Three months later.
I stood in the massive, glass-walled lobby of Sterling Architecture. I wore a tailored navy blazer I bought from a thrift store, my chestnut hair pulled into a severe, professional knot. I was three and a half months pregnant, but the loose cut of my blouse hid my secret perfectly.
Marcus Chen met me on the forty-eighth floor. He was sharp, perceptive, and possessed a warm, calculating smile.
“Your structural analysis is brilliant, Zara,” Marcus said, leading me down a corridor of pristine drafting tables. “You understand sustainable materials better than our senior executives. James Sterling, our chief architect, personally reviewed your files. He demanded we hire you.”
“I am incredibly grateful for the opportunity, Mr. Chen,” I replied. My heart hammered against my ribs. “I will not let this firm down.”
“I know you will not,” Marcus stopped outside a massive corner office. “You will start on the Riverside project. It is a billion-dollar development. But I must warn you. Our CEO is brutal. He built this company from nothing. He does not tolerate mistakes, and he despises office drama. He will tear your designs apart just to see if you bleed.”
“I can handle brutal,” I promised. I had survived complete social destruction. I could handle a strict boss.
“Good.” Marcus smiled. “He is in Tokyo this week, so you will not meet him until Monday. Go settle into your cubicle. Welcome to the team, Zara.”
I walked to my desk, feeling a surge of genuine triumph. I had done it. I was reclaiming my life. I sat down and booted up my computer. The corporate screensaver flashed across the monitor. It was a high-resolution photograph of the company's executive board.
My blood turned to pure, unadulterated ice.
Standing in the centre of the photograph was the CEO. Broad shoulders. A sharp, chiselled jawline. Piercing, unforgiving steel-grey eyes.
Malachi Sterling.
The stranger from the hotel room.
Panic threatened to rip my throat open. I could not breathe. I was working for the man who believed I was a manipulative call girl. If Malachi Sterling saw me in his building, he would fire me on the spot. Worse, if he ever discovered who and what I was hiding.
I spent the next four days working in a state of sheer terror. I arrived at dawn and left at midnight, hiding behind my computer monitors. I poured my panic into the Riverside project, creating architectural blueprints that were flawless. I needed to prove my worth to Marcus and James before Malachi returned to destroy me.
Monday morning arrived like an executioner's axe.
“Conference room B, everyone!” Marcus clapped his hands together, walking through the design floor. “The CEO is back. We are presenting the Riverside concepts right now.”
My stomach dropped into my shoes. I grabbed my portfolio with shaking hands and followed the team into the glass-walled boardroom. I sat at the very back of the long mahogany table, praying I could blend into the shadows.
The heavy glass doors slammed open.
The temperature in the room plummeted. Malachi Sterling walked in. He wore a bespoke black suit that screamed lethal authority. He commanded the room without saying a single word. Every architect sat up straighter.
“Let us make this fast,” Malachi demanded. His voice was a dark, rich baritone that sent a violent shiver down my spine. It was the exact same voice that whispered in the dark hotel room four months ago. “Show me the structural solutions for the Riverside foundation.”
“Our new junior architect solved the load-bearing issue,” Marcus stated proudly. He gestured directly toward the back of the room. “Zara, please walk Mr. Sterling through your blueprints.”
Time completely stopped.
Malachi slowly turned his head. His gaze locked onto mine.
The boredom in his steel-grey eyes vanished. Recognition hit him like a physical blow. His jaw clenched so hard a muscle feathered in his cheek. His eyes dropped to my lips, then back up to my terrified hazel eyes. He remembered every single detail of that night. He remembered the taste of my skin.
He took a slow, menacing step toward the table. The boardroom fell dead silent. He looked at me not like an employee, but like a predator looking at a trap he was about to rip apart.
“You,” Malachi whispered. The word carried a lethal, freezing venom that promised absolute war.
The boardroom emptied in less than thirty seconds. The senior architects practically ran for the door, desperate to escape the suffocating tension.
Malachi did not blink. His eyes burned with a cold, terrifying fury. “Miss Knight. My office. Now.”
I gathered my blueprints with trembling hands and followed his broad shoulders into the penthouse suite. The heavy oak door clicked shut behind us, locking me inside the lion's den.
“You infiltrated my company,” Malachi accused. His voice was a lethal whisper that commanded the massive room. “You expect me to believe a call girl who begged to stay in my bed is suddenly a junior architect on my most important project?”
“I am not a call girl, and I did not infiltrate anything!” I fired back, refusing to shrink under his towering presence. “I earned this job. I did not know you were the CEO. I applied to forty-seven firms!”
He closed the distance between us in three long strides. He stood so close I could feel the heat radiating from his chest. The familiar, intoxicating scent of cedar and expensive cologne flooded my senses, making my heart race.
“Fire me if you want, Mr. Sterling,” I challenged, tilting my chin up to meet his stormy grey eyes. “But my structural designs just saved your billion-dollar foundation. I was drugged that night in the hotel, and you were collateral damage. I want to work, not trap you.”
