The Interview
The elevator doors slid open with a soft chime that somehow sounded more judgmental than welcoming.
Sophie Gray adjusted the folded parts at the end of her sleeves and told herself, Don’t fidget. Billionaires can smell fear.
The reception area of Thorne Enterprises was all glass, steel, and silence, the kind of silence that made you feel like you were trespassing somewhere important. A wall of floor-to-ceiling windows framed the Manhattan skyline, glittering like it knew it was better than her.
It reminded her of another skyline years ago, from the backseat of her father’s car. She shook off the memory before it could take shape. This wasn’t the time to think about the past or the man who’d taught her that the world of power was never kind.
“Ms. Gray?” The receptionist’s tone was clipped, professional. “Mr. Thorne will see you now.”
Sophie’s pulse kicked.
Already? She hadn’t even had time to breathe or Google how not to look poor in front of a billionaire.
She followed the receptionist down a corridor lined with abstract art worth more than her apartment building. At the end of it, a set of glass doors stood open.
Inside, Damian Thorne sat behind a desk the size of a small yacht, looking like the cover of a business magazine brought to life, dark suit, darker eyes, and an expression that could freeze water.
He didn’t look up when she entered.
He didn’t have to. His presence filled the room.
“Ms. Gray.” His voice was deep, precise. “You’re late.”
“I’m five minutes early,” Sophie said before she could stop herself.
That earned her a brief, sharp, and assessing glance. “Interesting. Most people would apologize first.”
“Most people probably did something wrong.”
The corner of his mouth twitched, almost a smile. “Sit.”
She sat, gripping her portfolio like a shield.
He skimmed her résumé with surgical efficiency. And he said, You’ve had nine jobs in four years.
Ten, she said, then added quickly, but one was seasonal.
“And you left your last position because…?”
“My boss proposed during a meeting.” She smiled tightly. “To his girlfriend.”
Damian finally looked at her fully, and for a moment Sophie forgot how to breathe. His eyes were gray, not the cold kind, but the storm kind, the kind that promised lightning.
“Unprofessional,” he said.
“I thought so too.”
Silence stretched. The city hummed faintly below.
Finally, he set her résumé aside. You realize this position requires complete discretion, irregular hours, and an ability to tolerate demanding behavior. Damian said.
I was a waitress in midtown, Sophie said. “I can handle demanding.”
“Can you handle me?” His tone was unreadable, but his gaze didn’t waver.
Her heartbeat stuttered. “I guess that depends on what you require, Mr. Thorne.”
For a split second, something that seemed like curiosity and amusement flickered in his eyes before he leaned back, folding his hands.
“I require competence, loyalty, and silence. My assistant sees everything, hears everything, and says nothing.”
“Then I’m perfect,” she said, forcing a smile. “I’m great at pretending things don’t bother me.”
Another pause. Then he stood, moving to the window. The skyline bathed him in pale light, all power and distance.
“Report to Human Resources,” he said without turning around. “You’re hired.”
Sophie blinked. “Just like that?”
“I don’t have time to interview people twice.”
She stood slowly, still not sure what just happened. “Thank you, Mr. Thorne. I won’t let you down.”
“I doubt that’s true,” he said lightly. “Everyone lets someone down eventually.”
Sophie left the office with shaking hands and a strange, unexplainable excitement in her chest. She’d done it. The job, the paycheck, the miracle.
As the elevator doors closed, she exhaled for the first time in hours.
Back in his office, Damian Thorne pressed a button on his intercom.
“Find out everything you can about Sophie Gray,” he said quietly. “Family, debts, medical records. I want it all.”
“Understood, sir,” his assistant replied.
Damian stared out at the skyline, his reflection ghosted in the glass. Something about that name, “Gray”, stirred an old echo in the back of his mind. A boardroom. A scandal. His father’s fury.
He brushed it off with a scoff that didn’t reach his eyes.
“She’ll do,” he murmured. “She’s exactly what I need.”