Chapter 11
CHAPTER ELEVEN : Warning Call
NOVA POV
I was a bundle of nerves, even after Grant stopped by later. While my heart was busy painting vulgar scenarios of how the night could go right, my head kept cataloguing all the ways it could go terribly wrong. And deep down, I knew,I probably wasn’t ready for any of it.
I wore my thickest sweater even though the heater was on, sweat beading down my forehead like I’d run a marathon. My oversized, fluffy pajama bottoms swallowed my legs, and my glasses were perched neatly on my nose, the one consistent accessory in my life.
And then, he was in my room. Simply put, the ball was in my court.
Grant sat at the edge of the bed, scrolling on his phone, stretching the silence like an overwhelmed hair tie on the verge of snapping. My nerves decided now was a great time to betray me.
“Did you know sloths can hold their breath longer than dolphins?”
No. No, Nova. Absolutely not.
Of all the things to randomly blurt out around Grant, why did my mouth have to choose this?
Sometimes I experience what I call a brain glitch, where my mouth spews content not approved by me or my brain. It usually happens when I’m either too nervous or when I’m with someone I feel… safe around. Familiar.
Wait. Did that mean I was comfortable with Grant?
No. Not comfortable, dumbass. Nervous.
But can I blame my stupidity on nerves? Maybe.
Grant’s hand stilled mid-scroll. Slowly, he lifted his eyes to mine, one brow arched.
The weight of his stare nearly knocked the air from my unstable lungs.
“…Excuse me?”
His voice was flat, calm in a way that felt almost lethal.
My cheeks flamed.
“Uh—I mean. Sloths can actually hold their breath longer than dolphins. Forty minutes compared to ten. Which is insane, right? Because dolphins are literally built for swimming, and sloths… well, they look like they’d drown in a puddle.”
Silence.
I know. I know.
This was surprising to me too. I hoard random information in my head for later use, and apparently later use meant blurting it in front of a billionaire who probably didn’t care about sloths.
Who would’ve thought sloths could out-hold their breath compared to sea creatures?
My amusement was short-lived when Grant adjusted his cufflink, the faintest twitch of a smile threatening his lips.
“Of all the useless information you could have interrupted me with… that’s what you chose?”
Useless? My heart dropped.
But it wasn’t useless. Sloths really could go forty minutes. For real.
“I panicked,” I whispered, my voice shrinking to a confession.
Grant leaned back on the bed, studying me like I was a puzzle no algorithm could solve.
“Noted,” he murmured, and to my horror, there was a hint of a smile in his tone.
“Do you ever panic?” I asked quickly, locking my eyes on him, expecting him to laugh it off. After all, I was basically a basket full of clumsy contradictions.
“We all do.”
He pocketed his phone, folding his arms across his chest as his gaze locked on mine.
“The way you compose yourself matters more.”
“I compose myself well enough,” I muttered, “but I always end up doing something clumsy or awkward.”
My voice sounded whiny even to me.
“Go to the doctor. I’m not your therapist.”
This man had the confidence of a cobra, and the precision of one too.
“Then what are you in my room for?” I shot back sarcastically.
Silence.
He didn’t answer. Instead, he let his eyes roam across the space, really looking at my room for the first time.
It might be his house, but for my temporary stay, I’d already personalized the room until it hummed with my presence. There’s nothing like the warm embrace of a space that feels lived in and safe.
Half the shelves were overtaken by my pen collections. Yes. Pens.
I have four major obsessions in life that I can’t help but hoard, but pens are my favorite. Each pen tells a story the owner abandoned once their ink or purpose ran out. I guess I identify with them. A little too much. So I care for them, give them a home, so they don’t feel used and discarded.
Fountain pens. Ballpoints. Markers. Fineliners. Even a quirky set of glitter gel pens shaped like cartoon characters that I refuse to part with. They’re not clutter. They’re me.
The red gel ink pen reminds me of late-night doodles I made when I was lonely. The sleek black fountain pen reminds me of who I want to be someday, unapologetic, elegant, and sophisticated.
