
After My CEO Forced a Kiss on Me
Chapter 1
It was a Friday evening at an upscale rooftop bar in Manhattan. The air was crisp, and the city lights glittered below us like scattered diamonds. I stood near the edge of the terrace with Sandra Okafor. She was my new colleague, and we were celebrating my new job offer. I felt light. I felt free. For the first time in years, the crushing weight in my chest was gone.
Then I saw him.
Castiel Pierce was standing across the terrace. My breath caught in my throat. My heart slammed against my ribs. He looked exactly the same. Sharp suit, perfect hair, and that easy, arrogant posture. He wasn't alone. A beautiful, glamorous woman clung to his arm. Kiana Kelley.
Castiel ordered champagne loudly. He pulled Kiana close and kissed her. It was a deliberate performance. He didn't look at me directly, but I knew him too well. I felt his eyes sliding to the corner, watching me. He was waiting for me to crack. He wanted to see my confidence shatter.
Kiana turned her head. She caught my eye and flashed a bright, poisonous smile. She knew who I was. She knew exactly what she was doing.
"I need to go," I whispered to Sandra.
"Mira? Are you okay?" she asked, her smile fading.
"Just a headache. I'll see you Monday."
I turned and walked away fast. I didn't run, but I wanted to. I stepped into the empty elevator and the doors slid shut. The quiet hit me hard. I pressed my thumbnail into the palm of my hand. I pushed hard until the pain grounded me. I watched my knuckles turn white. *You left him,* I told myself. *You are safe.* My hands finally stopped shaking by the time I reached the lobby.
I thought that was the end of it. Just a bad coincidence. But Monday morning arrived with a nightmare.
I walked into the Midtown marketing firm for my first real day. The lobby was buzzing. People were whispering. Sandra grabbed my arm as soon as I stepped inside.
"Emergency town hall," she said quickly. "In the atrium. A corporate acquisition just went through over the weekend."
We stood in the crowd of employees. The HR director tapped the microphone. "We are thrilled to announce our new parent company," he said. "Please welcome your new CEO."
A tall figure stepped up to the podium. The blood drained from my face. Castiel.
He adjusted his cuffs and looked out over the crowd. His eyes scanned the room, moving past dozens of faces until they locked onto mine. He didn't smile. He didn't blink. He just looked at me. It was the look of a man who had finally cornered his property.
My stomach twisted into a cold knot. Every instinct screamed at me to look away, to hide behind Sandra. But I didn't. I planted my feet. I kept my chin up and stared right back at him. I refused to look away first.
The rest of my first week was a slow, suffocating torture.
Castiel didn't fire me. That would be too easy. Instead, he began a campaign of calculated cruelty. By Wednesday, my office was relocated from the bright, glass-walled tenth floor to a windowless room near the basement. By Thursday, he assigned me three campaign proposals with impossible overnight deadlines.
He never raised his voice. He never said anything I could take to HR. It was all perfectly professional. But the message was clear. His building. His rules. I belonged to him.
The breaking point came on Friday afternoon. We were in a department-wide meeting. I presented my campaign strategy. I had stayed up all night perfecting it.
Castiel sat at the head of the long table. He tapped his pen against the glass. "It's weak," he said softly. He didn't even look at the slides. "The narrative is disjointed. It lacks vision. Do it again."
The room went completely silent. My cheeks burned. "Which part lacks vision, Mr. Pierce?" I asked, keeping my voice steady.
"All of it," he replied flatly. "I expect revisions by Monday."
An hour later, I was sitting in my windowless office, staring blankly at my screen. The door opened. Kiana Kelley walked in. She wasn't even an employee, but she moved like she owned the place. She dropped a thick folder of Castiel’s revision notes onto my desk.
She leaned over, giving me a pitying smile. "He’s very particular, Mira," she purred. "But don't worry. You'll learn to keep up. Or you'll quit."
She walked out, her heels clicking sharply on the linoleum.
I couldn't breathe. The walls of the tiny room felt like they were closing in. I grabbed my phone with trembling fingers and dialed the only person who made me feel safe.
"Elliot?" I choked out when he answered.
"Mira. What's wrong?" His voice was deep, calm, and instantly grounding.
"I need to see you. Now. Please."
"Come to the office," he said without hesitation.
An hour later, I was sitting on the soft gray sofa in Elliot Anderson’s Upper West Side therapy office. The room smelled of cedar and rain. It was a stark contrast to my claustrophobic basement desk. Elliot sat across from me in a leather armchair. He wore a simple navy sweater. His dark eyes watched me with quiet intensity.
I told him everything. I told him about the rooftop bar, the atrium, the windowless room, and Kiana. My words tumbled out in a frantic rush. I paced the floor, wrapping my arms around myself.
"He's trying to break me, Elliot," I said, my voice cracking. "He wants me to quit. Or worse, he wants me to crawl back and beg him to stop. He wants to own me again."
Elliot didn't interrupt. He never did. He let me empty my lungs. He watched the way I pressed my thumbnail into my palm. He leaned forward slowly, resting his elbows on his knees.
"Mira," he said softly.
I stopped pacing and looked at him.
"Castiel's power over you relies entirely on your reaction," Elliot said. His voice was a steady anchor in my storm. "He wants you to feel trapped. He wants you to believe you are still playing his game."
"I am trapped," I whispered. "He's my CEO."
Elliot tilted his head slightly. A strange, unreadable emotion flickered in his eyes. He looked at me not just as a therapist, but as a man who saw right through my armor.
"What do you think would happen," Elliot asked with quiet precision, "if Castiel believed you had already moved on? Not just from him, but past him?"
I frowned, dropping my hands. "What do you mean?"
"He expects you to cower," Elliot said smoothly. "He expects you to be the frightened girl he remembers. But what if you show him you aren't? What if you show him that his presence in your life doesn't matter anymore, because someone else has taken his place?"
I stared at him. My heart gave a sudden, hard thump. The air in the room seemed to shift, growing thick and charged.
"Someone else?" I echoed.
Elliot didn't blink. He held my gaze, his calm exterior hiding something much deeper. "Yes. Someone else."
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