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"His Bed, Her Lies" Chapter 2

Chapter 2: The Glitch in the Algorithm

The Sterling Global tower didn't just touch the clouds; it defied them. By 10:00 AM the following morning, the repercussions of Vespera’s midnight data manipulation were already vibrating through the market.

Alaric’s phone had been a persistent, buzzing heartbeat in his pocket since he stepped out of the penthouse.

Stock prices for Kinsley hadn't just stabilized; they had surged, defying the market logic Alaric had meticulously charted. It was an anomaly. And Alaric Sterling despised anomalies.

He moved through the executive corridor like a storm front, his stride eating up the distance between his office and the service elevator.

He needed to be downstairs in the clearinghouse, but he also needed Vespera Thorne. He needed to see her face when he tore the logic of her "optimization" to pieces.

She was waiting by the elevator, her tablet tucked under her arm, the platinum bun of her hair so perfect it looked like it had been carved from marble.

As he approached, she didn't look up, though the slight tilt of her head confirmed she had tracked his approach long before he was in range.

"The board is asking for a breakdown of the Q3 projection shift, Mr. Sterling," she said, her voice cool, professional, and infuriatingly devoid of panic.

"The board can wait," Alaric growled, stopping inches from her. The scent of her—something crisp like winter rain—suddenly flooded his senses, a jarring contrast to the stale, recycled air of the office.

He jabbed the elevator button. The doors hissed open, and they stepped into the brushed-steel cage. As the lift began its smooth, silent descent, Alaric hit the emergency stop.

The cage lurched, then froze. The lights flickered, dimmed, and settled into a low, amber glow.

Vespera didn't gasp. She didn't press the call button. She simply turned her head, her violet eyes meeting his with an irritatingly calm curiosity. "We're stuck, sir."

"We're not stuck," Alaric said, his voice dropping an octave. He took a predatory step forward, backing her against the mirrored wall of the elevator. The space was small, intimate, and suddenly charged with a volatile static. "I stopped us."

Vespera’s gaze flickered to his hand, then back to his face. "A bold tactical choice. Does this count as billable hours?"

Alaric ignored the jab. He placed one hand on the wall beside her head, trapping her. He was six inches taller, and he used every ounce of that height to loom over her, a dark, immovable force.

"You and I both know the Q3 projections were impossible. Kinsley was a sinking ship. You didn't just scrub the logs, Vespera. You reinvented the market narrative."

"I optimized," she corrected, her voice soft. "You should be thanking me. You're wealthier by sixty million than you were at dawn."

"I don't like surprises," Alaric whispered, leaning closer. His gaze dropped to the pulse point at the base of her throat, where he could see a faint, rhythmic flutter—the only crack in her armor he’d found yet. "And I don't like feeling that I’m being steered."

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"Then stop being so predictable," she countered.

It was a slap. A verbal, intellectual slap that sent a jolt of pure, unadulterated adrenaline through his veins.

He looked down at her, at the way her dark wine blouse hugged the curve of her collarbone, at the haughty tilt of her chin. The air in the elevator was thinning, or perhaps it was just that his lungs were refusing to process it.

He was a man who lived by rules. Rules kept Sterling Global at the top of the food chain.

Rules kept him sane. But looking at Vespera, he felt an urge to discard every single one of them. He wanted to fire her for her insubordination; he wanted to pin her against the mirrored wall and force her to confess exactly who she was and what she was playing at.

His hand rose, his thumb tracing the line of her jaw. Her skin was cool, unnervingly soft. He expected her to flinch, to look away, to show even a flicker of the apprehension any other employee would feel when faced with the cold wrath of Alaric Sterling.

Instead, she leaned into his touch.

It was a micro-movement, almost imperceptible, but it hit Alaric like a physical blow. Her violet eyes darkened, the pupils dilating in the amber light.

"You're very intense, Alaric," she murmured. She used his first name—a breach of protocol so flagrant it should have been grounds for immediate termination. She didn't apologize. She didn't even blink.

"Does this make you uncomfortable? Knowing that your right hand might be stronger than the arm it’s attached to?"

"You're not the arm," Alaric said, his voice thick. He was too close now. He could count the individual lashes framing those strange, beautiful, dangerous eyes. "You're the glitch."

"And what do you do with glitches?" she asked. The challenge was blatant, dripping from every syllable like honey.

"I patch them," he said, his thumb moving to her lower lip, pulling it down just a fraction. It was a possessive gesture, an assertion of dominance that had no place in a professional office. "Or I delete them."

"You haven't deleted me yet," she pointed out, her breath hitching ever so slightly.

"I'm curious," he admitted, his voice a low, jagged tremor. "I want to see what happens when the code finally crashes."

She didn't retreat. She reached up, her fingers ghosting over his chest, tracing the edge of his waistcoat. The fabric of his suit was rigid, but his heart was hammering against his ribs like a bird in a cage.

The irony wasn't lost on him: he was the one who had stopped the lift, he was the one who had cornered her, and yet he was the one who felt trapped.

He wanted to kiss her. It was a sudden, violent realization that clawed its way through his logic. He wanted to crush those arrogant lips with his own, to see if the reality of her tasted as sharp as her wit. He wanted to strip away the "secretary" facade, to see if the fire in her eyes translated to her touch.

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The silence stretched, heavy and suffocating, punctuated only by the low hum of the elevator’s dormant machinery.

Alaric’s eyes dropped to her mouth, his hunger warring with his legendary restraint. For a man who owned the world, he had never felt so utterly powerless.

Vespera’s hand stilled on his chest. Her expression remained unreadable, but her breath was coming in shallow, ragged bursts.

The game was no longer being played on a screen or a spreadsheet; it was being played in the space between their bodies, a battlefield where the only outcome was disaster.

Suddenly, a chime echoed through the shaft. The elevator’s internal safety reset triggered, and the cage began to descend again, smooth and indifferent to the wreckage of their conversation.

Alaric realized he was still holding her captive, his hand on the wall, his thumb still grazing her lower lip. He pulled back as if burned, his hand dropping to his side.

He regained his composure with a sharp, disciplined inhale. The mask of the CEO slammed back into place, cold and impenetrable.

The elevator slowed. The doors slid open to the lobby, revealing a bustling sea of employees, couriers, and security staff.

Alaric stepped back, creating a vacuum of space between them. He didn't look at her; he couldn't. He looked at the lobby, at the mundane reality of his empire, trying to steady the frantic rhythm of his own pulse.

He turned toward her, his jaw set like granite. His eyes, usually an icy, detached blue, were dark with a frustration he couldn't name.

He stared at her lips—reddened and slightly swollen from his touch—for a fraction of a second too long.

Then, he walked.

He didn't look back to see if she was following. He didn't check to see if she was laughing at him. He simply navigated the lobby with the rigid, mechanical precision of a machine that had just undergone a violent, unplanned update.

Vespera Thorne remained in the elevator for a beat longer than necessary. She watched him go, her hands slowly smoothing the fabric of her wine-colored blouse. There was no tremor in her fingers, no sign of the storm that had just raged in the steel cage.

She tapped the screen on her tablet, and the Kinsley merger data blinked to life. She smiled—a small, sharp, victorious thing that didn't reach her eyes.

The glitch was growing, and Alaric Sterling, the master of algorithms, had no idea how close he was to total system failure.

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