LOGINElena Torres has lost everything: her job, her dignity, her hope. When powerful billionaire Damien Voss offers her a lifeline, she knows the cost will be higher than any salary she could earn. Working for a man who sees people as pawns in his empire means surrendering more than just her time; it means entering a world where control is currency and vulnerability is weakness. Damien Voss built his empire on cold calculation and emotional detachment. He doesn't do relationships; he does transactions. But Elena, with her haunted eyes and hidden strength, awakens something dangerous in him: the need to possess, protect, and ultimately break down every wall she's built around her shattered heart. As professional lines blur into something darker and more consuming, Elena must decide: will she lose herself in Damien's world of dominance and desire, or will she discover that true power lies not in submission, but in choosing who gets to see you break?
View MoreThe sound of my name cracked through the office like a whip.
“Elena Torres!”
Dozens of heads turned toward me. Fingers paused mid-typing, whispers rippled through the cubicles like a low current of electricity. My stomach tightened as I rose from my chair, dread pressing against my commitment. I clutched the file in my hands so tightly the edges bent.
Mr. Lawson’s glass office sat at the far end of the room, elevated like a question, and he didn’t wait for me to reach the door before his voice cut through the chatter again.
“Do you have any idea how much you’ve cost this company?”
I froze halfway across the floor. My colleagues pretended to work, but I could sense their eyes on me. “M—my checkbook—I—I corrected the numbers, sir,” I said softly, forcing the words through a tightened throat.
He leaned back in his leather chair, sneering. Corrected? You mean ruined. He tossed the folder across the desk; papers scattered at my feet like fallen birds. Do you think anyone will take this department seriously with mistakes like yours? Maybe you should focus less on acting innocent and more on being useful, and people snickered. My vision blurred, but I blinked fast, desperate not to cry in front of them.
I can do the report. ort.
He stood, stepping close enough for me to smell the bitter coffee on his breath. “You’ve been here three years, Elena, and you still can’t follow simple instructions.” His eyes trailed down on me, lingering where they shouldn’t. “Maybe you’re just… distracted.”
The room went silent. My pulse pounded in my ears.
He smiled slowly, deliberately, and poisonously. “If you want to keep this job, come to my office after hours. We’ll… discuss how to make this right.”
The meaning behind his words burned hotter than shame itself. I swallowed hard. “No,” I whispered, voice trembling but firm.
His jaw clenched. “Then you’re done here.”
He turned away, dismissing me like trash. The whispering started again, sharper this time: "pathetic, tic, fired, stupid girl." rl. I gathered the papers with shaking hands, pretending not to hear, pretending I still had a shred of dignity left.
When I stepped outside, the winter air hit me like punishment. The city lights blurred through tears. I refused to let it fall. My heels clicked against the pavement until one snapped, sending me stumbling into a puddle. Cold water splashed up my legs. Perfect. Just perfect.
By the time I reached my apartment, my body felt hollow. The tiny one-bedroom smelled faintly of damp plaster and exhaustion. I kicked off my shoes and sank to the floor, and for a moment, I just sat there in silence, in shame, in pain too deep to name. Then the tears came, heavy and ugly.
I thought about the rent due in three days. The bills were stacked like curses on the counter. My sister, Clara, who is still in school, depends on me. And the job I’d just lost because I refused to trade my dignity for a paycheck.
The sobs came harder. I pressed my palm against my mouth to muffle the kitchen; terrified neighbors would hear how broken I sounded.
When the crying finally stopped, silence filled the room like smoke. My reflection stared back from the window with smeared mascara, cracked lips, and swollen, empty eyes. pty. I looked like a life that had been chewed up and spat out.
I used to believe that if you worked hard and stayed kind, life would meet you halfway. But kindness doesn’t pay rent. And hard work doesn’t stop men like Lawson from seeing you as disposable.
I wiped my face and stood. My body ached, but something deeper inside—the kind of pain that makes you wonder if survival is really worth it.
My phone buzzed on the table. A message from Clara lit up the screen:
Hey, did you eat? Don’t forget to rest, okay? I love you.
My throat tightened. She didn’t know how dire the situation was. She couldn’t. She was too young, too hopeful. I’d promised her I’d handle everything. Even if it killed me.
I whispered to the empty room, “I’ll fix this, Clara. Somehow.”
But the words felt hollow. I no longer believed them.
The next morning, I put on my only clean blouse and printed résumés until the printer groaned. I spent the day walking from building to building, smiling through rejection after rejection.
“We’re not hiring.”
“We’ll call you if something opens.”
“We need more experience.”
By sunset, my legs ached, and my pride felt bruised. The city turned golden under the dying light, and for a moment, it looked almost cruelly beautiful, like a reminder that even misery can glow when the sun hits it right.
When my feet finally gave out, I ducked into a small café to rest. The warmth inside felt foreign, almost forbidden. I ordered the cheapest item on the menu—a cup of hot water—and sat by the window, pretending it was tea.
