LOGIN
THE NEW JOB
Helen James pulled her blazer tighter around her and took a deep breath as the taxi slowed to a stop.
“Madam, we’re here,” the driver said.
She looked up—and her breath caught.
Cole Designs.
The building stood tall and imposing, a striking piece of modern architecture. Its glass façade reflected the city around it, shimmering with quiet authority, while its sharp lines and towering structure made everything else nearby seem smaller. It wasn’t just a workplace—it was a statement.
Helen simply stared, this was the place she had dreamed about for years.
“Thank you,” she said softly, handing the driver his fare before stepping out.
The ground felt unusually solid beneath her heels as she stood there, clutching her leather bag. Her heart pounded, but she forced herself to move.
She approached the entrance, the glass doors sliding open as if welcoming her into another world.
Inside, everything was sleek, polished, intentional.
Helen straightened her posture and walked into the lobby, her heels clicking lightly against the floor.
The receptionist, a friendly-looking woman with a warm smile, greeted her immediately.
"Good morning, welcome to Cole Designs. How can I help you?"
Helen returned the smile, steadying herself. "Good morning, I'm Helen. I have an interview with Mr. Cole Lucas."
"Ah, yes," the receptionist said, her smile widening. "We’ve been expecting you. Please, have a seat while I inform HR."
Helen nodded and sat on the plush couch, glancing around at the elegant space. Everything about the place spoke of precision and excellence—and it only made her more aware of where she was.
After a few minutes, an HR representative arrived and led her upstairs.
"Mr. Lucas will be with you shortly," she said before leaving.
Helen exhaled slowly, smoothing her dress. Her fingers brushed over her resume, though she already knew every word on it.
Then the door opened.
He walked in with quiet authority.
Tall, composed, and sharply dressed, Cole Lucas carried himself with effortless control. His piercing blue-grey eyes landed on her instantly, assessing, observant.
Helen stood.
"Good morning, Mr. Lucas. It’s a pleasure to meet you."
He gave a small nod as he took his seat. "Have a seat, Miss… James, right?"
"Yes," she replied, sitting carefully.
He opened the folder in front of him.
“Strong academic record,” he said, almost to himself. “Top of your class.”
“Thank you,” Helen said.
“University projects focused on urban design and structural efficiency,” he continued, glancing up at her. “You weren’t studying to be a secretary.”
Helen hesitated for a second, then answered honestly. “No, sir. But I was studying to work in an environment like this.”
His brow lifted slightly, intrigued.
“Explain.”
She leaned forward just a little, her nerves settling into determination. “I’ve always admired how Cole Designs blends creativity with function. I followed your projects during my final year—especially the Milan complex design. The way space was utilized… it was intentional, not just aesthetic.”
Cole’s gaze sharpened, “You studied my work closely.”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“Because I wanted to understand what excellence looks like,” she said simply.
He closed the file halfway, studying her now instead of the paper.
“You speak both English and French?” he asked.
“Yes,” she replied. “Fluently.”
“Give me a reason I would need that in this role.”
Helen didn’t miss a beat. “International clients. Coordination across regions. Miscommunication can cost time—and money.”
“Good answer.”
He leaned back slightly.
“And digital systems? Scheduling, correspondence, internal coordination?”
“I’m proficient in most executive management software,” she said. “I’ve also handled high-volume scheduling during my internship. Multiple calendars, conflicting priorities—”
“—and how did you handle conflicts?” he interrupted.
She paused briefly, choosing her words.
“By prioritizing impact,” she said. “Not everything urgent is important. I learned to identify what directly affects outcomes—and what can wait.”
He tapped his pen lightly against the table.
“Say I have two clients demanding the same time slot. Both are important. Both impatient. What do you do?”
“I’d assess the stakes,” she replied. “Who has a deadline? Who brings more long-term value? And if necessary, I’d communicate transparently—without making either feel secondary.”
“And if they both insist?”
Helen held her gaze.
“Then I make the decision you would make.”
That earned her a longer look.
“And how would you know that?” he asked quietly.
“By learning how you think,” she said.
Cole leaned forward slightly, his expression more focused now.
“You’re confident.”
“I’m prepared,” she corrected gently.
Then he flipped the file shut completely.
“Last question,” he said. “Why should I hire you?”
Helen inhaled softly.
“Because I won’t just manage your schedule,” she said. “I’ll protect your time, anticipate your needs, and make sure nothing slows you down. You won’t have to think twice about anything I handle.”
