Chapter 9: The Secret Behind the Bookshelf
The next morning, Mia returned to the Montgomery mansion with a strange, heavy flutter in her chest.
Walking through the grand double doors felt like coming back to a familiar home that had quietly shifted on its axis while she was gone. She went straight to the utility closet, changed into her uniform, and started wiping down the foyer table.
Alexander found her there five minutes later. He was wearing dark wash jeans and a casual grey henley shirt—a terrifyingly rare sight that almost made Mia ask if he was running a fever.
“Good morning,” he said, offering a hesitant, almost shy smile.
“Good morning, boss,” she replied, heavily stressing the last word as she aggressively polished a bronze statue.
Alexander rubbed the back of his neck, looking unusually nervous. “About our agreement yesterday. I’ve got a massive problem.”
Mia stopped polishing and let out a long, exhausted sigh. “What kind of problem now, Alexander? Did you accidentally buy a small European country?”
“My mother planned another dinner for Saturday,” he confessed, wincing slightly. “With Victoria and her entire family.”
Mia crossed her arms, her dust rag dangling from her hand. “And?”
“Apparently, our ‘reconciliation’ needs to be celebrated publicly,” Alexander explained. “She thinks we broke up and got back together. Which, technically, is completely true.”
Mia threw the rag onto the table. “Alexander, I explicitly told you last night in my mother’s kitchen that I did not want to pretend to be your girlfriend anymore!”
“I know, I know!” he pleaded, holding his hands up in surrender. “But it’s just one more time. Just this Saturday. After that, I will sit her down and tell her the absolute truth. I swear it.”
“And what if she completely freaks out and fires me?” Mia challenged.
“Let her try. I own the company and the house. I should have faced this head-on from the absolute start instead of dragging you into my corporate circus.”
Mia studied him closely. Something fundamental about him had shifted since the night before. There was significantly less arrogance, and a whole lot more vulnerability.
“All right,” she finally grumbled, picking up her rag. “But this is the absolute last time. And absolutely no drama this time.”
“No drama,” he promised, though they both knew that was a lie.
That afternoon, while Mia was organizing the massive mahogany bookshelves in the estate’s library, Alexander appeared in the doorway. He had a boyish, almost secretive grin on his face.
“Want to see something?” he asked.
“That heavily depends,” Mia said, eyeing him suspiciously from the rolling ladder. “Is it cool, or is it billionaire-weird?”
“A little bit of both, honestly.”
He walked over to the far corner of the library, reached behind a leather-bound copy of Moby Dick, and pressed a concealed panel. With a soft, mechanical hiss, the entire bookshelf swung inward.
Mia’s jaw dropped. “You have a secret lair in your house? Are you secretly Batman?”
“It’s not secret,” Alexander laughed, gesturing for her to follow. “Just strictly private.”
Mia climbed down the ladder and followed him down a well-lit spiral staircase. It led to a massive, pristine basement.
The space was a high-tech wonderland. It was filled with sleek workbenches, 3D printers, strange electronic prototypes, and massive glass whiteboards completely covered in complex algebraic formulas.
“What do you actually do down here?” Mia asked, her voice echoing in the cavernous space.
Alexander walked over to a central bench and picked up a small, sleek device that looked somewhat like a modified remote control.
“Inventions, mostly,” he said softly, his eyes lighting up. “Specifically, devices that help make life easier for people with severe physical disabilities.”
Mia walked closer, utterly fascinated. “Like what?”
“This one, for example,” he held up the device. “It’s a specialized controller that can operate an entire smart home just through micro-eye movements. It’s designed for people with complete paralysis.”
Mia took the device from his hands, touching the smooth plastic with absolute reverence. “That’s incredible, Alexander. Does it actually work?”
“Want to try it?”
For the next forty-five minutes, the billionaire CEO sat on a metal stool, animatedly explaining his passion projects to the cleaning lady. He showed her an automated door-opening system for wheelchair users, an app prototype that translated ASL into real-time speech, and a smart cane equipped with LIDAR for the visually impaired.
“Why haven’t you ever talked about this?” Mia asked, genuinely awestruck. “This is world-changing.”
Alexander looked down at his hands, a shadow crossing his face. “Because most people in my circle wouldn’t understand. They just see the ruthless CEO of Montgomery Tech. They don’t see the guy who likes tinkering with wires.”
“Like me with the toaster,” Mia smiled gently.
“Exactly like you with the toaster,” he laughed, looking up. “Except you almost electrocuted yourself into the next century, and I actually wear safety gear.”
They laughed together, the sound bouncing off the concrete walls. Mia felt a massive, undeniable shift in her chest.
“You are completely full of surprises, Alexander Montgomery,” she whispered.
“So are you, Mia Gonzalez,” he replied, his gaze locking onto hers. “Who would have thought a stubborn cleaning lady would make me question absolutely everything in my life?”
Mia’s breath hitched. The air between them suddenly felt electric, heavy with unspoken possibilities. She quickly broke eye contact, stepping back toward the stairs.
“I… I should go back upstairs. The library isn’t going to dust itself.”