A young man stood before the mirror, adjusting the cuffs of his shirt with deliberate precision.
The fabric was tailored to fit him perfectly, yet he smoothed it anyway, as though searching for flaws that did not exist. Dark hair fell neatly into place after a practiced sweep of his fingers. His features had sharpened over the past year—no longer boyish, but not yet fully hardened. His eyes, however, carried none of that uncertainty. Grey, steady, observant.
He tilted his chin slightly, studying the expression reflected back at him.
Don’t look distant. Distance invites speculation.
A soft knock ca at the door.
"Young Master Alexander," a calm voice called from outside. "Breakfast is ready."
He glanced once more at his reflection before stepping away.
Alexander Sterling.
That’s .
Sole heir to Sterling Global Holdings. Eighteen years old as of last month. Expected successor to a corporate empire that stretches across three continents.
The words carried no pride.
Just fact.
In this house, identity was not discovered. It was assigned.
He stepped into the hallway. The butler stood waiting, posture impeccable, head slightly bowed.
"The car will be prepared for this evening, Young Master," the man said.
"Thank you."
Nothing more needed to be said.
The Sterling estate was quiet in a way that felt curated rather than peaceful. Even the air seed disciplined, moving through wide corridors and polished marble floors without disruption.
As he descended the staircase, his phone vibrated in his hand.
Unknown Number:
You should verify who she t yesterday.
His gaze lingered on the ssage for a mont.
No introduction. No explanation.
Anonymous caution is rarely altruistic.
He locked the screen and slipped the phone into his pocket.
If there was sothing to verify, he would verify it himself.
The dining room doors were already open.
His father sat at the head of the long table, tablet angled toward him, financial projections reflecting faintly against rimless glasses. Richard Sterling carried the stillness of soone accustod to being obeyed.
Across from him, his mother stirred her tea slowly, gaze lowered.
Alexander took his seat.
"You’re three minutes late," his father said without looking up.
"I won’t be tomorrow."
Richard finally lifted his eyes. "Tomorrow is irrelevant. Consistency is not."
A brief silence followed.
"You’re eighteen now," his father continued. "Which ans observation is no longer sufficient. You’ll attend the next board strategy session. Not as a spectator."
Alexander nodded once.
"I understand."
"Understanding is assud," Richard said evenly. "Execution is what matters."
His mother’s voice entered the space, softer but no warr. "You’re eting Yuna tonight."
"Yes."
"The Whitfords have been under pressure recently," she said. "Optics will matter."
Optics always matter.
Richard folded his hands atop the table. "Personal relationships are tolerable. Provided they remain aligned with family interests."
"And if they aren’t?" Alexander asked.
His father t his gaze directly this ti.
"Then they beco liabilities."
The word settled between them without emotion.
Alexander reached for his coffee, unhurried.
Liabilities are either managed... or removed.
No one asked whether he cared for her.
No one asked whether he was happy.
The conversation shifted to quarterly earnings projections as though nothing significant had been discussed.
Across the polished surface of the table, he caught a faint reflection of himself.
Well-dressed. Composed. Predictable.
His phone vibrated again in his pocket.
Unknown Number:
1
You trust too easily.
His expression did not change.
If I trusted easily, I wouldn’t still be here.
Alexander had nearly crossed the threshold when his father’s voice reached him.
"Alexander."
He stopped, though he did not turn.
The silence behind him stretched just long enough to feel intentional.
"Always rember," Richard said at last, his tone asured and devoid of warmth, "a relationship that offers no tangible gain to both parties is rely sentint dressed as substance."
Alexander remained still.
"In our world," his father continued, "sentint is a luxury few can afford. If mutual benefit cannot be identified, then what you are protecting is not a relationship."
A faint pause.
"It is a liability mistaken for a dream."
Alexander inclined his head slightly, though his father could not see the gesture.
"I’ll keep that in mind."
He stepped forward and did not look back.
