When pain becomes unbearable, courage is born.
The slap came hard and fast,louder than thunder, and sharper than her breath.
Isabella stumbled backward, her cheek stinging, eyes watering, but she didn’t cry. Not anymore. Crying had lost its power in this house a time long ago.
“Ungrateful wretch,” her stepmother hissed, her heavily painted lips curling in disgust. “If it weren’t for my mercy, you’d be rotting in the gutters with your good-for-nothing dead mother.”
“I didn’t touch your necklace,” Isabella whispered, voice trembling.
“You’re a liar just like your dead mother .” Her stepsister chimed in, leaning on the doorframe with folded arms and a wicked smirk. “You were probably planning to sell it and run away with your invisible boyfriend. If anyone would even look at you.”
That wasn’t the plan,but now it was.
That night, Isabella didn’t sleep. She waited.
She waited until her stepmother’s heavy footsteps faded into silence and her stepsister’s phone buzzed with yet another late-night flirtation.
Then she packed.
Nothing expensive. Just her passport, a few clothes, her mother’s rosary, and a bundle of cash she’d been hiding under a loose floorboard for two years. She’d saved every penny she could from menial jobs and housemaid tips. They never noticed. They never looked that far beneath her skin.
At dawn, she left.
The air outside felt foreign on her face. She hadn’t stepped out alone in months. The city still buzzed like it was awake and mocking, but this time, she had purpose in her .
The night air burned her lungs as she sprinted across the icy sidewalk. The scent of fuel, vodka, and fear clung to her coat. Her boots slapped wet against the cracked pavement, but she didn’t dare look back. If she looked back, she’d freeze—and freezing meant dying.
She boarded the plane to New York with trembling hands, a secondhand coat, and a prayer under her breath.
The plane landed in New York just before dawn.
Isabella Volkov pressed her forehead against the icy window as buildings stabbed into the sky like glass knives. She didn’t blink. Didn’t flinch. Her fingers clutched the handle of the cracked black suitcase she’d carried since Moscow.
Inside it was nothing but a spare blouse, a passport, and a broken silver watch that used to belong to her father.
The watch was the only part of him they hadn’t stolen.
When the plane touched down, she didn’t cry.
She’d cried enough already. On train tracks, in moldy attics, in a kitchen full of fists and slaps. Tears didn’t save people like her.
Only silence did.
Two Weeks Later — Manhattan
Isabella clutched her resume like it was armor, though her trembling fingers betrayed the panic inside her. She adjusted her frizzy bun, trying to tame the stray curls sticking to her forehead.
The towering glass building loomed over her like a monument of power.
JAXON CORP.
A multinational tech empire. She’d found the job listing by chance. Secretary position. No experience required. High pay. Interviews today.
She needed this.
She stepped in and was greeted by sleek marble floors, LED lighting, and a woman at the reception desk who looked like a model straight out of a fashion campaign.
“You’re here for the secretary position?” the woman asked with a glance.
Isabella nodded. “Yes.”
The woman blinked, her gaze sweeping over Isabella’s coat, her cracked nails, the faded red scratch on her cheek.
The receptionist’s lips twitched, but she said nothing as she gestured toward the elevators.
“Top floor. Straight to Mr. Knight’s office.”
Isabella blinked. “The billionaire himself is doing interviews?”
The woman smiled faintly. “He prefers a…hands-on approach.”
Hands-on. Right. Isabella stepped into the elevator,When the elevator doors closed, Isabella finally exhaled.
She caught her reflection in the mirrored wall. Hollow cheeks. Big eyes. Lips bitten raw. Her fingers trembled as she clutched her papers, but she told herself it didn’t matter. If she could just survive the next hour, she’d have a job. A place to sleep. A life.
No more running.
The office was enormous. Glass walls. Black marble desk. A skyline view that stretched across Manhattan like a painting.
And behind that desk sat the man himself.
Damian Knight.
She recognized him instantly. Every woman in Russia had seen his photo at some point in some glossy business article. A self-made billionaire. Ruthless. Sharp. Impossible.
Thirty, maybe thirty-two. Sharp jaw, stormy eyes, black suit tailored like sin, and a presence that made the air thinner.
He didn’t look up immediately. He was typing something on his phone so fast and focused. Then, as if sensing her discomfort, he finally met her gaze.
Time stopped.
His eyes narrowed, as though trying to place her in a memory. She felt it too,an eerie sense like he had seen her before.
“Isabella Martinez,” he said, reading her name off the file.
“Yes, sir,” she replied, quietly.
“Your voice,” he murmured, gaze darkening. “It’s soft. Too soft for this city.”
“I’ll adapt.”
He stood, walked around the desk, and stopped two feet in front of her. Tall. Broad. Dangerous. He circled her once, like a predator evaluating prey, but didn’t touch her.
“Why New York?”
“I had nowhere else to go.”
“Are you running from something?”
A pause.
“No,” she lied.
A slow smirk curled on his lips. “Liar.”
Isabella stiffened. Her instinct screamed for her to run,to run and never come back,but something in his eyes, cold and curious, pinned her in place.
“You’re hired,” he said simply.
She blinked. “Just like that?”
“I don’t waste time. Starting tomorrow, you’re my secretary. Six a.m. sharp. And Isabella?”
“Yes?”
He stepped even closer, his breath warm against her cheek.
“If anyone touches you in this office…they’ll have to deal with me.”
Isabella was so shocked that she practically ran out of the office.
Without knowing she was been watched.
