Chapter 13 – The Billionaire’s Intern

Whoever had sent those damn flowers-whether it was a cruel joke or some ridiculous misunderstanding-had put a target on her back. Trina’s words echoed: Office romance is not tolerated. Perception is dangerous.

She wasn’t doing anything wrong. But in a place like this, perception could be fatal.

“I can’t lose this,” she whispered. “Please don’t let me lose this.”

The tears came harder.

She sank to the cold floor, curling in on herself like something brittle about to break. And finally-alone-the sobs tore free.

She wiped her eyes. Smoothed her hair. Composed herself the best she could.

Then she stood.

And went back downstairs.

Meanwhile – Executive Wing

The sleek corridors of the executive wing were a world apart from the noise and energy of the lower floors. Silence reigned here-sharp, polished, intentional.

James Horton moved with quiet efficiency, a slim folder tucked under one arm as his polished shoes echoed against marble. The investigation was complete. As always, swift and precise.

He didn’t need long.

The bouquet had been delivered via Lilium & Lace, a high-end floral boutique. The sender: Paul Sanders. One of the PR generalists who worked just three rows down from Maya Thompson.

James raised a brow slightly as he reviewed Paul’s profile. Clean record. Employed for four years. Well-liked. No major red flags. Just… a man who had apparently taken an interest in the wrong intern.

James walked into Damien’s office.

“He sent them,” James said simply, placing the report on the edge of Damien’s desk.

Damien didn’t look up immediately. He was still staring at the screen-reviewing department analytics, productivity graphs, PR metrics that didn’t actually matter at this moment.

“Name?”

“Paul Sanders.”

Damien’s eyes finally moved.

James continued. “PR generalist. Four years in. Quiet file. No violations-until now.”

There was a pause.

Then, Damien’s tone turned sharp. “I want him gone.”

James waited. “Fired?”

“No. Transferred.” Damien’s voice was ice. “Overseas. Make it immediate. Frame it as strategic collaboration between branches. Internal talent initiative. I want him in the Seoul office by Monday.”

James inclined his head. “Understood.”

“And,” Damien added coldly, “let HR know it’s a disciplinary preemptive reassignment. Policy breach. Code of conduct. Make it clean.”

James nodded. “I’ll handle it.”

And he did.

Back in PR

When Maya returned, nothing had changed. The stares were still there. The whispers. The side-eyes she pretended not to see.

She walked to her desk like a ghost and stared at the bouquet still sitting there, soft petals bright under the fluorescent lights.

Her chest tightened.

And then, without a word, she reached for the vase.

Harper looked up from across the room, startled. “Hey-“

She took two quick steps from her desk-but Trina’s gaze snapped toward her and gave a subtle shake of her head.

Not now.

It wasn’t cruel.

It was a manager’s instinct-a quiet command to give someone space when they were on the edge.

Harper froze, her heart aching. She nodded once, reluctantly, and sat back down.

Across the department, Paul Sanders looked up.

He’d been watching her from the other side of the room-not intentionally at first, but he couldn’t look away now. He had seen her walk in with that haunted look on her face. And now, watching her grip the vase like it burned her, something in him twisted.

He rose halfway from his chair, torn. Part of him wanted to stop her. To say something. Anything.

He’d only meant to make her smile.

He’d noticed her quiet presence all week. The way she scribbled notes when no one else paid attention. The way she looked out the window during breaks, like she was somewhere else entirely. There was something about her-gentle, but strong in a way he couldn’t describe. Alone, but never small.

He hadn’t even signed the card with his name.

He hadn’t thought it would explode like this.

And now, watching her march toward the recycle bin with that bouquet clenched in her hands, his chest ached with regret.

He had made it worse.

And he didn’t know how to fix it.

Maya didn’t notice any of it.

Her pace didn’t falter. She moved on instinct-past desks, past whispers-straight to the corner where the large recycling bin stood like a finish line.

She dumped the vase without ceremony. The glass hit the bottom with a muted crack, the water sloshed, petals folding in on themselves like the remnants of something already ruined.

She stood there, breath uneven.

Then her shoulders hunched forward – and the tears returned.

Maya turned away from the bin and hurried toward the far corner near the elevator-quiet, tucked away from the main floor. She collapsed to the ground beside the tall window, her back against the cold wall, pressing a trembling fist against her lips to stifle the sobs.

She didn’t care if anyone saw anymore.

She was too tired. Too overwhelmed.

Her body slid down the wall in surrender, knees drawn close as the tears spilled freely. She tried to hold them back, to stay composed, but everything had finally caught up with her-the exhaustion, the fear, the weight of it all.

She just wanted to disappear.

That’s when the elevator chimed.

The doors slid open-and James Horton stepped out, a signed folder in hand, on his way to deliver the HR document to Trina personally.

He paused when he saw her.

A crumpled figure by the window, red-eyed and shaking.

“Ms Thompson?” he said, approaching carefully. “Maya?”

She flinched and looked up.


New Book: Back Home to Marry Off Myself

Loredana’s father left the family for his mistress, leaving them to fend for themselves abroad. When life was at its toughest, her father showed up with “good news” after 8 years of absence: To marry off Loredana to a paralyzed son of the wealthy Mendelsohn family.