LOGINAdrian’s POV
I see her the second she looks up, I recognize her instantly. The woman from the club. Same eyes. Same composure. But this time, there’s no alcohol to soften the edges. No dim lights to blur the details.
I don’t break stride as I walk into the room. I can feel the shift around me—conversations dying, attention locking in—but I ignore all of it.
My focus stays on her. I didn’t get to know her name but from the look on her face I know she recognized me too. She freezes for half a second, most people wouldn’t notice it but I did then it’s gone almost immediately.
She straightens slightly in her chair, her expression smoothing into something professional, distant—like she’s trying to erase the fact that we’ve already crossed a line no one in this room knows exists.
Too late, I thought. I take my seat at the head of the table like nothing has changed. Because for everyone else—Nothing has. But this just got a lot more interesting.
“My name is Adrian Blackwood,” I say, my voice even. “As of today, Aurelius Group operates under my authority.”
I let that settle before continuing.
“There will be immediate structural changes. Some roles will be dissolved. Some departments will be restructured. If your position is affected, you’ll be informed before the end of the day.”
No reaction from me when the tension rises. It’s expected.
“For those who remain, expectations will change. Performance will matter more than titles.”
I pause, then look across the room.
“Who here knows this company better than anyone else in this room?”
Silence. No one moves. Typical. Then someone shifts.
A man two seats away from her exhales sharply, clearly irritated, and gestures in her direction.
“She does.” The room turns. Not toward him. Toward her. She doesn’t move immediately.
She didn’t raise her hand didn’t try to speak. She just sits there, shoulders slightly stiff, like she didn’t ask for the attention—but isn’t about to deny it either.
Interesting. I follow his gesture, my gaze settling on her.
“Is that True, Miss?” I ask. She meets my eyes this time.
A beat, “Ava Sinclair, and Yes.” No hesitation. No attempt to downplay it.
Just acceptance. Good. “Care to explain?” But she’s not looking at me. Not directly. But I can see it in the way her fingers press against the folder in front of her. The way her shoulders hold just a little too stiff.
She does. And she doesn’t waste time doing it.
She breaks down internal operations, workflow gaps, inefficiencies between departments. She doesn’t speak like someone guessing—she speaks like someone who has been watching everything closely for a long time.
And she’s right. About all of it. That confirms what I already suspected. When she finishes, no one challenges her. They can’t.
I hold her gaze for a second longer than necessary, and if I had doubt about her not remembering I was convinced now.
I remember it clearly.
She came in with her friends but somehow she didn’t belong—and didn’t care that she didn’t.
I noticed her not because she was trying to be seen but because she wasn’t.
She moved like she was somewhere else entirely. Like the room didn’t exist. Like whatever was in her head mattered more than anything around her.
I watched her move away from her friends to sit at the other side of the bar, watched her drink like she needed the burn.
And when I approached her and she turned to me—I saw Anger. So when she asked “How much for the night?” I didn’t take it as an insult.
I understood exactly what she was doing. She wasn’t asking for me. She was trying to take control of something she had already lost.
That kind of move was reckless but not weak and that’s why I didn’t walk away.
“Mr. Blackwood.” The voice drags me back. I look up. Everyone’s watching me now, waiting.
“You’ll work with me directly,” I say. The words land exactly how I want them to.
A flicker of surprise crosses her face before she locks it down.
“After this meeting,” I continue, “you’ll report to my office.”
The room shifts again—this time differently. Like they’re trying to understand what just happened.
I move on like nothing significant just occurred.
“HR will distribute a list of roles being dissolved,” I say. “If your name is on it, you’ll be informed before the end of the day.”
One of the senior managers leans forward slightly. “Mr. Blackwood, perhaps we should review—”
“Decisions like this aren’t made in this room,” I cut him off immediately “They’ve already been made.”
The rest of the meeting moves fast. Signatures. Terms. Formalities.
I don’t look at her again. I didn’t need to because I’ve already made my decision.
But as chairs begin to shift and quiet conversations start, I stand. That’s when I see her. Still seated. Still composed.
But not alone. The woman beside her—I recognize her from the club —she leans in slightly, her voice low but urgent.
“Are you okay?” I don’t hear Ava’s response. But I don’t need to.
I see the brief pause before she answers. The tension in her shoulders. The effort it takes to stay controlled. So It affected her more than she’s showing.
I turn away before anyone notices I was watching. Because I’ve already seen enough. Ava Sinclair just moved from irrelevant—To necessary.
And whether she realizes it or not—She just stepped into a position she won’t be able to walk away from easily.
After the meeting, I step away from the table and move toward the window while the legal team finishes up behind me.
The city stretches out below. Busy. Loud. Irrelevant. My attention isn’t on the view. It’s on her—Ava Sinclair.
Executive assistant. Sharp. Controlled. Reckless when pushed far enough.
