I Don’t Have a Husband, Can I Have a Date With You — CEO Begs Single Dad – Part 1

I Don’t Have a Husband, Can I Have a Date With You — CEO Begs Single Dad

Part 1:

Clara Hail had everything except the one thing money couldn’t buy. When the ice queen CEO of Hail Industries found herself trapped in a steel box between floors, gasping for air in designer heels, she never imagined the maintenance man’s voice through the intercom would shatter her perfectly controlled world.

“I don’t have a husband,” she would confess weeks later in a parking garage, her voice trembling. “Can I have a date with you? But before we get there, let me take you back to where it all began. And please comment your city below so I can see how far this story travels. The morning of Tuesday, March 14th, started like every other morning in Clara Hail’s meticulously ordered life.

Her alarm pierced the silence of her penthouse at exactly 5:47 a.m. Not 5:45, not 5:50, but 5:47. Because that gave her precisely 13 minutes to complete her morning routine before her first virtual meeting at 6:0. Clara didn’t believe in wasted time. Time was money, and money was the only language she spoke fluently.

She moved through her apartment like a ghost haunting her own life. Sleek, efficient, untouchable. The space was decorated in shades of white and chrome. Everything sharp angles and cold surfaces. No photographs cluttered the shelves. No warm blankets draped over the furniture. Even her coffee maker was a sterile German engineered machine that produced the same perfect espresso every single morning without variation, without personality, without soul.

Clara was 32 years old and had built Hail Industries from a struggling family business into a multi-billion dollar empire in just 7 years. Forbes called her the ice queen of tech. Business Insider dubbed her the CEO who never smiles. She wore these titles like armor, never letting anyone see that sometimes, in the darkest hours of the night, she wondered if the cold that surrounded her had finally frozen something vital inside her chest.

By 7:15 a.m., Clara was stepping into her private elevator on the ground floor of the Hail Industries Tower, a gleaming monument of glass and steel that dominated the Chicago skyline. Her security detail had already swept the building. Her assistant had already uploaded her schedule to three different devices.

Her driver was already circling the block for her evening departure. Everything moved like clockwork because Clara demanded nothing less than perfection. The elevator doors slid shut with their usual whisper quiet efficiency. Clara pressed the button for the 48th floor where her corner office overlooked Lake Michigan like a throne room surveying a kingdom.

She was already mentally preparing for her 7:30 conference call with the Tokyo office when the elevator jolted violently. The lights flickered once, twice, then died completely. Claire’s hand shot out to grip the railing as the elevator car shuddered and groaned. Metal scraping against metal in a sound that made her teeth ache. Then everything went still.

The emergency lights kicked in, bathing everything in an eerie red glow that made Clara think of blood and sacrifice and all the nightmares she’d locked away in childhood. She pressed the button for the 48th floor again. Nothing. She pressed the button for the lobby. Nothing. She pressed the emergency call button and a dial tone hummed through the speaker, but no voice answered.

Clara Hail, who controlled boardrooms and commanded respect from senators and CEOs twice her age, felt her carefully constructed control begin to crack. The elevator was small, suddenly unbearably small. The walls seemed to press inward, and Clara realized with growing horror that her breathing was coming faster, shallower.

Her chest tightened, her vision narrowed to a pinpoint. Somewhere in the rational part of her brain, she recognized the symptoms of a panic attack. But recognition didn’t make it stop. She was trapped. Trapped in a steel box suspended God knew how many feet above the ground. And nobody knew she was here. And the emergency button wasn’t working.

And she couldn’t breathe. Couldn’t breathe. Couldn’t M. Hail. A voice crackled through the intercom, cutting through her spiraling thoughts like a lifeline. Miss Hail, can you hear me? Clara lunged for the call button, pressing it with shaking fingers. Yes. Yes, I’m here. The elevator. It stopped it. The lights. I know. We’ve got you on the monitors.

