The second morning at The Sterling Group felt a little less overwhelming — or maybe Elara was just getting used to the rhythm of it all.
The steady hum of printers, the soft clinking of coffee cups, the muted elegance of people dressed in tailored confidence.
She sat at her desk in the PR division, her workspace still bare except for a single notebook and her nameplate:
Elara Winters – Public Relations Associate.
She liked the simplicity of it.
No expectations. No labels beyond her work.
Across the hall, she could see the glass doors of Adrian Hale’s office slightly ajar. His presence had already become something of a quiet fascination among the staff. Whenever he walked by, conversations softened, and eyes followed.
But Elara kept her gaze fixed on her laptop, trying to lose herself in schedules and press releases.
She wasn’t here to notice anyone — especially not him.
Still… it was difficult to ignore a man whose calm seemed to command the room.
---
Around mid-morning, a gentle knock on her desk pulled her out of her focus.
It was Lina, her colleague — cheerful, chatty, and the kind of person who made friends in seconds.
“Hey, newbie,” Lina said, smiling. “Adrian wants the campaign draft from your section. He said he’ll review it personally.”
Elara blinked. “Personally? I thought the team lead—”
“He asked for you,” Lina interrupted with a small grin. “Lucky girl.”
Elara ignored the teasing tone and stood, clutching her folder. Her heart wasn’t racing — not exactly — but there was a strange awareness in her chest, a quiet anticipation.
When she reached his office, she knocked lightly.
“Come in,” came that calm, low voice.
Adrian looked up from his laptop as she entered. He wasn’t the kind of man who filled silence — he made it feel natural.
“Ms. Winters,” he said, gesturing toward the chair across from him. “Please, sit.”
She handed him the folder. “The initial draft for the spring campaign.”
He nodded and flipped through the pages. For a while, there was only the sound of paper and rain faintly tapping the window behind him.
“You’ve written this?” he asked without looking up.
“Yes,” she said. “I worked on the content and concept.”
He paused, then finally met her eyes. “It’s good. You have clarity. Not too heavy, not too much trying.”
Something about his words — the simplicity of his praise — made her feel seen in a way she hadn’t expected.
“Thank you,” she said softly.
He leaned back slightly, studying her. “You’ve just joined, but you already sound like you’ve been here a while. You observe before you speak — not many do that.”
Elara didn’t know how to respond, so she just smiled politely.
“I guess silence helps you understand more,” she said after a moment.
Adrian smiled faintly — that rare, barely-there kind of smile that seemed to belong only to him. “It does. Most people speak to be heard. Few speak to be understood.”
For a moment, their eyes met — steady, calm, unhurried.
No spark, no rush, no music playing in the background. Just… something quiet, something real.
She looked away first. “I’ll let you continue your work.”
He nodded, still watching her. “Good job, Ms. Winters. And—” he hesitated briefly, “—welcome to Berlin. I hope this place feels like home soon.”
Elara gave a small nod and left, the sound of her footsteps echoing down the hall.
But long after she was gone, Adrian found himself staring at the door, thinking about the girl who didn’t try to impress him — and somehow managed to leave an impression anyway.
---
Later that afternoon, as the office grew quieter, Lina nudged Elara at her desk.
“So? What did he say?”
Elara looked up from her computer. “About what?”
Lina rolled her eyes playfully. “About the campaign. About you. You know how rare it is for him to call someone in personally?”
Elara shrugged. “He said it was good. That’s all.”
“Just good?” Lina pouted. “Ugh, I’d faint if he even said good morning to me.”
Elara laughed softly. “You might want to stay conscious if you plan to keep your job.”
Lina giggled and turned back to her desk, but Elara’s smile lingered — faint, thoughtful.
Somewhere in her mind, that small moment replayed:
You observe before you speak.
He had noticed her silence — and somehow, that mattered more than a hundred compliments ever could.
---
As she left the building that evening, the city was bathed in sunset — warm gold spilling over glass towers and the slow-moving river. She paused for a second, her reflection merging with the sky in the office windows.
For the first time since arriving in Berlin, she didn’t feel like a stranger.
Maybe not quite at home yet… but close.
And as she walked away, unaware that from his office window Adrian was still watching the fading light, one thought crossed both their minds — though neither dared to say it aloud:
> Sometimes, the smallest glances stay the longest.
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Updated 37 Episodes
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