Signed To The Ruthless CEO

Rringgg! Rringgg!

The sound wasn't just an alarm; it was a physical reminder and assault to the ears . Valerie groaned, her arm feeling like a log as she fumbled blindly across the bedside table. Her fingers finally touched the cool plastic of her phone, and she silenced the uproar with a violent swipe.

She didn't move. Not at first.

Mondays always arrived with a cruel punctuality, dragging exhaustion behind them like a heavy, suffocating life threatening shadow. She hadn't found rest the night before-only restless tossing and turning until the early hours of the morning. Her limbs felt heavy, her mind trapped in a thick fog. Laziness, sweet and seductive, whispered in her ear.

Just five more minutes...

Then, the fog cleared. Her eyes snapped open, tracking the position of the sun filtering through her thin curtains.

Something was wrong. The light was too bright. The room was too warm.

She lunged for her phone. 7:00 a.m.

Her heart didn't just drop; it went into the pit of her stomach.

"Oh no-no, no, no!"

Valerie sprang from the bed, her covers wrapped around her ankles and nearly sending her onto the floor. Adrenaline, sharp and stinging, replaced her exhaustion. Her interview at the Noir Group was in exactly sixty minutes. One hour. Sixty minutes to prove she wasn't the failure her family claimed she was. This job wasn't just a paycheck; it was the only ladder out of the pit her life had become.

She had no Plan B. No safety net. No one to catch her if she fell.

Mumbling frantic prayers and curses under her breath, she tore through her morning routine. She scrubbed her skin in a blur, applied just enough makeup to mask the dark circles of a sleepless night, and yanked her hair into a high, professional ponytail. Her hands were trembling so violently she nearly fumbled the buttons of her coffee-brown silk shirt. She paired it with tailored white pants and the white stilettos she usually reserved for dreams-or funerals.

By 7:30 a.m., she was on the road , flagging down a taxi with the desperation of a lost child. When one finally screeched to a halt, she slid into the back seat, breathless and vibrating with nerves.

"Noir Group," she gasped. "And please... ignore the speed limits."

When the car finally pulled up in front of the destination, Valerie felt the air leave her lungs.

The Noir Group skyscraper loomed above her-a tall building of glass and steel that seemed to pierce the very clouds. It didn't just look like an office; it looked like an altar to power, money, and ruthless influence. Standing at the base of it, Valerie felt tiny . Unworthy. Like a stray cat trying to enter a palace.

I have to do this, she whispered, the words a thin shield against her rising tension. I have to.

She straightened her shoulders, took a breath that tasted of exhaustion and nerves, and stepped inside. Her heels clicked with a sharply against the polished marble floor as she approached the reception desk. She forced a, calm smile even as her heartbeat echoed in her ears.

"Good morning," she said, her voice steadier than she felt. "I'm Valerie. I'm here for the Executive Sales Manager interview."

The receptionist didn't even look up from her screen. "Twenty-fifth floor. First office on the right."

"Thank you."

Valerie turned toward the elevators. In her haste, she didn't notice the difference between the staff elevators and the executive gold-trimmed lift. She just saw an open door and stepped inside.

The moment the sensors registered her presence, her life tilted in a swift motion .

Ellan Noir arrived seconds later.

The atmosphere in the lobby didn't just change; it froze . Conversations died mid-sentence. Security guards straightened their spines. Even the continuous hum of the air conditioning seemed to go silent out of respect.

He moved with a predatory confidence-tall, broad-shouldered, and encased in a tailored suit that clung to his muscular frame with a deadly precision. He was young, impossibly powerful, and whispered about in every boardroom in the city. Dark rumours followed him like a shadow-rumours of a temper as cold as ice and a reach that went far beyond the corporate world.

As the elevator doors began to slide shut, Ellan stepped into the small, confined space.

His sharp gaze swept the whole place landing instantly on Valerie. She was unfamiliar. Tense. A splash of ink in his pure world

And yet...

A flicker of something sparked in the back of his mind. A distant memory of a dim room. The scent of rain and panic. Room 502.

