07/02/2026
Episode One: LTE
“Never give up on your dreams.”
My mother said it like a prayer. Like if she repeated it enough, life would finally listen.
But life never did.
At twelve, I learned how fast everything could be taken away. One phone call. One accident. One moment my father was alive—and the next, he wasn’t.
The house that once echoed with laughter became painfully quiet. Bills replaced birthday plans. Hunger replaced comfort. My mother aged overnight, and I learned what it meant to be strong before I even understood what weakness was.
While people my age were sneaking out at night and planning futures they assumed would be waiting for them, I was learning how to stretch meals, how to hide tears, how to grow up too fast.
Dreams became dangerous things. They distracted. They hurt.
But I held onto mine anyway.
College wasn’t freedom—it was survival dressed as ambition. Long nights. Part-time jobs. Silent breakdowns in bathroom stalls. I smiled through exhaustion because failure wasn’t an option. I had too many people depending on me.
Now, graduation stands in front of me like a fragile promise.
I don’t feel victorious. I feel terrified.
Because choosing a life means risking everything I fought to protect.
What I don’t know yet is that my life is about to collide with someone who has never had to fight for anything—someone born into power, privilege, and protection.
And when our worlds meet, it won’t be gentle.
It will be messy.
Painful.
Transformative.
Because some dreams don’t come true quietly.
Some come against the odds.
The house was loud that morning.
Not the happy kind of loud—no laughter, no music. Just voices layered with stress, the clatter of plates, the weight of too many worries fighting for space.
“Ava, have you seen your brother’s school fees receipt?” my mother asked, already sounding tired.
I tightened my grip on my bag. “I’ll handle it after work.”
She turned to look at me then, really look at me. Her eyes softened, but the worry didn’t leave. It never did.
“You don’t have to carry everything alone,” she said.
I wanted to laugh. Or cry. Or scream.
“I’ve been carrying it alone for years,” I replied quietly.
Silence followed. Heavy. Familiar.
Morgan Enterprises rose into the sky like a monument to everything I wasn’t born into. Glass walls. Security at every entrance. People who walked like the world owed them something.
I stood there for a moment, adjusting my jacket, reminding myself that I belonged here just as much as anyone else.
Inside, everything moved fast. Too fast. Assistants rushed past, heels clicking, voices sharp, phones pressed to ears. No one smiled.
“New hire?” the receptionist asked without looking up.
“Yes. Ava Williams.”
She nodded. “Elevator. Top floor orientation.”
The doors slid shut just as someone stepped in.
Tall. Controlled. Expensive.
He didn’t look at me at first. Just checked his watch like time itself answered to him. But when the elevator jolted slightly, his gaze lifted—and met mine.
Something shifted.
Not butterflies. Not warmth.
Tension.
His eyes were sharp, unreadable. The kind that assessed, measured, decided. I straightened instinctively, refusing to shrink.
“You’re new,” he said, voice calm but commanding.
“Yes.”
No introduction. No smile.
“Don’t be late,” he added.
The doors opened.
He stepped out, and the entire floor seemed to respond to his presence. People moved faster. Straighter. Like gravity had changed.
I followed—then froze when I heard the whispers.
“That’s him.”
“CEO’s on the floor.”
“Aiden Morgan.”
My stomach dropped.
So this was him.
The man who had everything handed to him before he was old enough to understand struggle. The man whose name opened doors while mine only knocked.
In his office, Aiden loosened his tie, irritation simmering beneath his calm exterior.
Another day of numbers. Control. Expectations he never asked for.
He glanced through the glass walls—and saw me again. Standing stiffly. Determined. Out of place.
Interesting.
Back at my desk, my phone buzzed.
Mom: Your sister is sick. Pharmacy bill is higher than expected.
I closed my eyes.
First day. And already, life was reminding me that dreams didn’t pause for survival.
When I looked up, Aiden was standing there.
“Williams,” he said. “Come with me.”
Not a request.
As I followed him into his office, my heart pounded—not with excitement, but with fear.
Because whatever this was…
It wasn’t going to be easy.
And it definitely wasn’t going to be fair.