76
The conference room had a heartbeat.
It pulsed with anticipation—low murmurs, the hum of devices, the rhythmic shuffle of executives preparing for a meeting they knew would be remembered. The air smelled like roasted coffee and ambition, and the massive digital screen at the front waited like a curtain about to rise.
Then the double doors opened.
And just like that, silence.
Ericka Mathews walked in like she owned the building. Which, technically, she did.
Her blazer was midnight-black with a sharp cut that accented every curve and shoulder roll like it had been sewn by hand. Diamond studs glittered discreetly at her ears. Her presence wasn't just seen—it was felt. Commanding, elegant, untouchable.
Amanda followed right behind her, tablet in one hand, notes in the other.
A high-waisted skirt and an ivory blouse with gold buttons hugged her form with just enough structure to say professional, but just enough softness to say don't underestimate me.
She looked like a storm in heels—calm on the surface, with everything moving just beneath.
They didn't just enter the room.
They entered as a unit.
"Morning," Ericka said, cool and even as she approached the head of the table.
"Good morning, Ms. Mathews," came the near-unanimous response.
Amanda took her place at her right side, placing the tablet onto the embedded table screen. With a single tap, the company's new logo and title filled the room.
"Global Expansion | Strategic Sustainability | Reclaiming the Future"
No preamble.
Ericka launched into the presentation like a general with a map.
Her voice didn't just command attention—it drew people in, lacing vision with strategy, inspiration with numbers.
She discussed the new global partnerships in Seoul, Berlin, and S?o Paulo.
Mentioned the capsule collection already generating pre-launch buzz on fashion blogs. She didn't hesitate. Not once.
Amanda supported from beside her—fingertips gliding over her tablet to shift slides, pulling up charts before they were needed, glancing across the table to read expressions and gauge questions before they were asked.
Every cue was met with a solution. Every concern met with a strategy.
When an executive from Paris raised an eyebrow about production timelines, Amanda leaned in slightly and whispered the updated supplier numbers. Ericka delivered them a second later without missing a beat.
It was dance. It was chess. It was war.
And they were winning.
At one point, a director—new to the board, too bold for his title—cleared his throat.
"With all due respect, there've been whispers about your recent absence. Some are wondering if the leadership is—" He didn't finish.
Ericka simply tilted her head. A slow blink.
"Wondering if what?" she asked, her voice a velvet-gloved fist. "If your CEO can still lead the empire she built?"
Silence. Then:
"No. I'm saying we're all glad to see you back."
Ericka's smile didn't reach her eyes. "You're not the only one."
The next slide—an ambitious initiative on textile recycling and tech innovation—appeared.
Amanda tapped her finger lightly along the edge of the tablet. Smooth.
Ericka's hand drifted under the table just slightly—brushed her pinky against Amanda's.
Just once. A pulse. A thank you.
By the end of the presentation, even the skeptics were nodding. Proposals flew across the table. Follow-up meetings were scheduled. International leads requested more involvement. And when Ericka gave her closing remarks, she didn't just wrap the meeting.
She cemented her return.
"We're not riding the next wave," she said. "We are the wave."
As the room broke into applause and murmured conversation, people started filing out with their notes and latte cups, voices buzzing with new energy.
Amanda stood quietly beside her chair, glancing at the still-glowing screen. She didn't speak until the last person left.
"You killed that," she said softly.
Ericka didn't look at her. Just reached for her water bottle and took a long sip.
Then: "We did."
Amanda looked down at her hands, a blush teasing at her cheeks. "That was the most powerful version of you I've seen in weeks."
Ericka turned, finally locking eyes with her. "That version never left," she murmured. "She was just...waiting for the right moment."
Amanda's breath caught a little at that. The vulnerability beneath the confidence. The edge wrapped in silk.
Ericka stepped closer.
"You being here made that easier."
Amanda swallowed hard. "Always."
They stood there for a moment, the glow of the screen fading, the room quieter now, filled only with the lingering weight of what they'd just done—of who they were when they moved together.
A force.
Not just coworkers. Not just lovers.
Something more dangerous.
And far more beautiful.