From the hallway, a pair of eyes watched Isabella walk out of Damian Knight’s office. Eyes filled with hatred.
A camera clicked.
A message was sent.
“She’s here. Plan begins now.
The past doesn’t knock—it breaks inIsabella barely slept.Even wrapped in the expensive warmth of Damian’s penthouse sheets, she kept waking in a cold sweat, haunted by shadows with no faces and names that didn’t belong to her anymore.Every time she closed her eyes, she saw red heels and sharp smiles. Every time she exhaled, she heard Helena’s voice again—Then she won’t just be his secretary. She’ll be his ruin.She hadn’t told Damian what she overheard.Not yet.Because something had shifted inside her after last night’s reveal.If Damian had known her since Russia, if he’d kept that photo for years, then this wasn’t coincidence.This was design.And she wasn’t ready to ask why.The most powerful man in Manhattan slept under the same roof, two doors down, with a picture of her tucked away like a secret he never planned to share.By 6:40 a.m., she was already seated at her desk outside Damian’s office. Earlier than usual, but not early enough to stop the gnawing feeling in her chest
A smile can be sharper than a knifeIsabella turned from the kettle slowly.The breakroom was empty—at least, it looked that way. But she had felt it again. That weight behind her neck. That prickling instinct she’d learned not to ignore.The scent of vanilla and money drifted in before the click of her heels. Isabella didn’t have to turn around to know it wasn’t just another intern. There was a presence some women wore like perfume, expensive, confident, lethal. And this one was laced with warning.She turned slowly, heart already picking up pace.Afriaid of who she might see when she turns.“Isabella, right?”The woman’s heels had clicked too confidently. Too deliberately.And she didn’t blend in.No one wore red heels in Jaxon Corp. No one except her.Helena Knight. Damian’s sister-in-law.She hadn’t even known he had a sister-in-law until yesterday, when his assistant had whispered it under her breath while filing the floor’s clearance records.Helena was married to Damian’s older
sometimes the danger hides behind protection The cold wind scraped against her cheeks, but Isabella didn’t move.She stood at the edge of the penthouse balcony, thirty-nine stories above the city, her hands gripping the glass railing like it could anchor her to reality.The truth was still echoing in her skull.“I didn’t hire you because of your résumé… I hired you because I couldn’t forget you.”“I want to keep you.”Those words didn’t feel romantic.They felt like chains.Behind her, the sliding door opened. Softly. No footsteps. Just presence. She didn’t turn around.“Was any of it real?” she asked.Damian’s voice didn’t answer right away. “What do you mean?”She exhaled slowly. “The interview. The job. The keycard. The drawer. All of it. Did you orchestrate everything just to keep me here?”“No.”“Liar.”She heard him stop two feet behind her.“You didn’t think I’d find out?” she whispered. “That you watched me? Followed me? That you kept a photo of me from years ago?”His voice
Damian rarely misjudged people.He’d spent his entire adult life detecting lies, reading fear like a language, picking apart smiles that concealed daggers. In boardrooms, he thrived. In war zones, he survived. And in business, he dominated.Because Damian didn’t get emotional.Emotions were leverage. Noise. Clutter.He never let them in.Until her.Until tonight.She sat on the guest bed now, her back straight, her fingers wrapped around the old photo like it might fall apart if she let go.But Isabella Volkov wasn’t any of those things.She wasn’t a strategist.She wasn’t a threat.She was a ghost.The girl he’d never been able to forget.She looked up at him with wide, stunned eyes. Vulnerable, but not weak. There was something fierce in her confusion. Like her instincts wanted to run but her heart wasn’t ready to follow.He watched her silently, the tension between them thickening like storm clouds before a downpour.Her voice came out small.“Who gave you this?”He didn’t move. “N
The private elevator rose without a sound, but Isabella’s heart roared like thunder in her chest.She was alone with him. Again.Damian Knight stood beside her, motionless, composed, unreadable and with one hand in his coat pocket, the other gripping a phone that hadn’t lit up once. He hadn’t said a word since they stepped in, and yet his presence filled every inch of space between them. It wasn’t loud. It was… unshakable.Like a shadow that didn’t need sunlight to exist.She tried to keep still, but her fingers kept brushing against the edge of her coat. Her jaw tightened. Her breathing stilled, she tried not to fidget but her hands gave her away.She stared straight ahead. She was trembling He didn’t look at her until the elevator reached the thirty-ninth floor. Then, almost without emotion, he turned his head slightly and said, “You’re shaking“I’m not.”“You are.”She pressed her hands tighter in her lap. “I’ve never been in a penthouse before.”“You’ll get used to it.”There was
After the man stepped into the elevator and vanished, Isabella stayed frozen for several moments. The scent he left behind—citrus and smoke—still clung to the air like an invisible fingerprint.She forced herself to focus. To breathe.Damian hadn’t called her in. No one on the floor looked alarmed. Life at Jaxon Corp was moving like a well-oiled machine. Maybe that was what scared her the most was how easily a threat could slip in and out of such a place without anyone blinking.She turned back to her screen, heart pounding against her ribs. Her fingers hovered above the keyboard as she reviewed the updated call logs, the investor summaries Damian had forwarded, the legal brief she was supposed to revise by noon. It all felt pointless now. Fragile.But she worked anyway.By 11:50, she needed air.She slipped out of the executive floor and rode the elevator down to the twelfth, where the Jaxon Café buzzed quietly. She ordered a coffee she wouldn’t finish and a sandwich she wouldn’t tou