My name’s Ryan. I’m with maintenance. Just sit tight. Okay. We’re going to get you out of there. The voice was calm, steady. It had the kind of warmth that Clara hadn’t heard in years, maybe ever. It reminded her of hot chocolate on winter mornings when she was a child before her father died. and left her mother to run the company into the ground before Clara had to grow up too fast and learn that warmth was a luxury she couldn’t afford.

“How long?” Clare asked, hating the way her voice shook. “How long until you can get me out?” “I need to assess the situation first. Can you tell me exactly what happened?” Clara forced herself to focus, to push down the panic that kept trying to claw its way up her throat. The elevator jolted. The lights went out. I heard metal grinding, then it stopped.

Okay, that’s good. Did you feel the elevator drop at all? I I don’t know. Maybe. It happened so fast. That’s all right. I need you to do something for me, Miss Hail. I need you to take a deep breath, count to four, hold it for four, then exhale for four. Can you do that? I don’t need breathing exercises. I need you to get me out of here. I know.

The voice remained patient, unruffled by her sharp tone. “And I will. But first, I need you calm so you can help me figure out what’s going on. The camera system’s down on your elevator, so you’re my eyes in there. Breathe with me. In for four.” Clara wanted to argue, but something about the voice about Ryan made her comply.

She breathed in slowly, counting in her head. “Hold for four.” She held, feeling her heart rate begin to slow infinite decimally. out for four. She exhaled and some of the tightness in her chest eased. Good. Again. They breathed together three more times and Clara felt the edges of her panic begin to dull. She could think again. She could function. Better? Ryan asked.

“Better?” Clare admitted grudgingly. “Excellent. Now I need you to look at the doors. Do you see any light coming through? Any gap at the top or bottom?” Clara crouched down, grateful she’d chosen pants today instead of a skirt. She examined the doors in the dim red emergency lighting. There’s a gap at the top, maybe 3 in.

I can see light from I think it’s the 32nd floor. 32. Copy that. That’s actually good news. You’re aligned with a floor, which means we can work on getting those doors open manually. I’m heading up there now with my tools. I need you to stay away from the doors. Okay. Stand in the back corner. Keep your hands clear. Wait, Clara said, surprised by her own urgency.

Don’t Don’t turn off the intercom. There was a pause. When Ryan spoke again, his voice was gentler. I won’t. I’ll keep talking to you the whole time. It’s going to take me about 4 minutes to get up to 32. Tell me something. What were you doing before you got in the elevator this morning? Clara blinked, thrown by the question. I What? Just talk to me. It’ll help.

What does a CEO do at 7 in the morning? I had a virtual meeting at 6:00 with our Singapore office. Then I reviewed the quarterly projections while drinking coffee. What kind of coffee does that matter? Humor me. We’ve got 4 minutes to fill. Clara found herself almost smiling despite the circumstances. Espresso single origin Ethiopian yoga.

I have a machine that she stopped herself. Why am I telling you about my coffee maker? Because you’re not thinking about being stuck in an elevator anymore, Ryan said. And Clara could hear the smile in his voice. See, you’re doing great. What’s the rest of your Tuesday look like? I have back-to-back meetings until 7:00 p.m.

Conference call with Tokyo, lunch meeting with potential investors, quarterly review with the board, then a charity gala tonight that I’m supposed to. Clara stopped. A new wave of anxiety crashing over her. The gala? It starts at 8:00. I’m giving the keynote speech. If I’m not there, hey, one thing at a time.

Let’s get you out of this elevator first. Then we’ll worry about your schedule. I’m in the stairwell now. 28 29. The gala is not until tonight. We’ve got plenty of time. Clara pressed her back against the elevator wall, focusing on Ryan’s voice as he counted floors. She realized she was listening for more than just his words.

She was listening to the sound of his breathing, slightly labored from climbing stairs, completely human in a way that most of her interactions never were. 32, Ryan announced. I’m at the elevator doors now. I’m going to start working on getting them open. You’ll hear some noise, maybe some grinding. That’s normal.

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