The CEO's Midnight Savior Novel Cover

The CEO's Midnight Savior

6.6 / 10.0
Devastated by a broken engagement and academic expulsion, Clara Vance takes a catering job where she saves the life of tech tycoon Julian Thorne. She vanishes into the night, leaving only an engraved silver spoon as a clue. Julian launches a relentless search for the woman who rescued him, unaware that his enemies are positioning a fraud to take her place. Ironically, the savior he is hunting is the same woman now serving him his daily morning coffee.

The CEO's Midnight Savior Chapter 1

Chapter 1

"You’re expelling me? Over a spun-sugar garnish?"

Clara Vance stared across the mahogany expanse of the Dean’s desk, her knuckles turning white where she gripped the arms of her chair. The air in the office smelled of floor wax and the bitter, burnt-coffee stench of absolute injustice.

Dean Aris folded his hands, looking at her with a mixture of pity and severe disappointment. "It is not just a garnish, Clara. It is the signature element of the final tasting menu. The exact molecular profile, the lavender-infused honey, the precise tempering temperatures—it was all documented in Sienna’s notebook. And she brought it to me this morning."

Clara whipped her head to the side. Sienna Croft sat in the adjacent leather chair, her pristine white chef’s coat completely spotless, her blonde hair pulled back in an immaculate French twist. Sienna was dabbing at her dry eyes with a tissue.

"I’m so sorry, Clara," Sienna whispered, her voice trembling with perfectly calibrated fragility. "I didn't want to bring this to the Dean. I really didn't. But you literally copied my entire flavor profile. I’ve been working on that dessert for six months."

"You have got to be kidding me," Clara snapped, her voice cutting through the quiet office like a serrated knife. "Sienna, you don’t even know how to temper chocolate without seizing it. I taught you that technique. I spent three weeks perfecting the lavender honey ratio while you were out partying with your sorority sisters."

"Clara, please," Sienna sniffled, shrinking back into her chair. "Don't make this harder than it already is."

"Enough," Dean Aris commanded. "The evidence is clear, Clara. Miss Croft presented her dated digital files, complete with timestamped photos of her trial runs."

Clara felt the floor drop out from beneath her. "Photos? She took pictures of *my* prep station while I was in the walk-in freezer! My brother is in the hospital. I’ve been working night shifts at the diner just to pay for my ingredients here. Why would I jeopardize my graduation by stealing from someone whose best dish is a boxed mac-and-cheese?"

"Do not insult your peers," the Dean warned, his tone icing over. "The culinary institute has a zero-tolerance policy for academic theft. Given your financial... situation, we were willing to overlook certain rough edges in your demeanor. But plagiarism is a terminal offense. You have one hour to clear out your locker."

Clara looked from the Dean’s hardened face to Sienna. Sienna’s eyes met hers, and for a fraction of a second, the trembling victim act vanished. A cold, triumphant smirk flashed across Sienna’s glossy lips before she quickly ducked her head into her tissue again.

Pragmatism, cold and sharp, flooded Clara’s veins. Begging wouldn't work. The Dean was already convinced, and Sienna’s family donated heavily to the alumni fund. Clara was just a charity case with a sick younger brother and a mountain of debt. The game was rigged, and she had just lost.

Clara stood up, smoothing the front of her apron. She didn't cry. She refused to give Sienna the satisfaction.

"Keep the recipe, Sienna," Clara said, her voice eerily calm, though her dark eyes blazed. "But a recipe is just paper. You still have to execute it on the line. And when that sugar burns and turns to ash in your pan tonight, everyone in that kitchen will know exactly who the real fraud is."

"Dean Aris, she's threatening me," Sienna gasped.

"Goodbye, Dean," Clara said, turning on her heel and marching out the door before the man could utter another word.

She stripped off her student apron in the hallway, tossing it into the nearest trash can. Her chest felt tight, her pulse roaring in her ears. Two years. Two years of bleeding over cutting boards, burning her forearms, and sleeping three hours a night to earn her spot at the top of the class. Gone.

She needed to talk to Leo. Her fiancé would know what to do. Leo was a financial analyst, always level-headed, always practical. He would help her figure out how to pay Toby’s hospital bills now that her guaranteed post-grad placement at Le Petit Chien was gone.

Clara hurried out of the institute and caught the subway back to their shared apartment. The sky overhead was a bruised, heavy gray, threatening rain.

When she unlocked the door to their third-floor walk-up, the apartment was eerily quiet. But there was a strange scent in the air. Expensive, cloying perfume.

"Leo?" Clara called out, dropping her keys into the ceramic bowl by the door.

A sharp gasp echoed from the bedroom down the hall.

Clara froze. The pragmatic side of her brain instantly calculated the variables. Mid-afternoon. Leo was supposed to be at the firm. The perfume smelled sickeningly familiar. It smelled exactly like the custom Parisian blend Sienna wore.

Clara’s boots made no sound on the hardwood floor as she walked down the narrow hallway. She pushed the half-open bedroom door wide.

