whatever. But this… this was different. Emma’s exit wasn’t drama. It was fear.
And as much as she bullied me, I couldn’t shake the image of her pale face when she looked at that phone screen.
“Don’t do it, Winton,” I muttered to myself. “Stay in your lane. Keep your head down. You need this paycheck.”
Two seconds later, I was stuffing my laptop into my bag and following her out the door.
Because clearly, I have zero self-control.
---
Scene 4 – Strange Shadows
The Los Angeles evening buzzed with traffic. Emma’s sleek black car was parked by the curb, but she wasn’t inside it. Instead, she stood a few steps away, talking in quick, clipped tones on her phone.
I ducked behind a lamppost like some budget version of James Bond.
That’s when I noticed them.
Two men. Leaning casually by a silver SUV across the street. Sunglasses at dusk, leather jackets, the kind of posture that screamed I’ve buried bodies and would happily add yours to the list.
Emma hung up, glanced around nervously, then walked faster toward her car. The men exchanged a look and pushed off the SUV.
My stomach dropped.
This was none of my business. Absolutely none. But my feet were already moving before my brain had a chance to veto.
---
Scene 5 – The First Confrontation
“Ms. Thircroft.”
The taller of the two men stepped into Emma’s path, his voice low and smooth. “Our boss has been waiting for your reply.”
Emma froze. Her hand tightened on her purse. “Tell him I don’t owe him anything.”
The second man chuckled darkly. “That’s not how it works. You know the rules. He doesn’t like to be… ignored.”
I should’ve walked away. I should’ve called the cops. But instead, I opened my mouth, because apparently my survival instinct is broken.
“There you are, honey!”
Both men turned. Emma’s eyes widened.
I strode over like I’d been looking for her all night. Slipping an arm lightly around her shoulders, I plastered on my best goofy smile. “Sorry I’m late. Traffic, you know how it is. Did I miss the fun part?”
Emma stiffened like I’d just kissed her in front of CNN cameras.
The taller man frowned. “Who’s this?”
I laughed, squeezing her shoulder just enough to sell the act. “Me? Oh, I’m her boyfriend. We were just headed to dinner. Romantic Italian place, candlelight, overpriced pasta—the whole cliché.”
Emma made a strangled noise in her throat. I couldn’t tell if it was panic, fury, or both.
The men exchanged a glance. “Our boss doesn’t like interruptions.”
“Cool,” I said, nodding. “But here’s the thing—physics.”
They blinked. “What?”
“Physics. Newton’s Third Law of Motion,” I explained cheerfully. “Every action has an equal and opposite reaction. You try to hurt her, the reaction won’t just come from me—it’ll come from the cops, the company, maybe even CNN. Bad press, bad karma, bad night for everyone. Not worth it, right?”
For a long, tense moment, no one moved.
Then the taller man sneered. “We’ll be seeing you again, Ms. Thircroft.”
With that, they turned and stalked back to their SUV. The engine roared to life, and within seconds, they were gone.
---
Scene 6 – Aftermath
Emma wrenched herself out of my grasp and spun on me, eyes blazing. “What the hell was that?”
I raised my hands. “Uh… saving your life?”
“I didn’t ask you to interfere!”
“Yeah, well, I didn’t ask to be demoted to Coffee Boy either, but here we are.”
She gaped at me like she couldn’t believe my audacity. Which, fair. Even I couldn’t believe my audacity.
“You could’ve been killed,” she snapped.
I shrugged. “So could you. At least this way, neither of us is currently bleeding. You’re welcome, by the way.”
Her mouth opened, then closed again. For the first time since I’d met her, Emma Thircroft looked… speechless.
She shoved her car keys into her hand and muttered, “Stay out of my business, Winton.”
Then she jumped into her car, slammed the door, and sped away.
I stood there on the curb, heart still hammering, wondering what mess I’d just stumbled into.
One thing was certain, though.
Emma wasn’t just my boss anymore. She was a target.
And for reasons I didn’t fully understand yet, I had just volunteered to be her shield.
---
Scene 7 – Hook Ending
I slung my bag over my shoulder and started walking back toward the bus stop. My hands were still shaking, but my brain wouldn’t stop replaying the confrontation.
Physics. Really, Winton? That was the best I could come up with?
But it had worked. At least for tonight.
And as the city lights flickered on around me, I realized something terrifying.
This wasn’t going to be a one-time thing.
Those men would be back. Their boss—whoever he was—wouldn’t let this go.
And Emma? She was in deeper trouble than she wanted anyone to know.
I sighed, shoving my hands into my pockets.
“That was the moment I realized,” I muttered to myself, “if I didn’t protect her… no one else would.”