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IN THE QUIET OF HIS OFFICE

IN THE QUIET OF HIS OFFICE

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14 Chapters
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He's her boss: distant, controlled, and used to being alone at the top. She's the cleaner: unnoticed, soft-spoken, and invisible to everyone but the empty halls she tends each night. Their conversations are brief. Their glances linger. And in the silence between them, something fragile and unexpected begins to grow. But love was never part of the job description... and some lines aren't meant to be crossed.

Contents

Chapter 1 THE MIDNIGHT SHIFT

The fragrance of Julian Vane's office was always the same: expensive cedarwood, cold glass, and the sterile scent of untouched success.

It was a room designed to intimidate, perched on the 64th floor of the Vane Tower, overlooking a city that looked like a circuit board of golden lights.

Elena gripped the handle of her industrial mop bucket. To the rest of the world, she was a shadow in a navy-blue jumpsuit. To the security guards, she was "Badge 402." To Julian Vane, she didn't exist at all. She preferred it that way. It was 11:45 PM. Elena moved with a practiced, rhythmic grace, wiping down the mahogany desk that cost more than her mother's house in the valley.

She was careful not to disturb the perfectly aligned stacks of folders. She was a ghost in a temple of commerce. Then, the heavy oak door groaned. Elena froze. Julian Vane wasn't supposed to be here. The CEO was usually at a gala or a high-stakes dinner by this hour. But as he stepped into the room, he didn't look like the titan on the cover of Forbes. His silk tie was undone, hanging limp around his neck. His white button-down was unbuttoned at the collar, and his hair-usually slicked back with military precision-was disheveled.

He didn't notice her at first. He slammed a leather briefcase onto the desk, missing her hand by a mere inch. Elena pulled back, the plastic of her spray bottle clicking against the wood.

Julian snapped his head up. His eyes were a piercing, stormy grey, currently bloodshot from exhaustion. He blinked, squinting as if trying to resolve an image on a blurry screen. "You're still here," he said. His voice was a low, gravelly baritone that vibrated in Elena's chest. "I'm the night shift, Mr. Vane," Elena said softly, keeping her head down. "I'll be out of your way in a moment."

"Stay," he muttered, dropping into his leather chair. He put his head in his hands, pressing his palms into his eyes. "The silence in this building at night is deafening. The noise of the mop... it's better." Elena hesitated. She should leave. Rule number one of the cleaning staff was to never engage. But there was a crack in his voice-a vulnerability that didn't belong in this office.

She turned back to the floor, moving the mop in slow, sweeping arcs. Swish. Swish. Swish. "You missed a spot," he said suddenly. Elena stopped. She looked down. The floor was spotless. She looked at him, confused. Julian was leaning back, watching her. For the first time in the six months she had worked here, he was actually looking at her.

His gaze traveled from her worn-out sneakers to the messy bun held together by a pencil, finally landing on her eyes. "By the bookshelf," he pointed. "There's a smudge. It's bothering me." Elena walked over to the towering glass shelves. She knelt, spraying the glass and wiping it. As she did, her eyes caught the title of a book tucked away on the bottom shelf: Meditations by Marcus Aurelius, a vintage cloth-bound edition. "You have the 1924 translation," she whispered, forgetting herself. "That's the best one. The modern ones lose the rhythm of the Stoicism."

The silence that followed was so heavy Elena could hear the hum of the air conditioning. She felt her face go hot. Stupid, Elena. Cleaners don't talk about Latin translations. She heard the leather of his chair creak. Julian stood up and walked toward her. He didn't stop until he was standing directly behind her. She could smell him now-the cedarwood was real, mixed with the faint, bitter scent of black coffee and something warm, like sun-heated skin. He reached over her shoulder, his arm brushing her sleeve. The contact sent a jolt of electricity down Elena's spine that made her breath hitch. He pulled the book from the shelf. "You read?" he asked. It wasn't an insult; it was genuine curiosity. "I think everyone reads, Mr. Vane."

"Most people in this building just look at spreadsheets and ego-metrics," he said, turning the book over in his hands. He looked at her again, his grey eyes searching hers. "What's your name?" "Elena." She answered "Elena," he repeated.

The way he said it-slowly, tasting the syllables-made it feel less like a name and more like a secret. "Why are you cleaning my floors at midnight, Elena?" "Because the floors are dirty," she said, regaining her shield of professionalism. "

And because the rent is due on the first." She reached for her bucket, intending to leave, but her hand slipped on the wet handle. She stumbled, and instinctively, Julian's hand shot out, catching her by the upper arm to steady her.

His grip was firm, his fingers wrapping around the thin fabric of her jumpsuit. The heat of his hand seeped through the cloth. For a second, neither of them moved. They were inches apart-the man who owned the sky and the girl who polished it. The tension was a physical thing, a cord stretched tight between them. Elena looked up, her pulse fluttering in the hollow of her throat. Julian's eyes dropped to her lips, his thumb twitching against her arm. He let go as if burned. "Get some rest, Elena," he said, his voice dropping an octave.

He turned back to his desk, picking up a pen as if the conversation were over. But his hand was shaking, just slightly. "Goodnight, Mr. Vane," she whispered. As she pushed her cart out of the room, she looked back one last time. He wasn't looking at the papers. He was staring at the book, his thumb tracing the spot on the cover where her fingers had been.

The slow burn had begun, and neither of them knew the fire was already lit.

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