Caesar kicked the gate like it owed him something.
Same energy I had when I read the team update at 12:41 a.m.
I wasn't even through the stable doors yet, and he was already huffing like I'd personally offended him.
They say he's my horse, but that's not quite true.
He's my shadow. My barometer. My most honest mirror.
And this morning, he was vibrating with the tension I wouldn't name.
By the time I reached him, the fog still curled low over the hills. The sunrise painted the ridge gold, but Caesar's coat gleamed black as oil—restless, twitching, fully awake and entirely unimpressed by my delay.
"You're dramatic," I muttered, leaning against the gate.
He tossed his head and slammed a hoof into the dirt, hard enough to rattle the latch. Message received.
Behind me, Mirsad grunted. "He woke the whole ridge up. Been screaming for you since dawn."
I glanced over my shoulder. "I had a call with Berlin."
Mirsad's face didn't twitch. The man was carved from stone and sarcasm.
"Tell your calls to hold next time. The horse doesn't care. And neither do I."
I smirked. "Good morning to you too."
He only grunted again.
No one had earned Mirsad's respect without blood or bruises—and even then, it was temporary. He respected performance, not pedigree. Which made him the only person alive who could speak to me like that without worrying about unemployment.
I stepped into the stall. Caesar yanked at my scarf like a child throwing a tantrum.
"Don't be petty," I warned, working the bridle over his head.
He huffed in response, then nipped at my glove for good measure.
"Honestly," I muttered, pulling the girth strap tight. "You're worse than my brothers."
He blinked, unbothered. Predictably arrogant. Unforgiving.
It took longer than usual to saddle him—not because he was difficult, but because my head was somewhere else entirely.
Specifically, on the roster update that came through at 12:41 a.m.
Team Assignment Update:
Kenan Husić removed. Ayub Selimović assigned.
I hadn't made the change.
But I knew who had.
Husine Begović didn't believe in warnings. If something crossed a line, it vanished.
That was how he built an empire. Swiftly. Quietly. Without apology.
Kenan had been skating on thin ice for weeks. Personal comments. That lingering gaze he thought I hadn't noticed. A joke in front of a client that left me ice-cold.
But my father had noticed.
He was at the meeting Friday when Kenan leaned too far into my space while handing me the quarterly sheets. I hadn't reacted. I never do. But Babo's eyes had narrowed like a blade being drawn.
Now, before the new week even started, Kenan was reassigned to my father's office. It wasn't a promotion. It was exile.
I pitied him—for about thirty seconds. He'd made his bed.
Now he could present analytics to a man who could end his career before lunch.
Still, I hadn't expected Ayub to replace him.
That caught me off guard.
Ayub had always been around. Just... not in my way.
He moved into our home when I was sixteen and he was barely older.
I remember him sitting at our dinner table that first night—too quiet, too polite, eyes wide with the kind of grief you don't talk about.
My mother sat him beside me like I was supposed to make him feel welcome. I passed him the salad without speaking. He whispered "thank you" like I was doing him a favor.
He stayed for two years.
Long enough to fold into the rhythm of our family.
Long enough for my mother to start calling him her "fifth child."
He moved out at eighteen—first to the university dorms, then to an apartment across the river. But he never stopped showing up.
He still came home every Sunday for dinner.
Still brought flowers for my mother.
Still sat in the front row at my siblings' events in pressed shirts with that quiet, dependable smile.
He's a good man. Truly.
And I love him in the way I love my brothers.
But I've always known he had a crush on me.
It's not something he ever acted on. Of course not. Ayub is too respectful for that. Too careful.
But I saw it.
In the way he lingered near the kitchen when I walked in.
How he looked away a second too late.
How he always said my name like it was something breakable.
It was sweet.
Cute, even.
He's handsome. Tall. Lean. Eyes like dark glass. The kind of jawline girls trip over.
He was cute even as a teenager—shy and sharp-edged.
And he grew into something more. Broader. Quieter. A little sad around the edges.
But not for me.
He never stood a chance.
Not because I didn't care about him—but because Ayub would never survive me.
I'm difficult on my best day. Sharp on my worst. I eat hesitation for breakfast.
And Ayub—for all his intelligence and kindness—is soft where I am steel.
He never pushed back. Never interrupted.
Babo offered him a division last year. He declined.
Said he preferred to work under Imran.
Babo called it humility.
I called it fear.
Running a division meant standing shoulder to shoulder with Imran and me.
We don't share power easily. And Ayub knew that.
So he stayed where it was safe. Comfortable. Quiet.
And I let him.