The sight before her was something out of a cheap, trashy soap opera. Leo, her fiancé of three years, was scrambling backward against the headboard, frantically pulling the duvet over his chest. And beside him, hastily snatching up a silk camisole, was Sienna Croft.

Sienna. Who was supposed to be at the institute. Who must have sprinted to a cab the second Clara left the Dean’s office just to beat her here.

"Clara!" Leo’s voice cracked, his face draining of all color. "What are you doing home? You—you have the final tasting today!"

Clara leaned against the doorframe, crossing her arms over her chest. Her heart was shattering into a million jagged pieces, but her spine turned to pure steel.

"I was expelled," Clara said, her voice dangerously flat. "Because Sienna stole my recipe. But I see she’s been busy stealing a lot more than just my intellectual property."

Sienna clutched the silk top to her chest, tossing her blonde hair over her shoulder. The fake tears from the Dean’s office were entirely gone now. "Oh, please, Clara. Don't act so surprised. You've been treating Leo like an afterthought for months. You care more about your stupid brother's medical bills and your knives than you do about your own relationship."

"Sienna, shut up," Leo hissed, looking panicked. He scrambled out of bed, pulling on his trousers. "Clara, baby, listen to me. This isn't what it looks like. I was just... I was stressed. You’re always working. You’re never here. It was a mistake."

Clara let out a short, hollow laugh that held absolutely zero humor. "A mistake? A mistake is over-salting a broth, Leo. Falling into bed with my rival is a choice. A deliberate, cowardly choice."

"You're always so harsh!" Leo yelled, defensive anger masking his guilt. "You never compromise! Everything is always about the grind with you. Sienna actually listens to me. She actually cares about my day."

"I thought you were stealing my recipes because you lacked talent, Sienna," Clara said, completely ignoring Leo’s pathetic outburst and fixing her dark, sharp gaze on the blonde girl. "I didn't realize you were stealing my fiancé because you lacked self-respect."

Sienna flushed a dark, ugly red. "At least I'll be the one graduating with honors tomorrow. And I'll be the one walking into an executive chef position while you’re flipping burgers to pay for Toby's dialysis."

The mention of her brother’s illness was a low blow, even for Sienna. Clara stepped fully into the room. Leo flinched, backing away as if she might strike him. But Clara didn't raise her hands. She walked straight to the closet, pulled out her battered leather duffel bag, and began shoving her clothes into it.

"Clara, what are you doing?" Leo demanded, his panic returning. "You can't just leave. Where are you going to go? You don't have any money!"

"I would rather sleep on a subway grate than spend another second breathing the same air as you," Clara replied, zipping the bag with a vicious yank.

"Be reasonable!" Leo pleaded, following her as she marched back out to the living room. "We’re on the lease together! You can't just walk out!"

"Watch me," Clara said.

She paused by the door, turning back to look at the man she had planned to marry. He looked small. Pathetic. Beside him, Sienna emerged from the hallway, wrapped in a robe that Clara had bought for Leo last Christmas.

"You two deserve each other," Clara said softly, her sharp tongue delivering the final, fatal slice. "You're both incredibly cheap, and neither of you has any taste."

She slammed the door behind her, the sound echoing through the stairwell.

It wasn't until she hit the pavement outside that the adrenaline finally evaporated, leaving her hollow and shaking. The bruised sky finally broke, unleashing a torrential downpour of freezing rain.

Clara walked for three blocks before her legs gave out. She ducked into a bus shelter, dropping her heavy bag onto the wet concrete. She sat on the cold metal bench, pulling her knees to her chest, and finally let the tears fall.

She was ruined.

She had twenty-four dollars in her checking account. She had no degree. No job. No home. And tomorrow morning, the hospital billing department was going to call her demanding the three-thousand-dollar copay for Toby’s next round of treatments.

She had hit absolute, undeniable rock bottom.

Clara buried her face in her hands, her shoulders shaking with silent, bitter sobs. *What am I going to do? Toby... I'm so sorry. I failed.*

A sharp *ping* from her coat pocket made her jump.

Clara wiped her wet face, pulling out her cracked smartphone. It was a text message from Chef Armand, a notoriously strict caterer she had temped for last summer.

**[Armand]:** *Vance. My sous chef just broke his arm. I need a prep cook who doesn't ask questions and can move fast. Elite masquerade gala at the Sterling Hotel tonight. VIP client. 12-hour shift.*

Clara stared at the screen, her thumbs hovering over the cracked glass.

**[Clara]:** *How much?*

The reply came seconds later.

**[Armand]:** *$2,500 cash. Under the table. Be at the loading dock in twenty minutes, or don't come at all.*

Clara stopped crying. She looked at the blinking cursor, the number $2,500 burning itself into her retinas. It was almost exactly what she needed for Toby. It was a lifeline thrown into the middle of a hurricane.

She wiped the last of the rain and tears from her cheeks, her jaw setting into a stubborn, pragmatic line. She didn't have time to mourn her life. She had to survive.

**[Clara]:** *I'm on my way.*

***

Continue Reading

The CEO's Midnight Savior of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3
Ch. 4
Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10
Ch. 11
all

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