Never Bargain with the Boss: Chapter 10
Never Bargain with the Boss (Never Say Never Book 5)
âHow was your day?â
Itâs mid-week, after dinner, so Iâm supposed to be officially off the clock, but this new routine isnât about a paycheck. Itâs⦠normal. Cameron comes home, where Iâve got dinner waiting, and the three of us sit down to eat together. After that, Grace will disappear upstairs to talk to friends and shower while Cameron and I clean up and then move to the living room to talk about our day. Usually, we end up like we are now, sitting at opposite ends of the couch, our eyes ping-ponging over each other while we talk.
Itâs comfortable and easy, two things I secretly enjoy because they give me a sense of peaceful calm I rarely experience. And yes, Iâm hoarding every single one of these moments like little precious gemstones so I can carry them with me when I go. Whenever Iâve moved on to whateverâs next, Iâll close my eyes and live in these moments again, remembering Cameron and Grace fondly.
âGood. We went to the barn for Graceâs lesson, and youâll be happy to know that Miller and Shana are hooking upâI mean âgoing outââFriday.â I throw up air quotes so he knows that I truly meant the former, not the latter correction.
He replies with a roll of his eyes and quips sarcastically, âMay the lovebirds live happily ever after.â
âOr at least until Saturday morningâs walk of shame,â I reply, tilting my head with a pointed look. Itâs not that I think Miller and Shana canât be a long-term thing, but having met both of them now, I donât think either of them is actually looking for that. âWe also went to Starbucks for Frappuccinos.â I sigh dramatically, and Cameron goes tense. âThat girl,â I say, soothing his worry with a grin, even as I whine.
âWhatâd she do now?â he asks, a smile teasing at his lips. He canât wait to hear what antics his beloved daughter has gotten up to now.
âShe went full debate mode with me, arguing whether today was visit number one or two,â I inform him. âWe finally came to the agreement that the week officially begins on Monday, so she gets two frappes between Monday and Sunday, and visits donât roll over if she doesnât use one, nor can she borrow from the next week.â
Cameron presses his lips together, but this time, rather than being a sign of anger, it seems like heâs trying to hold back a laugh at my high-stakes negotiations with Grace. âSounds like a fair resolution,â he says evenly. But his eyes are sparkling.
âAre you actually laughing at me?â I demand. âYou have no idea how hard I had to work to hammer that out with her.â I push my hair behind my ear, feigning exasperation, but too quickly, I give in and smile. âAnd so weâre on the same page⦠Visit number one of the week is ticked off the permissible activities list. Otherwise, you know that girl will play us against each other.â
âThat, she will,â he agrees. âWhat about you? What did you do today?â
âI went to a farmerâs market and learned all about honey. I even tried six different kinds. My favorite was the wildflower one, but I bought the buckwheat one. I want to put a spoonful in your shakes because itâs supposed to be full of antioxidants. And I thought itâd stand up to your greens powder better.â
The market was so fun. I walked around for nearly two hours, shopping and chatting with people whoâd made all their own products. The beekeeper had been deeply passionate about his hobby and eager to educate a willing student, so I was happy to buy a big jar of the fruits of his beesâ labor.
âYou bought me honey?â He sounds incredulous. Or horrified. Iâm not sure which, but thereâs a hollowness to the question.
I nod. âYeah, is that okay? You donât have to try it if you donât want to.â
Before he can answer, Grace races into the room. âWill you braid my hair now?â
Tension that I donât understand shoots through Cameron and he says, âBraids?â
Confused by his suddenly sharp tone, I explain, âGrace asked if I could braid her hair. That okay?â
He clears his throat and I can sense a ânoâ in the air, but then he nods stiffly. âYes, of course.â
Peering at him curiously, I tell Grace, âCan you get a comb, a spray bottle of water, and two ponytailers?â I count out the three items on my fingers, noticing that I need to redo my nails. The bubblegum pink that matches my hair is chipped on a couple, and I could go for a bit of smoothing out, too.
âGot it!â Grace shouts, bolting upstairs.
âWhatâs wrong?â I whisper as soon as I think Grace is far enough away to not overhear us.
âOh, nothing,â Cameron says, sounding like something is very wrong.
With no time for beating around the bush, I demandingly hiss, âWhatâs. Wrong?â
After a quick check that Grace hasnât magically returned, he whispers back, âHer friend said something about her hair. Iâm hoping this isnât related.â
He barely has a chance to get the words out before Grace comes bounding back into the room, proclaiming, âHere you go!â
She thrusts the gathered supplies into my waiting hands, and after confirming the items, I set it all down on the coffee table. Grace sits on the floor in front of me, crisscrossing her legs, and I start to comb through her hair, parting it down the middle into two sections, my mind racing at the small amount of information Cameron had time to give me.
âDo you get your hair braided a lot?â I ask, keeping my tone light as I pry into what the hellâs going on.
