Chapter 1

2262words
The air in the gymnasium hung heavy with sweat and adrenaline.

Squeaking shoes against polished hardwood and the sharp smack of volleyballs created a feverish symphony.


Alexander barely noticed any of it.

His long legs crossed, he sank into the plush VIP seat, fingers dancing across his phone as he handled a stream of urgent emails from his law firm.

Beside him, his cousin Jake waved his arms wildly, practically spitting with excitement.


"Dude, check out that Libero. She's incredible!"

Alexander glanced up briefly before returning to his screen.


The flash of orange on the court resembled a leaping flame.

Nothing more.

Work trumped some college volleyball match any day.

Jake suddenly grabbed his arm with enough force to make him wince.

"Look! Look! Here it comes!"

Alexander looked up with irritation, only to freeze at the sight before him.

The opposing spiker launched into the air, body arched like a drawn bow, arm hammering down with brutal force.

The volleyball cut through the air like a missile, rocketing toward an exposed corner just inside the line.

The point seemed already lost.

In that split second, the orange flame moved.

The girl hurled herself parallel to the floor in a desperate dive, her arm somehow getting under the ball at the last possible instant.

*Thump!*

The volleyball popped up in a perfect arc, floating precisely toward the setter.

The crowd exploded.

Alexander lowered his phone.

As the screen dimmed, it reflected the surprise in his steel-gray eyes.

He couldn't look away from her.

Emma Wilson.

Her name blazed across the back of her jersey.

Sweat-soaked strands of chestnut hair clung to her temples and cheeks, framing a face etched with fierce determination.

The rest of the match became Emma's personal showcase.

A tricky drop shot—she read it early, rushed in, and calmly saved it.

A thunderous back-row attack—she dropped to her knees and somehow dug it up from an impossible angle.

A ball nearly rolling out of bounds—she sprinted from backcourt, her body contorting as she scooped it back from the dead zone.

Three "kill shots," each handled with a different, impossible save.

Each save ended with her body slamming against the floor, yet she bounced up every time, eyes burning brighter than before.

The whistle shrieked for timeout.

Her teammates huddled around, breathing hard, frustration etched on their faces from the opponent's dominance.

Emma wiped sweat from her chin with her wristband. Her voice wasn't loud, but it cut through to every teammate.

"Trust me."

"I'll get every damn ball."

She spoke without a hint of doubt, as if stating a simple fact of nature.

Something in her certainty steadied everyone's nerves.

Match point arrived.

For the final point, the opponent targeted Emma again—a deceptive quick attack sending the ball to the empty space behind her.

Every spectator held their breath.

With her back to the ball, working on pure instinct, Emma threw herself backward, body horizontal to the floor, arms extended behind her.

She never even saw the ball.

The volleyball smacked perfectly against her forearms, popped high, and arced toward the setter already positioning at the net.

Her teammates didn't waste her sacrifice—their spiker leapt and hammered the ball down for the kill.

Game over.

The stadium erupted in deafening cheers.

Her teammates mobbed her, screaming and laughing as they pulled her into a crushing group hug.

In the center of the chaos, sweat and happy tears streaming down her face, Emma beamed like a child, her smile outshining the overhead lights.

Alexander stood, adjusted his suit jacket, and strode purposefully toward the celebrating team.

"Dude? What the hell are you doing?"

Jake snapped out of his excitement, grabbing Alexander's arm with a look of utter disbelief.

He'd never seen Alexander show interest in anything not work-related. His cousin was a precision machine built for high-stakes law and billion-dollar contracts. Attending a sports game was already unprecedented. Approaching a female athlete? That was like watching a fatal system error unfold in real time.

Alexander didn't break stride.

The crowd buzzed with energy.

Curious students, suspicious coaches, and resentful opponents all stared at the intruder like he'd crashed a private party.

A man in a bespoke dark suit with perfect posture and an ice-cold demeanor.

He belonged here about as much as a shark in a kiddie pool.

Alexander noticed none of it.

His eyes locked on one target.

That orange flame.

With measured steps, neither rushing nor hesitating, he cut through the final ring of celebrating players.

He stopped.

Directly in front of Emma Wilson.

The gymnasium roared around them, but in their small bubble, time seemed to freeze.

