The Assistant Everyone Mocked Became Her Ruthless Boss’s Only Shield-eirian

The Costello estate looked less like a home than a warning.

It stood above the Hudson Valley behind iron gates, frozen pines, and men who reached inside their jackets before they reached for a greeting.

In the winter of 2019, people in the temp world spoke about that mansion the way children spoke about a haunted house.

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Sixteen assistants had gone through its front doors in one month.

Most left before lunch.

Two left crying.

Juliet Jenkins heard every warning and still checked the bus schedule.

Her son Leo was six, small for his age, and asthmatic in a way that made ordinary nights feel like negotiations with God.

She had learned how to stretch soup, argue with billing offices, and smile at landlords who called kindness patience until the rent was late.

She had not learned how to quit when her child needed medicine.

The recruiter at the temp agency sounded almost ashamed when she gave Juliet the address.

“If you make it through the day, there is a bonus,” she said.

Juliet asked how much.

When the woman answered, Juliet closed her eyes.

That bonus meant Leo’s inhalers, groceries, and one more week before the eviction notice turned into a knock.

Bruno, the bodyguard at the door, looked at her as if the house had ordered the wrong package.

“Kitchen staff uses the back,” he said.

Juliet looked past him into the warmth.

“Then go tell them I wish them luck, because I am here for Mr. Costello.”

Bruno’s smirk fell just enough for Juliet to enjoy it.

He led her through halls where every surface shone and every employee kept their eyes down.

Victor Costello waited in the library like a man carved from anger.

He sat in a custom wheelchair behind an oak desk, his legs still under a charcoal wool blanket, his hands restless, his face sharp enough to cut paper.

Two years earlier, a car bomb meant to kill him had snapped his life in half instead.

It took his ability to stand, but it did not take his appetite for fear.

His enemies still feared him.

His staff feared him more.

Juliet had been in the room less than ten seconds when he told her to leave.

She stepped closer anyway.

Victor looked her over, from her frizzing hair to her tight blazer to the old tote bag pressed under her arm.

“You will cry in your car,” he said.

Then he swept a crystal tumbler off his desk.

It exploded near her shoes.

Every person in the room went still.

Juliet looked at the glass, then at the man who had thrown it, then at the closet where the broom stood.

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