LOGINPhoenix
A man who keeps condoms in his office obviously keeps a fuck toy close. And I didn’t need a seer to tell me who Victor Crowe fucks in his office. Octavia Willow is going to be a problem. I knew it the moment she walked into Victor’s office this morning and looked at me like something she needed to scrape off her shoe. I knew it when Victor handed me to her team like a file he needed off his desk. And I know it now, standing in the middle of the creative floor while she addresses the team with me positioned slightly apart from everyone else, like a visual reminder that I don’t belong here. She sees me as a threat. One she believes might come between her and whatever she has going on with Victor. He invited me to his office, something he’s never done with any other female intern. “This is Phoenix Veyl,” Octavia says to the room. Not introducing me. Presenting me. The way you present evidence. “She’ll be joining the team as an intern. But unlike some of you who worked really hard to be here… she didn’t have to do much. She only had to use her body.” Every person in the room hears exactly what she means. “I deserve to be here just like everyone else.” I fire back before I can stop myself. I was not going to stand here and have this woman lie about me. “Mr. Crowe can confirm that.” She lets out a humorless laugh. “Mr. Crowe? Were you not just in his office seducing him?” She asks, walking toward me. I hear the room gasp, some taking out phones to record like it’s a show they need to save and entertain themselves with later. “Phoenix here is a slut.” She says, standing in front of me. “And girls like her who sleep their way to the top do not deserve a place in this company.” “Stop making things up because you feel threatened.” “Threatened? By who? You?” She picks up a coffee from a desk beside us, bringing it to her lips. I almost think she’ll drink it but instead she empties it over my head. I gasp as the heat makes contact with my skin, soaking through my dress, leaving me stained and drenched. “Why the fuck did you do that?” I ask, balling my fist, really controlling myself from connecting my knuckles to her nose. “Just showing you that you are garbage. And I can’t be threatened by filth.” She says, wearing a smug smile. “What are you doing?” Victor’s voice cuts through the chaos. The room goes so still I can hear the coffee dripping from the ends of my hair onto the floor. Everyone turns. Nobody breathes. Victor stands at the entrance of the creative floor, taking in every detail with that slow, quiet precision that is somehow more frightening than shouting. His eyes sweep the room, land on me, soaking wet and burning, and something closes in his expression. Quiet. Cold. Decided. Octavia doesn’t miss a beat. “I’m glad you’re here, Victor.” Her voice is smooth, composed, like she didn’t just pour scalding coffee on someone thirty seconds ago. “Phoenix was being disrespectful. Challenging me in front of the entire team, undermining my authority on her first day. I was simply disciplining her.” The lie is so clean it almost impresses me. Victor says nothing. Just crosses the room toward me, shrugs off his jacket, and settles it over my shoulders himself, his hands briefly warm against my arms. That’s when I hear it. A sharp, barely contained breath from Octavia’s direction. I don’t need to look at her directly to feel what’s radiating off her body right now. It isn’t just anger. It’s the particular kind of burning that comes from watching a man do something tender for someone else, something he has never done for you. Her jaw is tight enough to crack. Her hands are at her sides and very still, the way hands get when you are using every available resource to stop them from shaking. She is consumed. And she wants me to know it. Victor steps back and faces her, and whatever is in his expression makes her swallow hard. “I told you when I put you in this position,” he says, his voice so quiet the room strains to hear it, “that there is no place for a bully in this company.” “Victor, I—” “Keep this behavior up and it won’t be a suspension. It will be a termination.” His eyes move across the room, touching every person holding a phone, every person who stood and watched and said nothing. “Anyone who recorded this will delete it now. Anyone who participated will be hearing from HR before end of day.” Phones disappear. Eyes drop. One last look at Octavia. Then his hand settles lightly at my back and he steers me toward the door. Nobody says a word as we leave. In the corridor he drops his hand and we walk in silence to the elevator. I keep his jacket pulled tight around my shoulders. My dress is ruined. My hair is soaked. The sting on my scalp hasn’t faded and I refuse to cry about it, not here, not now. The elevator arrives. We step in. “Thank you,” I say when the doors close. “You could have believed her. Most people would have walked in and believed her.” “I know you.” He says it to the elevator doors, simple and certain, not even turning to deliver it. Three words. But the certainty behind them, no hesitation, no qualification, settles somewhere in my chest that I wasn’t expecting. He walked into that room and saw the truth without asking for it. Just looked at me and knew. The doors open on the ground floor. “Go home,” he says. “Change. Take the rest of the day.” I almost laugh. “That’s the thing. I don’t exactly have a home to go to right now.” “What do you mean?” “I’ve been in a hotel since the weekend. The friend I was supposed to stay with had a family emergency and left the state before I arrived. I haven’t sorted anything permanent yet.” He is quiet for a moment, that stillness he gets when he is thinking working through his jaw. “You’ll stay at my place,” he says. “Victor—” “Until your friend comes back or you find somewhere permanent. I have more space than I use. It doesn’t make sense to have you sitting in a hotel.” Even, decided, no room for debate. Standing here in the lobby with his jacket warm on my shoulders I think about the plan. Everything