logo
Become A Writer
download
App
Ms. CEO by Lilies⋆. 𐙚 ˚ - Book Cover Background
Ms. CEO by Lilies⋆. 𐙚 ˚ - Book Cover

Ms. CEO

Lilies⋆. 𐙚 ˚
1.1K Views
Reading
dot
Introduction
"You've been such a good boy, Rhys....now get on your knees and beg to me" She's cold. She's cruel. She's irresistible. Carmen Blackwood is the kind of woman men fear-and secretly crave. A powerful CEO with ice in her veins and secrets behind her stilettos, she doesn't need anyone. Especially not Rhys Morgan, her quietly bold and maddeningly observant secretary. He follows her like a shadow. Watches her like he knows her. And despite all her cold glares and sharp-tongued dismissals, he never flinches. Until one business trip blurs the line between professionalism and something far more dangerous. A stolen kiss. A night neither of them can forget. And a rivalry threatening to pull her deeper into the very darkness she's always controlled.
dot
Free preview
Chapter 1 Intimidation

The sound of heels struck the marble corridor in a steady rhythm, each step reverberating like a war drum before dawn.

The echo carried power, announcing presence before sight.

I remained at the tall window, my silhouette framed against the dim skyline, draped in a black silk robe that moved like shadow with the faintest shift of air.

The city below lay restless beneath a ceiling of heavy clouds, a storm waiting to be born.

There was no music, no television, no distracting hum of background noise.

Silence was a luxury I cultivated, a space where nothing entered without my consent.

It was mine to command, and within it, everything was precise.

A knock interrupted it. Soft, polite. Then another, as if testing the edge of my patience.

“Come in,” I said, my gaze still fixed outward.

The door opened without creak or hesitation.

Elise, my maid, appeared with her customary grace, carrying a porcelain cup resting on a gold-rimmed tray.

She bowed her head slightly as she stepped forward.

“Your coffee, Madame,” she said.

I accepted it silently, fingers brushing the delicate handle. The first sip was bitter, exactly as I preferred.

The taste was not comfort but clarity, sharp enough to scrape away the fog of morning.

It hit the back of my throat like truth, undeniable, uncompromising, cleansing.

“Your driver is waiting,” Elise continued. “The forecast says rain. Do you want the usual coat?”

“No,” I murmured, setting the cup down. “It won’t touch me.”

Her eyes lowered in understanding. Words were unnecessary; obedience was instinct.

I swept past her without another glance, the air shifting in my wake.

My presence was like a blade, smooth, cold, and always sharp enough to cut.

In the dressing room, the wardrobe hummed open, a mechanical sigh unveiling rows of garments curated with ruthless precision.

Suits in dark hues lined the rails, monochrome blouses folded like pressed pages of an unreadable book, and stilettos gleamed like polished weapons.

Each piece was a declaration. Each choice, a strategy.

Today, I selected a dark navy pantsuit, structured shoulders, crisp lines, a silhouette built for authority.

It spoke before I did, and it always spoke the right language: power, discipline, permanence.

By the time I descended into the underground garage, the clock read exactly 7:32 a.m.

Punctuality was not a habit—it was a law I never broke.

My driver, stationed beside the sleek black town car, bowed his head in wordless acknowledgment.

He opened the rear door, his movements precise, mechanical, practiced.

No greetings were exchanged. None were ever necessary.

As the city blurred past the tinted windows, I reviewed the morning’s agenda.

Board updates. Client renegotiations. A press screening ahead of the upcoming merger.

Everything sat neatly in place, each task aligned, every move anticipated. It always was. I made certain of it.

What I didn’t notice, not yet, was the email that had arrived at 6:03 a.m. The subject line was brief, clinical.

New Personal Secretary Assignment – Effective Immediately.

I wouldn’t open it until later. And when I did, everything would begin to shift.

Continue Reading