The door closed behind me, and the house returned to its usual silence.
I stood there longer than necessary, briefcase in hand, replaying the look on Alex's face when I'd told him to use the kitchen anytime. The way his smile had come easily unforced, unapologetic.
It shouldn't have stayed with me.
I left the estate and slid into the back seat of the car, giving my driver the address of the office out of habit. Sydney blurred past the tinted windows, glass and steel rising like monuments to ambition.
Normally, this grounded me.
Today, it didn't.
You might regret that.
I exhaled slowly. He hadn't said it with fear or reverence. Just confidence. As if wealth didn't impress him. As if my name didn't carry the weight it usually did.
Rich men don't intimidate me.
He hadn't said those exact words but I'd heard them anyway.
---
Windsor Holdings buzzed with efficiency when I arrived. Assistants moved quickly. Executives straightened when they saw me. The usual deference, the usual distance.
I welcomed it. I needed it.
The morning passed in meetings, numbers, projections, expansions. I corrected mistakes before they were spoken. I dismissed excuses without apology. This was the version of myself the world expected.
This was the version I trusted.
And yet, between agenda points, my mind drifted.
Alex's easy sarcasm.
His insistence on earning his place.
The way he'd stood in my kitchen like he belonged there.
I cut a presentation short.
"Any questions?" I asked.
No one spoke.
"Good. Meeting adjourned."
They filed out quickly. My assistant lingered.
"Sir," she said carefully. "About the graduate analyst position, HR sent a shortlist."
I nodded. "Leave it on my desk."
She hesitated. "There's... an additional résumé attached."
I already knew.
"Alex Smith," she continued. "Mary's son."
I looked at her, expression neutral. "And?"
"He meets the criteria. Strong academic record. Relevant skills."
"Then he's on the list," I said.
No favoritism. No shortcuts.
She nodded and left.
I stared at the file.
This was dangerous territory.
---
That evening, I returned home later than planned. The house smelled like garlic and herbs, dinner in progress. Laughter floated from the kitchen. Alex's voice, unmistakable.
I slowed without meaning to.
"...telling you, Mum, if I don't get a job soon, I'll start charging you rent for emotional support."
Mary laughed. "You already eat enough to count as rent."
I stepped into the doorway.
Alex turned first. "Oh. Hey."
There it was again. That smile. Casual. Unafraid.
"Good evening," I said.
"Dinner's almost ready," Mary said. "Alex helped."
"I can tell," I replied, meeting his gaze. "The house smells better."
"High praise," Alex said. "From you, especially."
I raised an eyebrow. "Why especially?"
He shrugged. "You seem like the type who's hard to impress."
I held his stare. "Only when people try too hard."
Something passed between us, a quiet understanding.
Dinner was comfortable. Too comfortable. Conversation flowed easily, laughter punctuating the space in a way it rarely did. I caught myself watching Alex more than my plate.
Afterward, Mary excused herself early.
"I'm turning in," she said pointedly. "You two don't stay up too late."
Alex groaned. "Mum."
I ignored the look she gave me warm, knowing and focused on clearing my plate.
Alex reached for it at the same time our fingers brushed.
Electric.
We both froze.
"Sorry," he said quickly.
"It's fine," I replied, though my pulse disagreed.
We stood too close for a moment longer than necessary.
He broke the silence first. "So... you're really not intimidating, you know."
I laughed softly. "That's not what my employees say."
"Yeah, well," he said, meeting my eyes with that stubborn confidence, "rich men don't intimidate me."
There it was.
Spoken aloud.
I should have corrected him. Reminded him of boundaries. Of reality.
Instead, I found myself smiling.
"Good," I said quietly. "I'd hate to think my wealth was the most interesting thing about me."
His expression softened. "It's not."
The air between us thickened, charged, restrained.
I stepped back first.
"Goodnight, Alex."
"Goodnight, Mark."
I watched him head toward the stairs, shoulders relaxed, unaware of the effect he was having.
As I turned toward my study, one thought settled heavily in my mind.
Alex Smith didn't see the CEO.
He saw the man.
And that was far more dangerous than intimidation ever could be.