Lila Hart stood in the center of her one-bedroom apartment, surrounded by half-packed boxes and the bittersweet clutter of her life after college. The echoes of her parents’ concerned voices still lingered from the phone call an hour ago.
“Maybe you should just move back home until you figure things out, Lila,” her mother had suggested, her tone thinly veiled with worry. “There’s no shame in it.”
But Lila couldn’t do that. She had spent four years clawing her way through exams, internships, and late-night coffee-fueled essays to break free from her small Midwestern hometown. She had earned her degree in Communications with every intention of conquering the world or at least finding a decent job. Yet here she was, three months later, with her savings dwindling, a pile of rejection emails in her inbox, and a deepening sense of uncertainty.
The only bright spot was the cryptic email that had landed in her inbox that morning.
Dear Ms. Hart,
We’ve reviewed your application and would like to invite you to interview for the role of Personal Assistant at Morningstar Enterprises.
Please report to our downtown headquarters at 10:00 a.m. tomorrow.
She didn’t remember applying for the job, but at this point, she wasn’t in a position to be picky. Morningstar Enterprises was a mysterious yet powerful conglomerate she had only vaguely heard about a company that owned everything from luxury hotels to cutting-edge tech firms. A position there could be her ticket out of mediocrity.
“I’m going to nail this,” she muttered, standing straighter in the mirror and smoothing the fabric of her navy blazer. “No plan B.”
The Morningstar Enterprises headquarters towered over the city, a sleek, black glass monolith that seemed to absorb the sunlight rather than reflect it. Lila felt a shiver crawl up her spine as she approached the revolving doors. There was something almost... otherworldly about the building.
Inside, the air was cool and fragrant, smelling faintly of cedar and something sharper she couldn’t quite place. The receptionist at the marble desk barely glanced up as she directed Lila to the top floor, where the CEO’s office awaited.
The CEO? Lila thought, her stomach twisting into knots. She hadn’t expected to interview directly with the head of the company.
The elevator ride to the top was eerily silent. There were no music, no button labels, just a faint hum that made her ears pop as she ascended. When the doors opened, she stepped into a hallway lined with dark wood paneling and abstract art. At the end of the corridor stood a pair of massive, polished black doors.
Taking a deep breath, Lila pushed them open.
The office was a work of art. Floor-to-ceiling windows framed a breathtaking view of the city skyline, while the furniture was a blend of sleek modernity and old-world luxury. A massive black desk dominated the room, and behind it sat a man who looked more like a myth than a corporate executive.
He was impossibly handsome, with chiseled cheekbones, a strong jawline, and eyes so dark they seemed to hold secrets no human should ever know. His raven-black hair was perfectly styled, and he wore a tailored suit that fit him like a second skin. But it wasn’t just his appearance it was the way he carried himself, as if he owned not just the room, but the world.
“You must be Lila Hart,” he said, his voice smooth and deep, like velvet dipped in smoke.
Lila hesitated for a moment before stepping forward, forcing herself to meet his gaze. “Yes. And you are...?”
He smiled, and it was a slow, dangerous thing that made her pulse quicken against her will. “Dante Morningstar. CEO of Morningstar Enterprises.”
She cleared her throat, determined to remain professional. “Thank you for inviting me to interview. I’ll admit, I wasn’t expecting to meet with you personally.”
“Call it a... personal interest,” he replied, gesturing for her to sit in one of the leather chairs across from his desk. “Your resume caught my attention.”
As she sat, Lila couldn’t shake the feeling that he was studying her not in the way employers typically did, but as if he were looking straight through her, peeling back layers she didn’t even know she had.
“I see you graduated top of your class,” he said, glancing at a file on his desk. “Ambitious. Resourceful. Not afraid to take risks.”
“I try,” Lila said, struggling to keep her voice steady. “But I believe actions speak louder than words.”
“Good,” Dante said, leaning back in his chair. “Because the position you’ve applied for requires someone who isn’t easily intimidated.”
The way he said it sent a shiver down her spine, but she forced herself to hold his gaze. “I can handle it.”
For a moment, the room seemed to grow darker, as if the sunlight streaming through the windows had dimmed. Dante’s smile widened ever so slightly, and Lila could have sworn she saw a flicker of something... otherworldly in his eyes.
“I hope you’re right, Miss Hart,” he said, his voice almost a purr. “Because once you’re in, there’s no turning back.”
The interview ended abruptly after that. Dante didn’t ask any of the usual questions about her experience or skills. Instead, he offered her the job on the spot, handed her a contract that seemed far too thick for a simple assistant position, and told her to report back the next day.
As Lila left the building, her thoughts were a tangled mess. She should have been thrilled this was exactly the kind of break she had been waiting for. But something about Dante Morningstar didn’t sit right with her.
The way he had looked at her, the way he had spoken it was as if he already knew her, as if he had been waiting for her to walk through those doors.
Shaking off the uneasy feeling, she resolved to focus on the opportunity at hand. Whatever weird vibe Dante Morningstar gave off, she could handle it.
But as she stepped onto the street and glanced back at the imposing tower of black glass, she couldn’t shake the feeling that her life was about to change in ways she couldn’t begin to imagine.
And she had no idea that she had just made a deal with the Devil himself or rather, his son.