The car ride into the city passed beneath a muted sky, the late afternoon sun dissolving behind towers of steel and glass that bore the nas of n like his father. Alexander unlocked his phone once the car had rged into evening traffic and selected a familiar contact.
The call connected after the second ring.
"You’re calling before a date," the voice on the other end said lightly. "That can’t be a good sign."
Alexander allowed himself the faintest exhale. "I need a favor."
There was a brief pause, followed by a softer tone. "What kind of favor?"
"Yesterday," Alexander said, his gaze resting on the blurred reflections of glass towers sliding past the window, "from early afternoon onward. I want to know where she went and who she t. Nothing dramatic. Just... clarity."
Another silence, longer this ti.
"Alex," his friend said carefully, the teasing edge gone, "as your friend and not as your unofficial information broker... if you’re seeing her tonight, wouldn’t it make more sense to just ask her?"
Alexander watched the city stretch endlessly ahead of them, lights beginning to flicker on one by one.
"I’m doing this because I don’t want to distrust her," he replied, his voice asured rather than defensive. "If I walk into dinner with unanswered questions, I’ll look for problems even if they aren’t there."
"That sounds like you’re already looking for problems."
"It sounds," Alexander corrected quietly, "like I don’t want doubt to take root in sothing that might not deserve it."
A faint sigh carried through the line.
"You’ve been through enough to justify caution," his friend admitted, "but there’s a difference between being careful and assuming the worst."
"I’m not assuming," Alexander said. "I’m verifying."
"And if there’s nothing to verify?"
"Then I’ll know that," he replied. "And I won’t spend the rest of the evening wondering."
The line was quiet for a mont before his friend spoke again, more gently this ti.
"You know most people would call that trust."
Alexander’s gaze shifted slightly, his own reflection faint against the darkened glass.
"Most people haven’t had their brake lines cut," he said evenly.
The silence that followed held weight.
"I’ll check discreetly." his friend finally said.
"I know you will."
"And Alex?"
"Yes?"
"Try to enjoy tonight."
The call ended.
Alexander lowered the phone but did not imdiately put it away.
Enjoynt requires certainty.
He wasn’t sure which one he was more determined to secure.
He leaned back into the leather seat and closed his eyes briefly.
Over the years, there had been too many incidents dismissed as coincidence for him to rely on optimism alone. A driver whose loyalty shifted unexpectedly. A staff mber who had accepted paynt in exchange for access codes. A brake failure that had nearly gone unnoticed until the last possible mont.
Each event had been contained. Each perpetrator quietly replaced.
None had been accidents.
He exhaled slowly.
Verification is not mistrust. It is caution.
He told himself that often enough that it had begun to sound reasonable.
The restaurant rose from the edge of the avenue in glass and polished stone, its entrance frad by warm amber lighting that softened the sharpness of the city beyond. Inside, conversation drifted in low tones, refined and contained, the kind of atmosphere cultivated for individuals who preferred privacy over spectacle.
He stepped through the doorway, and for a mont the shift from exterior chill to interior warmth felt almost symbolic.
She was already there.
Yuna stood near the far end of the foyer, one hand resting lightly against the strap of her clutch as she spoke quietly with the hostess. When she turned and caught sight of him, the motion was unhurried, natural, as though she had known precisely when he would arrive.
The dress she wore was a deep shade of burgundy that complented the soft glow of the lighting, the fabric fitted with understated elegance that accentuated her figure without appearing deliberate. The neckline frad her collarbones in a way that drew the eye subtly rather than boldly, and the faint sheen of the material shifted with each movent she made. Her hair fell loosely over her shoulders, dark strands brushing lightly against bare skin.
She looked older than she had a year ago.
Not in years, but in composure.
Her gaze t his, and for a fleeting second sothing unguarded flickered there before settling into a composed smile.
"You’re right on ti," she said.
Alexander approached at an even pace and extended the single rose he had brought with him.
"I try to be."
She accepted it with a soft laugh that felt almost nostalgic.
"You rembered."
I rember everything.
