The office was quiet, almost eerily so. The city lights spilled through the windows, painting long shadows across the polished floors. I was alone at my desk, reviewing the final containment report from the leak we'd traced the night before. Every number, every clause, every note had to be precise. Any error could unravel weeks of work—or worse, give Charles Laurent a thread to pull.
The soft click of the door caught my attention before it fully opened.
"Still here?" Shawn's voice was low, calm, carrying that unshakable authority that always made me aware of every inch of space between us.
I looked up, heart skipping a beat, and found him leaning against the doorframe. Not looming, not imposing—just present, controlled, and impossibly centered.
"Yes," I said, masking the flutter in my chest. "Final review."
He moved closer, silent, deliberate. I could feel the faint warmth of him even without a touch. "And?"
"All contained," I said firmly. "No external exposure. The junior analyst has been counseled. Timeline adjustments are in place. Everything aligns with our acquisition strategy."
He nodded once, sharp and approving. Then his gaze softened—not in the professional way that he reserved for subordinates, but in that subtle, careful way that made the air between us taut. The kind of look that spoke without words.
"You did well," he said quietly. "As always."
I felt the warmth creep back into my chest. His praise was rare, understated—but it landed with weight. Not for anyone else to see, not for anyone else to know. Just for us.
I exhaled softly. "It was… a team effort."
"Yes," he murmured, stepping slightly closer. Our shoulders brushed as he leaned over the files I had spread across the desk. The contact was fleeting, almost accidental, but it made my pulse hitch. The brush of his sleeve against mine carried something unspoken, restrained, and deliberate.
We worked side by side, revising clauses, double-checking projections, and refining internal communications. Hours passed in quiet precision. Not a word about anything personal. Yet every glance, every slight movement, every shared nod reinforced a connection that existed only between us.
At one point, my hand reached for a folder at the same time as his. Our fingers brushed briefly. I didn't pull away. He didn't either. That moment—a flicker, a spark, a subtle acknowledgment—was enough. It was all we needed.
"You're calm under pressure," he said softly, almost conversationally. "That… that's rare."
I met his eyes, holding them steadily. "I've learned from the best," I replied, careful to maintain professionalism, though the pulse of my heart betrayed me.
He allowed a small, private smile. That smile didn't belong to the office. It didn't belong to protocol. It belonged to us.
By the time the work was complete, the office was silent save for the hum of the city. Papers were stacked, files secured, and the leak fully contained. Everything that could have spiraled into disaster had been preempted. Calculated damage. Controlled outcome. Everything in place.
Shawn straightened, finally breaking the stillness. "You should leave soon. You've earned it."
I gathered my things, but paused, aware of his presence behind me. Quiet, steady, waiting. He didn't touch me, but I felt the intensity of his attention, and it sent a warmth through me I couldn't name.
"Tomorrow," he said, voice low, deliberate, "we deal with the follow-up. Investors, reports, and potential questions. It will be public-facing. And I'll need you aligned perfectly with me."
"Of course," I said, keeping my tone professional, though my chest was tight. Aligned. Together. That word carried meaning beyond strategy.
He studied me for a brief moment, the air thick with unspoken acknowledgment. Then he stepped back, leaving just enough space to remind me that this—whatever this connection between us was—remained carefully restrained. Private. Hidden.
I left the office with the satisfaction of a job well done, but also with the thrill of restraint, of tension that wasn't visible to anyone else. The world saw a professional, composed law student. Shawn and I saw more.
And that made all the difference.
