
The CEO's Ruthless Rebound
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
"The projections are unacceptable, Marcus. I didn't spend the last three years dragging this company out of the red just to let a secondary acquisition bleed our quarterly profits."
Vivienne Croft sat at the head of the sprawling mahogany table, her voice a perfectly calibrated instrument of absolute authority. The boardroom of Croft-Sterling Enterprises was perched on the eightieth floor of the city's most prominent glass spire, suspended in the clouds. Down below, the city was a chaotic blur, but up here, Vivienne controlled every breath, every margin, and every single man in a tailored suit who dared to look her in the eye.
Marcus, a senior board member with silver hair and a penchant for outdated business models, cleared his throat nervously. "Vivienne, be reasonable. The tech sector is volatile. We need a buffer—"
"What we need," Vivienne interrupted smoothly, her dark eyes locking onto his, "is a management team that doesn't mistake incompetence for market volatility. You have until Friday to restructure the deal, or I will dissolve your department and absorb the assets myself. Are we clear?"
A heavy silence fell over the room. No one challenged her. They never did. At twenty-eight, Vivienne was widely regarded as the ice queen of the financial district. They whispered that she had a calculator where her heart should be, a ruthless machine who had taken her late fiancé's failing startup and forged it into a multi-billion-dollar empire.
She preferred the whispers. They kept the sharks at bay.
"Excellent," Vivienne murmured, picking up her platinum pen to sign off on the final merger documents for the day. "Now, moving on to the finalization of the Vanguard acquisition—"
The heavy oak double doors of the boardroom didn't just open; they were shoved apart with a dramatic, echoing slam.
Vivienne didn't flinch, though her pen paused a fraction of an inch above the dotted line. Several board members jumped in their plush leather chairs.
"Sorry I'm late to the party," a male voice rang out, loud, smooth, and dripping with an arrogant charm that made Vivienne's blood turn to Freon in her veins. "Traffic over the Atlantic is a killer these days."
Vivienne looked up.
The pen slipped from her fingers, clattering softly against the polished wood. For a single, terrifying second, the meticulously constructed fortress of her mind completely collapsed.
Standing in the doorway, wearing a custom Italian suit that fit his broad shoulders perfectly, was Arthur Sterling.
*Arthur.*
The man who had supposedly died in a fiery private jet crash over the Pacific three years ago. The man she had mourned in silence, standing in a black veil by an empty casket, burying her grief so deep it had turned into a diamond of pure, unyielding ambition.
He wasn't a ghost. He was tan, smiling, and looking utterly pleased with the chaotic gasps erupting from the board members around the table.
"Arthur?" Marcus breathed out, his face turning an ashen grey. "Good God... Arthur? Is it really you?"
"In the flesh, Marcus," Arthur beamed, stepping fully into the room like a conquering hero returning from a minor skirmish. "I know, I know. It's a miracle. Surviving the crash, the remote island, the amnesia... it’s a long, harrowing story. I’ll save the details for the press conference."
But Arthur wasn't alone.
As he stepped forward, he reached back, his hand wrapping around the delicate, manicured fingers of a young woman trailing behind him. She stepped into the unforgiving fluorescent light of the boardroom. She was breathtakingly pretty in a soft, performative way—wide blue eyes, pouty lips, and a designer maternity dress that clung tightly to a very distinct, undeniably pregnant belly.
"Everyone," Arthur announced, his voice swelling with pride as he pulled the blonde woman against his side. "I’d like to introduce you to Chloe Jenkins. Well, Chloe Sterling now. My wife. And the mother of my future heir."
The boardroom erupted into a cacophony of shouts, murmurs, and dropped tablets.
Vivienne didn't move. Her spine was locked into a rigid, perfect line. Three years ago, he had vanished on the eve of their wedding. She had spent a thousand nights wondering if his final thoughts had been of her, if he had suffered, if she could have saved him.
And here he was. Married. Expecting a child. Smiling like a goddamn tourist.
"Vivienne," Arthur said, his eyes finally shifting to the head of the table. He offered her a look of deep, condescending pity. "Sweetheart. I know this is a shock. You look pale. It’s okay. I’m back now."
Vivienne slowly stood up. The simple motion was so fluid, so predatory, that the babbling board members instantly fell dead silent.
"Arthur," Vivienne said. Her voice was completely devoid of inflection. It was the exact same tone she used to fire embezzlers. "You are trespassing."
Arthur blinked, his charming smile faltering for a fraction of a second before roaring back to life. "Always the workaholic, aren't you, Viv? Come on, let's put the spreadsheets away. I'm alive. The rightful CEO of Croft-Sterling has returned. I know it's been hard on you, playing boss while I was gone—"
"Playing?" Vivienne repeated softly.
Chloe stepped forward, placing a protective, manicured hand on Arthur’s chest. She looked at Vivienne with wide, innocent eyes that entirely failed to mask the calculating gleam beneath them. "You must be Vivienne. Arthur has told me so much about you. I can't imagine how hard it was for you to keep his little company afloat. But you don't have to stress anymore. Arthur is home to take his burden back."
Vivienne’s gaze shifted to the young woman. "And who, exactly, are you?"
"I just told you," Chloe said, her voice raising a pitch, taking on a defensive, whining edge. "I'm his wife. We fell in love while he was recovering. He needed a real family, someone to care for his heart, not just his bank accounts."
"Fascinating," Vivienne said dryly, turning her attention back to Arthur. "You survived a plane crash, contracted amnesia, somehow maintained your perfect dental hygiene on a remote island, and found the time to impregnate a woman who looks like she just graduated from a sorority catalog. Truly, a modern Odyssey."
