LOGINThe alarm screamed at 5:30 AM.
I slapped it silent and stared at the ceiling for exactly ten seconds. That was all the weakness I allowed myself. Then I threw off the covers and became someone else. Morning Vivian was armor. I showered. Applied makeup with military precision. Foundation to hide the dark circles. Concealer for the evidence of last night's tears. Mascara. Lip color. War paint. My suit was charcoal gray. Designer. Fitted to perfection. It cost more than my first car, but in this world, appearance was currency. Hair went into a controlled twist at the nape of my neck. Not a strand out of place. I looked at myself in the mirror. Gone was the woman who had knelt on the floor, begging, sobbing, coming apart. In her place stood someone untouchable. This was the version of me that the world saw. The version that had survived two years as Alexander Kane's executive assistant. The man was impossible. I grabbed my bag and headed out the door. The coffee shop on the corner knew my order by heart. Large black coffee, one sugar, heated to exactly 180 degrees. Alexander's specifications. The barista smiled at me. "Early again, Vivian." "Always." I arrived at Kane Industries at 6:45 AM. Fifteen minutes early. That was the rule. Alexander didn't tolerate lateness. He barely tolerated anything. The building was forty floors of glass and steel. It gleamed in the early morning light like a blade. I'd worked here for two years, and it still intimidated me. The elevator carried me to the top floor. Executive territory. Where the air smelled like money and everyone walked like they were being watched. Because they were. Alexander's office dominated the floor. Corner position. Floor-to-ceiling windows. Views of the city skyline that probably cost more than most people's houses. I pushed through the door without knocking. That was another rule. Don't knock. Don't hesitate. Just enter and be ready. He didn't look up from his laptop. "You're early," he said. Not a greeting. Just a fact. "Always, Mr. Kane." "The Henderson file. Page forty-seven. There's an error in the projections." I stood there, his coffee in my hand, waiting for him to acknowledge me. To look at me. To say good morning, or thank you, or anything human. He didn't. "Fix it before the board meeting," he continued, still typing. "The numbers are off by three percent. That's unacceptable." I set his coffee on the desk. "I'll have it corrected within the hour." "See that you do." I turned to leave. "Vivian." I stopped. Turned back. He still wasn't looking at me. "Close the door on your way out." That was it. No please. No thank you. No acknowledgment that I was a person rather than a function. This was Alexander Kane. He was brilliant. Everyone knew that. He'd built Kane Industries from a startup in his apartment to a global enterprise worth billions. Forbes loved him. Investors worshipped him. Competitors feared him. He was also the most demanding, impossible, exacting man I'd ever met. In two years, I'd watched seven assistants come and go before me. Some quit. Some were fired. One cried in the bathroom for an hour and never came back. I was still here. I didn't know what that said about me. I took the Henderson file to my desk and started reviewing page forty-seven. He was right—the projections were off. By exactly three percent. How he'd caught that at 6 AM was beyond me. The morning passed in a blur of emails and meetings. Alexander moved through the office like a storm, leaving demands in his wake. Coffee. Files. Updates. Reports. Everything now. Everything perfect. I kept up. I always kept up. But today my mind kept drifting. How did Sir know about my meeting? It was probably nothing. It had to be nothing. But the question gnawed at me. At noon, I grabbed a sandwich from the break room and ate at my desk. No lunch hour when you worked for Alexander Kane. "You look tired, Vivian." I looked up. James Whitmore from accounting was leaning against my cubicle wall. Mid-thirties. Nice smile. He'd asked me to dinner twice. I'd declined both times. "I'm fine." "Late night?" My stomach clenched. "Just didn't sleep well." "You should get more rest. Kane works you too hard." "I can handle it." James shrugged. "Offer still stands. Dinner. Whenever you're free." "Thanks, James. I'll let you know." He walked away. Nice guy. Normal. The kind of man I should want. So why did my mind keep drifting to a faceless voice in my earpiece? I threw myself back into work. The Henderson file was fixed by 1 PM. The board meeting was at 2. I prepped Alexander's presentation materials, double-checked his notes, made sure everything was perfect. At 1:45, I brought the final folder to his office. He was standing by the window, staring out at the city. For a moment, I saw something on his face. Something almost human. Tired, maybe. Stressed. Then he turned, and the mask was back. "Is everything ready?" "Yes, Mr. Kane." "The Henderson numbers?" "Corrected and verified." "Good." He took