TWO DAYS.
Not a lifetime, but not a minute, either. Two days had passed since Trent Rexroth broke my motherâs precious Louboutins, and truth be toldâI was still both disorientated and ridiculously aroused at what heâd done.
A delighted shudder seeped into me, bone-deep, from watching the lavish designer footwear snappingâseeing expensive things devalued was one of my favorite pastimesâbut in the same breath, I was glad to put some distance between me and Broody OâAsshole.
I had no one to blame but myself. I meanâIâd asked him specifically not to hire me. Should have known it would only make him want to be petty and do it to spite me.
Work had left its mark on my body, soul, and mind. I had to wake up at half past four in the morning every day to make time for surfing. Then, I usually did five hundred coffee runs for Vicious (cold and rude), Dean (fun and crude), and Jaime (polite and impersonal) before kicking off my shift as the secretariesâ and PAsâ bitch. Picking up clothes from the dry cleaners, holding ties for stock brokers to choose from before meetings, helping maintenance when one of the faucets in the menâs restroom was leakingâmy father hadnât been joking. Iâd been appointed to do the most mundane, mind-numbing tasks.
After our encounter, Rexroth steered clear of me, not even sparing me a glance as he glided the hallways like a fire-breathing demon, darkness gleaming from his light eyes.
On my lunch breaks, when I sat alone outside the building and sucked on a Ramen noodle from the sad pack Iâd bought at the Dollar Tree to save some money, I found myself wondering whether my stunt on his desk had made an impact, or if he thought I was a weirdo unworthy of his attention.
Didnât matter. What did matter was that now, I was one of the many overworked, overstressed assistants to these privileged, rich, self-entitled men, who in two short days had managed to make me want to commit serious crimes.
I hate this place, I hate these people, I hate this lifeâ¦
I was standing in the break room, picking at a fancy fruit basket (those were delivered daily to the fifteenth floor of Fiscal Heights Holdings, accompanied with fresh pastries and cold-pressed organic juices) when the cute girl and Camila walked in.
âShow me what you want to eat for lunch.â Camila handed the girl a tablet with pictures of food items. My old nanny looked up, saw me, and her face split into a grin. âMy sweet Edie, we meet again!â Camila clasped me in a bear hug, and I embraced her back like she was an anchor. In many ways, she was. I firmly believed some people came into the world to make it bearable for others. Camila was one of them.
âIs it wrong to be jealous of a three-year-old because she has you?â I murmured into her white, delicate hair, allowing myself some self-pity. Camila laughed and pulled away, running her fingers over my face, doing inventory, making sure that everything was in place. Physically, it was.
âSheâs four.â
âOh.â I leaned against the counter, watching the pretty girl more closely. This was our second encounter, so I noticed things I hadnât in the first one. Like, she was dressed like a boy, as though trying to hide how lovely she was. It made me like her instantly. She regarded her beauty as a secret, and like any secret, she chose the people to confide in carefully. Which was probably why she was stingy with the smiles, too.
âYouâre not much of a talker,â I observed, scrunching my nose at the kid. Years of being talked about when I was in the room had taught me that kids listen, discern, and hate being treated like theyâre invisible.
âGuess you could say that.â Camila cleared her throat and averted her stare to the fruit basket, grabbing a strawberry and popping it into her mouth. âShe doesnât talk.â She chewed instead of elaborating.
âHuh.â I crouched, offering the girl a pecan. Did kids her age eat pecans? I wasnât sure, but she took it anyway, pocketing it.
âI never asked what her name was,â I said as an afterthought.
âHer name is Luna.â Camilaâs voice cut above my head. She brushed the girlâs soft, brown curls. The kid was enchanting. A mixture of everything beautiful in the human species crammed into one person. Mocha skin on blue eyes. It reminded me of someone, but I couldnât remember who. Maybe a baby Adriana Lima.
âIâm Edie.â I offered Luna my hand. She didnât take it. I wasnât embarrassed or annoyed by her rejection.
âFine.â I withdrew my hand. âI donât need your germs all over me, anyway.â
Luna swallowed down a snort.