Emma's smile faltered as she felt the shift in energy.

She looked up.

A stranger.

A man who clearly belonged to another world stood before her.

His height was intimidating—Emma had to crane her neck to see his face.

His chiseled features could have been carved from marble, every line sharp and unforgiving. From his perfectly styled hair to the complex watch on his wrist and mirror-polished shoes, everything screamed wealth and power.

"You moved like a Guardian Angel out there."

Emma blinked in surprise.

Guardian Angel?

Alexander's gaze never wavered.

"I'd like to take your team out to celebrate this incredible victory."

Warning bells rang in her head.

Every instinct screamed caution.

What was this guy's angle?

Emma stepped back slightly, creating distance.

"Thanks for the offer, but we already have team plans."

Her refusal was polite but firm—a clear boundary.

Alexander, seemingly deaf to rejection, pulled out his phone, the screen's glow highlighting his sharp jawline.

"I've reserved the entire Michelin three-star restaurant. Cars are waiting outside."

He stated this as casually as commenting on the weather.

Emma's eyebrows shot together.

This wasn't an invitation—it was a done deal.

"I said no thanks. What exactly do you want?"

Her voice cooled, edged with irritation.

Alexander pocketed his phone, his intense gaze pinning her in place.

"I wanted to meet the woman who carries her entire team."

Her teammates exchanged glances, whispers rising around them.

"Did he say Michelin three-star?"

"The whole restaurant? Is he serious?"

Emma felt trapped, heat rising to her face.

In the private dining room, the silence was so complete you could hear ice cubes melting in water glasses.

Crystal chandeliers cast soft light over gleaming silverware arranged on plush velvet tablecloths.

Her teammates sat rigid in their chairs, barely touching their food.

Emma set down her water glass with a deliberate clink, shattering the suffocating silence.

She fixed her gaze on the composed man across from her.

"Who are you exactly? And why are you doing this?"

Alexander sliced his steak with surgical precision.

"Alexander."

He looked up through the flickering candlelight at her flushed face.

"I was impressed by your performance on the court."

Emma let out a soft, cold laugh.

"So you express that by throwing money around? I'm not for sale."

Alexander set down his cutlery, dabbed his mouth with his napkin, and leaned forward.

His expression shifted from calculating businessman to something more genuine.

"Money is just a tool. What truly impressed me was your character."

He lowered his voice, as if sharing a secret meant only for her.

"The way you fight for your teammates out there... it's beautiful."

The unexpected compliment caught Emma off guard, sending ripples through her defenses.

But she quickly steeled herself.

"That's my job. I don't need validation from strangers."

"Then what would make you consider my interest genuine?"

His question was direct, putting the ball in her court.

Emma met his gaze squarely.

"Sincerity. Not showing off your wealth."

Her words hung in the air between them, sharp and clear.

The next day, a massive cardboard box blocked Emma's dorm room door.

It bore a logo she'd only seen in professional sports magazines.

Her roommate Sarah gasped, eyes widening.

"Holy shit, Emma! This is Hyperice's pro-grade recovery system!"

They opened the box to reveal a sleek, futuristic device that screamed expensive.

Emma's heart sank.

This thing cost thousands—a luxury even professional athletes thought twice about buying.

He clearly hadn't heard a word she said last night.

Or worse, he'd interpreted "sincerity" as "more expensive gifts."

"Try it on! This would be amazing for your knee issues."

Sarah couldn't hide the envy in her voice.

Emma didn't move.

She silently pulled out her phone and searched for the courier's return service.

Over the next few days, the gift offensive didn't just continue—it escalated.

Day two brought custom-fitted German knee braces, each ergonomically designed for professional athletes.

Day three delivered personalized Swiss nutritional supplements, allegedly formulated to the microgram for her specific needs.

Their tiny dorm room was becoming a warehouse of expensive "tokens of affection."

Her roommates' initial shock had morphed into wary observation.

The entire dorm now buzzed with gossip about Emma's mysterious wealthy admirer and his extravagant gifts.

Emma taped up the last box.

She attached a note to the return form, her pen nearly tearing through the paper.

"I don't need your charity."

