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Her heart His mistake

Her heart His mistake

img Adventure
img 5 Chapters
img 28 View
img mark Sanderson
5.0
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About

She was the orphaned genius fighting for a future. He was the billionaire boss who mistook her light for deceit. After countless rejections, she finally lands a dream job-only to be fired and humiliated after being framed for something she didn't do. Cold, ruthless, and powerful, her boss believed the lie and shattered her world. When fate brings her into the arms of another billionaire-one who sees her worth and wants her heart-she begins to bloom again. But just as she's about to move on, the man who wronged her returns, full of regret, desperate for a second chance. Now, she must choose between the safety of new love... and the passion of a love that almost destroyed her. Her Heart, His Mistake is an emotional billionaire romance filled with heartbreak, redemption, and a love worth fighting for.

Chapter 1 Endless Doors C

Rain clung to the windowpane like little tears that refused to flow. Emma Carter sat on the edge of her worn-out twin-sized bed in the gloomy corner of her Queens one-bedroom apartment, which overlooked a noisy bodega. Her résumé looked back at her from the broken screen of her laptop, which she had revised for the twelfth time that week. The same lines. Her photo shows the same smile. However, with each submission, rejection came faster and colder.

"Dear Ms. Carter, Thank you for applying; however, we have decided to proceed with another candidate."

Click.

Delete.

Repeat.

Emma exhaled, rubbed her temples, and shut her laptop with a furious sigh. A blast of wind shook the loose windowpane, matching the storm brewing within her breast. She rose and walked down the small hallway to the kitchenette, where a stale box of instant coffee sat next to a chipped cup that said Make It Happen.

What should happen?

Her fingers trembled slightly as she poured the hot water over the grains. She had not eaten a full meal since the night before when she shared a microwaved lunch with her younger sister, Lily, who was having autoimmune treatment at a hospital two blocks away. Every penny went toward Lily's therapy. Emma had zero tolerance for failure. Not now.

She wrapped her hands around the cup and looked out the window at the city's nightlife, which included people walking beneath umbrellas and light boutiques. The resulting quiet, more than the rejection itself, shattered her. There was no feedback. No second chances. It was just a cold, automated rejection that seemed much too personal.

She retrieved a worn notepad from her desk and glanced through a list of jobs she planned to apply for. Seventy-two. She circled the number in red.

72 "no" s.

A photograph caught her eye-one of the few she had left. She and her dad are smiling on a beautiful beach in Maine. Her father had his arm around her mother. Emma, a little older than eight, stood firmly in a sandcastle moat. That was before the world burst open. Before cancer stole her mother. Her father was also on I-95 before the accident struck.

Following that, it was foster care and part-time employment. School is open throughout the day. Cleaning the workplace at night. She earned her degree via both hard work and intelligence.

Suddenly, nothing seemed to matter.

Emma slumped back onto the bed and stared at the ceiling. Her heart ached in the deep, worn place where sorrow and disillusionment reside. Her undergraduate friends were pursuing careers, traveling, and posting photos in beautiful outfits with hashtags like #bosslife and #lucky.

Emma's hashtags may be more honest: #rentislateagain, #coldnoodlesfordinner, and #onejobawayfromhope.

Regardless, she got up.

Nonetheless, she tried.

She reopened her laptop and updated the job postings. The screen's glow illuminated her pale face in the darkening room. She scanned through entry-level marketing, part-time retail, and assistant barista positions. Then, her eyes settled on something.

> Executive Assistant to the CEO at Wolfe Enterprises.

The location is Manhattan.

Salary: Competitive with complete benefits.

Requirements: BA/BS degree. Discretion. Organization. Flexibility. Emotional intelligence. Excellent problem-solving skills. At least two years of experience are necessary.

Emma sat upright. Her heartbeat skipped.

Wolfe Enterprises? That was enormous. They were not just a corporation; they were a fortress. A luxury import-export giant that sold everything from high-end furniture to cutting-edge technology. Their headquarters were a glass behemoth in Midtown, and the man behind the company, Alexander Wolfe, was as infamous as he was brilliant.

A cunning, sharp-eyed billionaire with a penchant for wealth and a reputation for perfection. Business publications referred to him as a "calculated genius." Gossip columns speculated about his lonely personal life. He seldom did interviews. I never smiled for photographs. No wife. No social media. Only a tempest of rumors and the empire he commanded like a chess master on a city board.

Emma bit her lip.

There is no way.

She had no inside knowledge. No Ivy League degrees. Her suit jacket was second-hand. Her résumé was respectable but not outstanding. And she had no previous experience working in a high-rise firm, much alone as CEO.

But she did have drive. Discipline. Grit. And she was clever. She knew she was brilliant.

Her fingers raced fast over the keyboard as she updated her cover letter. She did not embellish. She did not beg. She told the truth: she was a conscientious employee who understood loyalty, pressure, and privacy. She was willing to give more than she received if given the chance to demonstrate her worth.

She entered her résumé, triple-checked every word, and hovered her mouse over the "Submit" button.

Her hands shook faintly.

Then she clicked.

SEND.

The page loaded. Confirmation.

Emma leaned back and gazed at the ceiling.

She would done it. Another shot in the dark. Another knock at the door.

Her stomach growled, but she ignored it. She closed her eyes and gently pleaded, "Please. "Just this time." Let someone see me."

A minute has passed.

Then another.

The apartment became silent again. The radiator was switched on. Outside, the city went about its business as usual. But hope flickered in Emma's breast-not loudly or confidently, but like the faint flicker of a candle that refused to die out completely.

She smiled as she looked at her father's photograph.

"I am still trying, Dad."

She stood up, carefully folded her blanket, and started organizing her interview material, just in case. She submitted copies of her résumé, qualifications, references from college teachers, and a little leather notebook in which she jotted down key business terms and interview advice.

Hours have passed. She kept herself occupied with tasks such as cleaning, organizing, and reheating leftovers that she seldom touched. But her mind lingered on the email. Regarding Wolfe Enterprises. On the prospect of not just finding a job but also starting again.

A better life.

Night fell. Lights blazed over the skyline. She would never meet Alexander Wolfe, who resided in one of the towers. Powerful. Brilliant. And completely unaware that a girl called Emma Carter had just knocked at his door.

But fate has its sense of irony.

Frequently, the most difficult doors to open are the ones that change everything..

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