Chapter 3

Anna's first official day at Knight Enterprises felt like walking into enemy territory.

She had spent most of the night staring at the ceiling, turning over every word Alexander Knight had said to her. His warning-loyalty is everything-still echoed in her head, chilling and commanding all at once.

But she had no choice. Her father's hospital bills didn't care if her boss was the devil himself.

The elevator dinged, releasing her onto the executive floor. This time, she carried no résumé or portfolio-only her nerves and a determination she prayed wouldn't falter.

"Miss Williams?"

Anna turned to find a tall woman with sharp cheekbones and an even sharper suit waiting by the reception desk. She looked every inch the power executive-glasses perched on her nose, tablet in hand, heels clicking with precision.

"I'm Claire Matthews, Mr. Knight's executive assistant," she said briskly. "He asked me to orient you."

"Thank you," Anna replied, trying not to sound as nervous as she felt.

Claire gave her a once-over, eyes narrowing slightly, as though measuring and already finding her lacking. "You'll be working under me directly. But understand-anything you do reflects on Mr. Knight. That means one mistake could cost you more than your job."

The words weren't a warning. They were a knife, delivered with practiced indifference.

Anna straightened her shoulders. "I'll do my best."

Claire's lips curved into something that wasn't quite a smile. "We'll see."

---

Her desk was placed just outside Alexander's office, separated by a glass wall. It was modern, sleek, and painfully exposed. Every time she looked up, she could see his silhouette inside-head bent over files, speaking into the phone, or simply staring out the window with a presence that seemed to command the very skyline.

The work itself was demanding. Scheduling meetings, sorting through endless contracts, answering calls that never stopped ringing. Claire's instructions came rapid-fire, and Anna had to fight to keep up.

But every so often, she felt it-his gaze.

Through the glass, Alexander's eyes would lift, pinning her in place. Not for long. Just a flicker, a heartbeat too long. Enough to leave her unsettled.

She told herself it was her imagination. But it wasn't. He was watching her. Measuring her. Testing her.

And she had no idea why.

---

At noon, Claire appeared at her desk. "Mr. Knight wants to see you."

Anna's heart skipped. She smoothed her blouse, forced her legs to move, and stepped into his office.

Alexander was at his desk, sleeves rolled up, tie loosened. Even in a moment of disarray, he looked every inch the untouchable CEO-controlled, powerful, devastatingly composed.

"Sit," he said without looking up.

Anna obeyed, perching on the edge of the leather chair across from him.

He finally looked at her, eyes sharp as ever. "How was your first morning?"

"Busy," she admitted. "But manageable."

His lips curved faintly. "Most people don't survive their first week here. You lasted four hours without quitting. Impressive."

"I'm not most people," she said before she could stop herself.

His gaze darkened, amused. "I've noticed."

The silence stretched, thick and charged. Anna shifted under his stare, trying to find her voice. "Mr. Knight... why me? You don't even know me, and yet you-"

"Wrong." His interruption was swift, cutting. "I make it a point to know everything about the people I allow into my company."

Anna blinked. "You... investigated me?"

"Background checks are standard. But you..." He leaned back, folding his arms. "You're different. You're desperate, but not broken. Bold, but not reckless. You intrigue me."

Her cheeks warmed. "I didn't ask to intrigue you."

"No," he said softly, eyes never leaving hers. "But you do."

Her pulse spiked. She shifted in her seat, clinging to composure. "If this is some sort of test, I'd rather know what's expected of me."

His gaze sharpened. "Loyalty. Competence. And discretion." He tapped his desk lightly, each word weighted. "Do those three things, and you'll be rewarded beyond anything you've dreamed. Fail... and you'll regret ever stepping into my office."

The words should have terrified her. And they did. But beneath the fear was something else-an undeniable pull, like standing too close to a flame.

Anna cleared her throat. "Understood."

"Good." His voice softened, dangerously smooth. "Now, I have a proposition for you."

Her breath caught. "What kind of proposition?"

The corner of his mouth lifted, just slightly. "One that goes beyond a simple job. But for now..." He stood, towering over her, his shadow falling across her. "Prove to me I didn't make a mistake. Show me you belong here."

Anna stood too, forcing herself not to step back even as her pulse raced. "I will."

Their eyes locked, steel against fire, neither willing to yield.

For the first time in her life, Anna realized this wasn't just about survival anymore.

