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Deceiving The CEO

Deceiving The CEO

Mariyam Khan

Last update: 2021-06-23

Chapter 1 The Day Everything Goes Wrong

  • ~Hazel's POV~
  • Darkness befallen over the hall before a tiny flame flickered, illuminating all that was present in the room. A dozen pairs of eyes broadened, taking the shade of amber, and in a hubbub, everyone yelled, “Happy Birthday, Lauren!”
  • As instructed, John switched the lights back on, and I approached the coffee table, setting the strawberry cake in the middle; a customized candle shaped as the numbers seventy-six centered the top. Chuckling at the hungry expressions, I clapped my hands. “Come, come, everyone. It's time.”
  • Like a swarm of aged bees, forty people rushed forward, huddling around a flushed Lauren who, even at this age, looked almost like a fairy tale princess in her pink fluffy gown.
  • “Cut it, cut it, Laurie. I ain't getting any younger,” Ben urged, bouncing his frail body as much as his age let him, and everyone burst out laughing.
  • Handing the knife to Lauren, I walked backwards a few feet and angled my camera in the air. “Ready.”
  • As the birthday girl blew the candle out, the room erupted into another round of happy birthday songs while I took my desired pictures. One more happy moment to add to the memory keeper.
  • She cut out triangle pieces of small cakes and fed all the craving mouths until her soft eyes drove to me. “Hazel, what're you doing there, dearie? Come here.” She stretched out a relatively large slice of the cake in my way.
  • “Yes, yes. You go. I'll take the pictures,” Joseph offered, taking the camera from me.
  • “Alrighty!” I nodded, smiling and walking in the middle of the crowd. The smile radiating off of Lauren's face, showed all the happiness and gratitude that oozed from her heart.
  • “Thank you for everything, Hazie!” She pulled me in a motherly hug. “I don't know if I'll be here to celebrate my next birthday, but I'll die in peace, knowing you're here to take care of all these oompa loompas.” Her voice cracked at the end.
  • Pulling out of the hug, I wiped the tears staining her wrinkled cheeks and fixed the party hat over her gray hair. “Don't say that, lady. You're living at least a hundred years with all these wonderful oompa loompas wishing for you,” I said with a giggle and lifted her hand containing the cake, lightly pushing it to her thinned lips. Then she repeated my action, and I took a bite of the delicious fluffy delicacy, my taste buds dancing in delight.
  • After the whole cake was devoured, it was time for the presents, and one by one everyone delivered theirs. When it was my time, I pulled out the flat, red-wrapped gift and extended it to her.
  • “Thank you, darling,” gratifying, she began ripping the decorating paper slowly. All the eyes around watched curiously, holding their breath. They were definitely going to be satisfied I could say. I had been thinking about this present for the last two months.
  • As the last casing was undone, and the velvety covered book was out, frowns formed in every forehead. Eyeing the flock, Lauren proceeded to turn the cover.
  • Three, two, one!
  • Gasps echoed throughout the walls of the old-age home as everybody hovered over the photo album, turning pages after pages, awning and laughing at the memories. A lone tear escaped my eyes, and my heart fluttered with heavenly bliss to see these elderly people so happy. I had taken weeks inserting pictures that I had been collecting ever since my mother introduced me to this place. She wasn't here anymore, but I had the people she called family, the place she called home.
  • A pat on my shoulder made me wipe my eyes in a haste, and I looked up at Joseph, his eyes held the same glee. “Your mother would be so proud of you, kid.”
  • “Thanks!” I draped my arm around his hunched shoulders and sighed. “I'll never leave you guys ever again.”
  • “Hey, whatever you do, don't make us your burden, eh?” His hand ruffled the brown locks on my head.
  • “Correction.” I glanced at him, ruffling whatever hair was left on his head. It was our thing since we knew each other. “Y'all are my strength, old man.”
  • A gasp snatched our attention towards the crowd. “Oh look, it's a picture of Joseph picking his nose!”
