

Chapter 1 of Unseen bond
Alexander Drake lived by rules he never broke.
Precision. Control. Silence.
Every inch of his life, from the companies he built to the home he lived in, reflected that same unyielding discipline. He was a man people obeyed but never truly knew. To his board, he was a genius. To his staff, a distant perfectionist. To himself, just a man who had long forgotten what it meant to feel.
Routine was his armor. Numbers, meetings, and schedules filled the quiet hours that others might call life. He no longer noticed the days. Or maybe he just chose not to. Until she arrived.
Eliza, unassuming, meant to blend in like the others. She walked into his office that morning with her head slightly bowed, hands clasped in front of her, her voice soft but steady.
“Mr. Drake, I’m here to begin working.”
He didn’t look up at first. “See Mrs. Hayworth. She handles the staff schedule.”
“Yes, sir.”
It should have ended there. Another employee. Another passing face.
But something made him glance up once, twice. Maybe it was the calm way she moved, or the quiet strength that lived behind her lowered gaze. Whatever it was, it lingered.
Later that day, while he should’ve been absorbed in contracts and projections, he caught himself listening to her. The soft clinking of glass, the muted rhythm of her steps. It was different. Not mechanical. Not rehearsed. Human. Warm.
And it irritated him.
That evening, he found her again in the west parlor, dusting the grand piano. A strand of hair had escaped her bun, brushing against her cheek as she leaned forward. The light caught her at just the wrong time, just enough to make him forget where he stood.
“Careful,” he said sharply.
She startled, fingers tightening around the cloth. “I’m sorry, sir. I didn’t hear you come in.”
“You’ll scratch the lacquer if you press that hard.”
Their eyes met. Gray-blue against his dark, unreadable gaze.
“I’ll be careful,” she whispered.
Something cracked in the silence so faint he almost missed it.
He turned away at first, unsettled. He was not a man who took notice of women. Not a man who lingered on a voice. But when night fell, and he poured himself a drink in the stillness of his study, he found himself thinking of that moment. The steadiness of her hands. The softness of her words.
He told himself it was nothing. But when he passed through the hall later and caught the faint trace of lemon and lavender in the air, he knew it wasn’t.
For the first time in years, Alexander Drake’s perfectly ordered world felt unsteady.
And that minor disturbance, her presence, was beginning to feel like a fracture in the glass walls he’d built around himself.
Eliza had worked in houses like this before, polished, pristine, and silent as a museum. But something about this house felt different. It wasn’t the scale of it or the luxury. It was him.
Mr. Drake was everywhere and nowhere all at once. She’d catch glimpses of him at odd hours: standing by the library window, his reflection trapped in glass; at the far end of the corridor, speaking quietly into his phone; at the dining table, eating alone, eyes lost in thought.
He hardly spoke. But his silence filled every room like a presence she couldn’t escape.
At first, she tried to ignore it. She was here to work, not to be noticed. But every time she passed by his study door, her pulse betrayed her. Every time their eyes met, a brief, accidental something wordless passed between them, a kind of question neither dared to voice.
She’d heard rumors about him before she took the job: cold, unreachable, impossible to please. Yet the man she saw didn’t look cruel. Just lonely. Controlled to the point of breaking.
One morning, she was setting a vase of lilies on the hallway console when his voice came from behind her.
“You changed the flowers.”
She turned, startled. “Yes, sir. The old ones had wilted.”
He nodded slowly. “I see.”
But he didn’t leave. He stood there, watching her rearrange the petals, and she could feel the weight of his attention: sharp, curious, almost too intimate for such a mundane task.
“You prefer lilies?” he asked suddenly.
“Yes,” she said softly, still focused on the vase. “They’re simple, but they fill a room quietly.”
His gaze lingered. “Quiet things can be dangerous.”
Her hands froze. When she looked up, he was already walking away, his expression unreadable.
That night, she lay awake in her small room at the far end of the corridor, thinking about his words. Quiet things can be dangerous. Was that a warning or something else?
The next day, she found him in the conservatory, standing among the rows of glass and green. It was unusual; he never came down there during the day. The light cut across his face, making his features sharper, colder, and yet she saw the exhaustion in his eyes.
He didn’t speak as she entered, only glanced at her briefly before turning his attention to the leaves she was trimming. But she could feel him with every breath, every shift of his body, every heartbeat in the air between them.
When she dropped a pair of shears by mistake, the clang echoed too loudly.
“Sorry,” she murmured.
He bent before she could, picking them up, their hands brushing for an instant. It was nothing, barely a second, but it felt like too much.
His jaw tightened. “You should be more careful.”
She nodded, her throat dry. “Yes, sir.”
But she didn’t miss the flicker of something behind his eyes, something that looked a lot like regret.
After he left, she sat for a long while among the plants, her pulse still uneven. She knew she should keep her distance. He was her employer, a man far above her world, a man who had walls higher than anything she could ever climb.
And yet, every time he looked at her, it felt like those walls might crack.
That night, Alexander found himself pacing the edge of his study, frustrated for reasons he couldn’t name. Eliza had unsettled him in ways no one else had. It wasn’t just desire; it was something far more dangerous.
He was drawn to her quiet resilience, to the way she seemed to carry both fear and strength in equal measure. She wasn’t trying to impress him, wasn’t trying to win his favor. She was.
And that was the problem.
He’d built his world on detachment. But lately, every time he saw her, that carefully built silence inside him began to stir.
He looked toward the hallway, where the faint sound of her footsteps drifted up from below.
And for the first time in a very long time, Alexander Drake wondered what it might feel like to stop controlling everything.
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