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Chapter 4 - Chapter 4 – The Rules of the Game

Evelyn arrived early the next morning, dressed in her sharpest navy slacks and a crisp white blouse. Her hair was pinned neatly at the nape of her neck, her makeup subtle but polished. She had even replaced her usual stud earrings with tiny gold hoops. Her own silent symbol of courage.

Her new workspace wasn't on her familiar floor in marketing. Instead, she'd been granted a seat on the 35th which was an unspoken sign that she was now part of something bigger. It was a quiet corner with a wide window view, a sleek laptop waiting on the desk, and a welcome email from Alexander Drake's executive assistant, Natalie.

The subject line read simply: "Day One."

At precisely 8:15, her inbox pinged again.

From: Natalie R.Re: Project Briefing – VeridianLocation: Executive Lounge 2ATime: 8:30 sharp

Mr. Drake prefers punctuality.

Evelyn took one last sip of her lukewarm tea, smoothed her blouse, and made her way to the lounge.

When she entered, Alexander was already seated at the glass-topped conference table, his sleeves rolled to his elbows and a single folder open in front of him. No jacket today. Just a tailored white dress shirt, a navy tie, and that same intense focus.

"You're early," he said without looking up.

"You're earlier," Evelyn replied before she could stop herself.

Alexander looked up, his expression unreadable. For a moment, she feared she'd crossed some invisible line. But then the corner of his mouth tilted upward and barely noticeable, but unmistakably amused.

"Sit."

She did, clasping her hands in her lap.

"I'll be clear about expectations," he said, flipping a page in the folder. "This isn't a mentorship. You're here because I value outcomes. Not personalities."

Evelyn nodded.

"I don't micromanage," he continued. "If you deliver results, I won't care how many hours you work or if you take lunch at your desk. Fail to meet a deadline, however, and we'll have a different conversation."

"Understood," she said.

His eyes met hers. "I'm not as terrifying as people make me out to be."

"I'm starting to suspect that," Evelyn said honestly.

"You're not afraid of me?"

"I'm afraid of messing up," she admitted. "But no. Not of you."

He studied her for a long moment. Then he handed her a thick file from the folder.

"This is your section. Messaging, target persona strategy, and influencer integration. Review it. Revise it. And if you have better ideas, bring them."

Evelyn opened the file and began scanning. Her fingers trembled slightly as she took in the scope of it. This was real. This wasn't just a token project to make her feel included—he was giving her a critical component.

"I will," she said, her voice firmer now. "I won't disappoint you."

"I don't care about disappointment," he replied. "Only results."

He stood. So did she.

As he gathered his things, Alexander paused. "One more thing."

"Yes?"

"Don't get caught up in office noise. There will be speculation. Ignore it."

Evelyn blinked. "Speculation?"

"You're new. You're on my floor. People will talk."

She didn't know how to respond to that. Was it a warning? A threat? Or something else entirely?

"Let them talk," she said quietly.

Alexander's gaze lingered on her for a moment longer, then he gave a slight nod and exited the room.

The day passed in a blur of high-level meetings and whispered commentary from other staffers. She caught the glances - quick, assessing, curious. As if everyone was trying to figure out how a junior staffer like her had landed so close to the top.

Some looked at her with suspicion.

Some with envy.

A few with something worse: pity.

By late afternoon, she had already received two invitations to coffee and one half-joking warning from a fellow marketing analyst: "You're brave. Or foolish."

Still, Evelyn kept her head down and worked.

She rewrote strategy memos, corrected a major flaw in a cost projection slide, and cut daringly a redundant social strategy proposal from the plan entirely. At five-fifteen, she emailed the revised deck to Alexander, then sat back in her chair, heart pounding.

At five-thirty, her desk phone rang.

She picked it up.

"You cut the secondary stream," Alexander said without introduction.

"Yes. It conflicted with the brand's core demographic and would have diluted the messaging."

A pause.

"You're correct," he said. "I'm moving the meeting up. Eight a.m. tomorrow. Be ready to present that section."

Click.

Evelyn sat frozen, phone still to her ear.

Present? In front of the executive board?

That wasn't the plan.

And yet, she felt a strange thrill pulse through her chest.

Maybe there were no rules anymore.

Or maybe Alexander Drake was rewriting them just for her.

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