
SURRENDER TO THE BILLIONAIRE BOSS
Chapter 5
Elena(POV)
The next morning came too quickly.
I barely slept, every time I closed my eyes, I saw his face, the way his hand had lingered near my cheek, the words he'd whispered just before we were interrupted.
When my alarm rang at six, I stared at the ceiling for a long time before forcing myself out of bed. I told myself that today was business,nothing more. I had a job to do, and I wouldn't let last night cloud my mind.
But when I saw him in the hotel lobby:tall, confident, devastating in a charcoal suit that fit him like sin,all that determination began to crumble.
"Morning," he said, his tone calm, controlled. But his eyes... they gave him away. There was a tension there, the same one twisting inside me.
"Morning, Mr. Blackwood," I replied, my voice too soft.
He tilted his head slightly, almost smirking. "Mr. Blackwood? You only call me that when you're trying not to feel something."
I blinked, heat rising in my cheeks. "We should go. We're already running late."
He smiled faintly, but said nothing more as we stepped into the waiting car.
The meeting took place in a glass-walled boardroom at Harrison & Cole Investments, overlooking the Boston harbor. The air was thick with polite tension and quiet power, men in suits talking numbers, shaking hands that could buy and sell entire lives.
I sat beside Adrian, taking notes, trying to focus on the words instead of the steady sound of his voice.
Every now and then, his hand brushed mine when passing a document. Every time it happened, my pulse skipped.
"Miss Monroe?" someone asked suddenly, breaking my trance.
I blinked, realizing everyone was looking at me. "I- I'm sorry, could you repeat that?"
Adrian's gaze flicked toward me:sharp, protective, but also something else.
Mr. Harrison chuckled. "I asked if the presentation file was ready."
"Yes, of course," I said quickly, recovering. "It's right here."
I stood and walked to the screen, connecting my laptop. As I started the slideshow, I felt Adrian's gaze follow me. He didn't speak, but I could feel it:heavy, focused, burning through the calm exterior.
I got through the presentation somehow, but when it ended and the meeting wrapped up, my heart was racing for all the wrong reasons.
Outside, as the elevator doors closed behind us, Adrian finally spoke. "You were distracted."
I turned to him, startled. "I wasn't-"
He cut me off gently. "You were. And you know it."
The elevator hummed softly as it descended, but the air between us crackled.
"I can't work like this," I blurted out. "I can't keep pretending like nothing's happening."
His eyes softened. "Then stop pretending."
The doors slid open to the lobby, and I stepped out before he could say another word.
That evening, back at the hotel, I tried to lose myself at work. I spread the documents across the bed, typing furiously, trying to focus on figures and forecasts instead of the way he looked at me across the boardroom table.
But when I heard the knock on my door, my heart sank and soared all at once.
I didn't even need to ask who it was.
I opened the door.
He stood there again, this time without the usual control in his eyes. His tie was gone, his shirt unbuttoned at the top. He looked like a man who had been fighting with himself and losing.
"Adrian-"
"Stop," he said quietly. "Just stop pretending you don't want this."
I backed away slowly as he stepped inside, closing the door behind him.
"This isn't right," I whispered.
"Then why aren't you telling me to leave?"
I swallowed hard. "Because I don't want to."
His jaw tensed, and for a moment, neither of us moved. The air between us felt electric, dangerous.
He took another step forward, his voice low. "I tried to stay away. I tried to be your boss and nothing more. But every time I see you, every time you look at me, I forget the rules."
My hands trembled at my sides. "And what happens when we can't forget?"
He stopped in front of me, inches away. "Then we deal with the consequences."
I wanted to argue, to push him away but I didn't. I couldn't.
Because when his hand came up, brushing against my jaw, every part of me melted. The scent of him:cedar, spice, something unmistakably him, filled my senses.
And for one breathless moment, I let myself forget who he was. Who I was.
All I knew was that I wanted him.
He leaned in, his voice barely a whisper. "Tell me this isn't what you want."
But I didn't. I couldn't.
Instead, I whispered, "Adrian..."
And that was enough.
The kiss wasn't gentle; it was raw, consuming, as if I had been starving for it. We lost ourselves on the bed, wrapped in each other, until exhaustion finally claimed us.
Later, when I woke in the quiet of the room, the city lights flickering through the curtains, reality crashed back over me.
He was still there beside me:asleep, peaceful, his hand resting near mine.
And for one fragile moment, I just watched him. The man the world saw as powerful, untouchable, ruthless,looked so human, so heartbreakingly vulnerable.
But as the first light of dawn touched the room, a sickening thought hit me.
What have I done?
Because this wasn't love. Not yet. It was something darker, more dangerous, a connection built on desire and denial.
And deep down, I knew:
We'd just made a mistake that neither of us could ever undo.