Chapter 4: The Wolf and the Lamb

529 Words
"Professor?" I squeaked, my hands gripping the armrests of the chair until my knuckles turned white. Adrian stopped. He looked down at me, his eyes filled with dark amusement. Then, without a word, he walked right past me. He didn't touch me. He didn't push me onto the desk. He walked over to a small cabinet, poured himself another glass of whiskey, and pointed a long finger toward the corner of the room. "The computer is over there, Miss Lin. That pile of case files won't digitize itself." I sat there, blinking. My heart was still hammering against my ribs like a trapped bird. "Did you think I was going to r****h you on the rug?" he asked, taking a sip of his drink. His voice was dripping with mockery. My face burned so hot I thought I might catch fire. "I... You locked the door." " value my privacy," he said coolly. "I don't like to be disturbed when I work. And since you are now part of my work, you are locked in with me." He sat down in his massive leather chair and opened a file, dismissing me completely. "Get to work, Maya. Clock is ticking." I scrambled out of the chair and practically ran to the computer desk in the corner. I needed to be as far away from him as possible. I sat down, turned on the PC, and tried to breathe. Stupid, stupid, stupid, I scolded myself. He is a Professor. You are a student. He hates you. For the next two hours, the only sounds in the room were the clicking of my keyboard and the occasional turning of a page from his desk. But the silence wasn't peaceful. It was heavy. Every time I moved, I felt his eyes on me. Sometimes, when I looked up, I caught him watching me over the rim of his glass. He didn't look away. He just stared, intense and unreadable, until I looked down first. My fingers ached. The legal notes were dry and boring—complex corporate laws and old precedents. It was torture. "Break," his voice cut through the silence. I stopped typing. "I'm not tired, Sir." "I didn't ask if you were tired. I said take a break. I don't want you making typos because your blood sugar is low." He stood up and walked over to the fireplace. He picked up a tablet that was resting on the mantelpiece. I stood up to stretch my legs. I was stiff. I walked over to his desk to place the stack of finished papers. "I finished the frantic files, Professor," I said. He didn't answer. He was engrossed in whatever he was reading on his tablet. His expression had changed. The cold, hard mask was gone. He looked... captivated. His lips were parted slightly, his breathing a little heavier. Curiosity got the better of me. I leaned forward just an inch to see what was so important that it made the Ice King look human. I froze. I knew that text. I knew that font. On the screen, white text on a black background, was a chapter from a book. My book.
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