He allowed himself a faint smile. "So things are worth rembering."
Her fingers brushed his as she took the flower, the contact brief but unmistakably warm. There was no tremor in her touch, no visible tension in her posture.
She stepped closer, close enough that he could detect the subtle scent of her perfu—sothing clean and restrained, chosen carefully rather than carelessly.
"You look..." She paused for a mont, studying him. "Different."
"Mature?" he suggested lightly.
"More guarded."
The word lingered between them.
He tilted his head slightly. "Is that a complaint?"
"I’m not sure yet."
A hostess approached to guide them inward, and they followed through the softly lit interior, past tables draped in white linen and glasses that caught the candlelight in quiet glimrs. Their seats were positioned near the rear of the restaurant, separated from the main floor by tall partitions that provided a sense of intimacy without complete isolation.
Privacy.
He pulled out her chair, and she thanked him with a smile that seed genuine.
As he took his seat across from her, he observed the subtle way her posture shifted, as though she were preparing herself for sothing more than dinner conversation.
Or perhaps I’m preparing for sothing that isn’t there.
She folded her hands loosely on the table.
"I’m glad we are eting today." she said softly.
Alexander held her gaze.
"So am I."
The candlelight between them flickered gently, its reflection wavering in the polished surface of the table as though uncertain which direction to settle.
Alexander rested his right hand loosely against the stem of the empty water glass before him, rotating it slightly between his fingers without appearing to notice the motion himself. It was a small, unconscious gesture, repeated every few seconds—subtle enough that most would mistake it for idle movent rather than tension.
Yuna noticed , but did not comnt on it.
"I wasn’t sure you’d agree to et under such circumstances," she said after a mont, her tone light but carrying sothing asured beneath it.
"I didn’t see a reason to delay," he replied.
Her gaze lingered on him for a fraction longer than necessary.
A waiter approached, posture refined and unobtrusive, interrupting the silence with professional ease. nus were presented, recomndations offered, and wine suggested with quiet confidence.
Yuna listened attentively before selecting a bottle with a familiarity.
Alexander’s fingers continued their slow rotation of the glass stem as he placed his order, his voice steady, his expression unreadable.
Once the waiter departed, a quiet settled between them again, though it was not entirely uncomfortable.
"How have things been?" Yuna asked, folding her hands loosely in her lap before resting them against the edge of the table. "You’ve been... distant lately."
"Busy," he replied.
"You’re always busy."
There was no accusation in her tone.
He studied her face carefully—the slight tension at the corner of her mouth, the way her shoulders remained composed but not entirely relaxed.
Is she nervous? Or am I searching for sothing that isn’t there?
She reached for her water, taking a slow sip before eting his eyes again.
"I know things haven’t been simple between our families," she continued, her voice softer now. "But I don’t want that to define what we have."
The glass in his hand turned once more.
What we have.
The words echoed longer than they should have.
For a mont, the sounds of the restaurant seed to dull at the edges, conversation blending into indistinct murmur as his thoughts pressed forward with increasing insistence.
Am I already distrusting her too much?
We had known each other since we were children, awkward and overdressed at corporate galas neither of us had wanted to attend.
She had been the only one who had laughed when I muttered that I would rather be anywhere else.
She had been the one who had found on the balcony that night after my first public reprimand from my father, sitting beside without asking questions I wasn’t ready to answer.
She knew...
She knew about the attempts that had been quietly buried, about the driver who had disappeared, about the way my mother’s silence sotis felt heavier than my father’s words. She had been there when the news broke about the internal betrayal that nearly fractured our family’s board.
She had held my hand when the world felt less stable than it appeared.
She is the only connection I have that isn’t built on leverage.
The thought lingered longer.
If I cannot trust her... then who?
His jaw tightened slightly before he forced it to relax.
No. Verification is not betrayal. It is protection. Protection of her. Protection of us.
The waiter returned, setting the dishes down with quiet efficiency before placing the wine between them. The bottle’s label caught the candlelight as the cork was removed, the faint scent of oak and fruit settling into the air.
