登入Caspian’s POV
I knew her the second I walked through that door.
I had told myself I wouldn't. I had told myself a man doesn't remember one face out of a crowded club, one night out of a hundred forgettable nights, one woman he left before the sun came up. I had told myself a lot of things on the flight over.
But every one of them was a lie.
It was her. The slope of her shoulders. The way she held her chin like the world had tried to take it from her and failed. I had spent weeks trying to drink that night out of my head and here it was, standing at the front of my conference room in a gray suit, about to sell me my own company's strategy.
Anastasia Voss.
I sat down before my legs gave me away because I don't stumble. Not in a boardroom, not anywhere. But the sight of her had reached into my chest and closed a fist around something I didn't know was still beating.
She started her presentation. I heard maybe half of it.
The other half of me was in that dark room again, her hands in my hair, the small sound she made when I pulled her under me. I had left cash on the table like a coward, because leaving money was easier than leaving a number, and a number meant I wanted to see her again, and wanting things is how my mother taught me to lose.
I made myself listen.
And then I couldn't stop listening.
She was good. Not pretty-girl good, not lucky good. Sharp. She tore the market apart slide by slide and rebuilt it in our favor, and she did it with a calm that most men twice her age couldn't fake. Every objection I might have raised, she answered before I opened my mouth.
This is not the woman I left in that bed. That woman had been soft and drunk and breaking. This one was steel in a quiet voice.
"I would be happy to hear the boss's opinion on my proposals," she said.
The room turned to me.
I had been somewhere else entirely. I looked at her, and for one dangerous second I almost said the wrong thing. I almost said her name like I had earned it.
"Implement all of it," I said instead.
She nodded, professional, and moved on.
That was when the doubt set in. She had looked me in the eye twice now and given me nothing. No flush. No flinch. No flicker of I know you. A woman doesn't forget a night like that. So either she was the finest actress I had ever met, or she truly didn't remember my face.
The thought should have hurt.
Instead it spread through me slowly and warm, like a plan forming. Good. That makes everything easier.
I went back to my office and couldn't work.
I sat behind a desk that had closed billion-dollar deals and stared at the wall like a teenager. Did she take the money? I kept circling it. If she took it, she was one kind of woman. If she didn't, she was another, and the second kind was far more dangerous to a man like me.
I was reaching for my coat when the knock came.
She walked in without waiting long, a folder in her hand, and the air changed the way it does before a storm.
"I'm sorry to bother you," she said. "I need your signature on these."
I didn't move toward the folder. "That is my secretary's job."
"She stepped away from her desk." Ana crossed the room and set the papers down in front of me. "And I would rather get things done than wait."
Of course you would.
I picked up the pen, but I didn't sign. I looked at her instead. In the club she had been all dim light and want. Here, in the daylight, in that severe gray suit with her hair pinned back, she was something worse. She was real. The kind of beautiful that doesn't wash off in the morning. I let my eyes move over her longer than a man should, and a thought rose up in me, low and sure, about all the ways I could keep her exactly here, in this office, in my life, where I could see her.
She felt it because her chin lifted.
"Is something wrong, sir?"
I held her gaze. This was the moment. One question would tell me everything.
"Perhaps we have met before," I muttered.
I watched her face for the crack. The recognition. The fear or the want or the shame, any of it.
There was nothing.
"None that I know of," she said.
And I couldn't read her. That was the thing that undid me. In ten years of boardrooms and rivals and men trying to take what was mine, I had always been able to read the person across the table. I knew when they lied. I knew when they bluffed. I knew the exact weight of every word before it landed.
Hers told me nothing at all.
Is she pretending? Or is she telling the truth?
I signed the papers without reading them and slid them back. "Thank you, Miss Voss. That will be all."
She left. The door clicked. I sat in the quiet and realized my heart was going like I had run a mile.
The next few days, she lived in my head like a tenant who wouldn't pay rent and wouldn't leave.
I thought about her in meetings I don't remember attending. I thought about her over dinners I didn't taste. I thought about the way she said none that I know of, turning it over like a stone, looking for the lie underneath, and never finding one.
I don't do this. I don't lose nights of sleep over a woman. My mother burned that softness out of me before I was ten years old, with locked doors and long nights and a hand that never stayed still when I came second. I learned the lesson she taught me. Wanting makes you weak. Winning is the only thing that keeps you safe.
But I wanted this.
I wanted to know her. To unfold her one piece at a time until I understood every quiet thing behind those steady eyes. And I have never in my life walked away from something I wanted.
I came into the building the next morning already decided, though I hadn't let myself say it yet.
"Good morning, sir." My secretary fell into step beside me, tablet ready. "Your jet is fueled and waiting. Headquarters confirmed your meetings for the afternoon. The car will take you straight to the airfield."