the folder from my hands. His fingers brushed mine. I felt it everywhere. Just a touch. A microsecond of contact. But my body responded like it had been trained to respond. Wet. Wanting. Ready. What was wrong with me? He's not Sir, I told myself firmly. Alexander Kane was not the man who commanded me in the dark. They were nothing alike. Sir was attentive. Caring. He asked about my day. He worried about my stress. Alexander Kane didn't see me as a person at all. "Is there something else, Vivian?" I realized I was still standing there. Frozen. Staring at his hands. "No, Mr. Kane. Nothing else." I turned and walked away. Quickly. Before I did something stupid. As I reached the door, I felt it. The weight of his gaze on my back. I looked over my shoulder. He was watching me. Not my retreating form—me. His eyes met mine. And the expression on his face... It was too intense. Too knowing. Like he was seeing something I kept hidden. Like he was seeing Velvet. I blinked, and it was gone. He looked down at his files like nothing had happened. "Close the door behind you," he said. I fled. At my desk, I pressed my hands against my face and took deep breaths. I was losing my mind. That was the only explanation. Sleep deprivation was making me paranoid. Alexander Kane was not Sir. They couldn't be more different. I repeated that to myself all afternoon. Through the board meeting, where I stood in the corner and took notes. Through the post-meeting chaos, where Alexander demanded seventeen follow-up items in fifteen minutes. Through the long slog of late afternoon, when the office emptied out and I stayed behind. Alexander worked late. He always worked late. Which meant I worked late too. By 7 PM, we were the only ones left on the floor. The silence was heavy. Loaded. I could hear him typing in his office. The rhythm of his keystrokes. I caught myself watching his hands through the glass partition. Capable hands. Precise. The kind of hands that would know exactly where to touch— Stop it. I forced my eyes back to my screen. Answered emails. Pretended to be professional. "Vivian." His voice made me jump. He was standing in his doorway. Jacket off. Sleeves rolled up. He looked tired. Almost human again. "You can go home," he said. "It's late." "I'll stay until you're done." "That wasn't a suggestion." I held his gaze. "Neither was my response." Something flickered in his eyes. Surprise, maybe. Or something else. "You look tired," he said. The same words James had used earlier. But from Alexander's mouth, they sounded different. "Late night?" My heart stopped. He couldn't know. There was no way he could know. "I'm fine, Mr. Kane." "Get some sleep." He turned back toward his office. "You have a presentation at 3 PM tomorrow." I stared at his retreating back. 3 PM tomorrow. Exactly what Sir had said. Coincidence. It had to be coincidence. But as I gathered my things and fled the building, I couldn't shake the feeling that Alexander Kane saw far more than he should. And I couldn't decide if that terrified me or thrilled me.POV: Vivian | Timeline: Monday nightMonday night. The penthouse.We didn't scene.Too much tension coiled in both of us, too much uncertainty about what was coming. The weight of the investigation, the threat of exposure, Marcus circling like a shark that had scented blood—none of it was conducive to the headspace we both needed for a proper dynamic.Instead, we lay together in his massive bed, fully clothed, just holding each other. The lights of the city sparkled through the floor-to-ceiling windows like a universe of stars had descended to eye level. His heartbeat was steady under my ear, a rhythm I was learning to find comfort in."You almost said it," I whispered into the darkness. "In your office. The L-word. The one that ends everything."I felt his body tense slightly beneath me. Then relax, deliberately, the way I'd learned meant he was forcing himself to stay calm."I caught myself.""Why? Why did you stop?""Because the claus
POV: Vivian | Timeline: Monday afternoonI was in Alexander's office within minutes, the HR notice clutched in my hand.He was alone—his 4 PM meeting must have just ended. He looked up as I burst through the door, saw my face, and his expression immediately hardened into the mask he wore when facing hostile takeovers."Close the door."I did. Locked it for good measure, my hands shaking."You saw the notice." Not a question."Someone sent it to me directly. Before HR even delivered the official copy." I handed him my phone, showing the anonymous message. "They wanted to make sure I knew. Wanted to scare me before the formal notification arrived."Alexander's jaw tightened as he read. His knuckles went white around my phone."Marcus." The name came out like a curse. "He filed the complaint. Anonymous, but it's him. This is exactly his style—indirect, strategic, designed to create maximum chaos. He doesn't strike directly. He creates situation