He didn't speak. He simply reached out and pressed the button to the floor of his office.

Valerie stiffened, her back pressing against the cool metal wall. Her heart was hammering so loudly she was certain he could hear it. She squeezed her eyes shut, silently rehearsing her interview answers, trying to reclaim her breath.

Then, the world stilled.

The elevator jolted violently, a sickening metallic screech echoing through the shaft. The lights flickered once, twice, and then changed into a terrifying, dim emergency glow.

"No... no, please..." she whispered, the sound escaping her before she could catch it.

The elevator died. It sat motionless, suspended in a void of steel.

Panic, hot and paralyzing, surged through her. This couldn't be happening. She couldn't be trapped. If she missed this, she'd have to go back to her father. She'd have to endure Claire's mocking laughter and her feigned sympathy. She'd be a ghost in her own life.

"I-I have an interview," she stammered, her voice breaking. "I can't be late. I really can't. Please..."

Tears, unrestrained and without warning, slid down her cheeks. She felt small, broken, and utterly exposed.

Ellan watched her from the shadows of the corner. Initially, a flash of annoyance crossed his deadly features-he hated tantrums. But as he watched her, his expression shifted to pure curiosity.. This was a girl fighting for her life not just a late appointment . Her vulnerability wasn't a sign of weakness; it was the raw and fierce resolve.

Moments later, the machine roared, and the elevator back to life. The tension in the elevator eased and the lift began its smooth motion once more.

As the doors slid open on the twenty-fifth floor, Valerie scrambled to wipe her face, her cheeks burning with embarrassment. She had just broken down in front of a stranger.

Ellan stepped forward, blocking her path for a split second. He reached into his breast pocket and held out a crisp, white silk handkerchief.

"Pull yourself together," he said, his voice a cool, low, manly that sent a different kind of shiver down her spine. "In this building, first impressions are the only ones that matter."

Without waiting for a response, he stepped out and walked away, his stride long and commanding.

Valerie stared at the expensive fabric in her trembling hands. She had no idea that this brief, embarrassing encounter had already re-written her destiny. By the time she reached the waiting area, she felt like she was walking through a dream. Three other candidates sat there-two women and a man-their faces void of expression. Valerie ducked into the nearby restroom, adjusted her ponytail, scrubbed the tear tracks from her face, and used the cool water to ground herself.

The interviews began. It was a utter devastation .

One woman emerged minutes later, her eyes red and her hands shaking.

A man followed, his face a blank sheet of shock.

Then came Chloe, a girl who looked like she'd been through a war zone.

When Valerie's name was finally called, her heart skipped a beat, then settled into a heavy, measured thud. She whispered a final, silent prayer and stepped through the heavy oak doors.

The office was made of glass. Sunlight spilled across a polished oak table that looked like it cost more than her entire apartment building. Four people sat in high-backed chairs, looking down at her like judges.

And there, in the center of the storm, sat the man from the elevator.

Ellan Noir.

He didn't say a word. He didn't ask a single question. He simply leaned back, his fingers placed under his chin, and watched her. His gaze was intense-unsettlingly so-as if he were peeling back the layers of her coffee-brown shirt to see the secrets she carried beneath.

Valerie answered every technical question with desperation. She talked about market trends and sales while her hands remained clasped tightly beneath the table to hide their tremors.

When the ordeal finally ended, she walked out of the room feeling utterly drained, as if she'd left a piece of her soul on that oak table. She scanned the hallway, half-hoping to see Ellan so she could return his handkerchief, but he was gone.

She left the building quietly, the cold city air hitting her like a slap. She stopped at a small, modest restaurant, staring at a plate of food she couldn't eat, feeling a strange mix of exhaustion and a tiny, flickering flame of hope.

That night, back in the silence of her flat, she washed the silk handkerchief by hand. She used the gentlest soap she had, hanging it to dry with a care .

She would return it. She had to. Because deep down, she knew this wasn't the last time she would see the man with the cold eyes and the silent mystery.

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