LOGINZara’s POV
I managed to make it to the ladies’ room on the executive floor before my legs gave out. I lock myself in the last stall, press my forehead against the cool metal door, and take in deep breaths. I’ve got this. I won’t falter.
Welcome back.
The bastard has no idea what those two words did to me.
I straighten after a minute, check my reflection in the mirror; clear eyes, no tears. Good. I touch up my lipstick with a steady hand, even though my stomach twists in knots. This is what I came for. Answers and financial stability for Liam. Not whatever storm was brewing behind his eyes.
When I step out, I see the same silver-haired man from earlier in his coat walking past the hallway. He’s fixed on his tablet, scrolling through something that makes his mouth tighten, while he passes by me. I catch his name embroidered on his coat: Dr. J. Arnolds, Corporate Health. I watch him disappear around the corner, wondering why a corporate physician is on the executive floor.
Then a young lady with a severe ponytail calls out my name, and I forget about him. How’s she not down with a headache? The sight of her ponytail is giving me one already.
“Miss Matthews? I’m Sarah from HR. Mr. Cruz wants you to start right away. He doesn’t believe in orientation periods.” She gives me a sympathetic look. “Most new assistants don’t make it past week one.”
I almost smile. “I’m not most.”
Sarah leads me to a sleek desk positioned directly outside Valerio’s glass-walled office. He could see my every move, and I can see him right back if the curtains aren’t drawn like old times. I shake the memory away; they belong in the past.
The desk is already stocked with a new laptop, a leather notebook, and a telephone. Everything pristine. I sit down and open the laptop, the login credentials already waiting in my email. I type them in, fingers flying across the keys like muscle memory that never left. I miss doing this.
It takes me approximately forty minutes to reorganize his entire schedule for the next two weeks. I flagged three conflicts, moved the Tokyo call, and attached corrected financial notes to the quarterly report. Then I pull up the latest merger files and start highlighting red flags the way I used to. Argh, old habits die hard.
I turn to look at his office, then I see it, and my hand pauses on the mouse.
There’s a small orange bottle on the corner of his desk, visible through the glass well, but I can’t read the label from here. But it looks a lot like a prescription medication.
Valerio never takes anything strong, except for whiskey for a headache. Well, it’s been three years, and people change.
My phone buzzes, and it’s from an unknown number. Unknown: My office. Now.
No greeting, no please, arrogant as always. I stare at it for a moment, set my phone face down on the desk, and finish the paragraph I’m reading before I stand. I don’t rush; I’ve made up my mind that I won’t be someone who rushes for him.
I square my shoulders and walk in head held high.
He stands by the floor-to-ceiling windows, hands in his pockets, staring out at the city as if he owned it. His jacket is off, sleeves rolled up to his forearms. The same forearms that used to pin my wrists above my head while he—
“Close the door,” he says without turning around.
I do, and he finally faces me, the same unsettled look from the interview is still there, but sharper now. Like I am an itch under his skin that he couldn’t scratch.
“You restructured my entire week,” he says, a hint of slight anger in his tone.
“You told me to impress you.”
He stares at me for a long moment. Then he laughs, but there is no warmth in it, and it breaks my heart. “You think moving a few meetings impresses me? That is what assistants do; that’s literally the job description. Do you want a gold star for reading a calendar?”
I sigh. “The Nakamura call was going to overlap with the board briefing. You would’ve lost face. I fixed it.”
He takes slow steps towards me and stops just inside my personal space, close enough that I have to tilt my head to meet his eyes. The tension in the room gets heavier by the minute.
“You anticipate me,” he says quietly. “Why?”
“Because I’m good at my job.”
“Cazzate! (Bullshit!).” The word comes out low, almost intimate. “You walk in here knowing things you shouldn’t and look at me like—” He cuts himself off, jaw tight.
“Like what, Mr. Cruz?”
His gaze drops to my mouth and lingers. “Like you’re waiting for something.”
My heart slams against my ribs, his familiar cologne invading my senses. I can feel the heat radiating off him. Three years of nothing, and my body still remembers exactly how it felt when he used to back me up against this same desk and kiss me until I forgot my own name.
I take one careful step back, needing the space to think clearly. “I’m waiting for instructions. That’s all.”
Valerio’s eyes darken. He doesn’t believe me, but he lets it slide, for now.
“Fine. You want instructions?” He grabs a thick folder from his desk and shoves it at me. “The Harrington proposal. Tear it apart and find every weakness. I want it on my desk in two hours.” But he doesn’t let the folder go immediately; he holds it long enough. “Do not waste my time with surface-level observations. I could have an intern do that. If you bring me something obvious, I will hand you your termination papers before lunch tomorrow. Are we clear?
“Understood.” He releases the folder.
I turn to leave. “Zara.”
The sound of my name in his deep, rough voice stops me cold. He’d said it casually during the interview, but this time it felt different. It tasted familiar on his tongue like it used to.
