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After His Assistant Stole My Life Novel Cover

After His Assistant Stole My Life

I heard New York before I saw it. The terminal noise hit me the second the customs doors swung open — rolling luggage, overhead announcements, a crying kid somewhere near gate B. JFK smelled like recycled air and burnt coffee, same as it always had. Some things don't change while you're gone. I had been counting on that. I pulled my carry-on and scanned the arrivals hall. My eyes moved fast, the way they always do in a new room — clocking exits, reading faces, looking for the one I actually wanted. Landon Rivera was six-foot-two and impossible to miss. Broad shoulders. That particular stillness he carried, like the air around him had decided to behave.
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Chapter 1

I heard New York before I saw it.

The terminal noise hit me the second the customs doors swung open — rolling luggage, overhead announcements, a crying kid somewhere near gate B. JFK smelled like recycled air and burnt coffee, same as it always had. Some things don't change while you're gone. I had been counting on that.

I pulled my carry-on and scanned the arrivals hall.

My eyes moved fast, the way they always do in a new room — clocking exits, reading faces, looking for the one I actually wanted. Landon Rivera was six-foot-two and impossible to miss. Broad shoulders. That particular stillness he carried, like the air around him had decided to behave. I had spent three years across an ocean telling myself I was done looking for him in crowds.

Old habits.

I didn't find him.

What I found instead stopped me cold for exactly two seconds. Then I started cataloging.

She was standing near the rope line, maybe twenty feet out. Holding a Rivera Holdings placard in both hands, posture perfect, chin slightly lifted. Tailored cream coat, double-breasted, hitting just above the knee. I owned that coat. Not that exact one — but close enough that the difference was clearly intentional. Her hair was pinned back in a low chignon at the nape of her neck. My chignon. The specific one I'd worn to the Rivera Holdings Q3 summit four years ago, photographed about a hundred times, archived on every business blog that covered the event.

I kept walking toward her.

Her lipstick was nude. Warm beige, barely-there. The same shade I'd worn for so long that the Nordstrom beauty counter used to hold a backup for me. As I got closer I caught the perfume — light, clean, something with white tea and a woody base. Not quite right. A near-miss. Close enough to be deliberate, not close enough to be accurate.

She smiled when she saw me. Bright and practiced and just a fraction too wide.

'Ms. Carpenter.' A small pause, the kind that's actually calculated. 'Madelyn. Welcome back to New York.' She lowered the placard with both hands. 'I'm Aliza Burns. Mr. Rivera's personal assistant.'

Mr. Rivera's personal assistant. Not 'Landon sends his apologies.' Not 'there was a conflict.' Just his title and her function, offered like an explanation that wasn't going to explain anything.

I looked at her.

Aliza Burns was pretty in a careful, constructed way — the kind of pretty that required daily maintenance and fell apart fast without it. Late twenties, maybe thirty. Sharp cheekbones. Eyes that were watching me a little too closely to be professionally neutral.

'How was the flight?' she asked.

'Fine,' I said.

She reached for the handle of my carry-on. 'Let me —'

'I have it.' I said it without heat, just fact, and she withdrew her hand.

We walked toward the exit. She filled the silence immediately — seamlessly, like she'd rehearsed it, which she had.

'The car is just out front. I thought on the drive over I could brief you on a few things — there have been some structural updates to the executive floor since your last visit, and Mr. Rivera has restructured the assistant rotation, so it might be helpful to walk you through —'

'How long have you been with Rivera Holdings?' I asked.

She didn't miss a beat. 'Fourteen months.'

I nodded. Said nothing. She kept talking.

The car was a black Escalade, tinted, Rivera Holdings plates. She held the door. I got in. She came around the other side and settled in next to me like she belonged there, crossing her ankles, smoothing her coat — my coat — over her knees.