The kind of woman who makes one bad decision—and then tries to bury it like it never happened.
Like offering money to a stranger. Like following him without asking questions. Like walking into this room and pretending she doesn’t know exactly who I am.
My assistant steps beside me. “The documents are ready for signing.”
“I want everything on Ava Sinclair,” I say to him.
“Yes, sir.”
“And reassign her, she’ll be working directly with me.”
That gets a slight hesitation. “Sir?”
I turn to look at him. “Directly to me.”
He nods. “Understood.”
I sign the final document without reading it. The handover is done. Aurelius Group is officially mine. But that’s not what holds my attention anymore.
Because across the room—She’s still pretending. Still acting like that night meant nothing. Like it was a mistake.
Maybe it was. But I don’t believe in coincidences. Not in business. Not in people.
And definitely not in a woman who tried to buy control the moment her world fell apart.
By the time I reach my office, the building has already started adjusting. Quietly. Efficiently. Like it understands what just happened.
I knew she was coming before she knocked. Three short taps. Controlled. Precise. “Come in.”
The door opens, and Ava Sinclair walks in like she refuses to be intimidated by anything in this building—including me.
She places a single sheet of paper on my desk. “I’m resigning.” Straight to the point. I pick it up, skim it once, then fold it neatly.
“No.”Her jaw tightens.
“You don’t get to decide that.”
“I already did.”
She steps closer, anger sharpening her voice. “I’m not asking for permission, Mr. Blackwood.”
“Then you’re wasting your time standing here.” Silence stretches.
Then she exhales, frustrated. “If this is about access or files. You can replace me.”
“If I could, you wouldn’t be here.”
Her eyes narrow. “Then find someone and train them.”
“I don’t have that kind of time. And neither does this company.”
She lets out a sharp laugh. “You’re very confident for someone running a collapsing company.”
“And you’re very bold for someone trying to walk away from the only thing keeping her afloat.” Her expression hardens.
“You don’t know anything about me.”
“I know enough.” I let the words sit for a moment before adding, deliberately—“I know you don’t make reckless decisions.”
Her gaze flickers, just for a second. Small. But I notice it. “And yet,” I continue, voice lower now, “you walked into a bar, picked a stranger, and spent the night with him.”
That lands. Hard. Her entire body stills. The air in the room shifts instantly—thicker, sharper, charged with something that has nothing to do with business.
“That,” she says slowly, “has nothing to do with my work.”
“No,” I agree calmly. “It doesn’t.” I lean back slightly, watching her.
“But it tells me something.” Her eyes lock onto mine, guarded now. Dangerous.
“And what exactly do you think it tells you?”
“That you were trying to forget something or someone.” A beat.
“And that you don’t lose control unless something pushes you there.” Silence. Her lips press together, anger flashing beneath the surface.
“You don’t know what you’re talking about.” I hold her gaze. Didn’t look away.
“Don’t I?” Another pause. Then, carefully—“If it meant nothing,” I add, “you wouldn’t look like you’re ready to walk out every time you see me.”
That’s when it clicks for her. Her eyes widen—just slightly—but it’s enough. Followed immediately by disbelief. Then anger. Sharp. Rising. Controlled only by force. “…You.”
It’s barely a word, more like an accusation. I don’t respond right away. I let her sit in it, let her replay it.
The night. The details. The pieces falling into place whether she wants them to or not.
“That changes nothing, that night was a mistake” she snaps.
“Then treat it like one.” I don’t tell her how she begged for more, or how her back lifted to meet my hips, but the way sweat formed between her chest and her breath rising I was sure she was relieving the moment too.