His eyes on her, searching, measuring.
Then he nodded once.
“Alright, Miss James.”
He stood.
“We’ll see soon enough.”
As the interview drew to a close, Cole leaned back slightly in his chair, his fingers steepled together.
“So, Helen,” he said, his voice calm, “where do you see yourself in the next five years?”
Helen straightened, meeting his gaze despite the quiet.
“I want to grow,” she said honestly. “Not just in skill, but in responsibility. I see myself taking on leadership roles eventually—being someone the company can rely on.”
Cole studied her for a second, then gave a small nod.
“I like that answer.”
His eyes didn’t leave hers.
“I think you’d be a great fit for this team. Do you have any questions for me?”
Helen paused, choosing her words carefully.
“Yes. What’s the company culture like… and what’s the biggest challenge your team is facing right now?”
For the first time, something close to approval looked across his face.
“Good question,” he said. “We move fast here. It’s demanding, but it’s also… rewarding. People who stay grow quickly.”
He stood, signaling the end of the interview.
“As for challenges—we’re currently handling a major project. Tight deadlines, high expectations. It’ll require focus and resilience.”
He stepped closer, just enough to make her aware of his presence.
“If you’re here, Helen… you’ll be part of that.”
She nodded. “I understand.”
“We’ll be in touch,” he said.
A few days later, on a quiet Wednesday afternoon, her phone buzzed.
Helen stared at the email on her screen, reading it twice before it truly sank in.
Dear Helen,
We’re pleased to offer you the position of Secretary at Cole Designs…
Helen stared at the screen.
Once.
Twice.
Her eyes scanned the words again, slower this time, as if they might disappear if she blinked too fast.
“No…” she whispered under her breath.
Her fingers loosened.
The phone slipped—tilting dangerously in her hand before she caught it just in time, her heart lurching up into her throat.
“Oh my God…”
She pushed herself upright on the bed, the sheets tangling around her legs as her breathing grew uneven.
“This… this is real?”
Her thumb hovered over the screen, trembling slightly, as she reread the email again—line by line, word by word—searching for any sign that she had misunderstood.
But it was there.
Clear.
Certain.
She let out a shaky laugh, pressing her free hand against her chest as if to steady the wild beating of her heart.
“I got it…”
This time, the words came out louder. Real.
Her grip tightened around the phone, no longer slipping—now held like something precious, something hard-earned.
For a minute, she just sat there, stunned.
Then suddenly—
She sprang to her feet.
“I got the job!”
Her voice filled the room, breathless and disbelieving, as a wide smile finally broke through the shock.
And just like that… everything had changed.
“I got it…” she whispered to herself, a smile breaking across her face.
First Day
Helen arrived earlier than necessary, nerves and excitement twisting together in her chest.
At the reception desk, a woman looked up and smiled.
“You must be Helen. He’s expecting you—top floor.”
“Thank you,” Helen replied, her voice steady even as her throat tightened.
Inside the elevator, she exhaled slowly, watching the city rise behind the glass walls.
“Okay… you can do this,” she murmured.
The doors slid open to a quiet, polished corridor.
Designs lined the walls—bold, elegant, unmistakably his.
She knocked once.
“Come in.”
His voice was just as she remembered—controlled, effortless.
Helen stepped inside.
The office was everything she imagined—sleek, modern, intimidating.
And there he was.
Cole Lucas.
He turned from the window, his gaze landing on her immediately.
“Miss Helen,” he said. “You’re early.”
“I didn’t want to be late, sir.”
“Good. Because punctuality here isn’t optional.”
She gave a small nod. “Understood.”
He walked toward his desk, picking up a file.
“This company doesn’t run on appearances,” he continued. “It runs on results. Hard work. Consistency.”
Helen lifted her chin slightly.
“That’s exactly why I’m here.”
“I built this company from the ground up,” he said, his tone quieter now. “Six years of my life. As my secretary, you report directly to me. You’ll manage schedules, coordinate design reviews, and keep things running efficiently.”
He placed a thick portfolio in front of her.
“Think you can handle that?”
Helen met his gaze without hesitation.
“I wouldn’t be here if I couldn’t.”
A small, almost invisible smile touched his lips.
“Good,” he said. “Let’s test that confidence.”
He tapped the file.
“Go through this. I want your thoughts on the new design concepts before noon.”
Later in the afternoon, Helen’s fingers flew across the keyboard, though her feet ached in her heels.
She didn’t stop.
She wouldn’t.
Cole glanced up from his desk, watching her for a second before speaking.
