âItâs over. My life as I know it is over. R.I.P. to me.â
âIâm sorry, who is this?â
âPheebs!â
She chuckles while I stare at my reflection in the mirror and try not to throw up. My phone is lying on the bathroom counter on speakerphone, mostly because my palms have been sweating since I saw the meeting invite in my calendar for today.
9:00 A.M. â 09:07:32 A.M.: Emma Carson 1-on-1 with Ruslan Oryolov.
âSorry. Couldnât resist. Anyway, rewind, take a deep breath, then tell me whatâs going on in your big girl voice. Unburden yourself. Take all the time you need. Just make it quick because I have a 9 oâclock appointment.â
Iâm bouncing on the balls of my feet now, the same way that Reagan does when she needs to pee really bad. âYeah, so do I. With him.â
âAh. Oh, waitâoh.â
I first called Phoebe last night right after realizing what Iâd done. Her reaction was a dizzying mixture of pride and horror. I believe her exact words were, âSure, itâs mortifying, but Iâm glad you got your rocks off. Knew you had it in you.â
Sheâs a little more reassuring now that things are escalating out of control. âThat doesnât necessarily mean he heard the voicemail, Em. Maybe this is just a standard, no-big-deal, super-boring-business-stuff Thursday morning meeting.â
âItâs scheduled for seven minutes and thirty-two seconds. Precisely.â
âHm.â Thereâs a beat of silence. âDoesnât look good, does it?â
âSeriously? Thatâs all youâve got for me? Iâm gonna lose my job, Phoebe!â
âYou donât know that for sure. Just take a deep breath and go in there, see what he wants. Play it cool, yâknow?â
âAnd what if what he wants is to kick my ass to the curb with a recommendation letter that claims Iâm a dirty whore with mediocre phone sex skills?â
âI mean, thereâs probably a market for that.â I groan as Phoebeâs laughter fades into a serious tone. âListen, boo: whatever happens, youâre a strong, smart, confident woman and youâre gonna land on your feet. And until you do, Iâve got your back.â
Her words mean everything to me, but I know that Phoebe doesnât have much margin for error in her life, either. She struggles just as hard as I do. If she is able to help, it still wouldnât put a dent in all the bills and loans looming over me.
âThanks for the pep talk. Iâve gotta go to my doom now.â
âKeep your pecker up!â
I blink. âHuh?â
âOklahoma talk. It means, like, âbreak a leg,â but for Midwesterners.â
If I werenât worried about losing my job and ending up homeless on the street with three kids, Iâd laugh. Instead, I say one more miserable goodbye, then spend a solid three minutes dry-heaving into one of the empty bathroom stalls.
Once Iâve sufficiently bruised my stomach lining, I slink out of the bathroom and waste the remaining two minutes before the meeting standing outside of Ruslanâs door, watching the clock steal my life away one second at a time.
âYou okay, Emma?â asks Katie Miller, another of the executive assistants on this floor, as she passes by.
âDandy,â I mumble. âJust waiting for the noose.â
âWhat was that?â
âNothing. I like your earrings. Have a good day.â
She raises her brow a smidge. Iâm not usually so dismissive, but I canât concentrate on small talk right now. Not when Iâm T-minus thirty seconds away from the end of my career.
Dear God, I know I donât pray to you often. Or, well, ever. But please help me out today and Iâll definitely consider starting on a more semi-regular basis.
Great. Now, Iâm bargaining with God. New low, Emma. New low.
I take a deep breath and walk into his office. The shades are tight, snuffing out all the light of the Manhattan morning beyond. Itâs like a bear cave in hereâand the grizzly in question is sitting at his desk, scrolling through his phone. He doesnât acknowledge me until Iâm standing in front of his desk.
âSit.â
The moment my rear end is parked, he puts his phone down and looks at me. Just looks at me.
In the eighteen months that Iâve worked for him, heâs never once given me the benefit of his full attention. Even during our morning meetings, heâs either on his phone, flipping through files, or typing away on his laptop. I used to be annoyed about it. Iâm only now realizing I should have been grateful.
Should I say something?
Maybe he wants me to break the silence. Maybe Iâm supposed to give him an explanation, an apology, something. But the more the silence stretches on, the less Iâm capable of breaking it.
I decide once again that those amber eyes of his should be outlawed.
âI heard the voicemail,â he says at last.
I canât place his tone. Amusement? Anger? Disbelief?
âDo you have anything to say, Ms. Carson?â
I launch into the apology I spent most of last night practicing in the mirror. âI canât tell you how sorry I am, Mr. Oryolov. I have no idea what I was thinking. The whole thing was an accident; I didnât realize Iâd dialed you. I was so tired and out of it and⦠I can assure you that it will never happen again. I swear.â
My cheeks are flushed with embarrassment, but I try to keep my voice steady. I canât sound too desperate, although thatâs exactly what I am.
âTell me, Ms. Carson: what would you do in my place?â
âI would give the plucky, hard-working assistant another chance, maybe?â Itâs a long shot, but I figure, what the hell? I just wish Iâd asked it without my voice rising to an Alvin and the Chipmunks pipsqueak at the end.
His mouth twitches with the promise of a smile, but itâs gone as quick as it came. âI know what you sound like when you orgasm, Emma. Is that the soundtrack you want running through all our interactions from now on?â
Flushing the brightest of reds, I shake my head. âIf we could maybe just forget this whole thingââ
âThe way I see it, there are only two options here.â
I hold my breath.
