Current location: Novel nest Cold Boss Is My Masked Daddy Chapter 54

"Cold Boss Is My Masked Daddy" Chapter 54

"Have you noticed a shift in Julian lately?" Asher asked, leaning back against the booth as they finished lunch.

"He's a completely different animal than the intern who walked in on day one."

Samuel didn't look up from his phone. "He was always driven."

Asher shook his head. "Driven, sure, but he used to be reactive. Now he's taking the lead.

Yesterday he actually cornered me and asked for more tasks because he'd finished his queue early. It's like a scene from a legal drama—the protagonist gives up on a messy romance and decides to conquer the corporate world instead."

Samuel's gaze flickered toward him, cold and sharp.

"What?" Asher held up his hands. "I think the metaphor is spot on."

Samuel looked away. "It isn't about romance. He's simply showing who he is. Julian is one of us."

Asher blinked, confused.

"There's a restlessness in him," Samuel added. "A certain edge."

Julian Hale had been moving forward at a frantic pace, and for a long time, Samuel hadn't known what the boy was running from—or what he was trying to catch. But after learning about Julian's past, the picture became clearer.

Beneath that lean, seemingly fragile frame was a raw, animal instinct to climb. Julian wasn't a martyr; he refused to drown in self-pity. He possessed a terrifying resilience. Once he slipped his leashes, he didn't just walk—he took to the sky.

Samuel watched the transformation like a gardener watching a rare bloom, or a predator watching a butterfly emerge from a cocoon. The realization that he was helping mold Julian sent a cold, electric thrill through his marrow.

Julian Hale was a siren song specifically tuned to Samuel's frequency.

Samuel knew this better than anyone. It was the reason he had retreated, drawing a clinical line between them before things turned lethal. But even strictly as a professional asset, Julian was becoming indispensable. He had a gift for abstract thinking and a sensitivity to market trends that most senior analysts lacked. His empathy made him a natural for consulting.

Keeping him on foundational grunt work was a waste of talent.

"Put Julian on the New York project at the end of the month," Samuel told Asher. "He's going with you."

Asher's eyebrows shot up. "You're really taking him under your wing, aren't you?"

Samuel's eyes dropped back to his screen, offering no confirmation.

When Julian got the news that afternoon, he stood frozen at his desk. It would be his first major business trip. The excitement was a physical hum under his skin.

He'd had his passport ready since orientation, but he'd assumed such an opportunity would never fall to an intern. He tried to keep a lid on the joy—partly to avoid looking like a rookie, but mostly because he was terrified the trip would be cancelled if he celebrated too early.

It wasn't until the visa cleared and the tickets were booked that he finally allowed himself to breathe.

ADVERTISEMENT

Julian had no international background. He spent the week before the flight obsessively practicing his English, only to realize upon landing that communication was easier than he'd feared.

Any lingering insecurity about his accent vanished the moment he heard a senior associate from the Mumbai office; Julian decided his own pronunciation was practically Shakespearean by comparison.

The trip lasted three days. On Friday, Julian opted to delay his return flight, taking the weekend to explore the city alone.

He wandered the streets of Manhattan as a ghost in the machine, a tourist with the eyes of an analyst. On his final evening, he was walking through a busy intersection when the light shifted.

The skyscrapers stretched into the distance, leaving only a narrow vertical slit of sky. Just as Julian looked up, the setting sun dropped perfectly between the glass towers, bleeding a violent, beautiful orange across the entire block.

It wasn't the "official" Manhattanhenge, and it wasn't on 42nd Street, but it was blinding. Stunning. It made his head spin with a sudden, overwhelming sense of peace.

Bathed in that warm, orange glow, Julian realized something vital: he could survive on his own. He was going to be okay.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Upon returning to Apex Capital, Julian found his own "assistant" waiting. It was Emma. They had worked together on the Alderbrook Spirits deal, but she had since rotated to the Equities desk. He was surprised she had applied to move back.

"I thought you liked the secondary markets," Julian said, leading her to her new station. "Why the change?"

"I want to be in the trenches for an IPO," Emma admitted. "I'm staying in Private Equity after graduation. I need to know the full lifecycle."

Julian understood. An IPO was a massive, multi-front war involving regulators, markets, and legal teams. It was the fastest way for an intern to lose their "rookie" status.

Julian didn't mind sharing the burden. He'd walked the hard road already and was happy to give Emma the map. He briefed her on the current projects and shared his personal guide to the Apex office archetypes:

James: Lazy and uninspired, but easy to handle if you coax him gently.

Leo: The Scroll King. Driven, but his anxiety is contagious—don't let his pace rattle you.

Asher: The Team Guardian. Gentle, unless you make a recurring mistake. Then the "Male Mother" turns into a shark.

As for their boss...

Julian paused, his voice leveling out into a practiced, professional calm. "Samuel looks intimidating, but he's an exceptional lead. Just speak to him normally. There's no reason to fear him."

Emma's neck practically disappeared into her shoulders. "Do you actually believe that?"

Julian didn't have an answer for that.

"Whatever," Emma whispered, shaking her head. "I'll just report to Asher."

Julian felt a ghost of a smile. He remembered Luke saying the exact same thing to him months ago. How the tables had turned.

Still, Samuel was a good boss. He was rigorous, but he provided the space to grow. Julian felt a flicker of warmth in his chest and immediately suppressed it.

Separate the personal from the professional. Separate the personal from the professional.

With Emma handling the administrative friction, Julian was free to take on a higher-level challenge.

"You want me to handle the corporate consulting?" Julian stared at the message on his screen.

It had arrived a minute ago. Samuel wanted him to develop an operational consulting plan for the game Symbiosis and lead the meeting with the client in a week.

Julian felt a surge of vertigo. Consulting was for veterans, not interns.

Julian: Why me?

Samuel: The client saw the analysis you wrote last year. They want your perspective.

Julian remembered that report. He'd written it as a punishment task, poured his heart into it as a player of the game, but he'd assumed it was too idealistic to be useful. He figured he'd just be a junior participant on a team.

Then came the second message. Samuel wanted him to lead the project.

Julian's head throbbed. He typed "I can't" before he could stop himself. He was an intern; he couldn't give professional advice to a major firm.

Samuel: Is it that you don't want to do it, or that you're afraid you'll fail?

The man was still surgical. Always straight for the bone.

ADVERTISEMENT

You May Also Like

Compartilhar Link

Copie o link abaixo para compartilhar com seus amigos: