
After My Assistant Fought My Possessive Ex
Chapter 2
Her rejection arrived in my inbox exactly forty-two minutes after I sent the offer.
I stared at the glowing screen of my laptop, the corners of my mouth curling upward in the quiet dark of my penthouse. The email had been a calculated snare. Wallace Enterprises. Personal Assistant. A salary figure designed to quietly obliterate the suffocating mountain of debt Marcus had secretly saddled her with.
*Eugene,* her reply read. *I appreciate the generosity, but I must decline. We need to maintain our boundaries. —Cali.*
Boundaries. A fragile, invisible line she thought could keep a dead man from claiming his second chance.
Saturday morning broke gray and overcast, the New York skyline shrouded in a heavy mist. I stood outside her Brooklyn apartment, the hallway smelling faintly of old wood and rain. I knocked twice, the sound sharp in the quiet building.
When she opened the door, she was blinking sleep from her eyes. She wore an oversized gray sweater that slipped off one shoulder, her bare legs shifting nervously on the threshold. My chest seized—a phantom ache radiating from a memory of cold concrete. I shoved the trauma down, locking it away, and held out the paper cup.
"Macchiato. Extra shot, exactly one sugar, heated to one hundred and forty degrees," I said, my voice a low, steady hum.
She didn't take it. Her hand fluttered instinctively to the inside of her wrist, pressing against the skin. "Eugene. I told you no."
"You declined the initial draft." I stepped forward. The sheer gravity of my presence forced her to take a half-step back, allowing me inside her sanctuary. "This is a renegotiation."
"There is no negotiation. You're trying to manage my life."
"I'm offering you a job that pays triple what you make at that failing gallery." I set the coffee on her small kitchen island, my eyes mapping the dark circles under hers. "You have drowning legal fees from the lease Marcus broke. Your savings are gone. This solves it."
Her jaw tightened, a flash of defensive pride coloring her cheeks. "I don't need a twenty-six-year-old savior, Eugene."
"Then look at it as a business transaction." I closed the distance between us, stopping just short of touching her. "I need an assistant whose judgment I trust implicitly. You need capital. If you let your pride bankrupt you just to prove a point to a 'kid brother,' you're not the pragmatist I thought you were."
Silence stretched between us, thick and fraught. I watched the fight drain from her shoulders, replaced by a weary resignation. She stared at the coffee, then up at me, her dark eyes searching mine for a trap she couldn't quite see.
"Strictly professional," she finally whispered, her voice a fragile line drawn in the sand. "If you cross it, I walk. I mean it."
"Strictly professional," I echoed smoothly. It was a lie we both needed her to believe.
By Wednesday of her first week, the air inside my executive suite at Wallace Enterprises felt like a loaded gun.
I had positioned her desk directly outside my glass doors. I could watch the elegant curve of her neck as she typed, the way she chewed on her lower lip when reading a complex brief. But watching from afar was a torment I refused to endure. I needed proximity.
"There's an error in the Q3 projections," I murmured, stepping up directly behind her chair.
I leaned over her, bracing one hand on her desk, my chest hovering mere inches from her back. Cali went perfectly still. I could hear the sudden, shallow hitch of her breath. The scent of jasmine and warm skin drifted up, scrambling my senses, making the beast in my chest claw against its cage.
"Where?" she asked, her voice strained, a little breathless.
I reached past her, my arm brushing her shoulder, and tapped the screen. "Right here."
She swallowed hard. Her knuckles were stark white as she gripped the edge of her keyboard. "I'll... I'll fix it."
"Take your time." I didn't move. The heat radiating between us was a physical weight, pressing her down into the chair, tethering her to me.
The sharp clack of stilettos shattered the suffocating quiet. My office door swung open, and Naomi Chen swept in, a vision in crimson silk and aggressive corporate ambition.
"Eugene, darling," Naomi purred, bypassing Cali entirely. She closed the distance between us, her manicured hand coming to rest familiarly on my forearm. Her perfume was heavy, metallic—a stark, unpleasant contrast to Cali's clean jasmine. "I thought we were doing lunch. You've been ignoring my calls."
I didn't look at Naomi. My eyes were locked on Cali's reflection in the dark monitor screen.
Cali's posture had turned completely rigid. The soft flush on her cheeks from my proximity vanished, replaced by a cold, brittle mask. She reached for a stack of files, aligning their edges with violent precision. *Tap. Tap. Tap.*
"I'm working, Naomi," I said flatly, pulling my arm from her grasp.
"You're always working," Naomi pouted, stepping closer, her hip brushing my thigh. "Surely your... assistant can handle the paperwork while we eat."
Cali stood up abruptly. Her chair rolled back, hitting the glass partition with a dull thud. "I'll leave you two to your schedule," she said, her tone dripping with an icy politeness that sent a dark thrill straight down my spine. "I need to deliver these to Legal."
"Cali," I said, the command dropping the temperature in the room to freezing.
She paused at the door, refusing to meet my gaze. Her fingers were pressed hard against her wrist, rubbing the skin raw.
"Leave the files," I ordered softly, my eyes daring her to run. "Naomi was just leaving."
Naomi scoffed, "Eugene, really—"
"Out, Naomi." My voice left absolutely no room for debate.
When the door clicked shut behind the furious executive, the silence roared back into the room. Cali remained by the exit, her chest rising and falling in sharp, uneven increments. She was jealous. She would rather die than admit it, clinging to her 'kid brother' delusion, but I saw it in the defensive set of her shoulders and the dark, stormy flash in her eyes.
I walked slowly toward her, a predator cornering its mark.
"Professional enough for you, Ms. Mills?" I asked quietly.
She looked up, her eyes blazing with a sudden fire, and I knew the walls she had built were already beginning to crack.
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