  • Oops! My eyes widened, and I bit my lip, trying to stop the cackle threatening to come out. Of all the elders, Joseph was the one man who liked to come off as the cool, composed guy, never showing a flaw. But at my younger age, I had been on a mission to expose him, finally capturing a picture that would ruin his perfect image on a lazy summer morning.
  • The hall burst out in laughter. “Hazie, you did it!”
  • Gulping, I released him and ran, but so did he, limping behind me with his walking cane held high.
  • “W'ere you goin, kid? Ye can't 'scape me today.”
  • “Not my fault. Donald challenged me,” I spoke between laughs.
  • “Wat? Nay!” came Donald's wide-eyed rejection. Apparently, everyone feared Joseph except me for I had known him in a way no one else did.
  • Suddenly he stopped, his hand lifting to his chest, but it felt like my heartbeat stopped as I rushed to him along with the others. “Joseph! Joseph, are you alri-?”
  • Without warning, his arm wrapped around my shoulder, and his pained expression turned into a mischievous one. “Gotcha!”
  • I gasped, realizing he tricked me, and my eyes shut tight as his hand lifted.
  • Everything went silent.
  • A second passed.
  • Two seconds passed.
  • When nothing happened, I opened my eyes to see him smirking, and his hand landed on my back but in a gentle manner, patting. “You got me, kid.”
  • The tension dangling over the room cleared, and everyone erupted into another round of laughter.
  • “You got me, too, old man.” I laughed.
  • That very moment as I saw all these happy faces who once forgot how to even smile, my heart poured with warmth. I felt complete for the first time since my mother died six years ago.
  • Suddenly the sound of the front door slamming against the wall startled everyone. What was that? Frowning, I turned around and marched out of the room, down the hallway to the reception area, my eyes widening. A group of men forayed inside, baseball bats in their hands and started smashing the furniture and the decorative pieces mom organized with her own hands.
  • Jeremy, the guard of this old-age home came, standing before me. “Hazel, you stay behind.” He pulled out his gun, pointing it at them. “Stop it, or I'll shoot!”
  • “Jeremy, boi. There's no need to get so violent now,” a familiar voice spoke, snapping my head towards the direction.
  • Ryan, my father's- well, step-father's head of security walked through the door, his smirk broadening as his eyes drove to me.
  • No, he didn't.
  • My jaw clenched, and blood boiled like lava through my veins. Pushing Jeremy out of my way, I stalked forward. “Stop this right now!” I yelled at the top of my lungs.
  • As expected, the men stopped hitting and turning over things. Then I directed my enraged gaze to the suited man. “Ryan,” I gritted out, “what the hell is going on?”
  • “Chill your panties, princess. Boss's order. Have to vacate this place.”
  • “What the hell are you talking about? This is my mother's property.”
  • “Not anymore. This is the perfect venue for a lucrative resort.”
  • I swirled my head around. All the elders had gathered in the corridor, eyes widened in fear. The way my heart glided over the highest sky before, now drowned into the deepest pit of the ocean. He couldn't do this to me, to my mother, to these people. This is the place we held the closest to our heart, and he knew that very well, yet he decided to betray us like this. I vigorously wiped the tears off my face. I couldn't let him do that. Never.
  • “I'm gonna talk to him. Take your dogs out of here.” I looked at Jeremy. “Take care of them until I'm back,” saying that I started walking to the exit but stopped and inclined my head to the side, fear still gripping my heart. “Ryan, if one hair on their body is harmed, you'll have your wife coming after you.” I smirked. I had the pictures of him cheating, and I knew that he feared his gangster of a wife.
  • Without wasting one more second, I hopped into my Tesla and drove straight to the Montero Inc. Seeing me, the guard greeted and opened the door. Greeting him back, I climbed up the elevator to the fifteenth floor and stomped towards his office when his personal secretary blocked my way.
  • “Miss Green, wait! You can't go in there. Sir's in a meet-”
  • Before she could finish her sentence, I barged inside, my nostril's fuming and eyes flaring. “Mr. Montero!”
