LOGINMaya Chen's life is a mess. Her ex just got engaged to her coworker, she stress-eats ramen for dinner, and now she's desperate enough to interview at Sterling Industries—a company so elite she's pretty sure they'll laugh her out of the building. But Damien Sterling doesn't laugh. The gorgeous, intense CEO offers her the job on the spot, and Maya's suspicious. Guys who look like him don't just hand out six-figure positions to girls who bought their interview outfit at Target.
View MoreThe man sitting across from me was either going to hire me or murder me, and honestly, the way this week was going, I wasn't sure which I'd prefer.
"Ms. Chen," Damien Sterling said, his voice doing that thing where it was somehow smooth and commanding at the same time, "tell me why you're really here." I gripped my Target portfolio tighter and tried not to stare at his eyes. Because seriously, what kind of person had eyes that color? They were amber—like actual liquid gold—and they were currently boring into me like he could see every lie I'd ever told. Including the one I was about to tell him. "I'm interested in the Senior Marketing Manager position," I said, proud that my voice only shook a little. "Sterling Industries has an impressive reputation for innovation, and I believe my experience at Morrison & Associates would—" "Your ex-boyfriend just got engaged." I choked on air. Actual air. "I—what?" Damien leaned back in his chair, and I couldn't help but notice how the movement made his shoulders look even broader in that expensive suit. Not that I was noticing. Because that would be inappropriate during a job interview where he'd just casually mentioned the worst week of my life. "Daniel Yates," he continued, like he was discussing the weather instead of my personal trauma. "Junior account executive. Dated you for two years, dumped you six months ago, and last Tuesday he proposed to Amanda Kim in the middle of the Morrison & Associates break room. There was a cake. Very awkward for everyone involved, I'm told." My face was so hot I was pretty sure I could fry an egg on it. "How do you—that's not—I mean..." I took a breath and tried to remember the confident woman I'd practiced being in the mirror this morning. "With all due respect, Mr. Sterling, my personal life has nothing to do with my qualifications for this position." "Doesn't it?" He stood up, and that's when I realized exactly how tall he was. At least six-foot-three, maybe more, and he moved like... I don't know how to describe it. Like every motion was controlled and purposeful. It should have looked calculated, but instead it just looked natural. Predatory. I stood too, because sitting while he loomed over me felt wrong on every level. "I do my research on all potential employees," Damien said, walking around his desk toward me. He stopped about three feet away—close enough that I could smell his cologne. Something woodsy and expensive that probably cost more than my rent. "I need to know that the people working for me can handle pressure. That personal drama won't bleed into professional performance." "I can handle pressure just fine," I said, lifting my chin. My heart was hammering, but I wasn't going to let this arrogant, gorgeous man see me sweat. "I've been handling Daniel's engagement with professionalism for the past week. I even congratulated them. So unless you have questions about my actual qualifications, I think we're done here." I grabbed my purse and portfolio, ready to march out with whatever dignity I had left. "Sit down, Ms. Chen." It wasn't loud. It wasn't even rude. But something in his voice made me want to obey, which was weird because I'd never been good at following orders. I blamed it on the stress. I sat. Damien returned to his chair, and for a moment, he just looked at me. Really looked, like he was trying to figure out a puzzle. "You stood up for yourself," he finally said. "That's good. I don't need employees who'll roll over the second things get difficult." "So... I'm not being kicked out?" One corner of his mouth lifted in something that might have been a smile if it reached his eyes. "Why would I kick you out? Your portfolio is excellent. Your campaign for the Jensen account increased their revenue by thirty-seven percent in six months. Your social media strategies are innovative without being gimmicky. On paper, you're exactly what this company needs." I blinked. "On paper?" "I needed to see if you'd crack under pressure. Marketing at this level isn't about pretty presentations and catchy slogans. It's about making decisions when everyone's second-guessing you. It's about standing your ground when someone challenges you." He paused. "You did that. Most people don't." My brain was struggling to keep up. "So... this was a test?" "Everything's a test, Ms. Chen. Life, work, relationships—especially relationships." Something flickered in his eyes when he said that word, but it was gone before I could identify it. "The question is whether you pass or fail." "And did I pass?" "You're still here, aren't you?" He pulled out a folder from his desk drawer and slid it across to me. "This is the contract. The salary is listed on page three. The benefits package starts on page five. Read it over. If you're interested, you can start Monday." I opened the folder, flipped to page three, and nearly fell out of my chair. "This... this has to be a typo." "It's not." "But this is—" I did the mental math. "This is almost double what I was making at Morrison." "You're worth it." He said it so matter-of-factly, like it was obvious. Like I was supposed to believe that I—Maya Chen, who still bought her work clothes at discount stores and couldn't afford to fix the weird rattling sound her car made—was worth this kind of money. "Mr. Sterling, I appreciate the offer, but I have to ask—why? You don't know me. We just met. And yeah, my portfolio is decent, but—" "Decent?" He raised an eyebrow. "Ms. Chen, you're one of the most talented marketing professionals under thirty in this city. The only reason you're not working somewhere more prestigious than Morrison & Associates is because you're loyal to a fault. You stayed there because Daniel worked there, didn't you?" The accuracy of that statement stung. "I stayed because I liked my job," I said, but we both knew it was a lie. "Loyalty is admirable," Damien said. "But misplaced loyalty will ruin your career. Take the weekend. Think about it. But I'll tell you right now—this offer won't be on the table forever. I need someone who can start Monday, hit the ground running, and help me close the Meridian deal by the end of the quarter." The Meridian deal. I'd read about it in