“Don’t make me regret hiring you on the spot,” he says.
I look back at him over my shoulder. “I won’t.”
The rest of the morning passes in a blur of emails, calls, and the constant weight of his attention. He’s summoned me three more times. One for coffee—black, two sugars, exactly how he liked it. I delivered it without being told, and his fingers brushed mine when he took the mug. Neither of us said anything, but my hands trembled slightly
By eleven-thirty, my feet ache, and my nerves are frayed. I slip into the break room for water and find Luca leaning against the counter, arms crossed.
“You’re playing a dangerous game,” he says.
I fill my glass and take a long sip. “I’m not playing anything. You know I need the job, and I need answers.”
Luca rubs the back of his neck. He looks tired and older than he should. “He’s different now. Colder. Whatever they did to him while he was under… it stuck. If you push too hard—”
“I know what I’m doing.”
“Do you?” Luca’s voice drops. “Because he’s already watching you like you’re the only thing in the room. Clara’s going to notice. And when she does—”
The break room door swings open. Valerio stands there, eyes narrowing when he sees the two of us. “Am I interrupting something?”
Luca straightens. “Just giving the new assistant the lay of the land, bro.”
His gaze slides to me. “My office. Bring the Harrington file.”
I follow him back and grab the folder. The moment the door shuts behind us, the air changes again, thicker. He takes the file, flips through my notes, then tosses it onto the desk.
“Impressive,” he said. “Too impressive.”
I stay quiet.
He steps closer. “Who are you, really?”
The question lands heavily, and for a second, I consider telling him everything. The accident, the baby, and the nights I spent alone, wondering if he would ever look at me the way he is looking at me right now.
Instead, I say, “Your new secretary.”
He lets out a short, humorless laugh. “Right.” He reaches out like he’s going to touch my arm, then catches himself and drops his hand. “You’re dismissed. For now.”
I turn to go, but his voice stops me again.
“Zara.”
I pause at the door.
“Whatever you’re hiding,” he says dangerously, “I’ll find out. I always do.”
I don’t answer. Just walk out and close the door behind me with a soft click. Back at my desk, my hands shake as I open my personal phone. One new message from the nanny.
Mrs. Rivera: Liam had a nightmare during nap time. Kept calling for Daddy. He’s okay now, but…you might want to come home early if you can.
I stare at the screen until the words blur, and type back quickly.
Me: I’ll try. Tell him Mommy’s coming soon.
I set the phone down and look up. My eyes meet the watching eyes of Valerio through the glass wall. His expression is unreadable, but his eyes…his eyes held a lot of questions.
I look away first. It’s only the first day, and I already feel like I’m drowning.
By six-thirty in the evening, the office is mostly empty. I’m packing up to leave when Valerio’s door opens again.
“Working late already?” he asks.
“Finishing a few things, I’m leaving soon.”
He nods once. Then, almost reluctantly, “You did good today.”
The praise shouldn’t warm, but it does. This is getting dangerous. “Thank you,” I mutter.
He lingers in his doorway, watching me gather my things, and for a moment, it feels like the old days—him waiting for me to finish up so we could steal some minutes together before the cleaning crew arrived.
But those days were gone, erased just like me.
“Goodnight, Mr. Cruz.”
I make it to the elevator before the first tear slips, and I wipe it away angrily.
Behind me, I hear his office door close, but I can still feel him. And somewhere across the city, his son is waiting for a father who doesn’t even know he exists. I press the parking lot button and let the doors close, my heart aching.
This is going to destroy us all.