I didn't want him by my side. Not in that way.
But now—thanks to my father—he was here.
On my team.
Working under me.
I swung into Caesar's saddle and tried to focus.
Mirsad was already standing at the center of the ring, arms folded, frown carved deep.
We were a mess.
The first jump came too early. I didn't shorten Caesar's stride fast enough, and he took it long. His landing was heavy, his back legs scraping dirt like he was still half asleep. I barely corrected in time for the second.
The corner was worse. I overcompensated, pulled too hard, and he tossed his head in protest. His rhythm broke. The third jump came crooked. We clipped the top rail—loud enough to sting.
Mirsad let out a sharp whistle from across the ring, the kind that used to make me flinch when I was fifteen and too proud to admit I didn't know what I was doing.
I circled back, face hot, jaw clenched.
It wasn't Caesar's fault. It was mine. I wasn't grounded. I wasn't here. My body was in the saddle, but my head was still in that damn meeting, rehashing numbers, words, consequences. And Caesar knew it. Felt it.
He always did.
I gave him a pat on the neck. "Sorry, ljubavi."
But I could already feel Mirsad's stare burning through me as I brought him back around.
"You're off," he said flatly.
"I missed you too."
"No," he said. "You're off. He's off. I don't care about your board meetings or sleepless nights. You ride like that in Spain, you'll embarrass the entire country."
I gritted my teeth and nudged Caesar forward.
He resisted. Sloppy on the corners. Clipped the second pole.
"Again," Mirsad snapped.
Caesar and I had been training together for nearly a decade.
We were a unit.
But not today. Not with my head full of team charts and Ayub's name in bold font.
I circled the ring again.
Pushed harder.
By the third time, Caesar cleared the jumps like he was daring me to keep up.
We found it.
The rhythm.
The control.
The grit.
Mirsad didn't smile—but his nod held a flicker of approval.
I slowed Caesar to a walk, patting his neck. His coat was damp, breath steady.
Proud, the way only war horses and arrogant men ever were.
"You're still the only man who can keep up with me," I whispered.
He huffed, smug.
I dismounted, stretching my legs as the breeze picked up through the valley.
My eyes lifted toward the hills beyond the estate—toward Sarajevo waking below, full of traffic and tension and unread emails.
Somewhere down there, Ayub was opening his laptop.
Reading the assignment.
Preparing to step into my division.
Into my world.
Back in the stable, Caesar nuzzled my shoulder like he hadn't spent the last forty minutes actively trying to throw me. Mirsad muttered something about cooling him down, but I waved him off.
"I'll walk him," I said.
He gave me a look. "Walk yourself. He's not the one with the stiff spine and clenched jaw."
I ignored that and led Caesar out the back, following the orchard trail.
The fog was breaking apart in ribbons now, dissolving into the rising sun.
The silence out here was addictive—nothing but the crunch of hooves, the creak of leather, the beat of my heart.
I needed to stay here.
Just a few more minutes.
One more breath before I had to walk back into a world that was quietly rearranging itself while I slept.
The truth was—I didn't like surprises. Not on horseback. Not in the boardroom.
Not at 12:41 a.m. when the man I knew how to handle was replaced by one I didn't.
Ayub wasn't a threat.
But that's what made him dangerous.
Kenan had always been transparent. Easy to read. Easy to ignore.
But Ayub?
Ayub was silence that watched. Stillness that listened.
People like that don't reveal themselves until it's too late.
I didn't want to admit it, but part of me wanted to see how he'd show up today.
Would he stammer? Flinch? Try to smile through it all?
Or would he surprise me?
That was the thing.
He could.
And I hated that.
Because if he did—if he stood tall and proved me wrong—I'd have to rewrite the version of him I've kept folded in the back of my mind since I was sixteen.
The boy with broken eyes and gentle hands.
The one who watched me like I held gravity in my palms.
The one who never challenged me.
The one who never tried to stay.
I stopped walking.
Caesar swung his head around to look at me.
"Do you think he'll make it?" I asked aloud, half to him, half to the wind.
He blinked slowly, as if weighing the odds.
Then snorted like he couldn't be bothered with human delusions.
Fair.
My phone vibrated in my jacket pocket.
I pulled it out and glanced at the screen.
Imran:
You see the update yet?
I didn't respond. I just stared at the message.
Yes. I saw it.
I saw everything.
And now I had a few hours to figure out what I wanted from Ayub Selimović—
before he walked into my office
and tried to hand me something that looked like respect.
Because if he showed up expecting me to soften?
He'd never make it past today.