“Take a break.”
She blinked. “I’m fine, sir.”
“That wasn’t a suggestion.”
“…Yes, sir.”
On the terrace, the fresh air hit her like a release.
She closed her eyes briefly, letting herself breathe.
“Don’t mess this up,” she whispered.
Behind her, the door opened.
She turned slightly as Cole stepped out, phone pressed to his ear.
“No delays,” he said sharply. “If they can’t meet the deadline, find someone who can.”
He ended the call, his expression settling back into calm control.
His gaze shifted to her.
“You’ll need to adapt quickly,” he said.
“I will.”
He tilted his head slightly.
“Not ‘will.’ You must.”
She nodded. “Understood.”
“The portfolio.” he asked?
Helen straightened instinctively.
“It’s strong,” she said. “Clean layouts, clear direction. But I think some of the concepts could push further—be more distinctive.”
His brows lifted slightly.
“Go on.”
She hesitated, then continued.
“They’re safe, effective.”
Then—
A slow nod.
“Interesting,” he said quietly.
He stepped past her.
“Prepare a summary,” he added. “I want it on my desk before the end of the day.”
“Yes, sir.”
By evening, the office had emptied.
Helen moved quietly, organizing files, aligning documents.
Through the glass, she saw him still working.
Always working.
She watched him—not the CEO, not the “Lion”… just the man.
And something in her chest shifted.
She quickly looked away.
Closing her notebook, she whispered to herself—
“I will not fall.”
By the time the office began to empty, Helen was still at her desk.
The hum of keyboards had faded, chairs pushed in, quiet goodbyes exchanged in the distance—but she didn’t move.
Her eyes remained fixed on the portfolio, notes scattered neatly beside her, pen tapping lightly against the edge of the table as she reviewed her thoughts one last time.
She exhaled, straightened, and began typing.
Each sentence came with careful intention—clear, concise, but bold enough to stand out. She pointed out strengths, suggested sharper concepts, and proposed refinements. Not too much… just enough to be noticed.
Just enough to matter.
Minutes stretched into an hour.
When she finally stopped, her fingers hovered over the keyboard.
Then, with a quiet breath—
She printed it.
The office was nearly silent now as she stood outside his door, the document held firmly in her hand.
She hesitated.
Just for a second.
Then she knocked.
“Come in.”
His voice, steady as ever.
Helen stepped inside.
Cole didn’t look up immediately, his attention still on the documents in front of him.
“I thought I told you to have it ready by the end of the day,” he said.
“I do,” she replied, placing the summary neatly on his desk.
Slowly, he looked up.
Their eyes met.
Helen stood still, resisting the urge to shift her weight, her hands clasped lightly in front of her.
Every second stretched.
Then—
He leaned back slightly.
“You’re direct,” he said.
“I believed that’s what you wanted,” she said.
“It is.”
He tapped the document once.
“You didn’t just review it. You challenged it.”
“I thought it could be stronger,” she said carefully.
His eyes held hers a moment longer than necessary.
“Good,” he said. “We don’t need people who agree. We need people who think.”
Then, more quietly—
“You did well today, Helen.”
Something warm spread through her chest at the words, though she kept her expression composed.
“Thank you, sir.”
He nodded toward the door.
“That will be all for today.”
Helen stepped out of his office, closing the door gently behind her.
Only then did she release the breath she hadn’t realized she was holding.
“I survived,” she whispered, a small, tired smile forming.
She returned to her desk, tidying up—aligning files, shutting down her computer, smoothing out the small signs of a long day.
Her heels clicked softly against the floor as she made her way to the elevator.
This time, the ride down felt different.
Lighter.
As the doors opened to the evening air, the city greeted her with fading sunlight and distant noise.
Helen stepped out, clutching her bag a little closer.
She paused for a moment, looking up at the towering building behind her.
A slow smile spread across her face.
“This is just the beginning,” she murmured.
Then she turned—and walked into the night, unaware that somewhere above, behind a glass window—
Cole was watching her leave.
THE TRUTH SHE COULDN'T HIDEFor a few seconds, Helen couldn't answer.The apartment felt unnaturally still. Even the clock on the wall seemed louder than usual, each tick filling the silence her mother was patiently, deliberately leaving open.Her mother stood across from her.Not impatiently. Not with a raised voice or sharp expression. Just waiting — with the composed certainty of a woman who already knew the answer and was simply giving her daughter the dignity of arriving at it herself.That made it harder.Helen had always found it easier when her mother was angry. Anger was something to push against. This was different. This was the quiet before the real conversation — the kind that came wrapped in concern and love and made every prepared excuse dissolve before it could be spoken."Helen."Her name.
