Her heels echoed against the marble as she marched down the corridor. On the forty-second floor of Kingsley Tower, everyone moved fast but tried to make it look controlled. After a public disaster, chaos always went into hiding-people whispered, glanced at screens, avoided eye contact, convinced that reading the headlines too closely made them part of the mess.
Amara stared straight at everything. She'd spent eleven years making herself essential to the most difficult man on the Eastern Seaboard-she'd watched boardroom battles, survived hostile takeovers, handled three PR meltdowns, and swore the senator's son incident would follow her to the grave.
None of it shook her. She wore her calm like armor, calculated and intentional, just as some women drape themselves in jewelry.
But this morning felt different.
She watched the video four times before leaving her apartment. Four times, perched at her kitchen counter, coffee going cold, replaying Adrian Kingsley-always composed, brilliant, and feared-turning the quarterly investor summit into a public execution.
Mr. Chan barely got through his opening remarks, standing by the projector, fumbling with his notes, when Adrian let loose. The words struck hard. Incompetent. Negligent. An embarrassment to everything this company stands for.
He didn't shout-he spoke low and steady, as if the outcome was already decided and he felt nothing about delivering it. That made it sting all the more.
The cameras ate it up. The internet went wild.
By nine, the clips were everywhere-three with over half a million views. At ten, the hashtag hit four states. By the time Amara got in the elevator, tablet in hand and headlines flashing, Kingsley Group's stock was down two points, and the communications department phones hadn't stopped ringing since daybreak.
She pressed forty-four.
As the elevator climbed, she looked at her reflection. Dark blazer. Hair pinned back. Her face gave nothing away-and she practiced nothing. She knew exactly what to say, and she knew Adrian would fight her every step, right up until he had to admit she was right. He always did.
That's Adrian Kingsley for you. He's nobody's fool, and he's definitely not careless if you know how to read him. Strategic, relentless, and so precise, he built something remarkable from the family company. Still, underneath, there's this streak-impatience, pride-and every now and then, it erupted and cost him.
Now, it happened where everyone could see.
The elevator opened.
Amara strode past his assistant, who looked ready to speak but thought better of it. She pushed straight into Adrian's office without knocking and shut the door behind her, locking it.
Adrian stayed bent over his desk-always at his desk when things went sideways, as if the desk itself was the only anchor he trusted. He finished signing whatever document was in front of him, taking his time, sliding it aside as if he had all day and this crisis was just background noise.
Finally, he looked up.
"You humiliated him," Amara said. She never softened the blow.
Adrian's face stayed blank. He watched her, calculating, trying to figure out how much to care.
"Who?" he replied.
The question landed like a trap-or maybe he just wanted to make her say it. Amara refused to flinch.
"Mr. Chan. Right there in front of the investors, cameras, and half the board."
She crossed the room and set the tablet on his desk, screen facing him. Headlines blared between them.
KINGSLEY CEO ERUPTS AT PARTNER.
VIDEO: "INCOMPETENT" - KINGSLEY SLAMS MR. CHAN.
SHARES DIP AFTER PUBLIC OUTBURST.
Adrian stared at the screen. His face didn't change-no wince, no twitch, just calm. Clearly, the headlines were numbers to him; nothing more.
"The numbers didn't add up," he said. "The old man was stealing I'm sure of it."
"Management checked." Amara held her voice steady. "Chan came up clean."
"Management missed something."
"Management found nothing, Adrian. Not a thing." She let it hang. "Your reputation-that's a separate issue. Shares are sliding, and you started it."
He leaned back, and for just a moment, something flickered-frustration, maybe, but in him it looked more like a machine recalibrating.
"They'll bounce back," he said.
"They might," Amara replied, sitting across from him. She had a feeling this was going to take a while, and she wasn't about to stand through it. "But you won't. Not your image. Not this time."
The room went quiet-a kind of quiet she recognized. He was listening.
"Then fix it," he said.
"I plan to."
She tapped the screen, and the video started. Adrian's own voice filled the room: cold, exacting, devastating. On the screen, Mr. Chan stood outside the building rigid, struggling to keep himself together, then she came into frame out of nowhere and put an arm his shoulder to console him, then his resolve broke.
And she stood right there, holding him and consoling him.
The camera caught them, it was warm it was wholesome and whatever it showed, people couldn't stop watching.
Adrian paused the video.
He looked at her. "What's your angle?"
"Stability. Trust. You've spent years trying to overhaul your reputation-and, honestly, it was already trailing you. The cars, the parties, the women leaving at dawn-none of that helped. And now this." She waved at the frozen clip. "You don't inspire confidence nor trust Adrian. You inspire fear, and that's a terrible way to build shareholder loyalty."
He almost smiled, but his eyes stayed cold. "People trust results."
"No," Amara said. "People trust stories."
The smile disappeared.
She watched him-the resistance was still there, but she saw him starting to shift, something strategic sparking beneath the surface.
"Right now," she said, "your story is that you're unpredictable. Volatile. And completely alone."
He stiffened. "I'm not alone."
"Then prove it."
She hadn't planned the softness in her tone-it just came, the way the most important things somehow do.
He stared back.
"Something can be done to completely flip the narrative."
And Amara finally delivered the pitch she'd been building to since the elevator doors opened.
"Get married."