Chapter 3
Of course it is, Vivian thought. The man probably didn’t sleep—he just charged like a phone while standing by the window, brooding over corporate strategy and black coffee.
She straightened her shoulders and knocked lightly on the glass door to his office.
“Come in.”
His voice, cool and calm, carried like silk through the space. Vivian opened the door to find him standing by the window, coffee in hand, wearing a dark blue suit that looked custom-made for every inch of him.
“Good morning,” she said, hoping her voice didn’t crack.
He turned and gave her a once-over — not inappropriate, but definitely a pause before meeting her eyes. “You’re early.”
“You said 8. I plan on earning this job.”
Adrian's mouth twitched into the hint of a smile. “I like early.”
He walked over to his desk and tapped a folder on top. “Your first task. Review the Dixon campaign brief. We’re presenting in three days. I want your notes by lunch.”
Vivian nodded, taking the folder. “Understood.”
She turned to leave, but his voice stopped her.
“Vivian?”
She looked back.
“Don’t be afraid to disagree with me.”
She blinked. “Most people are.”
He nodded, expression unreadable. “That’s why I said it.”
The morning passed in a blur of emails, strategy decks, and trying not to spill her oat milk latte all over her desk.
Vivian devoured the Dixon file, scribbled notes in the margins, and typed up a polished summary with suggestions. At exactly 11:55, she walked into Adrian’s office with it.
He took it without a word, eyes scanning the page.
After a long pause, he said, “You’re bolder than I expected.”
“Too bold?” she asked.
He looked up. “Not at all.”
Their eyes locked again, and for a moment, the silence was thick enough to touch. Something about the way he looked at her made her stomach flip.
She shifted. “If there’s anything you’d like me to change
“No,” he said. “Keep this energy.”
Then he turned back to his laptop, and just like that, the moment ended.
By Friday, Vivian had settled into a routine: coffee by 7:45, review emails, anticipate Adrian’s needs before he even voiced them. She prided herself on efficiency, but her pulse still jumped every time he walked by. She told herself it was professional respect. Admiration. Maybe a little awe.
But that didn’t explain the way she felt when he leaned over her desk to point out a line in a document, his cologne curling around her senses. Or the way his voice dropped when they reviewed late-night revisions in the empty conference room.
Or the fact that he never, ever touched her but it felt like he did.
Friday evening, as most of the office cleared out for happy hour, Adrian called out from his office, “Vivian. Can I see you for a moment?”
Her heart did a tiny pirouette in her chest.
She walked in, and he gestured toward the open seat. “Shut the door?”
Closed door. Quiet office. Low lighting.
Dangerous.
“I wanted to say something before the weekend,” he said, leaning forward with his elbows on the desk. “You’ve been impressive. Focused. Precise.”
“Thank you.”
“Most assistants wait to be told what to do. You anticipate.”
Vivian hesitated, unsure what to say to that kind of praise. “I want to be valuable here.”
“You already are.”
The compliment hung in the air like static.
He stood, hands sliding into his pockets, and for the first time, he didn’t look like the impenetrable CEO.
He looked like a man deciding whether to say something he shouldn't.
“I expect a lot,” he said, stepping closer, voice quieter now. “But not just from anyone. Only from people who matter.”
Vivian felt her throat tighten. “And do I?”
Adrian’s eyes darkened, and for a terrifying second, she thought he might close the distance between them. Touch her. Say something irrevocable.
But then the moment passed. He blinked, stepping back like he’d just remembered where he was.
“Have a good weekend, Vivian.”
She stood, confused, heart pounding. “You too, Mr. Hart.”
And as she walked out of the office, she realized something:
This job wasn’t going to just change her career.
It was going to change everything
Chapter 4
The city was soaked in a summer downpour as the SUV rolled slowly through midtown, windshield wipers slicing through the blur of headlights and rain. Inside the quiet cabin, the tension between Vivian and Adrian had shifted — no longer restrained or awkward, but full of something unnamed. Something powerful.
He was still watching her. She could feel it even as she stared out the window.
“Vivian,” he said softly.
She turned, slowly. His gray eyes were darker in the low light, not cold now, but searching.
“I meant what I said earlier,” he murmured. “About you being exceptional. About this thing between us.”
Her heart beat louder in her chest.
“I know the rules,” he continued. “I know I’m your boss. But somewhere between our first meeting and that meeting today… I stopped thinking of you as just my assistant.”
Vivian’s voice was barely more than a whisper. “Then what am I?”
Adrian leaned in slightly, closing the space between them just enough to make her breath catch. “The person who makes me want to break my own rules.”
It would’ve been easy to pull away. Safer.
But she didn’t want safe. Not with him.
So she leaned in too.
Their lips met in the middle — not with hesitation, but with heat. With months of unspoken feelings crashing in a single, perfect kiss. The kind that made time stall, the kind that felt like a beginning and an answer all at once.
By the time the car rolled to a stop in front of her apartment, the storm outside had begun to fade.
Adrian opened the door and stepped out first. Then, instead of just saying goodbye, he walked her to the entrance of her building, close beneath the umbrella, his hand brushing hers.
They stopped in front of the door. The air was cool and quiet.
“I don’t want this to be a one-time thing,” he said.
Vivian searched his face. “Then don’t let it be.”
He hesitated — the CEO who always had the next ten steps mapped out — suddenly unsure.
“I’ve spent so long keeping walls up,” he said. “You make me want to tear them down.”
Vivian smiled, stepping closer. “Then let’s start here. No titles. No power dynamics. Just… us.”
Adrian looked at her for a long moment. And then he nodded, like he was finally surrendering — not to her, but to the truth that had been chasing them both since the day they met.
“Okay,” he whispered. “Us.”
He kissed her again — this time slower, with a kind of certainty that wrapped around her heart and held tight.
And just like that, the storm passed
Six Months Later
The office of Hart & Phoenix buzzed with energy. Vivian Carter was no longer an assistant — now she headed her own accounts, and Adrian had stepped back slightly from day-to-day operations.
No whispers. No secrets. Just admiration — for the work, and for each other.
As she crossed the lobby one morning, Adrian met her halfway, coffee in hand, smile already in place.
“For you,” he said, holding it out.
She took it with a smirk. “Trying to bribe me into approving your latest pitch?”
“Maybe,” he said, brushing a kiss to her cheek. “Or maybe I just really like spoiling my girlfriend.”
She rolled her eyes. “You're lucky I like you.”
“Like?” he teased. “I’m going to have to work harder than that.”
Vivian laughed as they walked into the elevator together — side by side now. No barriers. No lines to cross.
Just something real. And it was just getting started.
The End.❤️