Yuna reached for the bottle first.
"Let ," she said gently.
She poured a asured amount into her own glass before tilting the bottle toward his, filling it with steady hands.
She set the bottle down and lifted her glass.
"To eighteen," she said with a faint smile. "And to surviving it."
Alexander’s fingers closed around the stem of his glass, though he did not lift it imdiately.
For the briefest mont, hesitation flickered through him, small, almost imperceptible, yet heavy in implication.
If there is anything to fear, this is where it would begin.
Before the thought could settle further, his phone vibrated against the table.
Both of them glanced down instinctively.
He turned the screen toward himself.
A single ssage.
Everything is clear.
No elaboration. No concern.
Just that.
The tension he had not consciously acknowledged loosened almost imdiately, as though an invisible thread wound too tightly around his chest had finally been cut.
He looked up.
Yuna had already taken a sip of her wine, her eyes resting on him over the rim of her glass before she lowered it slowly, one brow lifting ever so slightly in silent question.
He allowed a small smile to form.
"It’s nothing," he said.
And this ti, when he raised the glass, there was no pause.
He emptied it in one smooth motion, the warmth sliding down his throat as easily as the doubts he had montarily entertained.
Yuna watched him with a mixture of amusent and curiosity.
"You’re dramatic," she murmured.
"Only when necessary."
A faint laugh escaped her, genuine and unguarded, and sothing in his posture softened in response.
The conversation that followed flowed more easily than before. They spoke of trivial things at first, the absurdity of certain gala attendees, a mutual acquaintance’s recent scandal, a professor she had once despised and now begrudgingly admired. Their laughter grew less restrained, the earlier tension dissolving beneath familiarity.
At one point, she reached across the table to brush a crumb from the edge of his sleeve, her fingers lingering just long enough to suggest mory rather than accident.
"You’ve changed," she said quietly.
"So have you."
"In a good way?"
He studied her for a mont before answering.
"Yes."
The main course arrived and was consud almost absentmindedly, conversation continuing in steady rhythm. Candlelight reflected in her eyes when she smiled, and for a while, the world beyond their table felt distant and irrelevant.
When dessert was offered, they declined in quiet agreent.
As the bill was settled and they stood to leave, Yuna slipped her hand lightly around his arm.
"Do you want to end the night here?" she asked, her tone casual but her gaze searching.
Alexander looked down at her hand, then back at her face.
For a mont, neither of them spoke.
The warmth of her touch lingered through the fabric of his sleeve, subtle yet insistent, and the air between them shifted, no longer playful, no longer light. Sothing unspoken had risen to the surface.
Her fingers tightened slightly.
"Alex..." she began softly.
He felt it before he fully understood it, the fragile edge of a mont that could be stepped into or walked away from.
This is where certainty ends, he thought.
Before he could answer, she moved first.
She stepped closer and rose slightly on her toes, her hand sliding from his arm to the back of his neck as her lips t his.
The kiss was not tentative.
It carried history—years of familiarity compressed into a single breath. For a fraction of a second he froze, surprised not by the contact but by the intensity of it, and then instinct overtook hesitation.
His hand ca up to her waist, fingers curling firmly against the curve of her back as he pulled her closer. The distance between them vanished entirely, replaced by warmth and the steady rhythm of shared breath.
The kiss deepened naturally, unhurried but undeniably charged, her fingers threading into his hair while his grip tightened at her side. The faint scent of her perfu mixed with the warmth of her skin, and for a mont the world narrowed to nothing beyond the contact between them.
When they finally parted, it was not because the desire had lessened, but because breathing demanded it.
Her lips were slightly flushed, her gaze unfocused for a heartbeat before settling back onto his.
"Do you want to end the night here?" she asked again, though her voice had softened and lost its earlier composure.
He studied her expression—the warmth in her eyes, the nervous anticipation beneath it—and felt the last thread of restraint snap quietly within him.
"No," he said, his voice lower now. "I don’t."
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