âNo. Dad canât do it very well, so I usually just wash, brush, and go. If itâs wild in the morning, Iâll spray it all down and comb it back into curls.â As she speaks, sheâs twisting the ends of the section Iâm not working with around her finger and staring at it critically.
âSounds like a good routine. Your curls are gorgeous.â
âHannah doesnât think so,â she mutters, telling her hair more so than me. Grace has gone still and quiet, two things the vibrant, energetic girl never is, which tells me how affected she is by whatever happened with her friend.
I lift my gaze to Cameron in alarm. His jaw is hard-set and his eyes meet mine, saying âsee?â
âThatâs the friend you said listens to Stray Kids like you, right?â I ask, my fingers deftly working from Graceâs crown to just behind her ear, leaving a neat, precise plait in their wake.
Sheâs talked about her friends in passing, mostly during run-on sentences in answer to the question âHow was your day?â but I donât feel like I have a good picture of who this girl is and what she means to Grace.
âYeah, she likes Felix, one of the band guys.â
Grace doesnât say more, so after a second, Cameron does it for her. âHannah is Graceâs best friend. Theyâve been nearly conjoined at the hip for the last year, doing sleepovers, going to the trampoline park, having playdates, talking on the phone, filming silly videos, and more. Best friends,â he emphasizes, âbut last week, she suggested that Grace straighten her hair.â
Graceâs shoulders climb up by her ears, but she nods. âShe said I should straighten it so itâs not frizzy.â
I gasp. âShe did not!â
Grace nods, adding, âBut itâs not. I spray it in the morning and make sure it looks good.â Her voice goes higher and louder, showing how much the one comment from a friend affected her.
As I finish the first braid and secure the end, she turns around, her eyes pleading with me to understand that sheâs doing the best she can.
âItâs always looked great when you go to school and still looks good when you get in the car after school too,â I assure her. She visibly relaxes, her shoulders dropping a bit. âThe horse-riding helmetâs not doing you any favors, but I donât think helmet hair looks good on anyone.â I throw her a wink, trying to be sure she hears the full honesty and understands that the compliment is equally as genuine.
âDid you talk to her like we discussed?â Cameron asks her.
âYeah.â
Itâs the right answer, but not the relief youâd expect her to have after a heart-to-heart with a bestie. Her reluctance to tell Cameron more is written all over face, and he bends down, getting closer to her, and softens his voice. âWhat happened?â
Grace nibbles on her lip but finally says, âShe laughed and told me to quit being so sensitive.â She throws her voice with the last bit, so I think thatâs exactly how Hannah said it to her⦠disrespectful and snide.
âThat bitch!â I spit out before I can stop it. I slap my hand over my mouth, just as surprised by my outburst as they are. I meant it to be an internal thought, not an out loud statement, but now that itâs out there, I stand by it. So despite Graceâs dinner-plate sized eyes and Cameronâs frown, I shrug and dig my grave deeper. âWell, itâs true.â
Cameron sighs heavily, rolling his eyes like heâs searching for patience and calm, and Iâm not sure if itâs to deal with me or this Hannah character. Chances are, itâs me. To his daughter, he says, âYou are not being sensitive. Hannah hurt your feelings, and feelings canât be wrong, only actions can be, and what she said was rude.â
He sounds like a self-help book, or one of those psychobabble internet memes, but in a sweet way. He cares about Graceâs feelings, and judging by the rigid set of his spine, heâs working hard to maintain his poise amid his anger.
âI guess,â Grace mutters, not sounding like she believes that any more than Cameron does.
I have extensive experience with adolescent girls and their savagery is downright terrifying sometimes. I donât want that to be the case for Grace, who is sweet despite her occasionally absent filter. But friendships are nuanced in ways that are difficult to explain, and even more difficult to navigate, especially at Graceâs formative age. How these complicated relationships are dealt with can make or break a girlâs confidence, so I need to step carefully and guide delicately. However, that doesnât mean avoiding the obvious. Sometimes, facing it head-on is the best course of action.
âThe first comment was rude. The second one was bitchy. Are you sure sheâs not a mean girl?â I ask bluntly.
Graceâs head falls forward, and though I canât see her face, she seems to be laser-focused on picking her cuticles. âSheâs my friend,â she virtually whispers.
I give Cameron a look, because my heart is breaking into pieces for his little girl. His eyes reflect the same pain. I lift a brow, silently questioning whether heâs okay with me addressing this. Iâve already overstepped once, and this is something heâs already handled, but itâs not done. Not with Grace still hurting.
He looks at me for a long moment, the uncertainty plain as day, but with a slight warning, he dips his chin, giving his permission. I think itâs mostly because heâs so desperate to help Grace that heâd do anything, even let me and my big mouth loose in the desperate hope that itâll be for the greater good.