He searched my face, looking for a lie. He found none. His jaw clenched so hard a muscle feathered in his cheek.
“I will not fire you and risk a wrongful termination lawsuit from a grifter,” he stated coldly. “You will work on Riverside. But if you make one mistake, or if you breathe a single word about that night to my staff, I will personally destroy your career.”
The next three weeks were a brutal, exhausting battlefield. Malachi piled impossible deadlines on my desk, fully expecting me to break under the pressure. I refused. I arrived before dawn, drafted blueprints until my fingers cramped, and left at midnight.
But my body was fighting its own secret war.
One rainy Tuesday, a violent wave of nausea hit me during a site inspection. I dropped my hardhat and sprinted to the temporary trailer bathroom, falling to my knees just in time as my stomach emptied.
The heavy trailer door pushed open.
Malachi stood in the doorway. His sharp eyes took in my pale, trembling frame. The cold anger in his face fractured, replaced by a sudden, strange flicker of genuine concern.
“Are you ill?” His tone was clipped, but he took a step inside the cramped space.
“It was just bad takeout,” I lied, splashing freezing water on my face. My heart hammered wildly against my ribs. I was exactly fourteen weeks pregnant. If he looked closely at the slight rounding of my stomach under my loose blazer, my entire world would explode.
“Go home, Miss Knight,” he commanded softly. He reached into his pocket and handed me a pristine linen handkerchief. “Sterling Architecture does not require martyrs.”
I took the cloth from him. His warm fingers brushed against mine, sending a jolt of pure, undeniable electricity straight to my core. He felt it too. He pulled his hand back quickly, his grey eyes darkening before he turned and walked out into the rain.
I did not go home. I stayed at the office and finished the Riverside structural models.
When I finally walked down to the main lobby that afternoon to grab a coffee, a sickeningly familiar voice echoed across the marble floors.
“Zara! Oh my god, look at you!”
Vanessa.
She wore a designer trench coat, her dark eyes darting around the luxurious lobby with hungry envy. “I heard a rumour you got a job here. I had to come see it for myself.”
“How did you find me?” I asked, my blood running to absolute ice. She was the monster who poisoned my drink and ruined my life.
Before she could answer, the private executive elevator chimed. Malachi stepped out. He was not alone. A stunning, statuesque woman with platinum-blonde hair clung possessively to his arm. Victoria Ashford. His ex-fiancée.
Victoria’s ice-blue eyes scanned me, dismissing my thrift-store suit in a fraction of a second. But Vanessa stared at Malachi like he was a diamond she wanted to steal.
“Zara,” Vanessa smirked, projecting her voice loud enough for the CEO to hear. “Does your new boss know about your messy little history? Or are you tricking him, too?”
Malachi stopped dead in his tracks. His eyes snapped toward me, cold and assessing.
“Is there a problem here, Miss Knight?” Malachi asked, his voice dark and dangerous.
“No, Mr. Sterling,” I said quickly. I grabbed Vanessa's arm, my nails digging ruthlessly into her silk sleeve. “My friend was just leaving.”
Victoria let out a mocking, elegant laugh. “Keep your personal trash off company property, junior.”
I dragged Vanessa through the revolving glass doors and shoved her onto the busy sidewalk. “Do not ever come near me again.”
“You cannot shut me out!” Vanessa dropped her sweet facade. Her face twisted with bitter, venomous jealousy. “Preston is looking for you. He wants you back now that he realizes you actually have talent. You cannot hide from us, Zara!”
I walked away, my hands shaking violently. Preston wanted me back? It made my stomach churn with disgust. I was completely surrounded by enemies, both inside and outside the office walls.
It was 11:00 PM. The drafting floor was completely empty, bathed in the soft glow of the metropolis skyline. I was rubbing my aching lower back, staring at a complex blueprint, when the scent of cedar filled the quiet air.
Malachi placed a hot cup of black tea on my desk.
I jumped, my chair rolling back. “Mr. Sterling.”
“You are the only one left in the building,” he noted. He leaned against my cubicle wall, crossing his arms. The harsh office lighting cast deep shadows over his chiselled face. He looked exhausted, and for the first time since we met, he did not look angry.
“I needed to finish the load-bearing calculations,” I whispered, pulling my blazer tightly across my stomach.
He looked down at the blueprints. His eyes widened slightly. “You solved the eastern cantilever issue. James said it would take a team of senior architects a month to figure this out.”
“I do not give up easily,” I replied.
Malachi looked at me. He really looked at me. He saw the dark circles under my eyes, the frayed edges of my jacket, and the absolute determination in my posture. He realized I was not a gold digger.
“Who are you, Zara Knight?” he murmured. He reached out, his warm thumb gently brushing a smudge of graphite off my cheek.
My breath hitched. The air between us ignited, thick with undeniable, magnetic tension. I looked up into his stormy grey eyes, and for one terrifying, beautiful second, I wanted to tell him everything. I wanted to tell him about the baby.