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The CEO Who Knew My Thoughts

Chapter 3 

Word Count: 353    |    Released on: 19/06/2025

r. I was there, not as a guest, but as Damien's shadow, carrying

fairly good

lower back to guide me. "The lighting in here is sur

He was definitel

rd Thorne, Damien's estranged uncle and CEO of a rival company,

the keynote, unveiling a ne

main screen beh

ross it. A denial-of-service attack, c

ed through

an open port in the temporary network setup for the p

s laptop nearby, my fingers flying across the keyboar

gain, then Damien's pr

g took less th

stration, it seems, of vulnerabilities in outdated systems. Which

ng it was a delibera

ien, "Thorne's IP address was flagge

ne across the crowded room. He gav

with a glass of champagne.

"Good instincts. You seem flus

pagne. He just watched me,

was something else, so

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The CEO Who Knew My Thoughts
The CEO Who Knew My Thoughts
“My family's tech company, ChenTech, was bleeding out, and Dad, ever the optimist, clung to an email from Stryker Innovations: an invitation to their "Next Generation Leaders Program." I was supposed to be our savior, a burnt-out junior software developer thrown into the corporate lion's den. I hated it, but Dad's desperate hope was a heavy chain around my neck. The orientation was chillingly efficient. Damien Stryker, the CEO, radiated an unnerving stillness. He immediately dismissed anyone who' d used clichéd motivational posters. My blood ran cold, but my minimalist presentation was safe. Then, a sharp, sarcastic thought cut through my anxiety: What a certifiable lunatic. His gaze snapped up, piercing the room, locking onto me. He knew. Instead of being dismissed, I was "promoted." Mr. Alistair Finch, Stryker' s chief of staff, informed me I was to be Damien's personal project assistant. My days became a bizarre loop of meticulously crafting his Colombian coffee (192 degrees, counter-clockwise stir) and organizing impossibly misfiled archives. Every mental groan, every cynical observation I made, he' d subtly echo or correct with a smirk I could almost feel. It felt less like a job, more like a cruel psychological experiment. How could he know? The mind-reading was infuriating, humiliating. This man, who saw right through my carefully constructed facade, seemed to deliberately play with my thoughts, making me feel like a trapped rat. Was he just an eccentric genius, or something far more sinister? Was I truly losing my mind? But then I started to notice: the companies he acquired often improved, employees thrived. The corporate wolf wasn't quite what he seemed. When his own stepmother, Eleanor, tried to weaponize me for corporate espionage, her veiled threats echoing his mind games, I realized the real danger wasn' t Damien. It was time to stop being a victim in this psychological maze and start fighting back.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10