That’s when I saw a sleek black car pulling up outside. It didn’t belong here. It was the kind of car that whispered money even when silent. People glanced, curious but cautious.
The door opened, and a man stepped out. Tall. Dark suit. Cold eyes. His presence alone seemed to bend the air. He didn’t glance at anyone; he didn’t need to. For a brief second, his gaze brushed mine through glass, the glass sharp, unreadable, and unsettling.
Something in my chest stilled.
He was gone before I could blink, the door closing behind him. But his stare, that fleeting, askance look, burned into me long after.
I didn’t know then that I had just seen Damien Voss, the man who would change everything.
The man who would break me before putting me back together in ways I could never imagine.
The flight to Seattle feels longer than it should.I've been on this route twice before—once full of hope and fear, once running away from both. This time, I don't know what I'm full of. Just a desperate need for answers to questions I haven't fully formed yet.Rachel drove me to the airport, made me promise to call her the moment I land, and told me she loves me no matter what happens.Clara sent a text: "Be brave. But also be honest. Those aren't always the same thing."Dr. Chen's last words in our session yesterday: "Remember, you're not going there to fix anything or prove anything. You're going to get information. To see what's real. Whatever you discover, trust yourself to handle it."I'm trying to trust myself.God, I'm trying.I don't tell Damien I'm coming.Part of me wants to show up at his office, dramatic and cinematic, like this is some movie where grand gestures solve everything.But real life isn't a movie. And I'm too old for grand gestures.So instead, I text him from
Three months later, the case is over.Reed settled two weeks before trial—not because we were weak, but because Christine's team uncovered evidence so damning he had no choice. Emails proving he'd orchestrated not just my situation, but a decade-long pattern of corporate sabotage across the industry.The settlement includes a public apology, financial restitution to all identified victims, and permanent injunctions preventing him from certain business practices. His firm is under investigation. His reputation is destroyed.We won.It should feel triumphant.Instead, I'm sitting in my Boston apartment on a Friday afternoon, staring at the news coverage, feeling absolutely nothing.I didn't attend the settlement conference. Worked everything remotely from Boston like I said I would. Damien handled the in-person negotiations. We communicated through lawyers and carefully worded emails. Professional. Distant. Exactly what I said I needed.It's been ninety-three days since I left Seattle.
Week two in Seattle, I miss Clara's graduation celebration.I'm on a video call with her, watching her show off her master's degree, and I can see the hurt in her eyes even though she's trying to hide it."It's okay," she says. "I know the case is important.""It's not okay. I should be there. I promised I'd be there.""Elena, you're fighting for something that matters. I get it."But I can hear what she's not saying: You chose the case. You chose Damien. You chose Seattle over me.After we hang up, I sit in my hotel room and cry. Not quiet tears—the ugly, gasping kind that come from realizing you've become exactly what you swore you wouldn't be.Someone who sacrifices everything for a man who isn't even hers.Rachel calls an hour later."Clara told me.""I fucked up.""Yeah, you did. But more importantly, you're fucking up right now. Elena, you've been in Seattle for two weeks and you've already rearranged your entire life around this case. Around Damien.""The case is important—""T
Day five in Seattle, the cracks start showing.We're in the conference room reviewing depositions when Damien snaps at one of the junior lawyers over a minor procedural question."That's not how discovery works. Did you even read the filing guidelines?"The lawyer—a woman named Sarah who's been working eighteen-hour days—looks stung. "I did, but the opposing counsel's interpretation—""Their interpretation doesn't matter. The rules are clear. This is basic shit, Sarah.""Damien," I interrupt. "Can I talk to you? Privately?"He looks irritated but follows me into his office."What was that?" I ask once the door closes."What was what?""You just humiliated Sarah in front of everyone for a mistake that's barely even a mistake.""She should know better—""She does know better. She's brilliant and exhausted and you just treated her like she's incompetent because you're stressed about the case." I cross my arms. "This is what you do. When you're overwhelmed, you get controlling and harsh.
Day ten of my leave, I'm attempting to cook something more complicated than pasta when my apartment buzzer rings.I'm not expecting anyone. Rachel's at work. Clara's in New York. The delivery I ordered isn't scheduled until tomorrow."Yes?" I answer through the intercom."Elena Torres?" A woman's v
The meeting at two goes sideways in a way I don't see coming.Catherine's on the call, along with two board members I've never met before—Richard Crane and Marilyn Foster. The Fremont location is on screen, my expansion proposal open, and I'm mid-presentation when Richard interrupts."Ms. Torres, I
Damien's apartment is nothing like I expected.I'd imagined something cold and modern—all glass and steel and expensive furniture that prioritized aesthetic over comfort. The penthouse version of the man he used to be.Instead, I walk into warmth.Exposed brick walls, hardwood floors that creak sli
The rain starts the moment we step outside.Not the gentle mist Seattle's famous for, but actual rain—cold and insistent, turning the sidewalks into mirrors that reflect streetlights in fractured gold. Damien immediately shrugs off his jacket and holds it over both our heads, pulling me close enoug






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