I mapped out before I walked through those doors this morning. I told myself getting this close to him would take weeks of careful, patient work. But surprisingly, it took one day. “Are you sure?” I ask, because I want to hear him say it again. “My driver will take you to collect your things from the hotel. Jenna will send you the address.” “Okay,” I say softly. “Thank you.” Something shifts almost invisibly in his face, there and gone, the way his control sometimes costs him something he won’t name. Then it’s back in place and he is composed and unreachable again. “Go,” he says. I go. I make it through the lobby and out through the glass doors and into the open air before I let myself smile. Wide and private and entirely my own. One day. I got inside his walls, inside his home, inside the life he keeps locked and managed and perfectly controlled, in one single day. He thinks he is being responsible. Doing the right thing by his best friend’s daughter. He has absolutely no idea what he just invited in. I pull his jacket tighter around my shoulders, tilt my face up to the sky, and think: One down. Everything else to go.Victor The penthouse is quiet when I step inside, but it doesn’t feel empty. That’s the problem. I loosen my tie and pause in the foyer, listening. The low hum of the city filters through the floor-to-ceiling windows, but underneath it there’s the faint sound of movement — drawers opening, soft footsteps. Domestic. Intimate. Strange. Then it hit me. Phoenix Veyl is in my home. Daniel’s daughter is sleeping under my roof tonight. I drag a hand down my face and head toward the kitchen. I should have sent her to a company apartment. Or kept her in the damn hotel. Anything but this. She’s standing at the island in soft lounge clothes — black leggings and an oversized sweater that slips off one shoulder — unpacking a small bag of groceries like she belongs here. Her hair is still slightly damp from a shower, curling at the ends. She looks up when I enter, and the smile she gives me is small, almost shy, but her eyes… her eyes have been watching me for eight years. I feel that weigh
Phoenix A man who keeps condoms in his office obviously keeps a fuck toy close. And I didn’t need a seer to tell me who Victor Crowe fucks in his office. Octavia Willow is going to be a problem. I knew it the moment she walked into Victor’s office this morning and looked at me like something she needed to scrape off her shoe. I knew it when Victor handed me to her team like a file he needed off his desk. And I know it now, standing in the middle of the creative floor while she addresses the team with me positioned slightly apart from everyone else, like a visual reminder that I don’t belong here. She sees me as a threat. One she believes might come between her and whatever she has going on with Victor. He invited me to his office, something he’s never done with any other female intern. “This is Phoenix Veyl,” Octavia says to the room. Not introducing me. Presenting me. The way you present evidence. “She’ll be joining the team as an intern. But unlike some of you who worked reall
Victor Daniel’s daughter. I say it, and I hear it. It still doesn’t land the way it should because my brain is doing something I need it to stop immediately: comparing the woman sitting across from me to the little girl I remember and finding absolutely nothing in common between them. The little girl is gone. What replaced her has no business being in my office. I lean back in my chair and immediately regret giving myself another chance to really see her. She’s — Christ. She is gorgeous in the kind of way that makes rational thought difficult. Dark eyes, full mouth, body that fills out that blazer in ways that are deeply inappropriate for me to be noticing at nine in the morning on a Monday in my own office. I noticed her the second she walked through the session room door. Didn’t know who she was. Just knew she was late and that body, fuck, that body made every coherent thought I had dissolve on the spot. My first thought was how good she’d look with her hands pinned t
Phoenix His office is massive. I step inside and just — stand there for a second, taking it in. Floor to ceiling windows, the whole city laid out beneath them like it belongs to him. Dark wood, clean lines, not a single thing out of place. There’s a framed photo on his desk and I drift toward it before I can stop myself. It’s him on a tennis court. White shirt, white shorts, racket in hand, caught mid-laugh at something outside the frame. He looks light. Easy. Nothing like the man commanding a room full of interns twenty minutes ago, nothing like the Victor Crowe I’ve watched in interviews and magazine covers my whole life. Like outside of all of this, when no one who matters is watching, he actually knows how to be happy. I stare at it longer than I should. The drawer beside the desk is half open. I should leave it alone, but I open it out of curiosity and immediately wish I hadn’t. Condoms. An open box of them. Several already missing. I pick one up. Read
Phoenix I’ve had a crush on Uncle Victor since I was twelve years old. As I’ve gotten older and learned my body, it’s become something else entirely. Every morning I touch myself with his name on my lips. My imagination runs full of him— the kind of pleasure I know only a man like him could give. I have a diary dedicated to him. Every dirty thing I want him to do to me, written down in my own handwriting. I know how that sounds. I’m not twelve anymore, so let me say it the way it actually is, the way it lives in my chest on a morning like this one, when I’m standing outside the most intimidating building in the city with my portfolio bag on my shoulder and my heart doing something embarrassing inside my ribs. I am twenty years old. I have wanted this man for the better part of a decade. From when I was twelve years old and he came bearing chocolates and flowers for my birthday. And today, for the first time in my life, I am walking into his world on my own terms. Tha







