Cecilia
The lunch hour hit like a territorial claim.
Amara appeared at my office door, her designer suit immaculate, her smile polished to a mirror shine.
“Join me for lunch?” she asked, using that honeyed tone she reserved for people she wanted something from.
glanced up from my computer. “Sure.”
But before I could even close my laptop, a deep voice sliced through the room-flat, final, and unmistakably in charge.
“She’s already committed.”
Both Amara and I turned.
Sebastian stood at the door, posture relaxed but unmistakably alpha, his expression stone-serene, the kind you couldn’t read unless he wanted you to.
His presence filled the space-shoulders squared, one hand casually in his pocket, as if he hadn’t just walked in to plant a flag.
Behind him, Beta Sawyer managed a diplomatic half-smile, the kind you wear when you’re watching a train wreck in slow motion but can’t Look away.
“Oh,” Amara recovered quickly, her voice climbing half an octave.
“I didn’t realize Cecilia had a business lunch scheduled. She really should’ve mentioned it.”
Then, turning to me with a smile that belonged on a politician’s campaign poster:
“You should’ve told me you had plans, darling. I wouldn’t have dropped. by unannounced.”
I almost laughed.
Right. Because this wasn’t a drop-by. It was a full-scale PR stunt staged for the in-house gossip network.
Sometimes silence said more than a headline.
So I said nothing.
Sebastian’s glacial stare softened just slightly when it landed on me.
“It was a last-minute call,” he said, voice still laced with command.
“Secretary Moore, you’re with me.”
No room for debate. No room for anyone else.
Amara’s expression turned tragic-the kind of heartbreak you’d expect to see on a soap opera, all glassy stares and engineered fragility.
Sebastian didn’t even look her way.
The tension in the room thickened until I could practically taste it.
“Ahem.” I cleared my throat, unable to stomach another second of this emotional theater.
Rising from my chair, I turned to Amara with professional courtesy-the kind you use when you’d rather slam the door but choose not to give them the satisfaction.
Special Assistant Amara, another time perhaps.”
The chairman had just appointed her as his special assistant.
Amara had gone from regional manager to personal aide to the most powerful man in the company.
A promotion dressed as a favor, wrapped in family ties and boardroom politics.
It struck me-how many years had I spent clawing my way up from nothing, only to be shuffled around like a pawn in someone else’s endgame?
Even at the branch office, the deputy manager had orchestrated my removal.
Anyone else would’ve been demoted. Maybe fired.
But not Amara.
Not when Luna Regina was her godmother.
She didn’t just fall upward-she was launched like a legacy rocket, landing softly in power’s front row.
And me?
Still pretending the game wasn’t rigged
“Tomorrow then,” Amara conceded gracefully, recognizing her tactical disadvantage.
We walked out of the office together:
Sebastian and Beta Sawyer had already disappeared, presumably taking the elevator down ahead of us.
When the elevator arrived, Amara said she needed to go out too, so we stepped in together. Standing side by side in silence was excruciating.
As we passed the 18th floor, Amara suddenly broke the silence.
“Secretary Moore,” she said, her eyes finding mine in the mirrored wall,
‘Kope you don’t resent me because Sebastian and I were once in love.”
*Resentment?* Wasn’t that emotion exclusively in your repertoire?
“Oh, not at all,” I replied with sugary sweetness. “You said it yourself-
‘once.’ I once loved another man too. He rests very peacefully in his grave. Sometimes his spirit pays a cheerful visit from the ashes, but hey, that’s life. So please, don’t burden yourself. Stay positive.”
Amara froze, her face hardening like cement. Her chest rose and fell with controlled anger.
I smiled innocently, as if I hadn’t just verbally backhanded her. When the doors opened, I waved cheerfully. “See you tomorrow!”
The moment I stepped out, my smile vanished. I muttered “idiot” under my breath as I walked away.
All this talk about love and past relationships-if someone stops loving you, you should stop loving them twice as hard.
Show them what real indifference looks like.
Sometimes that’s exactly what makes them come crawling back… like that dog Xavier.
Though I couldn’t say for sure if Sebastian played by those same rules.



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