The Assistant Kissed Her Boss’s Poster Before He Heard Everything-Teptep

By the time Alexia Summers saw Elliot Hawkins’s poster smiling from the reception wall, she had already survived the kind of day that makes a person question every polite habit she has ever been taught.

The executive floor was almost empty.

The conference rooms had gone dark.

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The vending machine hummed near reception, and the whole hallway smelled like burnt coffee, warm printer toner, and the lemon cleaner the night crew used on the glass doors.

Alexia sat at her desk with her fingers resting on the keyboard, staring at a spreadsheet she had not actually read in ten minutes.

Her feet hurt.

Her eyes burned.

Her pride hurt worse.

For one year, she had worked as Elliot Hawkins’s executive assistant.

One full year of perfect coffee, flawless calendar saves, emergency reports repaired before sunrise, and board packets printed before anyone else remembered they needed paper.

Elliot noticed everything.

That was what made it so insulting.

He noticed margins.

He noticed late reports.

He noticed when a comma made a sentence weak.

He noticed if an analyst used the wrong font size in a deck.

But when Alexia brought him coffee at 7:20 every morning, exactly one sugar, no lid if he was staying in, lid if he had meetings, he barely looked up.

When she rebuilt the quarterly file after two departments sent numbers that did not match, he wrote one word at the top.

Adequate.

When she prevented a client call from turning into a public embarrassment, he said, “This will do.”

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