I Was Hired To Seduce My Boss

I Was Hired To Seduce My Boss

last updateLast Updated : 2026-07-03
By:  GoldentreasureUpdated just now
Language: English
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They told me to get close to him. To make him trust me. To destroy him. The envelope landed like a stone dropped into still water. Inside: a photograph of a man who could buy my soul. A note that said, Seduce him. Destroy him. Or your mother dies. My mother is dying. The cancer is a thief in the night, stealing her breath one shallow gasp at a time. Twelve million dollars stands between her and a cure. I have twelve dollars in my pocket and a hunger that has nothing to do with food. So when Evelyn Cole – the spider in a gray suit offers me a deal, I say yes. Liam Cole is cold, untouchable, devastatingly beautiful. CEO of Crestwood Capital. Heir to a fortune built on bones and buried secrets. He does not smile. He does not explain. When he walks into a room, the air learns to hold its breath. He is my target, my enemy and my ruin. But when he closes his office door, he does not fire me. He slides a photograph across his glass desk – me, taking the job, caught in a camera's unblinking eye. And he whispers, "I have known since before you walked through my door." Now I am trapped between two hunters. Evelyn wants the file that could burn her empire to ash. She has my mother – a hostage wrapped in hospital sheets. Liam wants me to stay, to play the part, to feed Evelyn lies while he hunts the people who murdered his father.

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Chapter 1

Chapter 1: The Job That Could Kill Me

Zoe

The envelope landed on my kitchen table like a stone dropped into still water. I knew who sent it before I broke the seal. Evelyn Cole. The spider is inside a grey suit. The woman who finds desperate girls and weaves them into her web.

My mother was asleep in the next room, her breathing a shallow tide. Westbrook Medical Centre had sent her home to die. Silence was the new torture. Only the bills remained, stacked on my nightstand like a tombstone I could not afford to engrave.

Twelve million dollars. I had twelve dollars in my pocket and a job cleaning houses for a woman who paid me in coins. I opened the envelope. Inside was a photograph. Liam Cole. He sat in a glass office, and the city behind him spread like a dark ocean he commanded. His suit was the colour of midnight, his tie loosened. His face was carved from angles that caught light and threw it back as a shadow. He was not smiling. But his eyes – black holes that swallowed hope and gave back hunger – seemed to look straight through the paper, into the frightened part of me that still believed in fairy tales.

A note was clipped beneath the photo. Get close to him. Make him trust you. Make him want you. Then destroy him. Your mother's life depends on it. My fingers tightened until the paper bent. I should have thrown it away. I should have refused. But my mother's face floated behind my eyes – pale lips, thin arms, the way she smiled even when the pain was bad.

I looked back at the photograph. The strange thing was not fear. It was a flicker – low in my stomach, unwanted, immediate. A heat that had no business being there. I imagined his hands on my skin, his mouth on my throat. Why do I feel like I already know the taste of his kiss? I pushed the thought down. I had to do this.

Monday morning. Crestwood Tower. The building devoured the sky. Forty floors of black glass, each window an unblinking eye. I stood at the revolving doors with a fake résumé and real fear pressing against my throat. My navy dress was too tight, too low, a costume borrowed from a woman I did not recognize. It clung to my curves, whispering against my skin with every step.

Evelyn's instructions echoed in my skull. It looks expensive. Look harmless. It looks like a fantasy. I walked inside. Marble and Chrome. Air was so cold it felt like disapproval. People moved past me in currents – expensive cologne, clicking heels. No one looked at me. I was a ghost.

The elevator was glass. It climbed like a scream, leaving my stomach somewhere on the fifteenth floor. The city shrank beneath me – cars into beetles, people into ants. Top floor. My fake name sat on my tongue like poison. Lena Madaki. Twenty-six. Sterling Bank. A life built from borrowed breaths.

The receptionist barely glanced up. "He is in a meeting. Wait." I waited. Twenty minutes bled into forty. Forty bled into an hour. I did not fidget. I catalogued exits, cameras, and footsteps. I learned the building's heartbeat the way other women learn the shape of a lover's chest.

Then a door opened. And the air changed. He stepped out, and the room leaned toward him. Liam Cole. Not the photograph. Real. Larger. Colder. The kind of man who left silence in his wake. Three men followed him, but they were satellites orbiting a planet that did not need their light. "I do not care what legal says." His voice cut through the quiet like a scalpel. "If the numbers do not add up by Wednesday, the deal is dead."

The men scattered. And then his eyes found me. The moment stretched – elastic, unbearable. He walked toward me. Slow. Deliberate. I stood. Sitting felt like kneeling. "You are the new assistant." Soft. Quiet. I caught his scent – clean, expensive, a forest after rain. My breath hitched.

"Yes, Mr. Cole." His gaze moved – a slow drag over my face, my throat, the place where my dress ended, and my skin began. I felt it like a match striking. My nipples tightened against the thin fabric. His eyes lingered there for a fraction too long. "You are not what I expected." What did you expect?"

"Someone who looks afraid." He stepped closer. His cologne wrapped around me, beneath it something darker – smoke, power, danger. "You do not look afraid."

"I am not." A lie. Between my legs, a slow, unwanted heat began to bloom. His mouth curved. "Good. Follow me." His office was a box of glass and sky. He sat behind a desk and opened a folder. My folder.

He read it slowly. "Lena Madaki." He let the name sit on the air like an accusation. "Twenty-six. Sterling Bank. First-class degree." He closed the folder. "It is not your name." The air left my lungs. "I do not know what you mean." He stood. Walked around the desk like a predator. Stopped too close. His hand rose. Fingers brushed my cheek. Warm. Deliberate.

"I have been watching you." Each word was a blow. "The café. The way you count your change. The way you look at your mother's photograph is like it is a prayer." His thumb found my lower lip. Traced it. I parted my lips, and his thumb slipped inside. I tasted salt and skin. My tongue flicked against him involuntarily. His eyes darkened. I knew before you walked through my door."

I should have stepped back. But his touch was a fire I had not known I was cold enough to crave. I squeezed my thighs together. He noticed. "What are you going to do?" I whispered. He leaned closer, his mouth at my ear. "I am going to make you an offer." His hand slid to my waist, pulling me in. Hard muscle. Heat. The unmistakable proof that he wanted me pressed against my hip. My hands pressed against his chest but did not push.

"You will stay. You will play your role. You will report to Evelyn what I allow you to know." His grip tightened. A brand. "In return, your mother gets everything. No bills. No waiting." "Why?" Because I have been hunting Evelyn Cole for two years. Because she took my father. And you are the flame she will not see coming."

He kissed me. Hard. Immediate. No hesitation. The world collapsed. There was only his mouth, his tongue, his teeth grazing my lip. I kissed him back because I could not. His hand slid to my back, pressing me harder. I felt the length of him, the hunger behind the cold mask.

When he pulled away, we were both breathing like survivors. My lips were swollen. My body was a live wire. Between my legs, I was wet, aching. "Do we have a deal?" My mother's face surfaced. The bills. The silence. And beneath that, another truth – I wanted him. Not as a target. As a man whose weight I already missed. "Yes." His smile was a blade. "Good. I do not like losing."

He released me and turned back to his desk. I did not move. Something inside me had cracked. I was not the hunter. I never was. Across the street, a camera's red eye blinked. Evelyn Cole was smiling. My mother had three months. And I had stepped into a game where love and survival wore the same face, and both were hungry.

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