She talked the entire drive into Manhattan. Changes to the executive assistant pool. A rebrand on the media division. Some restructuring of the fourth floor. Her voice was pleasant and even and pitched slightly lower than was natural for her — I could hear the effort in it, the careful calibration. She had practiced sounding like someone who wasn't performing.

I watched the skyline come up over the bridge and let her talk.

Then, as we hit the Midtown traffic and she was mid-sentence about Q4 projections, I turned my head and looked at her directly.

'What percentage of Rivera Holdings shares do I hold, Aliza?'

There it was. Just a flicker — maybe half a second of stillness behind her eyes before the professional mask re-engaged.

'I — I'd have to pull the exact figure —'

'Twenty-two percent,' I said. 'Personally. Which makes me the largest individual shareholder in this company.' I held her gaze. 'Just so we're oriented.'

She smiled again. Tighter this time. 'Of course.'

I turned back to the window. Outside, the city was doing what it always did — roaring and grinding and existing without apology. I had missed it with a physical ache I hadn't let myself name until this exact moment.

We didn't speak again until the car stopped.

Rivera Holdings' Manhattan headquarters was exactly as I'd left it — glass and steel and that particular cold authority that Landon had built into the architecture on purpose. I walked through the lobby doors and the marble floors clicked under my heels, the sound carrying the way it always did in here, a little sharper than necessary.

And then I saw him.

Landon was crossing the far end of the lobby. Dark suit. No tie. Moving with that specific purposeful economy he had, the kind of walk that parted rooms without trying. He hadn't changed. That was the first thing I registered, and it landed somewhere behind my sternum like a key finding a lock.

He looked up.

The lobby went abstract for a second. Just the distance between us and the specific way his jaw tightened — a muscle jumping once, controlled instantly. His eyes did something complicated and fast that his face refused to confirm. Three years of silence sitting between us like furniture.

Neither of us moved.

Then his expression closed. Clean, professional, almost bored. The mask back in place before I could finish reading what was underneath it.

I broke eye contact first — not because he'd won anything, but because I chose to, which was a different thing entirely. I walked to the executive elevator and pressed the button.

Behind me, I heard nothing. But in the reflection of the elevator doors, barely visible in the polished steel, I caught it — Landon, still standing exactly where I'd left him, watching me go.

The doors opened. I stepped in.

The executive floor was quiet when I got off. Clean. And full of her.

A framed photo on the reception credenza — Aliza at some company event, smiling into a camera. A jar of branded hand cream on the edge of the desk, the one nearest my office. A small succulent on the windowsill in a white ceramic pot, tucked into the corner like it lived there.

I set my bag down.

I picked up the photo, the hand cream, and the succulent, one at a time, carried them to the elevator bank, and set them in a neat row on the floor outside the doors. I straightened up, rolled my shoulders once, and walked into my office.

My desk. My window. My view of Midtown stretching south.

I sat down. Opened my laptop. Pressed the intercom.

'Coffee,' I said. 'Black.'

The floor was very quiet after that. The good kind of quiet — the kind that meant everyone had understood something without needing to be told.

He came at seven.

No knock. The door opened and Landon Rivera stood in the frame with his hands in his pockets and the specific expression of a man who had decided in advance that this conversation would go a certain way.

'Your return,' he said, 'doesn't alter existing internal structures.' His voice was even. Controlled. The kind of controlled that costs something to maintain. 'Aliza stays in her role. That doesn't change.'

I looked up from my screen.

I looked at him for exactly one beat — just long enough to let him wonder — and then I said, 'I know.'

I went back to my documents.

A pause. Then the quiet sound of him stepping back, the soft click of my office door.

I didn't look up.

Out in the hallway, I heard nothing for a moment. Then, faint but unmistakable — the sound of a palm meeting the wall. Just once. Steady. Like a man reminding himself to hold it together.

Then footsteps, walking away.

I exhaled slowly through my nose and stared at the spreadsheet in front of me without reading a single number.

I was back.

And so was everything I'd left here.

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