The elevator doors slid open with a polished chime, and the air changed.
It wasn’t just colder—though Vale Enterprises’ headquarters clearly believed in arctic-level air conditioning—it was sharper. The kind of sharpness that made you stand straighter, fix your posture, and check that you weren’t chewing gum.
“Top floor,” the receptionist had said, her eyes full of something between pity and amusement. “Good luck.”
Elena stepped into the hallway, her bright yellow dress a glaring splash of color against the monochrome world of steel, glass, and silent employees who moved like shadows. Everyone was dressed in shades of black, grey, or navy. She looked like she’d just wandered in from a summer garden party.
Perfect.
If Adrian Vale was half the arrogant control freak the media claimed, her outfit alone would make him twitch.
She found his office at the far end of the corridor—double glass doors, frosted at the bottom, with a discreet silver nameplate. Adrian Vale – CEO.
She knocked once.
“Enter.”
The voice was deep, clipped, and utterly disinterested.
Elena stepped inside. The office was a study in ruthless minimalism—black marble desk, a single wall of books, floor-to-ceiling windows that framed the skyline. And behind the desk sat Adrian Vale himself.
He was… annoyingly perfect. Broad shoulders under a tailored charcoal suit, dark hair slicked back with precision, jawline sharp enough to cut glass. His eyes—icy gray—lifted from a document and landed on her.
She didn’t miss the faint pause. A fraction of a second where his gaze took her in from head to toe, lingering just long enough to register surprise before his expression returned to arctic neutrality.
“Elena Carter,” she said, stepping forward with a professional smile. Marketing consultant. I believe you called me in to rescue your product launch?”
His brow ticked up. “Rescue is a dramatic word.”
“From what I’ve heard,” she replied lightly, “so is Ice King. But we’re here, and I’m on the clock, so shall we skip the pleasantries?”
For the first time, the corner of his mouth twitched—almost a smirk, almost approval.
He gestured to the chair opposite his desk. “Sit. Impress me.”
Oh, he had no idea.