Mark's POV
The door closed behind me, and the house returned to its usual silence.
I stood there longer than necessary, briefcase in hand, replaying the look on Alex's face when I'd told him to use the kitchen anytime. The way his smile had come easily unforced, unapologetic.
It shouldn't have stayed with me.
I left the estate and slid into the back seat of the car, giving my driver the address of the office out of habit. Sydney blurred past the tinted windows, glass and steel rising like monuments to ambition.
Normally, this grounded me.
Today, it didn't.
You might regret that.
I exhaled slowly. He hadn't said it with fear or reverence. Just confidence. As if wealth didn't impress him. As if my name didn't carry the weight it usually did.
Rich men don't intimidate me.
He hadn't said those exact words but I'd heard them anyway.
---
Windsor Holdings buzzed with efficiency when I arrived. Assistants moved quickly. Executives straightened when they saw me. The usual deference, the usual distance.
I welcomed it. I needed it.
The morning passed in meetings, numbers, projections, expansions. I corrected mistakes before they were spoken. I dismissed excuses without apology. This was the version of myself the world expected.
This was the version I trusted.
And yet, between agenda points, my mind drifted.
Alex's easy sarcasm.
His insistence on earning his place.
The way he'd stood in my kitchen like he belonged there.
I cut a presentation short.
"Any questions?" I asked.
No one spoke.
"Good. Meeting adjourned."
They filed out quickly. My assistant lingered.
"Sir," she said carefully. "About the graduate analyst position, HR sent a shortlist."
I nodded. "Leave it on my desk."
She hesitated. "There's... an additional résumé attached."
I already knew.
"Alex Smith," she continued. "Mary's son."
I looked at her, expression neutral. "And?"
"He meets the criteria. Strong academic record. Relevant skills."
"Then he's on the list," I said.
No favoritism. No shortcuts.
She nodded and left.
I stared at the file.
This was dangerous territory.
---
That evening, I returned home later than planned. The house smelled like garlic and herbs, dinner in progress. Laughter floated from the kitchen. Alex's voice, unmistakable.
I slowed without meaning to.
"...telling you, Mum, if I don't get a job soon, I'll start charging you rent for emotional support."
Mary laughed. "You already eat enough to count as rent."
I stepped into the doorway.
Alex turned first. "Oh. Hey."
There it was again. That smile. Casual. Unafraid.
"Good evening," I said.
"Dinner's almost ready," Mary said. "Alex helped."
"I can tell," I replied, meeting his gaze. "The house smells better."
"High praise," Alex said. "From you, especially."
I raised an eyebrow. "Why especially?"
He shrugged. "You seem like the type who's hard to impress."
I held his stare. "Only when people try too hard."
Something passed between us, a quiet understanding.
Dinner was comfortable. Too comfortable. Conversation flowed easily, laughter punctuating the space in a way it rarely did. I caught myself watching Alex more than my plate.
Afterward, Mary excused herself early.
"I'm turning in," she said pointedly. "You two don't stay up too late."
Alex groaned. "Mum."
I ignored the look she gave me warm, knowing and focused on clearing my plate.
Alex reached for it at the same time our fingers brushed.
Electric.
We both froze.
"Sorry," he said quickly.
"It's fine," I replied, though my pulse disagreed.
We stood too close for a moment longer than necessary.
He broke the silence first. "So... you're really not intimidating, you know."
I laughed softly. "That's not what my employees say."
"Yeah, well," he said, meeting my eyes with that stubborn confidence, "rich men don't intimidate me."
There it was.
Spoken aloud.
I should have corrected him. Reminded him of boundaries. Of reality.
Instead, I found myself smiling.
"Good," I said quietly. "I'd hate to think my wealth was the most interesting thing about me."
His expression softened. "It's not."
The air between us thickened, charged, restrained.
I stepped back first.
"Goodnight, Alex."
"Goodnight, Mark."