âIn fact, donât get anywhere near me, okay? You look like a nose-picker.â
I loved children. Not in the way most girls my age liked them. I liked the hardened and the disorderly. The ones who struggled to communicate their feelings and felt trapped inside their bodies. Maybe because I saw so much of me in them.
I walked over to the other side of the kitchenette, opening the fridge and grabbing a can of Coke. Luna followed me with her eyes, a taunting smirk on her full lips. I arched an eyebrow and cracked the can open.
âI bet they donât allow you to drink pop, huh?â
She shook her head. There was something hesitant about her movements. Like she wasnât entirely sure how to do themâor if she should be doing them at all.
âIf I give you some, would you tell on me?â
âNo, no, no, no,â Camila interrupted, rushing toward us, her palms waving. âHer dad would kill both of us. Lord, no.â
I said nothing, because ânoâ meant âmaybeâ in Camilaâs world. It was a matter of how hard you pushed for something. Luna looked between us, trying to pick on the nuance of our relationship.
âI need to go to the bathroom for a second. Can you watch her?â Camila smoothed her long skirt and blazer.
I nodded. ââCourse.â
âNo soda.â She wiggled a finger from the door.
I nodded again. She knew better than to believe me, but still felt her duty to point the same threatening finger at Luna. âI mean it, Luna. Your dad will not be happy.â
Needless to say, as soon as she left, Lunaâs lips united with her very first can of Diet Coke. I held the can in my hand as I allowed her a small sip, squatting down to catch her every reaction when the fizz hit her taste buds.
âItâs good, isnât it?â
Luna nodded solemnly in agreement. I took a long pull, staring into the little hole.
âYup, so good. Wait till you taste beer,â I snorted.
âNo need, since that will never happen,â a steel voice came from the entrance of the kitchenette and I twisted my head, my jaw slacking in horror.
Shit.
Trent Rexroth walked in, looking fifty shades of pissed off and wearing one of the most sinfully sexy suits Iâd seen on a human being. I wasnât even big on suits, mainly because Jordan liked them and I hated everything he loved by association, but the way the silky black fabric hugged Trentâs ripped, tall frame made me wonder what heâd look like in a wetsuit. Or out of one. Either way, heâd leave Bane and the other guys at Tobago Beach eating his dust. I wasnât sure what he did to maintain this kind of body, but it wasnât sitting on his ass from nine-to-five, writing angry emails and scowling at me and everyone else.
I drew the can away from Lunaâs lips, straightening up.
âIs sheâ¦â My gaze wandered around, looking for a distraction or a sharp object to defend myself with, should he decide to kill me.
âMy daughter,â he cut into my words. âShe is. Where the hell is Camila?â He sounded like the beast from Beauty and the Beast. Low, gruff, and commanding. But I refused to shrink into a corner and let him intimidate me.
âWhat kind of four-year-old has never tasted Coke?â I accused, throwing my arms in the air.
âExcuse me?â
âYou heard me.â I put a hand on Lunaâs shoulder, hoping she wouldnât shake it off. She didnât. âSeriously, what is wrong with you? She shouldnât have it every day, or even every weekâagreed. But not, like, ever? Why? Soda is awesome. Itâs sweet and it fizzles in your mouth and it makes you feel happy. Right, Luna?â I nudged her.
She nodded vehemently, and now it was Trentâs turn to stare at me, bewildered. He took a step forward, his eyes moving from me to his daughter.
Silence. And awkwardness. And what the hell was happening?
âWhat? What!â I lost my cool, looking between them.
âDo it again,â he said, to both of us, I think.
âDo what?â I rubbed the back of my neck, still trying to read the situation.
âMake her nod again. Please.â The last word came out reluctantly, as if admitting defeat. I worried my lower lip, inspecting him like heâd just landed from space wearing a pineapple hat and a Hula skirt.
âOkayâ¦â I scrunched my nose, looking down at Luna.