  • Three pairs of eyes turned to me, two widened and one pissed. Well, the feeling was mutual.
  • “Sir, I tried to stop her but she-”
  • “Out.” He gestured to the men and the secretary, and they were gone in a heartbeat.
  • The six feet build of Daniel Montero rose and strolled around his desk. “Looks like abroad has queered your manners.”
  • My teeth grinded against each other. This was the first time I was seeing him after he forcefully sent me to Canada. That time I wasn't mature enough for the world to defer against his decision, but time had changed. I was twenty-four now. He couldn't force anything else on me anymore.
  • “You can't do this.”
  • “As per the testament, I can do whatever I want.”
  • “The testament is rigged.” Mom died before she could write her will, regarding her properties, so he prepared one as per his wish.
  • “And that place is gold. Situated at the center of the city, it will be the most profitable of all my resorts.”
  • “How can you be so heartless? Where will those people go? They're shelterless for God's sake!”
  • “That's none of my concern. Now if you're done, you can go help to escort your friends out of my property,” he spoke in a tone of dismissal, amplifying the last two words and turning away.
  • Fear clutched its deathly tendrils around my heart, washing away my valiant attitude. If he really did demolish the old-age home and constructed a resort there, where would those elderly people go? On the streets? My heart pounded in my chest like it would come out of my mouth. I had to protect them, that's what I promised to my mom, and so I swallowed my pride and let out my true vulnerable self. “Please, don't do this. Please.”
  • He faced me again, a smile on his face, then it disappeared like smoke in thin air. “No. You know the loss my business is going through because of those Kingstons. How can I simply let go of such a beneficial site?”
  • “I'll do anything. Please,” the words rolled out of my tongue so low even I couldn't believe that I said those.
  • His brow arched. “What?”
  • My eyes shut tight along with my shaking fists. “I will do anything you ask if you don't harm the place and the people.”
  • His smirk only grew. “Anything?”
  • I nodded. I didn't know what I was doing. I was in a panicked trance, and all that mattered to me was those people.
  • “On second thought, I might leave that place alone. I'm not so heartless, you know.” The evil smirk occupying his face hinted of a storm coming my way. That greedy man wouldn't spare something big without gaining an even bigger profit.
  • I gulped, holding onto my breath. “What do you want me to do?”
  • He padded closer to me and leaned down. “I want you to bring me information.”
  • I frowned. “What information?”
  • “From the Kingstons.”
  • My frown only deepened. The Kingston Corporation was his rival company who owned more than a hundred successful hotels, motels and resorts around the world, whereas Daniel Montero owned only sixty-five with half of them bringing nothing but loss.
  • He straightened up, went around his desk and poured himself a glass of wine. “Their plans, their strategies, their projects. I want you to bring me everything.”
  • “What? How?”
  • “By working in their company, of course. You'll be my little spy.”
  • I cringed at his nickname. “Th-That's a crime.”
  • “It's not if you don't consider it one. Rather it's a favor from daughter to father.”
  • “You're not my father,” I snapped.
  • His jaw clenched. “Little girl, you need to watch your attitude if you want to keep your old friends well-fed and sheltered.”
  • I swallowed my temper once again, helpless. If this was the only way, I could do this. I'd have to do this for them. “How? They won't give me a job just like this.”
  • “Oh, they won't. Someone else will.” The smirk playing on his lips only indicated that he already had everything planned.
  • “What will be my position? I can't get information without being on an important one.” Which I hoped he wouldn't be able to arrange.
  • “Oh, you'll be in a very, very important position,” he uttered, taking a sip of his wine. “You'll be the secretary.”
  • My heart sank. How could he possibly arrange that? “Secretary of whom?”
  • “Dimitri Kingston.”
  • My eyes widened to the size of saucers. “What!”