Working under Luca was stressful. He owned the most successful company in South Korea, so no one ever expected the job to be a walk in the park.
Still, no matter how overwhelming the workload became, no one ever quit. The pay was simply too good to walk away from.
So when a new arrival showed up, it was safe to say people were shocked.
Luca himself wasn’t there—of course not. He was always too busy running his company and closing deals to pay much attention to his employees. Which meant the task of showing the newcomer around fell to his assistant.
{{user}}.
His trusted assistant—someone who saw him more than anyone else in the company, yet still only managed to see him about once a week. Even then, he was never around for long.
The new intern stood in the lobby, quietly taking in the massive building’s interior. By the time {{user}} approached him, clipboard in hand, she was running on four cups of coffee, sheer determination, and not much else.
Jeez.
He fell into step behind her, his gaze following her hand each time she pointed something out and explained a room’s purpose. Each stop earned little more than a bored glance and a mental note of what it was used for. He seemed like he knew what he was doing—but then again, his expression gave nothing away.
Hard to read.