âHey, dude, want another sip of Coke?â
Luna nodded and reached for the can. Trent laughed. God, he laughed. And not the way heâd laughed at me when he caught me trying to steal from his mother. He laughed like the world was ending and he didnât care. Like this office wasnât a hellhole and we didnât hate each otherâs guts. He laughed with a promise, with a melody, with a mellifluous sound that trickled bone-deep and changed the rhythm of my heartbeat. My knees snapped like thin twigs, and I almost stumbled down in shock.
He was suchâ¦a man.
Not that Vicious, Dean, and Jaime werenât men. They wereâalong with eighty percent of the people populating this floor. But only Trent Rexroth looked tortured and serious enough to cross all the bridges in the world and burn them shore to shore to get his way. Only Trent Rexroth looked liable to ruin your life if he put his mind to it. The fear heâd ingrained in me turned me on. And that worried me. A lot.
âI can do it again,â I mumbled, half-desperate to hear the sound coming out of his mouth again, half-hoping it would make him look at me as more than a potential sacrifice.
He arched a devilish, thick eyebrow. âLetâs see. But no Coke.â
I squatted down to Luna and whispered something into her ear. She lowered her head and tried to stifle her laugh with her tiny fist. Triumphant, I looked up to examine Trent. This time, he wasnât smiling. His eyes were gleaming with something I wasnât entirely sure he could even feel.
For a fleeting moment, something passed between us, but I didnât know what it was. He looked at me with an intensity I could feel on my shoulders. Like I had a superpower he wanted to get his hands on. I was almost relieved when Camila walked into the break room and he snapped his head toward her while I hurried to discard the Coke into the recycle bin.
âMr. Rexroth! Iâm s-so so sorry. I told her not to give Luna any soda. I would never let Luna stay with a complete stranger.â She was stuttering, her eyes moving frantically among the three of us as she cupped one of her cheeks with her hand. âLuna, come here, sweetie. Look, I was Edieâs nanny for eight years. I know her very well. And I was just down the hallway, in the restroomâ¦â
Wow. He must be a shithead for a boss. Although I didnât need Camilaâs reaction to know he was the take-no-prisoners type. Trent waved her off, losing interest in her speech.
âItâs fine. Camila, can you take Luna to the play room on the tenth floor? Iâll be right down.â
âOf course.â Worry still marred every cell in my old nannyâs face as she scooped Luna in her arms and rushed outside of the spacious galley, her steps quickening as she glanced behind her shoulder at her dictator employer. Trent and I were left alone, and even though I felt disgusted with myself, my stomach flipped the way it usually did before a first kiss.
He got into my personal space with one stride. I gulped when I realized he was over ten inches taller than me.
âIs pissing me off your mission in life?â His tone was a flat line on a monitor, dead and grave.
I shrugged, not skipping a beat. âNo, but itâs a nice bonus.â
He smiled. There was a threat in his smirk. His scent did stupid things to my head. Pulling at strings in my body I didnât know could ache and tugging my reason in the wrong direction. I gulped, taking a step back. Trent seemed to disregard my plea for space and ate the distance between us again. My lower back hit the tawny, cool counter. Why was everything gold and corrupted here?
âThereâs a Funny Felix party on Saturday for Lunaâs kid camp. Tobago Beach. I want you to be there.â His request was direct, callous. So was the big hand he put on the counter behind me, hovering over my body. I shook my head.
âIâ¦I canât.â
âI donât think you understand, Edie. Iâm not asking your underage ass on a Chuck E. Cheese date. This is not optional. Itâs part of your job description. Look at your contract. Clause 4.4 requires you to put in some additional hours every monthâweekends included. This is a business transaction. Nothing more.â
âYou donât understand.â I gripped the counter behind me until my knuckles turned white, hyperaware of how his right hand was inches from mine. The idea of touching him was crazy and enticing. Sinful, even. âI donât do Saturdays. My Saturdays are mine, and I spend them out of town, in San Diego. I can work Sundaysâno problem. But not Saturdays.â I choked out every word. Trentâs hardened face didnât flinch. His lips were so close to mine, I wasnât sure whether I was imagining it or if we really were molding into something else. I could feel his torso moving to the tempo of his breath without our bodies touching. The intimacy stripped me bare from the snark I usually carried like a cloak to keep the world at bay.