I watched him head toward the stairs, shoulders relaxed, unaware of the effect he was having.
As I turned toward my study, one thought settled heavily in my mind.
Alex Smith didn't see the CEO.
He saw the man.
And that was far more dangerous than intimidation ever could be.
Alex's POV
I took the stairs slower than necessary.
Not because I was tired but because my heart wouldn't calm down.
Rich men don't intimidate me.
I'd said it like a joke. Like a fact. Like it meant nothing.
But the truth was, Mark Windsor didn't intimidate me because intimidation implied distance. Fear. Power used loudly.
What unsettled me about him was quieter.
He listened.
He noticed.
And when he looked at me, it wasn't like I was background noise in his perfectly ordered world.
That was the problem.
I closed my bedroom door softly and leaned my forehead against it, exhaling. The room was neat, comfortable, unmistakably temporary. My suitcase still sat half-unpacked in the corner, like a reminder that I wasn't meant to settle too deeply.
Don't get attached, I told myself.
Easier said than done.
---
The next few days slipped into a strange rhythm.
Mark left early. I helped Mum in the mornings. Sometimes I cooked breakfast when she was busy, nothing fancy, just enough to keep my hands occupied and my thoughts from spiraling.
Mark never commented on it directly.
But he always ate.
Sometimes he'd thank me with a nod. Other times, a quiet "good." Once, just once he'd looked up from his phone and said, "You have a gift."
I'd nearly burned myself on the pan.
We learned each other through fragments. Passing conversations. Shared silences. Brief moments that felt heavier than they should have.
There were rules here. I could feel them.
They weren't spoken aloud but they existed all the same.
Don't touch.
Don't linger.
Don't ask for more.
I followed them.
Mostly.
---
One afternoon, I found Mum in the kitchen, arms crossed, watching me dice onions with more force than necessary.
"Who are you angry at?" she asked.
"No one," I said automatically.
She hummed. "You're cutting like the onion insulted you."
I sighed, setting the knife down. "It's just... weird being here."
"Weird how?"
I hesitated. Mum had always been my safe place. She knew about me. About who I loved. About who I didn't want to be.
Still this felt different.
"I don't want things to be awkward," I said carefully. "With Mark."
Her eyes softened. "Is he making you uncomfortable?"
"No," I said quickly. "He's not doing anything wrong."
That was the truth and also the complication.
Mum studied me for a moment, then spoke gently. "Alex, Mark has rules for himself. Very strict ones."
I looked at her. "Like what?"
"Like never mixing work with personal life. Like never depending on anyone. Like never letting feelings cloud judgment."
My chest tightened. "And?"
"And," she continued, "he breaks those rules only when he trusts someone."
I swallowed. "He trusts you."
"Yes," she said. "And that took time."
I forced a smile. "Then I'm safe. I don't plan on crossing any lines."
She reached out and squeezed my arm. "Good. Because some lines exist to protect both sides."
I nodded.
But later that night, lying in bed, staring at the ceiling again, I realized something uncomfortable.
I didn't know what line scared me more.
The one I might cross.
Or the one Mark had already stepped closer to.
---
The opportunity came sooner than expected.
I was in the kitchen, trying out a new recipe nothing extravagant, just something to distract myself when Mark walked in earlier than usual. No jacket. Tie loosened. Shoulders tense.
Rough day.
He paused when he saw me. "You're experimenting."
"Testing," I corrected. "Experiments explode."
His mouth twitched. "Fair point."
He watched for a moment, silent.
"You don't have to do that," he said eventually.
"I know," I replied. "I want to."
That seemed to surprise him.
"Why?" he asked.
I shrugged. "It makes the house feel... lived in."
The words hung there.
Mark looked around the kitchen, the warm light, the familiar counters, the quiet hum of something almost domestic.
"Yes," he said softly. "It does."
Silence settled again but this time, it was weighted.
"I reviewed your résumé today," he said suddenly.
