When Felicia stepped into Alexander Reeves’s office, every instinct told her to make herself small.
The room was built for men who were never ignored: glass walls, a city at their feet, silence so controlled it felt expensive.
Alexander looked up from behind his desk and studied her with the same unnerving steadiness he had shown in the hotel hallway.
Then, without taking his eyes off her, he said, “Everyone out.” His counsel, assistant, and head of security hesitated only a second before leaving.
The door shut.
For the first time all week, Felicia was alone with the one person everyone else had been deciding her life around.
“You may sit,” he said.
“Or stand.
Or walk out.
That’s your first choice in this room.” The sentence hit her harder than his wealth, harder than the skyline, harder than the word marriage printed inside the folder on his desk.
Felicia remained standing because her knees did not entirely trust her.
“My stepmother said there were papers,” she managed.
Alexander’s expression changed, not with surprise but with something darker.
“There are papers,” he said.
“But not the ones she thinks she can force on you.”
He turned the folders so she could see them clearly.
The first contained an employment offer: junior security analyst, six-month probation, a salary that made her breath catch, full benefits, and housing in a company apartment for the same period.
The second was a blank legal template for a private marital agreement, unsigned, with half the clauses crossed out in red ink.
“That one,” Alexander said, resting two fingers on the second folder, “exists because I once believed contracts were cleaner than emotions.
It was drafted before I understood the people around you would weaponize it.
No one is signing it today.
Possibly no one ever will.”
Felicia stared at him.
“Then why was I brought here?” Alexander leaned back slightly in his chair.
The movement was careful, almost economical, the habit of a man who had relearned every motion by necessity.
“Because my office requested a discreet meeting after I learned your name.
My staff sent a confirmation letter to your residence.
Before it reached you, someone else got involved.” He slid a thin file toward her.
Bank transfers.
Call logs.
A photograph of Linda leaving a restaurant with a man Felicia did not recognize.
“Your stepmother was paid to turn curiosity into coercion.”
Felicia lifted shaking eyes.
“Paid by who?” “I don’t know with certainty yet,” Alexander said.
“But I know enough to tell you this: I did not ask anyone to buy you.
I asked my team to find the woman who repaired a disabled employee’s chair during a fire drill and walked away before anyone could thank her.” The room went silent around them.
For a second Felicia forgot where she was.
She could see that other hallway again, the alarm lights, the trapped wheel, the embarrassed employee apologizing while everyone rushed past.
“You saw that?” she whispered.
“I’ve seen it more times than I care to admit,” Alexander said.
He told her about the footage.
About how security had flagged it while he was reviewing breaches after a leak inside his company.
About how everyone in the clip had been looking for the exit, except one young cleaner kneeling beside a