In the gym, volleyballs smacked against the floor amid shouts and squeaking shoes.

This was Emma's world—her sanctuary.

Sweat dripped from her hair and soaked her tank top, her muscles burning with satisfying exertion.

She pushed herself harder, using physical exhaustion to drown out her frustration.

A teammate sent a high pass toward the backcourt. Emma backpedaled, dropped into position, and prepared for a textbook bump.

Just as the ball approached her arms, she glimpsed a figure in the stands that didn't belong.

Alexander.

He sat in the empty bleachers in his impeccable dark suit, looking like a GQ model who'd wandered onto a sports set.

His intense gaze cut across the court, locked directly on her.

Her heart stuttered.

In that moment of distraction, the ball's trajectory shifted.

*Thwack!*

The volleyball smashed directly into her face.

The world went silent except for a high-pitched ringing in her ears.

She staggered, vision swimming.

Her teammates' concerned shouts seemed distant.

A dark blur rushed down from the stands, trailing expensive cologne.

"Are you okay?"

Alexander's voice held a rare note of concern as he reached for her.

Emma snapped back to awareness and swatted his hand away like it burned.

"Back off."

Her voice was ice cold, furious at this invasion of her space.

Every eye in the gym focused on them. Her teammates exchanged confused glances as the coach approached, frowning.

"Emma, who exactly is this guy?"

Humiliation washed over her.

She felt like a spectacle.

Worse still, the next day Alexander stationed a silver-haired sports medicine specialist outside the gym entrance.

"Miss Wilson, Mr. Sterling is concerned about potential concussion symptoms and asked me to examine you."

The doctor was polite, but Emma's fury reached boiling point.

Later came a call from a "personal nutritionist" he'd hired to create a "recovery meal plan" for her.

She finally snapped and dialed the number she'd seen on the delivery receipts.

"I am not your damn pet project."

She growled the moment he answered, her voice shaking with rage.

Silence hung for several seconds before Alexander's deep voice responded, sounding genuinely confused.

"I was just concerned about your injury."

"I can handle my own injuries. Stop interfering in my life."

"Emma..."

She hung up and threw her phone onto the bed.

As practice ended, a light drizzle began to fall.

Teammates left in small groups, huddled under shared umbrellas.

Emma stepped outside and froze.

A gleaming black Rolls-Royce Phantom sat at the curb, raindrops beading on its mirror-like surface.

The car looked like an alien spacecraft landed among the students' beat-up sedans.

The rear window glided down, revealing Alexander's sharp profile.

Her teammates stopped dead, phones appearing as whispers and camera clicks rippled through the crowd.

Emma's face burned hot, blood rushing to her head.

She clenched her fists, marched to the car, and yanked the door open.

This ridiculous show had to end.

"You're turning me into a campus joke."

She slammed the door, sealing them in leather-scented silence broken only by raindrops on the windows.

Without looking at her, Alexander nodded to the driver to pull away.

"It's raining. I didn't want you getting wet."

"I have an umbrella."

Emma pulled a compact umbrella from her bag, nearly jabbing it in his face.

"I also have legs. I don't need your chauffeur."

Alexander finally turned to her, taking in her flushed face and damp hair.

The air between them thickened.

Without a word, he removed his suit jacket.

Before she could react, he leaned closer.

The scent of rain mingled with his woody cologne enveloped her.

Silently, he used his soft, expensive jacket to dab the sweat from her temple.

His movements were gentle, almost reverent.

They were so close she could see her own startled reflection in his dark eyes.

Those typically predatory eyes had softened, showing only gentle concern.

*Thump-thump-thump.*

Her heartbeat thundered in her ears, deafening in the silent car.

"I'm sorry."

Alexander's voice was soft, almost rough.

"I never meant to cause you problems."

His unexpected apology cracked her armor slightly.

Emma's cheeks burned hotter, her breath catching.

The car pulled up to her dorm. She pushed him away and fumbled for the door handle.

"Why me?"

Before escaping, she heard herself whisper the question.

Alexander watched her flee, his fingers tightening on his jacket.

He made no move to stop her.

Instead, he answered just loudly enough for her to hear.

"Because you make me believe there are still pure things in this world."

Emma vanished into the rain like a startled deer.
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