Headquarters. Another city. My real desk, my real life, three hundred miles from here.
Three hundred miles from her.
"Cancel it," I said.
She stopped walking. "Sir?"
"Cancel the flight. Cancel the meetings. All of them." I kept walking, my voice even, like I was discussing the weather. "I will be running operations from this office until further notice."
"From... here?" She hurried to catch up, lost. "But you have never based yourself out of a satellite branch. Headquarters will need a reason. Everyone will ask why."
I stopped at the glass that looked out over the open floor. Down below, the staff moved between desks, and there, near the far window, a woman in gray bent over her work, a pen tucked behind her ear, unaware that the whole world had just shifted on its hinges for her.
"Tell them the truth," I said. "Tell them I want to get to know my employees."
Ana's POV I had been at my desk twenty minutes when HR walked in and shut the door behind her."Settling in?" she asked, but her eyes were doing something her smile wasn't."It's going as planned." I kept my voice light. "The launch timeline holds. I'll have the full rollout deck ready by Friday.""Good. Good." She sat on the edge of the chair across from me, like she didn't plan to stay, like she only had one thing to say and wanted it gone from her mouth. "Can I ask you something, off the record?""Of course."She leaned in. "What is going on between you and Mr. Strauss?"My pen stopped moving. "Nothing.""Ana." Her voice dropped. "I have worked here for four years. That man flies in, signs things, flies out. He doesn't learn our names. And yesterday he canceled his entire schedule and announced he is staying. The day after you started." She studied my face. "And the way he looked at you in that conference room. Like he already knew you. So I will ask again. Have the two of you met
Caspian’s POV I knew her the second I walked through that door.I had told myself I wouldn't. I had told myself a man doesn't remember one face out of a crowded club, one night out of a hundred forgettable nights, one woman he left before the sun came up. I had told myself a lot of things on the flight over.But every one of them was a lie.It was her. The slope of her shoulders. The way she held her chin like the world had tried to take it from her and failed. I had spent weeks trying to drink that night out of my head and here it was, standing at the front of my conference room in a gray suit, about to sell me my own company's strategy.Anastasia Voss.I sat down before my legs gave me away because I don't stumble. Not in a boardroom, not anywhere. But the sight of her had reached into my chest and closed a fist around something I didn't know was still beating.She started her presentation. I heard maybe half of it.The other half of me was in that dark room again, her hands in my
Ana's POV I looked at the floor he wanted me to kneel on.Then I looked at my husband, sitting there so sure of himself, and I almost laughed."No," I said.His smile slipped. "Ana.""I will never kneel to her." My voice was steady now. The shaking was gone, burned clean out of me. "Keep your signature. Keep your house. Keep her. The marriage is dead whether you sign or not, and we both know it." I picked up my bag from the stairs where I had left it packed since dawn. "Nicole can go to hell. And so can you."I walked out before he could find a single word.Emily took me in without one question. She just opened her door, pulled me inside, and held me while I finally let three days of tears fall where no one cruel could see them."You can stay as long as you need," she whispered into my hair. "Forever, if you want."I didn't want forever. I wanted my own life back, the one I had handed away when I let Sebastian talk me out of working. So the next morning I sat at Emily's kitchen table
Ana's POV I didn't leave the bedroom for three days.The curtains stayed closed. The phone stayed face down. I laid on top of the covers in the same robe and stared at the light on the ceiling, morning into evening into morning again.Sebastian didn't come home.Why would he? He had somewhere better to be now. Somewhere warmer, somewhere that could give him the one thing I couldn't. I kept seeing it whether my eyes were open or closed. His hands on her. Her legs around his back. The way he had looked at the floor instead of at me.On the second day my phone lit up. It was Emily.I let it ring. My best friend would hear it in the first word out of my mouth, the thickness in my voice, the crying I hadn't been able to stop. She would come straight over with wine and soft eyes and questions I couldn't answer yet. I wasn't ready to be seen. So I let the call die in my hand and turned the phone back over.I told myself I would feel human again soon.Then, on the third evening, the front d
Ana's POV I had three weeks, one red dress, and one last plan to save my marriage. And I used all of it on a man who was already inside another woman.But I didn't know that yet.I checked my reflection one last time and smoothed the dress down over my hips. Deep red. The one Sebastian used to love, back when he still looked at me like I was the only door in a room full of windows. It still fit. I told myself that was a good sign.Two years. We can fix two years.The table at Lavelle was perfect. Corner by the window, the whole city glittering below us like something I had paid for. Two bottles of his wine, chilling. The lamb he always ordered without reading the menu. I had even called ahead and asked them to play our first-dance song the moment we sat down.I sat alone instead.Forty minutes. The candle burned down a full inch while I kept my chin level and my hands folded and my smile bolted on. The waiter came by three times with that soft, pitying face people make at a woman who