Marcus stood up, waving his hands. "Vivienne, please! Show some compassion. The man is alive! This is a momentous day for the company. With Arthur back at the helm—"
"Arthur is not at the helm, Marcus," Vivienne snapped, her voice cracking like a whip. "Arthur has been legally declared dead. His shares were transferred to me. I own sixty percent of the voting rights. I am the CEO, the Chairwoman, and the sole architect of this company's current valuation."
"Now hold on a minute!" Arthur’s charm finally cracked, revealing the arrogant, entitled boy Vivienne had once made excuses for. He slammed his hands down on the polished table. "I built this company! My name is on the damn building!"
"Your name is on the building because I kept it there out of misplaced sentimentality," Vivienne countered, her eyes narrowing into dark slits. "When you left, this company was bleeding capital. We were two weeks from bankruptcy because of your reckless spending. I saved it. I built the empire. You just gave me a catchy logo."
"I am the founder!" Arthur shouted, his face flushing red.
"You're a liability," Vivienne replied instantly. She reached over and tapped the intercom button on her console. "Security. We have an unauthorized individual in the executive boardroom. Please send a team up to escort him from the premises."
"You wouldn't dare!" Chloe shrieked, clutching her pregnant belly as if Vivienne had just threatened her unborn child. "He's your fiancé! He loved you!"
"He clearly found better ways to spend his time," Vivienne noted coldly. She stepped out from behind the head of the table, her stilettos clicking sharply against the hardwood floor as she approached Arthur.
Arthur stood tall, trying to physically intimidate her, but Vivienne didn’t even blink. She reached out, her fingers deftly catching the edge of the silver executive keycard dangling from the lanyard around Arthur’s neck—a lanyard he must have sweet-talked an old receptionist into giving him.
With a sharp, violent yank, Vivienne snapped the breakaway cord.
"Hey!" Arthur barked, stepping back.
"Your executive clearance is revoked," Vivienne stated, tossing the broken lanyard onto the table as if it were garbage. "Your access to the corporate accounts remains frozen. Your fingerprint has been wiped from the biometric scanners. You do not work here, Mr. Sterling."
The heavy boardroom doors opened again, and four burly security guards in dark suits stepped in, looking highly confused but ready to follow Vivienne's orders.
Arthur looked at the guards, then back to the board members, his panic quickly morphing into a smug, calculating sneer. He straightened his jacket, pulling Chloe tighter against him.
"You see this, gentlemen?" Arthur announced to the room, shaking his head with a mocking sigh. "This is exactly why I hesitated to leave her in charge. Women are simply too emotional. Look at her. She’s hysterical. I return from the dead, and instead of rejoicing, she’s throwing a jealous tantrum because I found a woman who actually knows how to love a man."
Marcus nodded slowly, looking troubled. "Vivienne, perhaps you are letting your personal feelings cloud your professional judgment. Arthur is a founder. Pushing him out like this... it seems vindictive. The board might view this as an emotional overreaction, which could trigger a vote of no confidence."
"An emotional overreaction?" Vivienne repeated, a dark, dangerous smile finally touching her lips. "Marcus, you mistake my efficiency for a tantrum."
"You can't lead this company without me, Viv," Arthur sneered, stepping closer, his voice dropping to a condescending murmur meant only for her. "You're a brilliant workhorse, I'll give you that. But you have no charisma. No vision. The board will follow me. They always liked me better. Step down gracefully, give me my desk back, and maybe I’ll let you stay on as my Chief Operating Officer."
"I am not stepping down. And the board will not be voting on anything today," Vivienne said, her voice ringing out clearly.
"And why is that?" Arthur challenged, crossing his arms.
"Because an hour ago, anticipating the Vanguard merger, I restructured my holdings," Vivienne declared, turning her gaze to the entire room. "I signed my majority voting shares into a joint trust."
Arthur laughed, a harsh, barking sound. "A trust? With who? You don't trust anyone, Vivienne. You're completely alone. You always have been."
"Not anymore."
The voice that echoed from the doorway was like rolling thunder—low, lethal, and vibrating with an authority that made Arthur's arrogant posture instantly dissolve.
Everyone turned.
Leaning casually against the doorframe, dismissing the security guards with a mere flick of his wrist, was Julian Vance.
He was a predator in a bespoke suit. Wall Street’s most feared venture capitalist. The CEO of Vance Global. He possessed a terrifying intellect, a ruthless reputation, and eyes so dark and observant they seemed to strip the secrets from anyone he looked at.
Julian pushed off the doorframe and walked into the room. The sheer physical presence of the man seemed to suck the oxygen out of the boardroom. He didn't look at Arthur. He didn't look at the board members. His gaze was entirely, intensely focused on Vivienne.
He stopped right beside her, closing the distance between them until their shoulders were a breath apart. Slowly, deliberately, Julian reached out and placed his hand on the small of Vivienne’s back. The touch sent a jolt of electricity straight down her spine, a startling contrast to the ice she had wrapped around her heart.
"What is he doing here?" Arthur demanded, his voice pitching up in genuine panic. "Vance is our biggest rival! You can't let him in here!"
Vivienne looked at Arthur, her eyes gleaming with absolute triumph.
"I can do whatever I want, Arthur," Vivienne said softly. "Because I didn't just sign my shares into a trust. I signed them over to my new husband."
Julian’s lips curved into a faint, devastating smirk. He looked at Arthur as if he were a bug on a windshield.
"Hello, Arthur," Julian said, his voice a dark, velvety threat. "I'd ask how the island was, but I honestly don't care. Now, get out of my wife's boardroom before I have you thrown out a window."
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