âOne, I fire you.â
There it is. I knew it. Iâm done for. Iâm going to need to call the welfare office and see whatâ
âOr two⦠I give you exactly what you want.â
I almost choke on my own saliva. What little is left in my gaping mouth. âW-what?â
Silently, Ruslan offers me the blue folder lying in front of him. I pick it up with shaky hands and open the cover. It takes me a few long moments to figure out what on earth Iâm looking at.
A⦠contract?
I read through the first page, feeling a strange sensation bubble up in my chest. Then, since Iâm clearly misunderstanding something, I read through the first page again. And again. And again.
Only then do I look up. âIs this a joke?â
He doesnât blink. âI never joke.â
âItâs just that, it seems like, from what I read, umââ
âI will offer you money and security in exchange for live encores of the little performance you sent me last night. In addition to meeting my other needs.â
âAnd by âneeds,â you meanâ¦sex?â
He tilts his chin down and regards me solemnly. âHow explicit would you like me to be, Ms. Carson?â
What.
âSo thisââ I raise the blue folder in my hand. ââis a sugar daddy contract?â
His brow furrows. âIâd prefer to call it a âFriend With Benefitsâ contract.â
âBut weâre not friends.â
He smirks. âFair enough. No, weâre not.â
Thereâs a throbbing in my head that reminds me of the first time I got drunk. Sienna and I had snuck into Dadâs study the eve of my sixteenth birthday and stolen a 1984 Chateau Latour. We passed it back and forth, taking turns sipping from the bottle like it was cheap bagged wine until the whole thing was gone.
For a moment, I think about what Sienna would say if she were here. Would she be outraged or intrigued? Would she slap the smug asshole and storm out?
Or would she grin and say, Double the price and Iâm in.
What would you do, Si?
And then it hits me, a bolt of lightning straight to the chest, almost like sheâs speaking to me herself. I miss her so much, it hurts. But she left little bits of herself behind, in all three of her children. The same kids Iâm working my ass off to protect.
That right there is the answer.
Sienna would have done whatever was best for her children.
So I donât slap him. I donât storm out. I sit there and stare at my arrogant, asshole boss who always gets exactly what he wants.
And what he wants⦠is me.
I meet Ruslanâs steely gaze. âWhat happens if I say no?â
He shrugs as though this is just another job interview for him and he has a thousand other candidates lined up behind me. âIf you say no, Iâll let you go with a generous severance package, a glowing recommendation, and no mention of the phone call.â
Itâs a relief, but it doesnât come close to comforting me.
âBut if you say yesâ¦â His eyes turn a dark, liquid gold. âIt will definitely be worth your while. I have many skills, Ms. Carson, and theyâre not limited to business.â
My cheeks feel like theyâre on fire. Iâm sure he sees it.
He leans against his leather wingback. âItâs entirely up to you.â
I stare at the contract in my lap. Itâs not a small decision by any stretch of the imagination. âCan I have some time to think about this?â
âYou can have today off. I expect your answer by tomorrow.â
Heâs not really giving me a whole lot of time, but I think we both know more time will only confuse me. Maybe itâs better this way.
I start to stand when he says, âOne more thing, Ms. Carson.â
So I freeze, ass hovering over the seat. âYes?â
âThis stays between the two of us.â His expression turns deadly. Iâve seen that look on his face in the boardroom, right before he pounces on some poor fool who was stupid enough to question him. âIf you tell a soul about the contract, the deal is off. No protection, no recommendations, no pensionâand I have every means to utterly destroy your chances of employment in any capacity ever again. Am I making myself clear?â
I gulp hard. âCrystal.â
âGood. Then youâre excused.â
Itâs the normal goodbye routine. He picks up his phone, his gaze drops, and just like that, I go back to being a nobody. No one would guess that a few moments ago, he was propositioning me for sex. For contracted sex.
I have a lot to process.
I grab my stuff and race out of the building, trying to remember the last time I had a day off. It still doesnât feel like a free day; it feels like a weight sitting squarely on my chest. A weight that gets heavier and heavier with every passing minute.
I take the subway over to Central Park and find a bench in a shady corner. I pull out the contract folder and stare at the cover, gathering up the strength to start reading. Then, with a sigh, I dive in.
Twenty minutes later, I have a growing headache and a pro-con list thatâs pulling me at both ends.
Pro: The money is amazing. Iâd be able to actually take care of the kids without worrying so damn much every second of every day.
Con: I would be exchanging sex for money.
Pro: Iâll be able to pay off the loans faster.
Con: Ruslan Oryolov is an influential man with possible mob connections. All rumors, but in my opinion, thereâs no smoke without fire.
Pro: He also happens to be a very, very, very attractive influential man with possible mob connections.
Con: Heâs an asshole.
Pro: Heâs an asshole whoâs probably great in bed.
I close the contract after staring at the Non-Disclosure section of the agreement for what feels like an eternity.
If rumors of Ruslanâs supposed mob ties are to be believed, I would be exposing the kids to danger. It just feels like too big a risk. Which is why, when I put the contract back in my bag and get to my feet, I feel like Iâve made my decision.
Itâs too crazy, too reckless, too insane of a deal for me to agree to. I canât compromise myself that way and I canât let this decision bleed into the kidsâ lives. Isnât it more important that theyâre safe?
Okay. Done. Decision made. Goodbye forever, Ruslan Oryolov.
So why donât I feel right about it?