Please come closer. Please stay away.
âWhy? Whatâs on Saturdays?â His jaw was granite, his eyes titanium. If he didnât look so unattainable, I would caress his stubbled cheek the way Iâd wanted.
I met his stare. âWith all due respect, thatâs none of your concern.â
âIâm hardly concerned. Just trying to figure out how reckless you are as I make plans around you and my daughter. For some reason, she seems to have taken a shine to you.â
I hesitated, grimacing. âWhat makes you think Iâm reckless?â
âTurning down Ivy League schoolsâand bragging about itâpickpocketing in the middle of a busy promenade, pissing off the most powerful men in the state on your first day at work, to name a few. Since weâre hardly even acquaintances, Iâm placing my bet on a lot more random shit coming my way if I dig any deeper.â His words cut me like a knife as he unbuttoned the two first buttons of his shirt.
Iâd noticed some things. Like how it was the second time heâd gotten rid of his tie or loosened his collar when I was around. Like maybe it had meant he felt hotter when we were in the same close space.
I focused on the floor, trying to avert my thoughts from where heâd taken them the minute heâd loosened his collar. âUp until a week ago I worked as a surfing instructor. I mean, yeah, I mug people. But only becauseâ¦â I trailed off, looking for the right words without giving too much away, âlook, I have no choice, okay? Trust me, just because my father is loaded doesnât mean I see a dime of it. Iâm not a kleptomaniac. And I only target certain people. The rich kind. The ones who donât need the money to pay for electricity or food,â I added. Because to me, it made a difference.
âBra-fucking-vo, Robin Hood. Newsflashâfifteen years ago, my mother couldnât have paid her electricity bill if youâd stolen her wallet. Stop making indolent assumptions. Itâs unbecoming.â
âYou should remind yourself of thatâyou just labelled me as reckless,â I pointed out.
âBecause you are. I donât think youâll be a good fit for Luna.â
âI never auditioned for the job, so no harm done.â
The speed with which he moved away from me was startling. Trent scanned me coldly, a sneer on his face. âYouâre coming to the party. Non-negotiable, Van Der Zee.â
âDonât,â I said, grabbing my phone from the counter and angling my body toward the door. âI see what youâre trying to do here. I like Luna, and Iâm willing to be there for herâeven after hours, no problem. But on my own terms. And ideally, without you around, either. Camila is great, but you and I donât get along.â
He opened his mouth to say something when Dean Cole waltzed in, grabbing a plate and loading enough fruit onto it to choke an elephant, his eyes impassive on the colorful basket.
âHey, man.â He stuck a toothpick into a piece of watermelon and shoved it into his mouth, chomping. Trent spun to face him and offered him a wordless frown that screamed fuck off. Dean continued, undeterred. âAs your best friend, I feel like I should give you a fair warning. Hitting on your business partnerâs daughter, who could practically be your own kid, is a bad move. We noticed you were in each otherâs face from across the hall, and we all know hate turns into something else more often than not. So hereâs my two centsâkeep your crotches to yourselves, kids. Right. Fucking. Now.â Dean was still smiling cheerfully as he delivered the message. An onlooker from the other side of the glass would think he was discussing the weather or football. I looked between the two men. Trentâs eyes screamed something Dean was obviously able to read, his lips remaining pursed.
âGotcha, dude. Was just warning you.â Dean lifted one palm up in mock defeat.
I excused myself, sneaking out of the kitchenette and leaving the two men locked in a stare-down. Before I managed to make my escape, Trent grabbed my armâgently, not like my fatherâand whispered into my hair, âWhat did you tell Luna to make her laugh?â
I closed my eyes, leaning toward his neck, holding my breath so as to not inhale him and feed the growing addiction. âI told her that her dad is an uptight jerk.â
I didnât look back to see who won the stare-down, Trent or Dean.
It didnât matter, because I was the one who was losing.
My sanity, my logic, and my mind.
I was on the losing end, and I needed a fast win if I ever wanted to run away with Theo. Which I did. A lot.