Share

The Office

Author: P.E. Hart
last update publish date: 2026-04-12 11:09:06

"Absolutely not," Lina said.

"The contract is already signed." Her boss, Dana, pushed the folder across the desk without looking up. "It's a six-week consulting project. You're the best I have for restructuring work. It's not a conversation."

"Dana. Who is the client?"

Dana looked up then. And the expression on her face was the very specific expression of someone who is aware they are delivering bad news.

"Caldwell Holdings."

Lina's hand was on the folder.

She did not pick it up.

"No," she said.

"Lina—"

"Caldwell Holdings is Freddie Caldwell's company."

"I'm aware."

"The man I left at the altar nine weeks ago."

"Also aware."

"You want me to walk into that building."

"I want you to do your job," Dana said. "He requested our firm specifically. He requested you specifically."

That landed differently.

"He requested me."

"By name."

Lina picked up the folder. Opened it. His company letterhead. His signature at the bottom of the contract page. Clean, sharp, the way he did everything.

She thought about the text from three months ago. The anonymous number. You'll regret this.

She thought about Marcos's warning last week.

She thought about the baby she had not yet told anyone but Priya about.

"He's doing this on purpose," she said.

"Probably," Dana said cheerfully. "You start Monday."

She was twelve minutes late on purpose.

Petty. She knew it was petty. She did it anyway.

The Caldwell Holdings lobby was all glass and dark marble and quiet power. The kind of building that made you feel like you should speak in a lower register. The receptionist smiled at her with corporate serenity and handed her a visitor badge.

"Mr. Caldwell's assistant will take you up."

"I know where his office is," Lina said.

The receptionist's smile didn't waver. "Of course."

The elevator was mirrored. Lina looked at her reflection on the way up. Blazer. Hair up. Professional armor, all of it. She looked fine. She looked like a woman who had her life together.

She did not feel like that woman.

The doors opened on the thirty-fourth floor.

And Freddie was standing right there.

Not at his desk. Not in a conference room.

Right there.

Like he had been waiting for the elevator.

He looked at her. She looked at him. The whole world contracted into the four feet between them.

He was wearing a charcoal suit. No tie. Top button undone. He looked like he had slept five hours and still managed to make it look like a choice.

He looked furious.

He looked incredible.

She hated both of those things equally.

"You're late," he said.

"Traffic."

"It's twelve minutes."

"The city is unpredictable."

He stepped back. Let her off the elevator. Didn't move far enough that she could walk past without their arms brushing.

She brushed past anyway.

"Conference room is this way," he said.

"I know where the conference room is."

"Of course you do." His voice was perfectly neutral. Perfectly even. "Follow me anyway."

The meeting was professional. Precise. Brutal.

There were four other people in the room. His CFO. Two analysts. A lawyer Lina didn't recognize. Everyone had their folders open.

Freddie sat at the head of the table and did not look at her once.

He addressed everything to the room. To the air two feet to her left. To the window. Never to her directly.

It should have made it easier.

It didn't.

She kept her eyes on her notes and spoke when spoken to and pushed through the first hour on sheer professionalism.

Then he said, "The restructuring timeline. Walk us through your initial assessment, Ms. Vasquez."

Ms. Vasquez.

Three years. Dinner parties and holidays and arguments in kitchen and slow Sunday mornings. And it was Ms. Vasquez now.

She looked up.

He was finally looking at her. Direct. Steady. Not a flicker.

"Of course," she said. "The restructuring timeline."

She stood up.

She did her job.

She was very good at it.

And at the end, when the other people filtered out, she gathered her things quickly. She was not going to be the last one in this room with him.

She almost made it.

"Lina."

His voice, low. Not Ms. Vasquez. Her name. Just her name.

She stopped at the door. Didn't turn around.

"Why did you take this project?" she said.

"Because I need the work done."

"You have an entire internal team."

"I wanted the best."

She turned then. She shouldn't have. "Freddie. What are you doing?"

He was standing at the window. Arms crossed. Looking out at the city.

"I'm running my company," he said. "Same as always."

"That's not what I'm asking."

He turned to face her. His jaw was tight. His eyes were doing that burning thing again.

"Tell me something," he said. "And be honest with me. For once."

She waited.

"Did you leave me for him?"

The air went out of the room.

"For who?" she asked. Even though she already knew.

"Marcos."

There it was.

He knew. Or suspected. And now he had asked her directly, in a conference room thirty-four floors up, with nowhere for either of them to go.

She looked at him for a long time.

She thought about the two lines on the test. The baby she was carrying. The baby she believed was his best friend's.

"No," she said. "I didn't leave you for Marcos."

It was the truth.

It was also completely insufficient.

He nodded once. Turned back to the window.

"See you Thursday," he said. "Nine o'clock. Don't be late."

She left.

In the elevator, the mirrored doors showed her face again.

She looked like someone who was barely holding something together.

Because she was.

And as the elevator descended, her phone buzzed.

A calendar notification. A doctor's appointment. Twelve weeks.

She was starting to show.