It was about a game.

And Alexander Knight was daring her to play.

Chapter 4

The days that followed blurred into a storm of phone calls, contracts, and endless tasks. Anna barely had time to breathe, let alone think. Yet every moment was laced with tension, because Alexander Knight's presence was inescapable.

Even when he wasn't in the room, she could feel him-the weight of his gaze through the glass wall, the sound of his footsteps approaching, the ripple of silence that spread whenever he entered a space.

Working at Knight Enterprises wasn't just exhausting. It was suffocating.

And yet, Anna couldn't walk away. Not when her father's bills grew heavier each day.

That afternoon, Claire appeared at her desk with her usual icy composure. "Mr. Knight wants you in the boardroom. Now."

Anna froze. "The boardroom?"

Claire's sharp eyes flicked over her. "You'll be taking notes. Don't speak unless spoken to. And for your own sake, don't look weak."

Before Anna could reply, Claire was already striding down the hall. Heart pounding, Anna gathered her notebook and hurried after her.

---

The boardroom was massive, its glass walls overlooking the city like a throne room in the sky. A long polished table stretched down the center, where a dozen executives sat, their suits expensive, their faces lined with ambition.

And at the head of the table sat Alexander.

He didn't speak at first. He didn't need to. His silence was enough to command the room. When his gaze finally swept across the table, every man and woman straightened, waiting.

Anna slipped into a seat at the far end, clutching her pen like a lifeline.

The meeting began.

Numbers were presented, charts displayed, voices droning about projections and profits. But the moment someone faltered-hesitated, stumbled over an answer-Alexander pounced.

"Pathetic," he said when one executive failed to defend a proposal. His tone wasn't raised, but the word sliced through the air like a whip. "If you can't anticipate competitors, then you're already useless to me."

The man's face went pale.

Another tried to challenge Alexander's decision. His mistake.

"Do you think I built this empire by listening to incompetence?" Alexander's voice was smooth, deadly calm. "You're either with me, or you're irrelevant. Which is it?"

The room fell silent. No one dared breathe.

Anna's pen shook in her hand. She'd heard rumors of his ruthlessness, but seeing it firsthand was something else entirely. His control was absolute, his authority terrifying. And yet... no one left. They feared him, but they also needed him.

When the meeting finally ended, the executives scattered like prey fleeing a predator.

Anna remained frozen, her notebook filled with scribbles, her chest tight. She had witnessed power in its rawest form. And it chilled her to the bone.

---

"Stay," Alexander's voice cut through her thoughts as she began to stand.

Her knees wobbled. Slowly, she sank back into her chair.

He leaned back, loosening his tie, his eyes locking onto hers with unnerving precision. "Well? What did you think?"

She hesitated. "I think... you don't give people room to breathe."

One dark brow arched. "And why should I?"

"Because fear only lasts so long," she said quietly, surprising even herself. "Eventually, people break. Or they turn against you."

The silence stretched. Alexander's gaze didn't waver, sharp and calculating. Then, slowly, he smirked.

"You're not afraid of me."

Anna's breath hitched. "I didn't say that."

"You don't need to." His voice dropped lower, smooth and dangerous. "I can see it in your eyes. Fear... mixed with something else."

Heat flushed her cheeks. She gripped her pen tighter, forcing her voice steady. "Maybe you're misreading me."

His smirk widened, but his gaze grew darker, more intense. "No, Miss Williams. I never misread anyone."

The air between them thickened, charged with something unspoken, dangerous.

Finally, he leaned forward, resting his elbows on the table. "Good. I don't want blind loyalty. I want honesty. If you're brave enough to tell me the truth-even when it's dangerous-you may last longer than the others."

Anna swallowed hard, her throat tightened as Alexander's words sank in. Last longer than the others. What did that even mean? How many before her had stood in this same room, caught beneath that steel gaze, only to vanish from his world when they couldn't withstand the pressure?

Anna forced herself to meet his eyes, even though every instinct screamed at her to look away. "And if I don't last?" she asked, her voice low.

Alexander leaned back in his chair, studying her as if she were an equation only he could solve. "Then you'll join the countless others who thought they could survive in my world and failed."

There was no cruelty in his tone. No anger. Just the stark, terrifying truth of a man who never sugarcoated reality.

Her fingers clenched around her pen, knuckles white. "I don't plan on failing."