TRUTH BETWEEN FRIENDSLinda had frozen the moment she'd looked down.The mug had nearly slipped.Because what she was seeing — *what she was certain she was seeing* — was her best friend and closest colleague emerging from a luxury car, flushed and soft-eyed and wearing an expression Linda had never once seen on her face at the office.And Cole Lucas.*Cole Lucas.*Pulling away from the curb like a man who had just had a very, very good day.Linda blinked. Once. Twice."No."Helen disappeared through the front entrance, entirely oblivious.Linda pressed closer to the glass."Absolutely not."The car rounded the corner and was gone.Linda remained at the window for a long moment, repl
REALITY ARRIVESFor a few seconds, neither of them moved.The phones continued vibrating against the quiet of the terrace, insistent and ill-timed, and the peaceful bubble they had spent an entire day carefully building suddenly felt very fragile.Helen looked down first.*Mom.*Of course.Across from her, Cole stared at his own screen. The slight tightening of his jaw told her everything before he spoke."Your mother?"Helen nodded. "Yours?"A short exhale."My mother."Helen laughed despite herself. Not because anything was funny — because the timing was almost too perfect to be accidental. They had hidden from the entire world for one day. One single day. And somehow, without coordination or conspiracy, both their mothers had found them at precise
THE HOUR AFTERThe city stretched endlessly beneath them.From this height, New York looked softer somehow. The endless noise that usually defined it reduced to distant movement and scattered light — yellow cabs crawling through streets below like slow sparks, skyscrapers standing illuminated against a sky that had given up on darkness and settled instead for a deep, bruised blue.The private terrace was quiet.Protected from the rest of the building.Protected from questions.Protected from reality.At least for tonight.Helen sat between Cole's legs on the oversized outdoor sofa, her back resting against his chest, his arms loose around her waist. The blanket they'd pulled out an hour ago had been mostly forgotten, pooled somewhere around their legs, because his warmth was enough and they'd both stopped preten
THE HOUR PASSHelen's lips curved into a playful smile as she gazed at Cole, a mix of amusement and affection shining in her eyes. The subtle dance of emotions between them created an atmosphere charged with a blend of lightheartedness and underlying desire."So this was your plan all along?" she teased, her voice carrying a hint of teasing accusation.Cole met her gaze with a twinkle in his eyes, a knowing smile playing at the corners of his lips. "My plan?" he repeated, feigning innocence."To keep me here all day," Helen continued, her tone light yet filled with a touch of curiosity.The corners of Cole's mouth lifted further, his smile widening as he nodded. "I believe I may have mentioned something to that effect," he admitted, his voice laced with warmth and a hint of mischief.Helen shook her head in mock disapproval, her eyes dancing with laughter. "Y
JUST USThe footsteps belonged to no one important.A staff member crossed the corridor carrying a stack of folders, offered a polite greeting, and disappeared again without a second glance."I think we're becoming paranoid," Helen said."A little.""A little?"He smiled."We came all the way here to avoid being interrupted.""Fair point."At one point, they found a secluded terrace overlooking the courtyard below.Helen settled onto a cushioned bench beneath the shade of a large umbrella while Cole disappeared briefly and returned carrying two glasses of iced tea."You keep leaving and coming back with things."He handed her a glass."I like being useful.""You run an entire company."&
WATCHINGHelen's fingers tightened instinctively around Cole's hand.The shift in him happened so fast it unsettled her immediately.One second he had been close enough that she'd stopped breathing properly. Close enough that she'd felt the warmth of him and the particular quiet of someone about to
DINNERHelen should have said no.The thought followed her immediately after the question left his mouth.Not because she wanted to refuse.Because she didn’t trust how badly she wanted to say yes.The executive floor felt quieter now, almost suspended in the soft glow of evening lights. Most emp
BOUNDARIESHelen spent the next twenty minutes pretending to work while completely incapable of remembering a single email she'd answered.Every time she tried focusing on her screen, Cole’s voice replayed inside her head again.Because I already know what I’d rather be doing instead.The worst par
Helen's heels slowed slightly against the polished floor the moment she stepped fully into the executive department.Everything looked painfully normal. Phones ringing. Assistants speaking quietly across desks. The printer near accounting hummed through what sounded like an unreasonable amount of







