The office was colder than she expected.
Not physically,though the air-conditioning hummed with clinical efficiency, but in the way spaces become cold when they are designed to intimidate. Glass walls. Steel fixtures. A desk so immaculate it looked unused, despite the man seated behind it.
She stood just inside the door, spine straight, hands folded loosely in front of her. She had learned early in life that stillness read as competence.
“Sit.”
The word landed without warmth or invitation. It wasn’t rude. It was economical.
She sat.
He didn’t look at her.
That, more than anything, unsettled her.
Most men, especially powerful ones, looked. Assessed. Catalogued. Even if they hid it well, there was always a flicker of interest or dismissal or ego. But he stared at the document in front of him as though she were a concept rather than a person.
She wondered, briefly, how many people had sat in that chair before her.
How many had lasted.
“I’ll be direct,” he said. His voice was even, low, controlled to the point of austerity. “This role is demanding. Precision matters. Discretion is non-negotiable.”
She nodded once.
“You don’t speak unless spoken to,” he continued. “You don’t touch anything that isn’t yours. And you never mistake professionalism for interest.”
That made her blink.
Not because the rule was unreasonable, but because of the way his jaw tightened after he said it, like he was enforcing it on himself as much as on her.
“I understand,” she said.
Her voice was steady. She was proud of that.
For the first time since she’d entered the room, his pen paused.
He still didn’t look at her.
“You’ve worked in high-pressure environments before,” he said, scanning her resume. “Law firms. Political offices. Crisis management.”
“Yes.”
“Then you know this position has no margin for error.”
“Yes.”
Silence stretched. It wasn’t awkward. It was deliberate. He was measuring something, her patience, perhaps. Her need to fill space.
She did neither.
Finally, he set the paper down.
“You were recommended,” he said.
That surprised her. “I was told I applied through standard channels.”
“You did.”
Another pause.
“I requested your file.”
Her chest tightened before she could stop it. “May I ask why?”
He looked up.
The impact was immediate and disorienting, like stepping into deep water you didn’t know was there.
His eyes were dark, unreadable, and fixed on her with an intensity that felt entirely out of place in such a sterile room. Not hunger. Not desire.
Recognition.
Something passed between them, too fast to name, too sharp to ignore.
His gaze dropped again just as quickly.
“You met the criteria,” he said, curt.
She wasn’t sure she believed him. But she wasn’t sure she disbelieved him either.
“Your predecessor lasted three weeks,” he added. “The one before that, two.”
She absorbed that. “And the one before that?”
A beat.
“There wasn’t one.”
That should have scared her.
Instead, it anchored her.
“I won’t be a problem,” she said.
That earned a reaction, a subtle one. The corner of his mouth tightened. Not amusement. Something closer to restraint.
“That remains to be seen.”
He stood, signaling the end of the meeting. She rose immediately, mirroring his composure.
“You start today,” he said. “HR will handle the formalities. You’ll be seated outside my office. My schedule is absolute.”
“Yes, sir.”
She turned to leave.
“Miss—”
She stopped.
He hesitated. Just long enough to matter.
“Do you have any questions?”
She considered the moment carefully. This was the first test. She could feel it.
Only one question mattered, but she didn’t ask it.
“No,” she said instead. “The rules are clear.”
For a fraction of a second, something dangerous flickered across his face.
Then it was gone.
As she stepped back into the hallway, the door closing softly behind her, she missed the way he exhaled for the first time since she’d entered.
And she did not see him reach for her resume again, fingers tightening where her name was printed, as if holding it too hard might expose everything he was trying to keep buried.