Ava’s POV Luckily for me, the investigation had finally pointed to someone. Daniel Brooks, one of the junior employees from the Finance Department, had been taken in for questioning after evidence placed him inside the building the night the acquisition proposal disappeared. I didn’t know everything he had confessed, but judging by the determined look on Noah’s face every time he walked past my desk, I knew the investigation had finally begun moving in the right direction. Adrian hadn’t shared many details with me, and I understood why. Whoever was behind the attacks had managed to stay hidden for months, sabotaging Aurelius deal after deal without leaving much behind. If Daniel had truly been working for someone else, then whoever had hired him was still out there, and Adrian wasn’t about to show his hand until he knew exactly who he was dealing with. For the first time in weeks, I allowed myself to believe this nightmare might actually end. I caught myself smiling at the thoug
Adrian’s POV With everything happening at Aurelius Group, one truth became impossible to ignore. Whoever was orchestrating this chaos wasn’t trying to destroy Ava alone—they wanted to punish me too, as though I had committed some unforgivable crime against them. Every stolen file, every calculated move, every carefully planted doubt carried the unmistakable scent of revenge, and I couldn’t shake the feeling that I was only seeing the surface of something much darker. Ethan had resented me since we were children, so discovering he had been communicating with Serena wasn’t exactly shocking. What kept gnawing at the back of my mind was the question of who had manipulated him into taking things this far because Ethan had always been impulsive, but never strategic. Whoever was standing behind the curtain understood exactly how to exploit old wounds, and being family wouldn’t spare Ethan from the consequences of the choices he had made. The truth was, I didn’t have many enemies. If an
Adrian’s POV I had told Ava she could go home if she wanted but knowing her, I was sure she was somewhere now trying to figure out where the file had gone. The moment the meeting ended, I turned to Noah. “My office.” He gave a single nod and fell into step beside me. Neither of us spoke as we crossed the executive floor. Employees looked up as we passed before quickly pretending to be busy. News traveled fast inside a company, especially after a board meeting delayed without explanation. By the time we reached my office, I already knew half the building would be speculating about what had happened. Noah shut the door behind us. I walked straight to my desk without sitting down. “Have Marcus from Security, Olivia from IT, and Human Resources meet me in my office.” I paused. “Five minutes.” After hanging up, I looked at Noah. “Until we know who’s behind this, the fewer people involved, the better.” He understood immediately. “If there’s a mole…They’re already watching u
Ava’s POV For a second, nobody spoke. I wasn’t sure what shocked the room more—the missing acquisition proposal or Adrian believing me without asking for proof. The silence felt louder than any accusation. Adrian turned toward the board as though nothing extraordinary had happened. “We’re delaying the meeting by twenty minutes,” he announced calmly. A director immediately protested that investors had flown in from Zurich, but Adrian simply replied, “I know.” “The proposal is the foundation of today’s discussion,” another director insisted. Adrian met his gaze without raising his voice. “We’re delaying the meeting.” No one argued after that because no one challenged Adrian Blackwood twice. The boardroom erupted into controlled chaos as assistants called investors, Legal searched for backups, and IT rushed to investigate. I remained frozen beside the conference table, staring at the empty folder on my laptop. It wasn’t possible. I knew my routine by heart—draft, review, save, uploa
Ava’s POV Monday arrived whether I was ready for it or not. I must have woken up four different times during the night. Every time I managed to fall back asleep, my mind carried me to the exact same place. The Blackwood Estate. The long dining table. Aunt Margaret laughing so hard she nearly spilled her wine while Adrian sat there looking like he regretted ever introducing me to his family. Despite everything, a smile tugged at my lips. Rebecca. Whoever she was, she’d managed to embarrass Adrian Blackwood so thoroughly that his family was still talking about it years later. The memory warmed me. Then, almost instantly, it disappeared. Replaced by another. “You don’t spend years tracking someone you don’t care about.” Ethan’s voice. Followed by Adrian’s. “You weren’t invited because of Victoria.” Then the one sentence that refused to leave me alone. “I can’t answer that.” I groaned quietly into my pillow. “This has to stop.” I said but talking to myself wasn’t helping and pr
Ava’s POV For several seconds after Ethan walked away, I remained, pacing back and forth. It shouldn’t bother me but unfortunately it did. The hallway suddenly felt too quiet. Only echos of laughter and hushed conversation from the dinner room filled it. I hated that he had gotten into my head, EBY as I knew that was exactly what he wanted. But another part of me couldn’t stop replaying everything he had said. Victoria. Adrian tracking her and destroying the life of the man she was with? The questions stayed with me all the way back to the dining room. The moment I stepped inside, I noticed the conversation had long moved on. Nobody had stopped talking or stared as I walked in. They had simply moved on without me and I wasn’t sure if that made me feel relieved or invisible. My eyes found Adrian instantly, I wasn’t surprised to find he was already looking at me. Waiting. As though he had been tracking the doorway since I left. The realization should have comforted me. Instead,
Ava's PovMia didn’t say anything at first. She just stared at me from across the kitchen, her fingers wrapped tightly around a mug of coffee that had long gone cold, like she’d forgotten it existed. Her eyes were locked on me—searching, calculating, waiting for me to say something that would make
Ava's PovI thought the sound of laughter coming from our bedroom was the TV I’d forgotten to turn off. But as I pushed the door open, I realized the sound was much deeper, much more intimate, and coming from a man whose voice I didn’t recognize, wrapped in the arms of the man I was supposed to mar
Ava’s POVThe door closes behind me, soft and almost weightless against the storm building inside my chest. I keep walking, one step after another, my heels striking the floor in a steady rhythm that doesn’t match the chaos in my pulse. I don’t stop in the hallway, not when the receptionist glances
Ava’s POVIt’s been one week working for him. One week pretending I don’t remember the night we shared. One week of acting like nothing happened when everything changed. And the truth is, pretending is getting harder.Adrian Blackwood doesn’t miss a thing. Not the way my focus slips, not the way I







