The mont I stepped into his office, the air changed. It wasn’t just the scent of expensive leather and old paper, or the sterile chill of the climate control. It was him. A presence that pressed against the walls, against my skin, a silent, heavy weight that demanded to be acknowledged.
My Restraint, the one thing I had spent five years perfecting, splintered.
It wasn’t a dramatic break. It was a hairline fracture, a tiny, catastrophic crack that spread through my composure before I could stop it. My breath hitched, one sharp, audible gasp I couldn’t swallow. Heat followed, a low, unwelco flush that blood under my skin, spreading through my body with a precision that felt almost deliberate. A violation.
I kept walking. My steps were asured, my back straight. Stopping would have been an admission of weakness. It would have been the first mistake.
Charles Damien didn’t look up. He was seated behind his desk, a fortress of dark wood and glass, his focus absolute on the docunt in front of him. He owned the space, not through aggression, but through a quiet, unshakeable confidence that made the room feel aligned around him, every detail placed exactly where it belonged. He was the center of his own universe.
I reached the chair in front of his desk and stopped.
The reaction didn’t fade. It intensified.
My fingers tightened into fists at my sides, the nails digging into my palms. I forced my breathing back into sothing steady, a rhythm I could control. The suppressants were still working, I told myself. They had to be. But the realization settled in my gut like a stone: not well enough. Not against him.
I had co too far to let this unravel . Five years of planning, of burying my past, of becoming soone new. It wouldn’t all be abandoned because my body decided to react at the wrong mont, to the wrong man.
He finished the page he was reading, his pen making a final, decisive stroke. Only then did he lift his gaze.
The mont his eyes settled on , the pressure sharpened into a physical force. There was nothing careless in the way he looked at people. His attention moved slowly, deliberately, taking in details without rushing past them. It wasn’t curiosity. It was an assessnt. A dissection.
In that first glance, he registered everything that mattered. The perfect cut of my suit. The forced stillness of my posture. The slight delay in my breathing that I had already corrected.
And sothing else.
I could feel it in the way his gaze held just a fraction longer than necessary. A flicker of recognition, not of my face, but of my reaction.
"Eric Hart."
His voice was even, controlled, but it carried weight. The sound of it sent another pulse of heat through , sharper this ti, strong enough to make my jaw tighten before I could force the reaction down.
"Yes, Mr. Damien."
He leaned back slightly in his chair, the movent fluid and predatory. "You’re early."
"I prefer not to be late."
"Most people say that," he replied, a faint, almost imperceptible smile touching his lips. "Few an it."
I didn’t respond. There was no advantage in it.
He held my gaze for another mont, then closed the file in front of him with a soft, final thud. "You’re aware this position doesn’t follow standard structure."
"I am."
"And you still applied."
"Yes."
A brief pause. Not empty. asured.
"Why?"
The question was direct, but not aggressive. It didn’t need to be. The real question hung in the air between us, unspoken: Why are you really here?
Because you destroyed my father, and I’ve spent five years building a cage for you.
"I work better in environnts where decisions are made quickly," I said instead. "This seed like one of them."
A faint shift touched his expression. Not approval. Not yet. Sothing closer to intrigue.
"You’ve done your research."
"I make sure I understand where I’m going."
His gaze didn’t move away from mine. "That implies you think you understand this place."
"I understand enough."
"Enough for what?"
The question landed quietly, a stone dropped into a still pond.
I didn’t hesitate this ti. "To be useful."
Another pause. This one lasted longer. He stood.
The movent changed the room imdiately. He wasn’t taller than I expected. He was closer. The difference mattered.
He stepped around the desk without rushing, closing the distance between us in a way that didn’t feel aggressive but wasn’t passive either. The air shifted as he approached, the Alpha presence that had unsettled from the mont I entered sharpening with proximity, pressing in on from all sides.
My body reacted again. Stronger. Faster.
I held still, every muscle in my body locked in a battle for control.
He stopped in front of , close enough that I could feel the heat of him without contact. His gaze moved over once more, slower this ti, more precise. A physical examination.
"You’re not nervous," he said. It wasn’t a question.
"I don’t see the benefit in it."
"Most people do."
"I’m not most people."
That earned it. A slight change in his expression. Interest. Brief. But there.
His hand lifted without warning. I fought the urge to flinch. He caught my chin lightly between his fingers, tilting my face up just enough to adjust the angle of my gaze. The contact was controlled, not forceful, but the effect hit like a physical blow. Heat surged again, sharper than before, dragging a response out of that I had to suppress instantly before it reached my expression.
His thumb brushed once against my lower lip.
It was a small movent. It shouldn’t have mattered. It did.
My breath shifted. Just slightly. Enough.
His eyes didn’t miss it. There was no reaction in his expression. Only confirmation. The cold, terrifying certainty of a predator who has just found his prey’s scent.
"You don’t react like a Beta," he said quietly.
My pulse jumped hard enough to hurt.
I didn’t pull away. I didn’t answer.
He held my gaze for a second longer, then released and stepped back. The loss of contact registered imdiately, a sudden, cold void that was a problem I refused to acknowledge.
He turned, pressing the intercom on his desk without breaking rhythm. "Cancel the remaining interviews."
A voice answered imdiately. "Yes, sir."
He released the button and looked at again. "You start tomorrow."
The words landed without hesitation.
I studied him for a mont before responding. "You’re making that decision quickly."
"I don’t need more ti."
"And if I’m not what you expect?"
His gaze didn’t shift. "Then I’ll deal with it."
There was no uncertainty in the answer.
I reached for the card he slid across the desk, taking it without letting my hand linger against his. "Understood."
I turned before the reaction in my body had the chance to betray again.
The door closed behind with a soft click. I kept my pace steady as I walked down the corridor, each step controlled, each movent deliberate. The pressure in my chest didn’t ease until I reached the elevator, and even then, it didn’t disappear completely.
The doors closed. I exhaled slowly.
The reflection staring back at in the mirrored wall looked composed. Controlled. Exactly what it needed to be.
But the reaction was still there. Lingering. Unwanted.
Five years of planning had brought here. Five years of control had held until this mont.
And now, after less than ten minutes in the sa room as him, sothing had already shifted.
That wasn’t part of the plan.
Neither was the fact that he had noticed.
And worse—He hadn’t said anything about it.
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