the business section. Sterling Industries was trying to acquire Meridian Tech, a merger that would make them the largest tech conglomerate in the Pacific Northwest. "That's in six weeks," I said. "I'm aware." "That's impossible." "Only if you think small." He stood again, extending his hand. "So what do you say, Ms. Chen? Are you going to play it safe, or are you ready for something bigger?" I looked at his hand. Large, strong, with long fingers. No wedding ring, I noticed, though I wasn't sure why that mattered. Everything in my brain was screaming that this was too good to be true. That there had to be a catch. That men who looked like Damien Sterling and offered salaries like this didn't just fall into your lap without consequences. But I was so tired of playing it safe. Safe had gotten me a cheating ex and a broken heart. Safe had kept me in a job I'd outgrown years ago. Maybe it was time to be reckless. I took his hand. The moment our skin touched, something weird happened. Like a jolt of electricity, but warmer. More intense. I could have sworn I saw his eyes flash—actually flash, like there was gold light behind them—but that had to be the stress playing tricks on me. "I'll see you Monday, Mr. Sterling," I said, trying to ignore the tingling sensation in my palm. "Damien," he corrected, still holding my hand. His grip was firm but gentle. "Call me Damien. And Ms. Chen?" "Yes?" His smile was slow and dangerous, and made my stomach do a weird flip. "Welcome to the pack."MAYA'S POVSera called on Friday at seven in the morning.I was in the kitchen, coffee in hand, the building still quiet around me, and I picked up on the second ring because seven in the morning meant something had moved."I found her," Sera said.No preamble. That was the thing about Sera: she'd spent eight years as a liaison and had learned that context was for after the news, not before it."Tell me," I said."Her name is Yuna Park," Sera said. "Twenty-two, biology PhD candidate at UW, no pack connections, no supernatural context. She lives alone, she runs in the mornings, she has a lab partner named Cass who she eats lunch with every day and a professor who thinks she's the best student he's had in fifteen years."A pause."She also woke up three days ago and called her mother at two in the morning because she could hear her neighbor's conversation through two walls and a closed door and thought she was losing her mind."I put my coffee down."She's activating," I said."She's ac
MAYA'S POVReed drove his own car.I'd offered to ride with him and he'd said he'd rather have the time alone to think, which was the honest version of I need to prepare for something and I can't do that in company, and I respected it enough to take Damien instead.We got there first.The annex in mid-morning was different from the annex at eight in the morning three days earlier: the light came through the tree cover at a different angle, the frost was gone, the building's exterior had the quality of something that looked more ordinary in daylight than it had in the specific clarity of early morning.I unlocked the door and we went in.Reed arrived twelve minutes later.He stood in the doorway the way people stood in doorways when they were giving themselves a moment to transition from the outside to the inside, his bag over one shoulder, his eyes moving across the shelves and the table and the box and the open panel in the floor."She was thorough," he said."Yes," I said.He came i
MAYA'S POV The three operatives sat on one side of the conference table on Thursday at two in the afternoon and looked like people who understood they were being assessed and had decided to let it happen. Harlan had a folder. Dae-jung had his laptop. Sera had nothing in front of her, which I'd learned in the last week meant she was the one to watch. "The transition timeline," Damien said. "You said it was accelerating. Tell me what that means." Harlan opened the folder. "The Accord's senior council has fractured," he said. "The members who knew about the covenant are trying to negotiate their own separate arrangements before the ones who didn't know realize how much was being hidden from them. The internal politics are moving faster than the sixty-day timeline can contain." He turned a page. "Three regional Accord offices have already declared independent operation. Two more are expected by end of week." "Which means the transition from coordinated dissolution to chaotic fragmen
MAYA'S POVWe locked the annex the way we'd found it.Damien pulled the door shut and I turned the key and pocketed it and we stood outside in the Cascade morning with the snow peaks above us and the trees doing their quiet work around the building and neither of us said anything for a moment.The frequency was different now.Not pulling, not surging, not the forward direction of something guiding. Just present. The way a room felt different after someone entered it, the specific change in quality that had nothing to do with sound or light but registered anyway."We should call Reed," I said."Yes," Damien said. "After you eat something."I looked at him."You haven't eaten since last night," he said. "And you just made contact with a consciousness that's been sealed in a secondary pathway for eighteen years. Eat first."He was already walking toward the car.I followed, because he wasn't wrong, and because the specific quality of being known by someone well enough that they tracked w
MAYA'S POVMarcus said the name the way people said things they'd been carrying too long: not dramatically, not with the weight of a reveal, just flatly, the relief of finally setting something down."James."The room held it for a moment; then I watched Damien's face do something I'd never seen it
MAYA'S POV I called the number back before Damien could say don't. It rang twice; clean, international tone, the kind that meant distance, and then a woman picked up and said nothing, just waited, which was its own kind of answer about who she was and how she operated. "Who are you," I said. "So
MAYA'S POV The first thing I felt was Jess's hand in mine. Not Damien's. Not the mate bond humming under my skin like a live wire. Jess's hand, smaller than mine, gripping tight enough that her nails were cutting half-moons into my palm. I opened my eyes and the light didn't hurt. That was w
MAYA'S POV~I'd wanted him since the interview.Not in a vague, he's-attractive way. In the specific embarrassing way where you notice things you have no business noticing. The particular way his hands moved when he was thinking. The line of his throat when he tilted his head. The way his voice dr
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