The Boss I Hated Saved Me Before His Hidden Receipt Broke Me-rosocute

I hated Luca Romano long before I loved him.

That is the cleanest way to tell it, though nothing about us was clean.

I worked in accounts at Romano Maritime, a company with legal paperwork, polished conference tables, and enough silence around its owner to make every room feel watched.

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Luca never raised his voice, because men like him did not need to.

He wore black suits, signed contracts with a silver pen, and made powerful people lower their eyes with one quiet sentence.

To everyone else, I was the efficient woman who knew his books better than his lawyers did.

To myself, I was the daughter of a sick woman, paying bills in pieces, measuring every paycheck against another hospital notice.

One afternoon, my mother was waiting for emergency surgery, and the hospital wanted money before midnight.

I walked into Luca’s office with my pride already ruined and asked for one day away and an advance against my salary.

Three of his men were in the room, men with still faces and expensive watches, men who looked at weakness like it was a stain on the carpet.

Luca did not ask what happened.

He did not ask her name.

He looked at me across his desk and said, “Personal tragedy does not pause business.”

I remember the air leaving my chest more than I remember leaving the room.

I remember walking to the restroom, locking myself in a stall, and pressing my fist against my mouth so no one could hear me cry.

My mother survived because an anonymous payment reached the hospital before midnight.

I called it a miracle and never once imagined Luca had anything to do with it.

Why would I have?

He had shown me exactly what kind of man he was.

For the next year, I gave him perfect work and nothing else.

If he entered a room, I became professional enough to freeze water.

If he spoke my name, I answered with respect sharp enough to cut both of us.

Then he ordered me onto his private jet for a meeting on the coast, and I sat across from him thirty thousand feet above the Atlantic, hating the way he could look calm even above an ocean.

The cabin was all cream leather, polished wood, gold-rimmed glasses, and two silent guards.

Luca read a file like the sky belonged to him.

I stared at my laptop until he said, “You keep looking at me like you want to say something.”

I told him I wondered if men like him ever felt guilt.

One guard near the cockpit shifted as if I had pulled a knife.

Luca turned one page.

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