Each pen in my drawers, bags, or perched in coffee mugs across the room is like a tiny diary of a life phase.
Grant’s eyes narrowed slightly.
“Why do you keep so much clutter?”
“It’s not clutter,” I said quickly. “They hold more than sentimental value.”
Beside the pens, my too-small bookshelf was crammed with hardcovers and paperbacks. My novels spilled over in messy stacks, and somewhere in there I’d hidden my more… questionable reads. My eroticas, disguised under plain, boring covers that I hoped would fool any nosy onlooker.
Apparently, Grant was nosy.
He plucked the slimmest book from the shelf. My stomach sank. Of all the books, how did he manage to choose the filthiest one?
He flipped to the middle. My soul prepared to abandon my body.
The edge of his lips twitched.
“Suspended Arch… This position looks stressful.”
He turned another page casually.
“Spiral Staircase. Looks like something I’d try.”
His tone was calm, detached, as if he were reviewing stock reports instead of narrating pages from my secret stash of rare erotica collections of Sexual positions.
It was my fault. Who leaves such material where sunlight—and Grant—could reach it?
“Hm. The Mirror Grip. Note this one down for when I finally fuck you.”
The words dropped with full confidence, no hesitation, no shame. Alpha male. Dom energy. A predator marking his prey.
Images flooded my head, of me, tied up, whipped, touched. My nipples tightened through the fabric of my sweater in a treacherous response.
But this wasn’t my lucky night.
Before I could process further, Grant tucked the book under his arm and stood.
“You don’t mind if I borrow this, do you? I’m sure you have several others.” He smirked.
I shook my head furiously. This was a bad idea. A catastrophically bad idea.
“Or,” he drawled, “you could stay with me in my room while I finish reading it.”
Worse. Much worse.
I opened my mouth to reclaim my book, but the shrill tone of my phone cut through the tension.
My godmother’s name flashed across the screen. The woman rarely called. My heart sank.
“Mother,”
I answered, faking cheerfulness I didn’t feel. Whatever this was, it better be good.
“You abandoned me, Cherië,”
She launched into a melodramatic tirade.
“Living your life in New York City while I’m left here to suffer—”
“Interns don’t get paid,” I cut her off sharply.
She sniffed. “It doesn’t mean you can't take one or two extra jobs.”
Extra jobs. That would wreck my scholarship and tank my grades, all so I could send her money she’d probably blow on pills.
Yeah. I’d take a hard pass
When I stayed silent, she cleared her throat. And right before I could hang up, her voice dropped low, almost conspiratorial.
“There’s a man sniffing around your past, Cherië. You better stay careful.”
CHAPTER FIFTEENPsycho…Nova POV“Nova… stop!”The command cracked through the night like a whip. My sneakers screeched against wet pavement as I spun, lungs burning, fear burning hotter.The figure tugged at the edge of their mask, fingers frantic, like tearing off their own skin. And then—Oh God.Not a stranger.The face beneath was not what I expected. Not some alleyway creep with a knife. Or a kidnapper. It’s Sandra.Sandra from the front desk. Sandra, with her migraine-bright blouses and laugh that could double as a fire alarm. Sandra, who never missed a chance to look me up and down like my existence was a coffee stain on her knockoff heels.Sandra, who was the despicable Mr Aaron Smith's favorite colleague. Is he around? Did they plan this together? Do they intend to kill me? My brain glitched. Static. This had to be a fever dream. Or maybe Grant’s cologne was laced with something illegal, because no sane universe served me Sandra as my night-stalker reveal.“What the—”
Chapter Fourteen: Shadows That Don’t BelongNova – POVI couldn’t breathe in that office after he left. His words clung to me, wrapping around my throat like smoke I couldn’t cough out.Mine.No one should be able to say one word like that and make it sound like both a threat and a vow.But Grant Calloway had managed it, and now it ricocheted inside my skull long after his expensive cologne faded from the room.I paced my cubicle, hugging a stack of books to my chest before shoving them onto the shelves just to feel useful. My hands were trembling so badly one paperback slipped, the spine smacking against the floor. Great. The girl who always found safety in books was suddenly dropping them like she’d developed a paper allergy.“Get a grip, Nova,” I muttered under my breath, crouching to pick it up.Even the little things were wrong. My rainbow collection of pens was scattered across my desk, completely out of order, not in their neat rows of color. Normally I’d fix them without
Chapter Thirteen: What does Mr Calloway Know? Nova POVHow the hell does he know?The question wouldn’t leave me. It clung to me the way tea stains cling to the inside of my favorite chipped mug no matter how hard I scrub.Grant didn’t just stumble across those words. No one says this is not a charity organization like that in a precise, weighted, almost rehearsed way unless they’ve heard it before. Unless they knew exactly what string they were pulling.But that’s impossible.Right?I forced myself to look at him, to study every detail. He was leaning against my desk now, one hand in his pocket, the other adjusting his cufflink with the kind of bored precision people reserve for polishing knives. His face gave nothing away, but there was a stillness in him that made my skin prickle.Grant Calloway wasn’t a man you could read. He was a vault. A safe with a twelve-digit code and motion sensors. And yet, somehow, I couldn’t shake the feeling that he had already cracked me open and was
CHAPTER TWELVE - Aivra Nova POVThe past week of my life has been hectic, unexpected, and far too eventful for someone who survives on tea and fictional worlds.For starters, Aaron Smith, formerly the terror of the HR department and personal assistant to the CEO was quietly demoted to assistant HR director. The position of personal assistant was left vacant and juicy, dangled in front of everyone like some kind of golden apple.But no. It didn’t land in anyone’s lap.Sandra got Suspended on indefinite probation. Which, translated, means nobody has had to hear the echo of her stilettos or her shrill tone for days. The atmosphere in Alpha Corp has been almost… peaceful.So naturally, the question is: who is the lucky new personal assistant to Mr. Grant Calloway?Answer: not me.Not anyone with a pulse, actually.The role went to a brand-new AI prototype.Apparently, Grant owns a sprawling empire of companies across different sectors like Hydra heads sprouting from one smugly perfect
Chapter 11 CHAPTER ELEVEN : Warning CallNOVA POVI was a bundle of nerves, even after Grant stopped by later. While my heart was busy painting vulgar scenarios of how the night could go right, my head kept cataloguing all the ways it could go terribly wrong. And deep down, I knew,I probably wasn’t ready for any of it.I wore my thickest sweater even though the heater was on, sweat beading down my forehead like I’d run a marathon. My oversized, fluffy pajama bottoms swallowed my legs, and my glasses were perched neatly on my nose, the one consistent accessory in my life.And then, he was in my room. Simply put, the ball was in my court.Grant sat at the edge of the bed, scrolling on his phone, stretching the silence like an overwhelmed hair tie on the verge of snapping. My nerves decided now was a great time to betray me.“Did you know sloths can hold their breath longer than dolphins?”No. No, Nova. Absolutely not.Of all the things to randomly blurt out around Grant, why did my mou
Chapter Ten: Tacky Bitches.Grant POV“Surprise?” The word left her lips in a squeak, almost playful, but it scraped across my nerves.This bitch had to be the dumbest clown I’d ever given the privilege of sucking my dick. And I must have been even dumber to hand her a spare key to my office.“You don’t look happy to see me,” She added, forcing a pout. Her painted lips trembled, her head tilted like some lost kitten.I gave her a flat stare, my jaw tight. “Get out.”Her eyes widened. “Don’t you miss me? Grant—”“Get Out!” My voice cracked like a whip across the room.“Fine.” She crossed her arms, shoulders hunching as if she was the victim here. She looked so pitiful it pissed me off. That’s the problem with women who don’t know their lane—you indulge them once, and suddenly they think they matter. This is what happens when you don’t have a stable partner: you end up fucking strays who you should never have taken a second look at.She blinked rapidly, then asked.“Did I do anyt