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The Woman In Control

Author: Bridget Olive
last update publish date: 2026-01-09 22:55:41

Aurelia

People often conflate control with coldness.

I let them believe it.

As I step through the glass doors of Blackwood Global’s headquarters, the atmosphere shifts instantly, like the stillness that envelops a room when a blade is drawn—not fear exactly, but an acute awareness that something authoritative has arrived. I move deliberately, my heels clicking against the polished marble floor, neither rushing nor greeting, for I do not need to.

Glass, steel, marble—these elements converge here in perfect harmony. The building’s clean lines and sharp angles evoke a sense of order to which chaos has no claim. I designed this structure myself; it serves as a fortress for power.

“Aurelia,” Elena calls, pivoting to match my pace. She clutches a clipboard to her chest as if it’s a shield. “The board meeting starts in ten. Legal is waiting. ValeCorp has moved their press release forward.”

Of course they have.

“Delay legal,” I reply, my tone calm yet firm. “I want the numbers first. And pull the release—I want to see every comma.”

She nods, understanding the unspoken weight of my words, and swiftly departs.

This is how things operate here. I don’t repeat myself. I don’t raise my voice. I don’t need to threaten—people listen because they recognize the price of ignorance.

As I enter the boardroom, seasoned men—twice my age—straighten in unison, the air thick with a mixture of resentment and admiration. None of them underestimate me—not anymore. Taking my place at the head of the polished oak table, I fold my hands neatly, my posture poised, my expression a carefully crafted mask of neutrality.

“Let’s begin,” I state.

They speak. I listen.

Listening is my strength.

Control isn’t rooted in domination—it lies in the ability to apply pressure judiciously. I remain silent long enough to expose their vulnerabilities. I observe the flickers of hesitation, the eagerness in their eyes, the way some glance to others for validation before voicing their thoughts.

When I choose to speak, it is with utter conviction.

“No.”

“Yes.”

“Revise.”

“Do it again.”

We function without ego here. What matters are results.

By noon, I have woven through a tapestry of decisions—approving three acquisitions, dismissing one merger, and dismantling a proposal that would have tangled us in unnecessary risks. I achieve all this without once raising my voice.

Once, someone branded me intimidating.

I corrected them.

“I’m efficient.”

In my office, the floor-to-ceiling glass wraps around me like a panoramic throne, commanding a view of the bustling city streets below. I stand unmoving at the window, my hands clasped behind my back, watching the surging flow of traffic. Everything moves as it should. Systems are in place. Rules govern the order of things.

That is what I provide.

Control means never allowing them to witness my hesitance—even when I feel it.

And now, briefly, quietly, I do.

Luca enters my thoughts uninvited—the way he watches, the way he waits, the way he listens as if each word from my lips is a command. It unsettles me—not because he distracts me, but because he reflects my own relentless drive.

I brush the thought aside.

Here, there is no place for indulgence.

By evening, my company stands resilient—thriving, dominant.

And so do I.

No one perceives the hidden toll— the solitude, the unyielding vigilance. They are blind to the woman who learned early that power provided a more reliable safety than affection, that control offered a cleaner resolve than hope.

They see only the outcome.

Aurelia Blackwood.

CEO.

Untouchable.

And for now, that is precisely how I intend to remain.

By mid-afternoon, the entire building operates on my rhythm.

Emails halt until I grant my response. Meetings align with my entrance. Decisions linger in the air, awaiting my nod. I demand nothing—everyone learns that power, wielded with precision, shapes the behavior of those around it.

“Elena,” I say, my voice clear through the intercom.

She appears instantly, tablet in hand, anticipation lighting her features. “Yes?”

“Schedule a call with Singapore. Push New York to tomorrow. And cancel my evening.”

A flicker of hesitation crosses her face—a tiny fracture in her composure. “All of it?”

“All of it,” I state firmly.

With a nod, she exits without pressing for clarification. She knows me well enough to understand that I don’t cancel unless a matter holds far greater importance than appearances.

Returning to my desk, I sift through financial projections, scanning the lines of data as if they are a familiar dialect—a second language. Numbers do not lie. They obey. They yield clarity. I built this empire on the foundation of numbers, trusting them when I trusted nothing else.

But still, a nagging worry tugs at the edges of my concentration.

ValeCorp.

Their recent maneuvers have been unnervingly deliberate—too sleek, too measured. The individual at the helm of that ship understands restraint. Such control emerges not from desperation but from unshakable confidence.

I hold respect for that.

Leaning back slightly, I steep my fingers together, allowing my gaze to drift toward the skyline beyond the glass. This city has never shown me mercy. It demanded certainty and punished even the slightest hint of softness. I paid its price, giving it what it desired and taking everything it was willing to offer.

Control comes with a cost.

You do not lean on anyone.

You do not depend.

You do not expose your vulnerabilities.

My phone buzzes, disrupting my thoughts.

*Luca: I hope your day is unfolding as you intended.*

I stare at the message longer than is usually prudent.

I hadn’t granted him the privilege to text me during business hours.

And yet… the message feels unyielding, neither demanding nor intrusive. It simply acknowledges that my time is my own.

Interesting.

I type out a response, then delete it. I start again, fingers hovering over the screen.

Me: It is. Remember the terms.

His reply emerges more slowly this time.

Luca: Always.

I turn the phone face down, irritation boiling beneath the surface—both at him and myself. I disdain surprises. I loathe variables that elude my calculations. And he is becoming precisely that.

At five-thirty, the board reconvenes. An undercurrent of tension courses through the room; ValeCorp’s latest strategy has thrown them into disarray. I observe as they spiral into anxiety before I decide to interject.

“We don’t react.

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