A slow smirk touched his lips, and it was more dangerous than his glare. "Then prove it."

Anna's heart pounded. She should've been terrified-and she was. But beneath the fear was something else, something far more unsettling. A pull she couldn't explain, as if she were a moth drawn to a flame she knew would burn her.

"Dismissed," Alexander said finally, his tone clipped.

Anna rose, clutching her notebook, grateful for the release. She turned toward the door, her heels clicking against the polished floor.

Just as she reached for the handle, his voice stopped her.

"Miss Williams."

She froze. Slowly, she looked back.

Alexander's eyes were locked on her, sharp as steel, unreadable as always. "In this company, there are two types of people-those who get consumed... and those who conquer. Decide quickly which one you want to be."

The weight of his words followed her out of the boardroom, sinking deep into her chest.

Anna had stepped into his world, a world built on power, control, and shadows. And she knew now-there was no turning back.

Chapter 5

The morning began with a stack of files so tall Anna thought Claire was joking.

"These are to be reviewed, summarized, and reorganized before Mr. Knight's three o'clock meeting," Claire said crisply, dropping the tower of folders onto Anna's desk with a thud. "He expects precision. No errors. And considering you're new, I wouldn't get your hopes up about leaving before midnight."

Anna stared at the pile, her heart sinking. Contracts, reports, financial statements-hundreds of pages that would normally take a team days to handle.

"This is impossible," she muttered under her breath.

Claire's sharp eyes flicked up, unimpressed. "Nothing is impossible when it comes to Mr. Knight. If you can't handle this, perhaps you don't belong here."

And with that, she walked away, her heels clicking like a metronome of doom.

Anna exhaled shakily, pushing her hair from her face. All right, fine. They wanted to drown her? She'd swim.

She rolled up her sleeves, grabbed the first file, and got to work.

---

By noon, her desk was littered with sticky notes and coffee cups. Her fingers cramped from scribbling summaries, her eyes burned from scanning endless lines of legal jargon. Every time she thought she was making progress, another assistant dropped off more files "from Mr. Knight."

It was deliberate. She knew it.

Alexander was testing her.

Part of her wanted to scream, to storm into his office and demand why he was trying to break her. But another part-stubborn, unyielding-refused to give him the satisfaction of seeing her quit.

If he thought she'd crumble, he was wrong.

---

At 2:45, Anna stood outside the boardroom, clutching her neatly organized binder of summaries. She had worked like a machine, barely breathing, refusing to let herself fail.

When the doors opened, she stepped inside, nerves coiling tight.

Alexander sat at the head of the table, sharp and unreadable. His gaze flicked to her immediately, then down to the binder in her hands.

"Miss Williams," he said coolly. "Let's see if you're worth the chair you're sitting in."

Anna's pulse quickened. She placed the binder before him, her notes precise, color-coded, every page tabbed for quick reference.

He flipped through the first few pages in silence. The room was suffocatingly quiet, every executive holding their breath as the CEO's eyes scanned line after line.

Finally, Alexander looked up.

"Not bad," he said.

The executives seemed to exhale in unison. Anna's shoulders sagged with relief-until he added, "For an amateur."

Heat flushed her cheeks. "I-"

"You missed three discrepancies in the Logan file," he cut in, his tone sharp. "You caught details most wouldn't, but you overlooked the obvious. Do you know what that tells me?"

Anna swallowed. "That I need to do better."

His lips curved faintly, dangerously. "That you can do better."

Her eyes widened. That wasn't a dismissal. It was... something else.

Alexander leaned forward, his gaze locking onto hers like a predator sizing up prey. "You're not afraid of pressure. That much is clear. But pressure is only the beginning. I want to see what happens when you're cornered. When failure isn't an option."

The words sent a shiver down her spine. This wasn't just work. This was a game to him-a test of endurance, of willpower.

Anna straightened her shoulders, forcing her voice steady. "Then you'll see I don't break easily."

The faintest smirk touched his lips, though his eyes remained as sharp as steel. "We'll see, Miss Williams. We'll see."

---

After the meeting, Anna returned to her desk, her heart still pounding. The binder sat on Alexander's table, her work dissected yet not discarded.

For the first time since entering his world, she realized something chilling.

He didn't just want an assistant.

He wanted a challenger.

And whether she was ready or not, she had just become one.

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