
Beneath the Billionaire's Sky
When Elena Cruz, a hardworking girl struggling to keep her family afloat, meets Adrian Cole, a cold but brilliant billionaire CEO, it's supposed to be nothing more than a chance encounter on a rainy night.
But fate doesn't let go that easily.
When Elena later takes a cleaning job at a corporate tower, she discovers that the stranger who once offered her a ride now owns the building-and half the city. He remembers her, though she tries to stay invisible. She's quiet, respectful, and determined to keep her dignity intact, no matter how powerful he is.
Adrian, who's spent years surrounded by people who only wanted his money or name, finds himself drawn to Elena's honesty and calm strength. She's not impressed by his wealth, and somehow, that's what makes him want her even more.
What begins as a series of small encounters slowly grows into something neither of them expected-a love that feels real in a world full of pretense. But as their worlds collide, pride, secrets, and the eyes of society test everything they're building together.
Can love truly bridge the gap between two completely different lives?
Or will the world remind them that some skies were never meant to meet?
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Chapter 6
The week after the glass incident felt different.
Elena noticed it first - how people in the building seemed to greet her more kindly, how the managers suddenly remembered her name. She didn't know what Adrian might have said, but she could feel his presence in small ways - like invisible sunlight touching corners of her world.
Still, she kept her distance. Whatever his reasons for helping her, she didn't want to mistake kindness for interest.
But Adrian didn't see it the same way.
It started one morning when he showed up in the staff lounge - the one the cleaners used during breaks.
The entire room froze.
The CEO of Cole Industries had just walked into a space filled with mops, cleaning carts, and the smell of detergent.
He didn't seem to care.
His eyes found Elena immediately, sitting in the corner with her lunch box and thermos.
"You start work early," he said, a small smile tugging at his lips.
She blinked. "Mr. Cole- You shouldn't be here."
He raised a brow. "Why not? You're here."
Her coworkers tried to pretend they weren't watching, though half of them were whispering behind their hands.
"I just... it's the staff room, sir. It's not really..." She trailed off, embarrassed.
He glanced around, then shrugged. "Seems fine to me. Smells clean. Probably cleaner than most offices upstairs."
Her lips twitched - she didn't want to laugh, but she couldn't help it. "You're impossible."
"I've been called worse."
He leaned casually against the wall, arms folded. "Do you drink coffee?"
She nodded. "Sometimes. Instant coffee.
Why?"
"I was thinking," he said slowly, "you could join me in my office for a real cup sometime.
No meetings, no work talk. Just coffee."
Elena's eyes widened. "You're joking."
"I'm not," he said softly. "You helped me see a few things differently, Elena. I'd like to know more about the person who did that."
Her heart thudded, but she stayed calm.
"People might talk."
He smiled. "They always do. But if it makes you uncomfortable, I'll drop it."
She studied him for a moment - the sincerity in his eyes, the quiet honesty in his tone. Then she nodded once. "Just coffee. Nothing more."
"Just coffee," he agreed.
When she entered his office the next day, it felt surreal.
The room was huge, lined with floor-to-ceiling windows that made the city look like it was floating. Adrian poured two cups himself - not through an assistant, not a machine - just him.
"Cream or sugar?" he asked.
"Just black," she said.
He smiled faintly. "Figures."
They talked. Not about business, not about her job. He asked about her family, her dreams, the books she liked to read when she had time.
Elena was shy at first, but the more he listened - really listened - the more she relaxed.
She told him how she used to write small stories in her notebook when she was younger. How she dreamed of finishing school one day. How her mother used to tell her that the right people in life don't make you feel small.
Adrian didn't interrupt. He just watched her, realizing how easy it was to forget that kindness could feel this genuine.
When she finished her coffee, she stood and said quietly, "Thank you, Mr. Cole. For listening."
He looked up. "Thank you for talking."
After she left, Adrian stood by the window for a long time, holding his empty cup. The city stretched below him - busy, brilliant, unfeeling - but for once, he didn't feel alone in it.
Something real had begun - something simple, unplanned, and quietly beautiful.
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