CHAPTER 1: The Maid With No Name
Alina’s POV
Aiden Sinclair didn’t believe in coincidences.
Everything in his life was a calculated move on a very expensive chessboard—corporate takeovers, power dinners, betrayals cloaked as loyalty. Control was his currency, and he dealt in it with ruthless precision. He didn’t allow chaos, and he never lost.
Which was why, when he found a barefoot maid standing outside his private study at 2:04 a.m., staring at the locked door like it held the answers to the universe, his thoughts didn’t lean toward innocence.
He chalked it up to something else entirely.
Fate. Or worse—espionage.
“You lost?” His voice cut through the silence, low and cold, like a blade dragged across glass.
The girl jolted as if pulled from a trance. She turned toward him sharply, posture stiff and alert. The feather duster in her hand dropped to the floor with a soft thud. Her hair was a mess of curls, hastily tied back in a bun that had clearly lost the fight hours ago. Her uniform hung a little loose, as though she’d grabbed someone else’s by mistake. Nothing about her looked prepared.
But her eyes… her eyes were anything but unprepared.
Hazel. Not dull. Not tired. But sharp. Alive. Curious. Flecks of gold shimmered as the overhead light flickered. Those were not the eyes of someone who’d been cleaning grout or dusting chandeliers all day.
“I—I was cleaning,” she said.
Too calm.
Too steady.
Aiden took a slow step forward, arms folded across his chest. His tailored shirt stretched across his shoulders, crisp even at this ungodly hour. “Cleaning the air outside a locked office?”
Her lips parted, just slightly. “I got turned around. This house is enormous.”
House.
Not estate. Not manor. Too casual. Too practiced.
He tilted his head. “You’re new.”
“Yes. Today was my first shift.”
She held his gaze. Didn’t drop it. That was the first red flag.
“Yet you’re already wandering down restricted halls?”
“I didn’t know they were restricted,” she replied smoothly. Her chin lifted by just a fraction. A subtle sign of defiance. She didn’t flinch. She didn’t shrink. She didn’t look like she feared him.
That made her dangerous.
Aiden stepped closer, noting the way her shoulders tensed. “Most new hires don’t come near this wing.”
“I wasn’t trying to do anything wrong.” Her voice was soft but firm. “I was just walking.”
The way she said it' walking"like she had every right to be there. Not sneaking. Not hiding. Just walking.
He studied her carefully now. Every detail. The slight stain of dust near her elbow. The faint scar peeking from the neckline of her blouse. Her shoes were missing entirely why?
He didn’t like puzzles unless he was the one putting the pieces together.
“You’ve got five seconds to tell me your real name,” he said, voice dropping to something darker. “Or I call security.”
She didn’t blink. Didn’t show fear.
“My name is Alina.”
“Alina what?”
A pause.
Intentional.
“Just Alina.”
A slow smirk curved his lips. “Mysterious. How original.”
Her eyes narrowed slightly. “Do you always interrogate your staff at midnight, or am I the exception?”
“Special,” he said. He took another step forward. He was close enough now to see the flutter of her pulse at the base of her throat. “Because you’re lying. And I want to know why.”
The air shifted between them.
She didn’t break eye contact. She stared at him the way a panther might stare at a lion. Measuring. Calculating. Not afraid, but cautious.
“Are you always this paranoid?” she asked quietly.
He let out a short laugh. Low. Dangerous. “Only when someone pretends to be something they’re not.”
Then
A door creaked open somewhere down the hall.
Alina’s head snapped toward the sound. Her body went rigid.
And in that tiny moment, something changed in her eyes.
Not fear of him.
Fear of whoever—or whatever—was down that hall.
Interesting.
Aiden watched her. He didn’t speak. Just observed.
She was trying to decide something. Her jaw was tight. Her hands clenched into fists at her sides, then relaxed.
“Do you need someone to walk you back to the maid’s quarters?” he asked, voice now laced with mock courtesy.
“No,” she said too quickly.
His brow arched. “Suit yourself. But next time you decide to wander, make sure you’re not being followed.”
Her gaze snapped back to him. “What do you mean?”
He didn’t answer. He was already walking away, footsteps echoing in the marble corridor.
“Just a hunch,” he called back. “Goodnight… Alina.”
Her name tasted strange on his tongue.
He didn’t believe for a second that was her real name. But it would do—for now.
As his footsteps faded, Alina finally let out a breath she hadn’t realized she was holding. Her heart was racing, not from panic, but from something else.
He knew.
Or he was close.
She turned back toward the study door, the one he’d caught her staring at. She reached for the knob again, fingers brushing the metal. It didn’t budge. Of course not. It was coded, encrypted, and locked behind a biometric scan.
Untouchable. For now.
But nothing stayed locked forever.
Behind that door were files her mother had whispered about. On nights when the pain was too much and the memories too heavy. Files that could either destroy Sinclair Holdings or save it depending on who opened them.
She forced herself to pull away, turning back down the hallway, steps soft and silent.
She didn’t notice the slight shift in shadows near the grandfather clock.
Didn’t hear the faint tap of a phone screen.
Didn’t sense the pair of eyes locked onto her from the darkness.
Someone else had been watching.
Not just watching… recording.
And unlike Aiden
They already knew exactly who she was.
And exactly what she had come for.