My hand stilled. "Oh."
"You're qualified."
I met his eyes. "That's not an offer."
"No," he agreed. "It's not."
Relief and disappointment tangled in my chest.
"I won't accept anything I didn't earn," I said.
"I wouldn't give it," he replied evenly.
We held each other's gaze, mutual respect, sharp and undeniable.
That was another rule, then.
Earn it.
Don't owe.
Don't ask.
I turned back to the stove. "Dinner will be ready soon."
He nodded. "I'll be in my study."
As he left, I realized something that made my pulse quicken.
We were learning each other's rules.
And rules, once known, were dangerously easy to bend.
I just didn't know yet which of us would break first.
Mark's POV
I didn't go to my study.
I told Alex I would but instead, I stopped halfway down the corridor and stood there, staring at a painting I'd walked past a thousand times without ever really seeing. My reflection stared back at me from the polished glass frame: composed, controlled, untouched.
A lie.
We were learning each other's rules.
The thought unsettled me more than it should have.
I turned back.
The kitchen light was still on. The low sound of something simmering filled the air, steady and patient. Alex stood at the stove, focused, sleeves rolled up again. He hadn't heard me return.
This was a mistake.
I knew it the moment I crossed the threshold but my feet didn't stop.
"You said you'd be in your study," Alex said without turning around.
"So did you," I replied quietly.
He glanced over his shoulder, surprised and then smiled. That easy, unguarded smile that disarmed people before they realized it had happened.
"Guess we're both liars," he said.
I leaned against the counter, deliberately putting space between us. "Dinner smells good."
"Give it a minute," he replied. "It needs time."
Time.
I watched the way he stirred the pot unhurried, confident. The kitchen felt smaller than it had any right to be.
"You're avoiding something," I said.
He raised an eyebrow. "You always this blunt?"
"When I notice patterns," I said. "Yes."
Alex turned off the stove and faced me fully. "Then what pattern do you see?"
I hesitated.
Honesty was another rule I rarely bent but I found myself doing it anyway.
"You keep insisting you don't want favors," I said. "But you place yourself in situations where you give more than necessary."
His expression softened, something thoughtful flickering behind his eyes. "Maybe I don't like feeling like a burden."
"You're not," I said immediately.
There it was again that instinctive defense.
Alex noticed.
"See?" he said gently. "You do that."
"Do what?"
"Care," he replied. "Even when you pretend you don't."
The air shifted.
This was too close to truths I didn't want examined.
"You should be careful," I said, voice lower now. "This house has lines."
"So you keep saying," he replied. "But you never tell me where they are."
Because if I did, he might follow them.
Or worse he might cross them deliberately.
"I don't mix personal and professional," I said. "I don't blur roles. And I don't take advantage of imbalance."
Alex studied me for a long moment.
"Good," he said finally. "Because neither do I."
We stood there too close, not touching, yet painfully aware of each other. I could smell the faint citrus of his soap. Hear the steady rhythm of his breathing.
Dangerous.
"I should go," I said.
"Yes," he agreed. "You should."
Neither of us moved.
Alex reached past me for a towel, his arm brushing my chest brief, accidental, devastating.
I inhaled sharply.
He froze.
"I'm sorry," he said quickly. "I didn't..."
"It's fine," I said, too quickly.
It wasn't.
I stepped back, putting distance where there should have been from the start.
"Dinner," I said, grasping for control. "Thank you."
"You're welcome," he replied softly.
I left the kitchen without looking back, heart pounding harder than it had during any boardroom confrontation.
Later that night, alone in my room, I loosened my cuffs and stared out into the darkness beyond the windows.
Alex Smith was a complication I hadn't planned for.
He respected my rules.
He challenged my control.
And worst of all he made me want to bend.
This wasn't attraction born of impulse.
It was something slower. Deeper.
And if I wasn't careful, too close for comfort would become impossible to walk away from.