POV: Vivian | Timeline: Monday morningMonday morning. My first day back at Kane Industries after everything changed.The elevator ride felt different now. The same sterile lighting, the same quiet hum of machinery ascending, the same professionally dressed colleagues avoiding eye contact because that's what you did in elevators. But I saw everything through new eyes now.Power dynamics everywhere. Hierarchies that mirrored what I experienced in private with Alexander. Junior employees deferring to senior ones with subtle body language. Assistants anticipating needs before they were voiced, reading micro-expressions like survival depended on it. The careful dance of dominance and submission that existed in every workplace, just without the explicit acknowledgment of what it really was.Everyone was always serving someone. The only difference was whether they knew it.I'd spent a week in Alexander's world—his real world, the one with contracts and commands and consequences. Coming back
POV: Vivian | Timeline: Same nightThe kiss ignited something that had been smoldering for a week of separation, a week of agony, a week of wondering if we'd ever touch again.His hands came up immediately to grip my hips, pulling me down onto his lap. I went willingly, straddling him on the chair, my dress riding up around my thighs. Our mouths opened against each other—hungry, desperate, a week of deprivation compressed into a single point of blazing contact."Tell me you want this," he breathed against my lips when we broke for air. "Tell me it's not just adrenaline, or relief, or—""I want you." I pulled back enough to meet his eyes, to make sure he could see the truth in mine. "All of you. The Dom and the man. The control freak and the broken boy underneath. I want the version of you that doesn't hide behind protocols. The one who's scared and vulnerable and real."Something cracked in his expression. The control he wore like armor every minute of every day, the composure that ne
POV: Vivian (listening) | Timeline: Same evening"We met at a lifestyle event when I was twenty-eight."Alexander stared into his whiskey like it held answers he'd been searching for for years. His voice was flat, controlled—but I could hear the fractures underneath, the places where old wounds had never fully healed."I was young then. Arrogant. Convinced I understood the dynamic because I'd read every book, watched every educational video, practiced with willing partners who'd never challenged me deeply. I thought knowledge was the same as wisdom. I thought control meant I could handle anything. I didn't understand anything at all.""What was she like?" I asked softly."Beautiful. Elegant. Submissive in a way that felt completely effortless, like she'd been born for the role. She moved through life like everything was choreographed for my pleasure. Devoted beyond anything I'd experienced before—beyond anything I probably deserved even then." He paused, swirling the whiskey in his gl
POV: Vivian | Timeline: Same eveningWe sat in silence for a long moment, hands still joined across the space between us, both of us processing everything that had been said and everything that remained unspoken.The weight of his confession hung in the air. He'd built a system to find me. He'd manipulated circumstances to get what he wanted. But he'd also admitted that his feelings were real—that the part that mattered couldn't be engineered.I believed him. That was the terrifying part. Despite everything, I believed him.Then I pulled my hand back. Not angrily—just because I needed to think clearly, and touching him made clear thought impossible. His skin against mine still sent electricity through my nervous system, still made my body respond in ways that had nothing to do with conscious choice. Even now, even after everything, I wanted him. My core ached with the memory of his touch.But wanting wasn't enough. Not anymore. Not without guarantees."If we're doing this," I said slo
POV: Vivian | Timeline: Thursday evening I made it to my car before I broke completely. The tears came hard and fast—anger, confusion, betrayal, desire, all tangled together until I couldn't tell one emotion from another. I sat in the parking garage of Kane Ind
POV: Vivian | Timeline: Thursday afternoonI stood outside Alexander's office for three full minutes.My hand hovered over the door handle, trembling. My heart hammered against my ribs so hard I could feel it in my throat. My entire body shook with a combination of terror and ar
POV: Vivian | Timeline: Thursday morningThursday morning.I stood in front of my bathroom mirror for fifteen minutes, staring at the silver bracelet on my wrist.It was beautiful—delicate but distinctive. A cuff with an intricate Celtic knot pattern that wrapped around my w
POV: Vivian | Timeline: Wednesday nightMidnight.I knelt in my bedroom, wearing red silk—a negligee I'd bought months ago because Sir said the color would look beautiful against my skin. He was right. He was always right.The laptop was open on my bed. The camera light blin