It was only a matter of time before he noticed.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • The Wrong Bed   The Wrong Woman

    Clara had done her research on Diane Park.She always did her research. It was the thing that had kept her moving forward in rooms where everyone else had more power than she did. You learned who people were before you sat across from them. What they wanted. What they feared. What made them move.Diane Park was fifty five. Built her career from nothing. No family money. No connections handed to her at birth. Every single thing she had she had earned through work that most people in her position would have considered beneath them. She had joined the Caldwell board seven years ago on merit alone and had never once in those seven years voted with the crowd when she believed the crowd was wrong.That told Clara two things.One Diane was not easily impressed, and Diane was not easily moved.Which meant this conversation was going to require something different. Not charm. Not sentiment. Directness. The kind that didn't leave room for misunderstanding.She requested the meeting through a ne

  • The Wrong Bed   Diane

    Diane Park did not do well with surprises.She had built her entire career on being the most prepared person in every room she walked into. On knowing the numbers before anyone else did. On asking the question nobody else thought to ask until it was too late. Surprises were what happened to people who hadn't been paying close enough attention.So when Gerald called her at four fifteen and asked if he could come over she knew immediately that something had happened that she hadn't seen coming.She said yes.And started making coffee.Gerald arrived twenty minutes later.He sat across from her at her kitchen table with both folders in front of him and told her everything. Clara's visit. The birth certificate. Raymond came in afterward. What Raymond had said. The way he had said it.Diane listened without interrupting.That was something people who didn't know her well found surprising. They expected her to jump in. To push back. To ask sharp questions the moment something didn't add up.

  • The Wrong Bed   The Other Side

    Gerald was still at his desk when Raymond arrived.He hadn't moved much since Clara left.Had sat with the folder and his thoughts and the particular heaviness of someone who had just receivedinformation that changed the shape of everything they thought they understood.Raymond knocked once and came in without waiting.He looked at Gerald's face the moment he walked in.Then he looked at the folder on the desk.He sat down slowly."You've already seen it," he said.Gerald looked at him carefully. "You knew."It wasn't a question.Raymond was quiet for a moment. "I found out six months ago," he said. "She came to me first."Gerald sat back. "Six months.""Yes.""You've known about Edward's daughter for six months and said nothing to this board.""I needed time to understand what it meant."Raymond folded his hands in his lap."Gerald this isn't something you drop into a board meeting and expect people to process cleanly.""It's not your decision to make it alone, Raymond.""I know that

  • The Wrong Bed   The Name That Didn't Fit

    Freddie wasn't expecting the knock.He had been at his kitchen table for most of the morning. Notepad. Cold coffee. The same circling thoughts that kept finding new angles and hitting the same walls. He had called Daniel twice already and gotten the same answer both times, still working on it, give me a little more time.So when the knock came at eleven forty three he wasn't expecting it to be Daniel.But it was.Daniel Reeves stood in his doorway in his coat with a folder tucked under his arm and an expression on his face that Freddie had only seen twice in eleven years of working together. The expression of a man who had found something he wished he hadn't."You'd better let me in," Daniel said.Freddie stepped back.Daniel sat at the kitchen table.Didn't take his coat off. Didn't accept the coffee Freddie offered. Just put the folder on the table between them and kept both hands flat on top of it for a moment like he was deciding one last time how to do this."The keycard records

  • The Wrong Bed   The Firstborn

    Gerald Osei was not a man who was easily surprised.Sixty two years of living had taught him that most things that looked surprising were actually just things you hadn't been paying close enough attention to. He had built a career on paying attention. On reading rooms and reading people and knowing when something was coming before it arrived.So when the woman walked into his office at two fifteen without an appointment and sat down without being invited he didn't panic.He just watched her.She was in her mid thirties. Well dressed but not flashy. She sat across from him with the ease of someone who had rehearsed this moment so many times it no longer felt like a performance.She crossed her legs. Looked at him directly."You don't know me," she said."No," Gerald said slowly. "I don't believe I do.""My name is Clara." A pause. Just long enough to matter. "My father was Edward Caldwell."Gerald went completely still.She let that sit.Didn't rush past it, or fill the silence with an

  • The Wrong Bed   The Board

    Karthy didn't rush.She never did. Rushing was for people who hadn't planned properly. Who left things to the last minute and then scrambled to catch up.She had been planning this particular move for three weeks.She arrived at the Caldwell building at nine fifteen.Not through the main entrance. She knew better than that. The main entrance had cameras and a security desk and people who would remember a face. She came through the side entrance on the lower floor. The one that cycled through on a forty minute rotation and had a blind spot in the coverage that she had identified on her very first visit eight weeks ago.She was in the elevator before anyone had time to notice her.Twenty eighth floor.The board members' private offices.She had appointments with two of them. Not under her real name. Under the name of a corporate consultant whose credentials she had built carefully over the past month. Clean. Professional. Verifiable enough to get through a basic check without raising fl

  • The Wrong Bed   Falling

    "What is it you have?" Freddie said.The corridor outside the boardroom was so quiet. Only him and the phone pressed to his ear and the low sound of the building around him.Brett didn't answer straight away.That half second again. That same strange pause that had been there when he picked up. Fre

  • The Wrong Bed   JUST US

    Freddie woke up first.That wasn't unusual. He always woke up before everything else. Before his alarm. Before the city. Before the day had fully decided what it was going to be.What was unusual was the weight beside him.The warmth of it.For a moment he didn't move. Didn't grab his phone. Didn't

  • The Wrong Bed   The Suspect

    Freddie wasn't able to sleep that night.Not even close.He sat in the small conference room just off the main floor with Adrian and two members of the security team, a cold cup of coffee beside him that he hadn't touched in over an hour, and stared at the access logs spread across the table like t

  • The Wrong Bed   The Man In The Room

    "You look different," Freddie said.It was Thursday. Nine o'clock. She was on time.They were standing by the floor-to-ceiling window of his office before the rest of the team arrived. She had made the mistake of accepting coffee from his assistant, which had turned into standing here, close enough

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status