Adeline Acosta's clothes seemed to carry a faint lingering scent of stale coffee and disinfectant. In the elevator's polished chrome mirror, her dim, lifeless face stared back at her. She clutched a worn leather folder tightly to her chest - the last remaining fragment of her past life. Inside were the blueprints she had painstakingly designed. Though the paper itself was light as a feather, it felt unbearably heavy, as if constantly reminding her of the crushing tuition debt weighing her down, an anchor that had dragged her and her family into an inescapable abyss.
Adeline walked toward the reception desk. "Excuse me, I... have something to deliver."
It was not a lie. She was delivering coffee - her third order of the day - to a group of junior executives, whose weekly earnings likely exceeded what she made in three months. But this folder was hers alone. She hoped it might grant her dream a chance.
The receptionist, however, only glanced up disdainfully.
"Just leave it on the counter. Someone will collect it."
Adeline paled, biting her lip hard. She knew she was being foolishly optimistic, so she said no more. As she set down the cardboard coffee tray, her hand trembled, and scalding coffee splashed over the rim. An ugly dark stain spread across the immaculate marble surface.
She fumbled frantically in her bag for a napkin, her cheeks burning with shame. The mocking stares around her felt like they were piercing straight through her.
"Don't move. I'll handle it."
A low voice cut through the quiet hum of the office. Adeline looked up and gasped. Standing there was none other than Christian Mercer - the celebrity. Not the model from the covers of business magazines, but the man himself. He wore a perfectly tailored dark gray suit that seemed molded to his powerful frame. His deep eyes, clear as a winter sky, were fixed on the coffee stain, his expression unreadable and utterly cold.
He did not look at her.
He simply pulled a deep navy silk scarf from his breast pocket, moved with precise, crisp efficiency, and wiped away the stain in one gentle stroke. Then he folded the scarf neatly and put it away, concealing the damp mark. The whole process took less than ten seconds.
He never acknowledged her presence, never met her eyes. He turned and walked toward the private elevator, dignified and imposing.
Adeline stood frozen, her heart pounding. The man had ignored her entirely, as if helping her had been nothing more than a casual afterthought. She grabbed her portfolio and fled, rushing away from the suffocating place as if escaping.