
The CEO Who Pretended to Be Poor
Chapter 4
The first thing I noticed when Alexander walked through the door that evening was the smell—a mixture of concrete dust, sweat, and something metallic that clung to his clothes like a second skin. He stood in the doorway of what he claimed was our "modest" apartment, his work boots leaving traces of dried mud on the pristine hardwood floors.
"Rough day at the construction site?" I asked, not bothering to hide the distaste in my voice as I looked him up and down.
His jeans were torn at the knee, stained with what looked like paint and grease. His flannel shirt had seen better days—probably several years ago. The baseball cap pulled low over his eyes was so faded I couldn't even make out what logo it once displayed.
"Something like that," he said, pulling off his boots and setting them carefully by the door. "Sorry about the mess. I'll clean up before dinner."
I watched him move through the apartment with a strange sort of fascination. This was my husband—this man who looked like he'd spent the day hauling cement bags and operating heavy machinery. The irony wasn't lost on me. Derek had left me for someone with money, and now I was stuck with someone who apparently had none.
"Don't track that through the apartment," I called after him as he headed toward what I assumed was the bathroom. "Some of us have standards."
He paused, turning back to look at me with an expression I couldn't quite read. "Of course. I wouldn't want to offend your delicate sensibilities."
There was something in his tone—not quite sarcasm, but not quite sincerity either. It made me study his face more carefully, but the shadows from his cap made it difficult to see his eyes clearly.
Twenty minutes later, he emerged from the bathroom looking considerably cleaner but no less... ordinary. His hair was damp and pushed back from his face, revealing features that were actually quite striking when not hidden under layers of grime. But the clothes—God, the clothes were still terrible.
"Better?" he asked, spreading his arms in a gesture that was probably meant to be charming.
"Marginally," I replied, turning my attention back to the disaster I'd been attempting in the kitchen.
I'd decided to make pasta—how hard could it be? But somehow the sauce had turned into something that resembled chunky orange paint, and the noodles looked more like rubber bands than food. The smell wafting from the pan was... concerning.
"Need help?" Alexander appeared beside me, peering over my shoulder at the culinary catastrophe.
"I've got it under control," I said through gritted teeth, stirring the sauce with more force than necessary.
He was quiet for a moment, watching me battle with what should have been a simple meal. "You know, I could—"
"I said I've got it." The words came out sharper than I'd intended, but I was already feeling humiliated enough without accepting cooking advice from a construction worker.
When I finally served the meal, setting the plates down with perhaps more force than necessary, Alexander looked at his portion with what I could only describe as diplomatic interest.
"It looks... colorful," he said, picking up his fork.
I watched him take the first bite, waiting for the inevitable grimace of disgust. Instead, his expression remained carefully neutral as he chewed, though I caught the slight tightening around his eyes that suggested he was fighting some kind of internal battle.
"Well?" I demanded.
"It's... unique," he said, taking another bite. "Very creative use of... what spices did you use?"
I felt heat rise in my cheeks. "Just eat it or don't. I don't need your commentary."
But he continued eating, methodically working his way through the entire portion despite what had to be an assault on his taste buds. When he finished, he even smiled at me.
"Thank you for cooking," he said. "I appreciate the effort."
The sincerity in his voice caught me off guard. I'd been prepared for complaints, for criticism, for the kind of passive-aggressive comments Derek used to make about my domestic skills. Instead, Alexander seemed genuinely grateful, even for food that probably belonged in a garbage disposal.
"You don't have to lie," I said, my voice softer than before. "I saw you wince when you thought I wasn't looking."
He laughed—a real laugh that transformed his entire face. "Okay, it was pretty terrible. But you tried, and that matters."
Something about his honesty, delivered without cruelty, made my chest tighten unexpectedly. "I'm not much of a cook," I admitted.
"That's okay," he said, standing to clear the plates. "Maybe I could take over kitchen duties? I'm actually not bad at it."
I stared at him. "You cook?"
"Necessity is a good teacher," he said with a shrug. "When you're on your own, you learn to make do."
The next evening, I came home to the smell of something that actually made my mouth water. Alexander was standing at the stove, stirring something in a pan that looked like it belonged in a restaurant rather than our small kitchen.
"What is that?" I asked, setting down my bag and moving closer.
"Chicken marsala," he said, not looking up from his work. "Nothing fancy."
But it looked fancy. The sauce was a perfect golden brown, the chicken was seared to perfection, and there were actual herbs sprinkled on top. Real herbs, not the dried stuff from a shaker.
"Where did you learn to cook like this?" I asked, watching him plate the dish with movements that seemed almost professional.
"YouTube," he said quickly. "And trial and error. Lots of error."
When I tasted it, I had to bite back a moan of pleasure. It was restaurant-quality food, better than anything I'd ever made in my life.
"This is incredible," I said, taking another bite. "Seriously, where did you really learn to cook?"
Something flickered across his expression—so quickly I almost missed it. "I told you. When you grow up poor, you learn to make cheap ingredients taste good. It's all about technique."
But as I watched him move around the kitchen, cleaning as he went with an efficiency that spoke of long practice, I found myself noticing things. The way he held his knife—not like someone who'd learned from YouTube videos, but like someone who'd been properly trained. The way he tasted the sauce with a small spoon, adjusting seasonings with the confidence of someone who understood flavor profiles.
And then there was the wine he'd opened—a bottle I was pretty sure cost more than most construction workers made in a day.
"Nice wine," I commented, swirling the glass.
"Found it on sale," he said, but there was something evasive in his tone.
I studied his profile as he finished plating the vegetables. There was something refined about the way he moved, something that didn't quite match the story of a man who'd learned everything from necessity and YouTube tutorials.
"Alexander," I said slowly, "what exactly do you do at the construction site?"
"Manual labor," he replied without hesitation. "Whatever needs doing."
But when he handed me my plate, his hands were soft—not the calloused, rough hands of someone who spent his days doing manual labor. And when he spoke about the wine, describing its notes and vintage with casual expertise, I caught a glimpse of something that made my stomach flutter with unease.
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