Poor Maid Had A One Night Stand With Her Billionaire Boss To Pay Her Brother's Medical Fees
The hall was too bright, too polished, too perfect.
Soft music floated in the air like it had been trained to behave.
Crystal glasses clinkedked gently.
Expensive perfume mixed with the smell of grilled meat and wine.
Every table looked like money sat there first before people arrived.
And yet, the real reason everyone came was not the food.
It was Lawrence Admi.
He walked in without rushing, without smiling, without trying to impress anybody, because he never had to.
He was 27, tall and well-built, with a clean, disciplined look that made people straighten up without knowing why.
His face was handsome in a calm, dangerous way.
No loud charm, no playful warmth, just quiet control.
The kind of man who could sit in a room and make it feel like he owned the air.
People rose almost immediately.
Not because someone told them to, because that was what you did when Lawrence entered.
Two years away, they said.
Two years of staying out of sight, out of reach, out of gossip.
Now he was back, and the room wanted to be the first to remind him that it still remembered his name.
A friend with a loud laugh raised his glass.
"Everybody," the man announced.
"Let's welcome our own Lawrence Admy.
He came back today.
Let's toast.
Chairs scraped, glasses lifted.
To Lawrence.
To the man who disappears and returns like he never left.
Lawrence gave a small nod.
Nothing more.
His eyes moved over faces the way a blade moves over fabric.
Clean, quick, and cutting through to the truth underneath.
Another man leaned closer, grinning as if they were still boys.
"How have you been these two years?" he asked loudly, hoping to make everyone laugh.
We heard where you went.
No women around you at all.
Are you not going mad? A ripple of laughter swept the hall.
Someone else joined in.
The kind of person who enjoyed talking too much because it made him feel important.
Lawrence doesn't need women, he said with a mock, serious tone.
He's the most aloof man in the whole city.
The most unattainable.
Tell me.
What kind of woman can even catch his eye? More laughter, more teasing.
Lawrence did not laugh.
He did not defend himself.
He didn't even look offended.
He simply took a sip of his drink as if their words were background noise, like the music...
The hall was too bright, too polished, too perfect.
Soft music floated in the air like it had been trained to behave.
Crystal glasses clinkedked gently.
Expensive perfume mixed with the smell of grilled meat and wine.
Every table looked like money sat there first before people arrived.
And yet, the real reason everyone came was not the food.
It was Lawrence Admi.
He walked in without rushing, without smiling, without trying to impress anybody, because he never had to.
He was 27, tall and well-built, with a clean, disciplined look that made people straighten up without knowing why.
His face was handsome in a calm, dangerous way.
No loud charm, no playful warmth, just quiet control.
The kind of man who could sit in a room and make it feel like he owned the air.
People rose almost immediately.
Not because someone told them to, because that was what you did when Lawrence entered.
Two years away, they said.
Two years of staying out of sight, out of reach, out of gossip.
Now he was back, and the room wanted to be the first to remind him that it still remembered his name.
A friend with a loud laugh raised his glass.
"Everybody," the man announced.
"Let's welcome our own Lawrence Admy.
He came back today.
Let's toast.
Chairs scraped, glasses lifted.
To Lawrence.
To the man who disappears and returns like he never left.
Lawrence gave a small nod.
Nothing more.
His eyes moved over faces the way a blade moves over fabric.
Clean, quick, and cutting through to the truth underneath.
Another man leaned closer, grinning as if they were still boys.
"How have you been these two years?" he asked loudly, hoping to make everyone laugh.
We heard where you went.
No women around you at all.
Are you not going mad? A ripple of laughter swept the hall.
Someone else joined in.
The kind of person who enjoyed talking too much because it made him feel important.
Lawrence doesn't need women, he said with a mock, serious tone.
He's the most aloof man in the whole city.
The most unattainable.
Tell me.
What kind of woman can even catch his eye? More laughter, more teasing.
Lawrence did not laugh.
He did not defend himself.
He didn't even look offended.
He simply took a sip of his drink as if their words were background noise, like the music...
Poor Maid Had A One Night Stand With Her Billionaire Boss To Pay Her Brother's Medical Fees
The hall was too bright, too polished, too perfect.
Soft music floated in the air like it had been trained to behave.
Crystal glasses clinkedked gently.
Expensive perfume mixed with the smell of grilled meat and wine.
Every table looked like money sat there first before people arrived.
And yet, the real reason everyone came was not the food.
It was Lawrence Admi.
He walked in without rushing, without smiling, without trying to impress anybody, because he never had to.
He was 27, tall and well-built, with a clean, disciplined look that made people straighten up without knowing why.
His face was handsome in a calm, dangerous way.
No loud charm, no playful warmth, just quiet control.
The kind of man who could sit in a room and make it feel like he owned the air.
People rose almost immediately.
Not because someone told them to, because that was what you did when Lawrence entered.
Two years away, they said.
Two years of staying out of sight, out of reach, out of gossip.
Now he was back, and the room wanted to be the first to remind him that it still remembered his name.
A friend with a loud laugh raised his glass.
"Everybody," the man announced.
"Let's welcome our own Lawrence Admy.
He came back today.
Let's toast.
Chairs scraped, glasses lifted.
To Lawrence.
To the man who disappears and returns like he never left.
Lawrence gave a small nod.
Nothing more.
His eyes moved over faces the way a blade moves over fabric.
Clean, quick, and cutting through to the truth underneath.
Another man leaned closer, grinning as if they were still boys.
"How have you been these two years?" he asked loudly, hoping to make everyone laugh.
We heard where you went.
No women around you at all.
Are you not going mad? A ripple of laughter swept the hall.
Someone else joined in.
The kind of person who enjoyed talking too much because it made him feel important.
Lawrence doesn't need women, he said with a mock, serious tone.
He's the most aloof man in the whole city.
The most unattainable.
Tell me.
What kind of woman can even catch his eye? More laughter, more teasing.
Lawrence did not laugh.
He did not defend himself.
He didn't even look offended.
He simply took a sip of his drink as if their words were background noise, like the music...
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