
Taming The Ruthless Billionaire
Chapter 2
Maya showed up at 6:55 a.m. five minutes early, coffee in one hand, courage in the other. She'd barely slept. The thought of Adrian King's eyes cold, sharp, measuring had haunted every dream she tried to have.
The lobby guards already knew her name now. "Top floor," one of them said with a grin. "Looks like you survived yesterday."
"Barely," she replied under her breath, forcing a smile.
When the elevator doors slid open, the air on Adrian's floor was different. Quieter. More expensive somehow. Everything from the polished desks to the muted art on the walls whispered control. She straightened her blazer and stepped into the office she could now, technically, call hers.
Her desk sat just outside his glass-walled office. It gleamed, untouched, waiting for mistakes. A tiny note lay in the center: 9 a.m. meeting. Prep materials. Don't be late. A.K.
No greeting. No welcome. Just that.
She booted up the computer and opened the shared drive, scrolling through folders full of contracts and quarterly reports she barely understood. Her job, apparently, was to make sure Adrian had every detail of his empire memorized before anyone else did. By 8:45 a.m., she'd printed and arranged the reports, lined up the pens by shade, and double-checked the presentation slides.
At exactly nine, his door opened.
"Inside," he said, not looking at her.
She followed him into the boardroom, heart pounding again. Ten executives already sat around the long table, each looking like they could buy a small island before lunch. Adrian took his seat at the head, perfectly calm.
"This is Maya Rivers," he said, voice even. "My new assistant. She'll make sure none of you forget how to do your jobs."
A ripple of awkward laughter moved through the room. Maya kept her face still, pretending that didn't sting.
The meeting began. Numbers. Projections. Terms she could barely follow. Adrian didn't glance at notes once he spoke like he had every figure etched behind those cold blue eyes. Twice, he asked her to hand him a document she hadn't realized he'd need. Twice, she had it ready. A small victory.
When it ended, the executives filed out, murmuring admiration or fear she couldn't tell which. Adrian stayed behind, flipping through the papers.
"You didn't mess up," he said finally.
Maya blinked. "Thank you?"
"That wasn't praise," he added, closing the folder. "It was an observation."
"Then I'll try to make it a habit."
He looked up, and for a heartbeat something like amusement flickered across his face. "You really don't know when to stop talking, do you?"
"Not when silence feels like surrender," she said quietly.
For a moment, the room felt smaller. His eyes held hers long enough for her pulse to trip. Then he turned away.
"You'll learn the rules," he said. "Number one-time is my currency. Don't waste it. Number two loyalty is earned, not assumed. Number three never apologize twice."
She hesitated. "And number four?"
He looked over his shoulder. "Don't ask for a number four."
And just like that, he was gone, leaving her in the echo of his footsteps.
By noon, Maya's inbox looked like a war zone. Emails, calendar invites, urgent memos all marked high priority. Every time she finished one task, two more appeared. She learned fast that "urgent" meant now and "when you have a moment" meant five minutes ago.
Around two, a delivery guy appeared with lunch two identical salads. Adrian stepped out, phone to his ear, and gestured to one.
"That's yours," he mouthed before walking back inside.
It startled her more than any order he'd given. He'd noticed she hadn't eaten.
She sat at her desk, poking at the salad. For someone so infamously cold, he had strange flashes of consideration. Or maybe he just didn't want a fainting assistant on his floor. Either way, she couldn't decide if she should thank him or just stay quiet.
When he finally hung up, his door opened again. "Rivers."
She jumped up. "Yes, sir?"
"Cancel my six-thirty meeting. Move the investor call to tomorrow. And find out who approved the new software update then fire them."
Her jaw dropped. "Fire them?"
He turned slowly. "Problem?"
"No, sir. I just... wanted to confirm before ruining someone's life."
A pause. Then, faintly: "Efficiency with empathy. Interesting combination."
He disappeared again, leaving her cheeks hot and her brain spinning.
It was almost seven when the building began to empty. Maya was still there, organizing reports, when the lights dimmed automatically. She looked toward his office; he was still working too, jacket off now, sleeves rolled, focus unbroken.
For a man who barely blinked, he looked... human in that light. Tired. Almost lonely.
She gathered her things quietly, but his voice cut through the silence.
"Leaving already?"
She froze. "It's past seven."
"I didn't say you could leave."
She turned slowly, unsure if he was joking. He wasn't smiling.
"Do I need permission now?"
He leaned against the doorway, expression unreadable. "You need awareness. This company runs past hours. If you want to survive here, learn that."
Something in her chest tightened half defiance, half respect. "Then maybe I'll just learn faster."
His eyes narrowed, and for the first time, a small real smile appeared. "We'll see."
She left the office that night with her head spinning and her heart confused. Adrian King was impossible.
Unpredictable. Infuriating.
And yet, something about the way he looked at her when she pushed back told her one thing clearly:
He'd just met his match.