Zara's POVI don’t remember leaving his office.One moment I am standing there, frozen, watching the hurt in his eyes. The next, I am in the elevator, pressing the button for the parking garage over and over, my hands shaking so badly I almost drop my keys."Go home, Zara." His voice echoes in my head. "I am not asking. I am telling you."I’m already driving before I realize I have started the engine. The city blurs past me: red lights, stop signs, pedestrians, but my mind is still in his office, still replaying the way he looked at me when I told him about Liam. The concern in his voice and the way he said my name like a plea.“He would be a good father,” I think, if he knew.I push the thought away. I cannot afford to think about that now. I have to get home and check on Liam. I have to—My phone buzzes in the cupholder, and I glance at it at a red light.Valerio: Text me when you get home. Let me know how he is.I stare at the message for a long moment, my thumb hovering over the k
Zara’s POVI jolt awake to Liam’s small body burning against mine.The clock on his nightstand glows 3:17 a.m., and his skin feels like fire. I press my palm to his forehead, and my stomach drops. The fever has spiked hard, his cheeks flushed scarlet, his breathing shallow and fast. He whimpers in his sleep, tiny fists clutching my shirt tightly, and my heart breaks at the sight. "Mommy..." he whimpers, eyes still closed."I'm here, baby. I'm right here.” I whisper, voice cracking as I sit up and gather him closer, his little body trembling. I strip him down to his diaper, press a cool cloth to his forehead, and reach for the thermometer on the bedside table. I watch the numbers climb…103.8. Panic claws up my throat.I rock him gently, humming the lullaby he loves even though my voice shakes, while he makes soft, pained sounds that break my heart. I grab the children’s fever reducer and manage to get some into him with a sippy cup of water. He drinks a little, then curls back agains
Valerio's POVI take the long way, circling the block twice before I finally force myself to park. Every red light feels like a warning, and every turn feels like a mistake. I tell myself I am doing the right thing. Clara is my fiancée, and Zara does not want me.But none of it helps. My hands grip the steering wheel so hard my knuckles ache. Zara's face keeps burning behind my eyes, the way she looked at me in the dim hallway, lips parted, breath trembling, her body so close I could feel the heat of her through the thin fabric of her clothes. The way her voice cracked when she told me to leave. “Leave, Valerio.”I had almost kissed her; I had almost said fuck the rule, fuck the consequences, fuck everything, but…she pushed me away. “She told you to leave,” I murmur to myself, the thought like a knife twisting in my chest. “She doesn’t want you.”I should feel relieved, but the rejection feels like acid in my stomach.I pull up outside Clara's building and kill the engine. For a lo
Zara’s POV The apartment door clicks shut behind me, and I lean against it for a second, eyes closed, trying to steady the storm inside my chest. Valerio’s silent treatment is having an effect on me, and I shouldn't care, but that's not it, because I saw how he looked at me across his desk, like he's fighting the same pull. Then he asked about Liam and that tiny part of me that still clings to the past gets hope. I had texted that Liam wasn't well, and that I might be late to work though I made it just in time. I drop my bag and walk straight to Liam’s room. He’s awake, propped up against pillows with flushed cheeks and glassy eyes. Mrs. Rivera sits beside him, reading in a soft voice. The moment he sees me, his little face lights up, even through the discomfort. “Mommy,” he croaks, reaching for me. I cross the room in three strides and pull him into my arms, holding him tight against my chest, his small body warm, too warm. The guilt hits me like a physical blow. I've been aw
Valerio’s POVI barely slept. The coffee she made sat on my desk until it went cold, and I could not bring myself to throw it away before leaving the office.Now, the penthouse feels like a cage this morning.I stand at the window with a cup of black coffee gone cold in my hand, watching the city wake up below. Tokyo was a mistake, not the deal, that is progressing exactly as planned. The mistake was bringing Zara along, because those three days of proximity have just made it everything weird, and the whole scandal has left me torn between following my instincts and acting like the good gentleman that I am. Now, I have to keep my distance and act like I didn’t want her in all the ways known to man. “Perché non riesco a staccarmi da te?” (Why can't I pull away from you?) I murmur into the bedroom while pacing the length of the room. My thoughts keep circling back to her like muscle memory. I set the coffee down untouched and walk to my desk, the old photo still hidden in the drawer.
Zara's POVThe morning after the statement is everywhere—all the screens in the lobby, the photographer’s face pale and shaking as he admits he was paid, his face plastered on magazine covers. The board is satisfied, the story is dead, but something else is different. Valerio is already in his office when I arrive, standing by the windows, his back to me, hands in his pockets, and doesn’t acknowledge my presence through the glass wall like he always does. Not even a nod. “It’s fine,” I murmur to myself while I settle into my chair, “This is what you wanted, remember? Professional distance and safety.” But I can’t shake the weird feeling pooling inside my stomach. The morning passes in a blur; I handle emails, reports, and scheduling meetings while Valerio stays in his office without a word, and on the few times he comes out, he moves through the office like I am invisible. I try to focus on my work, drowning myself in all the tasks. I update the calendar, file documents, but my m
Valerio’s POVThe gala is supposed to be just another night of calculated smiles and strategic conversations. Instead, it feels like the ground is shifting beneath my feet.I’m standing near the grand staircase, champagne glass in hand, nodding at something one of the European investors is saying,
Zara’s POVThe gown feels too elegant for someone with a heavy heart as mine.I stand in front of the mirror in my small apartment, soothing down the deep emerald green dress I had bought on sales two weeks ago. It hugs my figure without being flashy; professional enough for an assistant, but still
Zara’s POVThe drive home from the office feels longer than usual. Luca’s words keep echoing in my head. “He found something last night. An old photo.” My hands grip the steering wheel tighter as I navigate the late-night traffic. Valerio has found a photo in my desk drawer; wait…is it the one tuc
Valerio’s POVThe office felt too quiet after Zara left. Her presence still lingers everywhere; at her desk, in the air, in the way the chair was slightly pushed back like she had left in a hurry. I sit down in her seat, leaning back, trying to make sense of the storm raging inside my head.These f







