
After His Assistant Stole My Life
Chapter 2
I got to the executive floor at six-fifty.
No one else was in yet. Just the hum of the HVAC and the gray pre-dawn light coming through the windows. I set my coffee down and looked at the reception area the way a surgeon looks at an incision site — clinically, without feeling.
Aliza had moved the desk three inches left. Small enough to look accidental. The document trays were stacked in the wrong order — aesthetic over function, the choice of someone performing organization rather than practicing it. The monitor faced the elevator bank instead of the corridor, which meant whoever sat there could be seen before they could see. A bad position. Reactive instead of proactive.
I spent twelve minutes putting it back.
Desk to its original position. Trays reordered. Monitor angled forty-five degrees toward the hall. I straightened the chair, adjusted the desk lamp, and moved a small decorative bowl — white ceramic, river stones inside, clearly hers — to the supply cabinet. Not the trash. Just out of the sight line.
Then I took my coffee to my office and opened my laptop.
She arrived at eight-forty.
I heard the elevator, heard her heels, heard the exact moment she stopped.
Three seconds of silence.
Then she kept walking.
I was already in the corridor when she reached her desk, standing near the window with my coffee, watching the street below. Two of the junior staff — Marcus from accounting and the new analyst, Priya — were nearby, pulling files from the credenza. Neither of them was looking at me. Both of them were listening.
Aliza was wearing a silk blouse. Ivory. Draped collar, billowy through the shoulders. It was a beautiful blouse. It was completely wrong for a board-facing day, soft where the room would be hard, decorative where the room would be precise.
I turned from the window.
'Aliza.' My voice was pleasant. 'Good morning.'
'Good morning, Madelyn.' Her smile was immediate. Practiced.
'Interesting choice today.' I let my eyes move briefly over the blouse. Just briefly. 'Rivera Holdings' executive floor has always held to a specific standard on board days. Structured pieces. Clean lines.' A small pause. 'I'm sure you know that.'
She held the smile. Didn't waver. 'Of course.'
'Good,' I said, and went back to my office.
Behind me, I heard Marcus find somewhere else to be. Then Priya. The corridor went very quiet.
Aliza didn't change. She sat at her reorganized desk in her ivory blouse and I didn't mention it again, because I didn't need to.
The quarterly board meeting was Thursday.
Landon sat at the head of the table. I sat at the far end. Eleven directors between us and the particular charge of two people in the same room pretending the room is only as large as it appears.
Aliza stood at the presentation screen in a charcoal blazer — she'd learned something from Monday, at least — and walked the board through the Q3 financial performance summary. Her delivery was smooth. Confident. Paced well. She had clearly prepared.
I listened with my pen resting untouched on the table in front of me.
Slide seven. Slide eleven. Slide thirteen.
Slide fourteen.
I let her get four sentences in.
'Can you go back to fourteen?' I said.
Not loud. Just clear.
Aliza stopped. The room shifted — that subtle collective reorientation of people picking up on something.
'The revenue projection model,' I said. 'The Q3 figure.' I still hadn't looked at her. I was looking at Landon. 'The compounding rate used in column F is based on Q2's adjusted baseline, not Q2 actuals. The difference is small per line. It's not small across the model.'
Silence.
Director Huang leaned forward. 'What's the variance?'
'Roughly four-point-three percent compounded forward,' I said. 'Applied across the full Q3 projection, that's a meaningful number.'
More silence. The kind that has weight.
Landon's expression didn't change. His eyes hadn't left mine since I spoke. There was something working behind his face that his face refused to confirm — I had always been able to read that particular stillness in him, the place where the emotion lived before he decided what to do with it.
He looked at Aliza.
'Pull the actuals,' he said. 'We'll resume in twenty minutes.'
We resumed in twenty-two. The corrected figures confirmed the discrepancy. No one looked at Aliza directly. The particular mercy of a boardroom is that its cruelties are impersonal.
At the close of the meeting, Landon announced the Q3 bonus adjustment. Standard language. Neutral tone. Aliza's name, her role, the docked figure. He said it the way he said everything — evenly, finally, without apology.
I heard her sharp intake of breath. Small. Controlled immediately.
And then I looked at her.
Just once. Almost gently.
She was already smoothing it back — the composure resettling over her face like water finding level. But for one second I had seen the thing underneath. Raw and hot and afraid.
I gathered my documents and left.
—
Cooper arrived at nine with Thai food in a paper bag and the particular expression he wears when he has something to say and is deciding how to say it.
'Pad see ew,' he announced, setting containers on the coffee table. 'And spring rolls because you never eat enough.'
'I eat fine,' I said.
'You eat coffee and intimidation.' He dropped onto the couch and pulled a folder from under his arm, setting it between us. 'Read that.'
I opened it.
Photographs first. Aliza and a man I recognized as Cristian Morris — a restaurant, low light, his hand on the table close to hers. Meeting records. Financial cross-references showing transfers to a shell company that traced back, with some work, to Morris Group LLC. Notes in Cooper's handwriting, tight and neat in the margins.
I read every page. I didn't comment.
Aliza Burns had been Cristian Morris's mistress. She had been groomed — her look, her mannerisms, her professional habits — and planted inside Rivera Holdings. The long game. The kind of patience that required a very specific kind of cold.
I closed the folder.
'How long have you had this?' I asked.
'Long enough,' Cooper said. He was watching me with that careful attention he'd had since we were kids — the look that meant he was tracking something he wasn't going to say directly yet. 'You mentioned migraines. On the phone last week.'
I reached for a spring roll. 'It's stress.'
My voice came out almost gentle. Easy. The tone I used when I was managing someone else's worry.
Cooper said nothing.
He just looked at me. Quiet and steady, the way he did when he had already decided not to push — tonight, at least — but had registered everything and would not forget.
Below us, forty floors down, New York roared on without us. All that noise and light and relentless forward motion.
I ate my spring roll and looked at the folder and didn't say anything else.
Neither did he.
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