âBoth can be true. Hannah can be mean and be your friend, if thatâs what you want,â I say gently. âBut the company you keep tends to rub off on you, so you should choose wisely.â
Cameron inhales sharply at my harsh statement even though I tried to deliver it as kindly as possible, his piercingly blue eyes virtually yelling at me. Grace sniffles, so I lean in, hugging her shoulders.
âItâs okay. Friendships are hard sometimes, but youâll figure things out. Just be true to you.â Itâs not the best pep talk Iâve ever given, but sometimes the truth doesnât come with rah-rahs and pom-poms. It comes with hard lessons that hurt, then scab over before leaving a scar of the lesson learned. âIâll braid your hair anytime you want me to, though,â I vow, knowing itâs a small consolation. âIn fact, Iâll even teach your dad how to do it so he can help you too in case Iâm not here on a day you want it done.â I catch Cameronâs eye, daring him to disagree.
âThatâs not necessaryâ ââ
âSit over here so you can see.â I pointedly glance at the couch beside me, telling him exactly where I want him.
His reaction to being not only interrupted, but told what to do, is obvious and only adds to his already tense state. The tic in his cheek returns, his eyes go cold, and his lips are nearly white with how hard heâs pressing them together.
Heâs not a man who follows orders. Heâs the type who gives them, knowing theyâll be obeyed. That heâll be obeyedâby Grace, by people at work, and usually, by his employees at home. Like me. And I will obey him in most things. But this is for Grace. She needs this distraction while what Iâve said ruminates in her mind, tossing and turning.
Like I told Cameron when he was dangerously close to commenting on that skirt, words have power. And the ones I just said are no different. But theyâre not bombs that blow up immediately. Theyâre more like a slow leak, hopefully changing the topography of Graceâs thoughts as they sink in.
âPlease,â I mouth silently, begging not for me or him, but for Grace.
He rises and stalks toward me, eyes flashing like warning lights. When he lowers himself to the couch beside me, I swear he measures the distance between our thighs with a glance like he canât bear to be near me. But this is not about whatever tension was building between us over the weekend. This? Itâs all about the little girl in front of us whoâs going through her first hard lesson of hurting.
âWatch and learn,â I tell Cameron, purposefully lightening my tone to ease the pall hanging over the room.
I spray the other section of Graceâs hair with the spray bottle and make quick work of French braiding from her temple, over her head, to the nape of her neck, my bracelets jingling in the otherwise silent room. âDonât worry about that part. Just start with two low ponies here and then braid regularly.â I point at Graceâs neck, where the braid switches from a French to a regular one. âYou have three sectionsâleft, center, and right. See?â
He nods jerkily, staring vacantly at Graceâs hair. Actually, Iâm pretty sure heâs mostly staring at my bracelets. I think he hates them. Heâs always frowning at them, especially in the morning. Iâve taken to switching up my bracelet stacks to see if thereâs one in particular that bugs him or just their existence in general. It seems to be the latter.
I demonstrate for him, crossing an outer section over the middle and alternating sides, and he watches. Or I think he does. âKeep it tight each crossover and take your time. You want to try?â I freeze, holding my hands in place so that I can replace my fingers with his to give him an opportunity to practice, but he jerks back.
âThatâs okay. I can see what youâre doing. Thank you.â If you looked up curt in the dictionary, thereâd be a picture of Cameron Harrington frowning at you from the bookâs thin pages. He even gets up, putting several feet of space between us as he goes over to pick up his phone from the table. Except it didnât make a noise and the screenâs been dark. Itâs an excuse to get away.
But from me or the braiding? Does he have some sort of braid phobia or something? Maybe a previous pony attack that made braids revolting?
âOooh-kay,â I drawl. I finish the braid, tie it off, and then tap Graceâs shoulder. When she looks back at me, I tell her earnestly, âAll done. Your hair is beautifulâcurled, in braids, or in any other style you want to wear it. Donât let anyone tell you otherwise, even if theyâre a friend, okay?â
Her teeth dent into her bottom lip where sheâs chewing uncertainly, but she hears me. I just hope she hears me.
When she nods, I smile encouragingly and say, âGo check them out.â
Petting her braids, she runs out of the room, escaping the lecture Iâm sure she feels like she got from both Cameron and me, but she calls back over her shoulder, âThanks, Riley!â
We stare at the door where she disappeared, but like weâre on the same scheduleâha! Me, on a scheduleâour eyes simultaneously find each other.
Quiet as a mouse, I whisper, âIâve got a few things Iâd like to say to Hannah. All super nice, I swear it. Sweet as can be.â To make sure he knows Iâm being sarcastic as hell, I feign a few shadow boxing moves and snarl my lip in a very Elvis-like way.
He huffs, not exactly laughing at my âjokeâ but not telling me Iâm overreacting, either. âMe too. I donât know where thatâs coming from. Theyâve been such good friends, so hopefully, itâs just a slip of the tongue.â
âYeah, hope so,â I say, not agreeing but not wanting to push it.
Itâs not that Iâm assuming the worst of a child Iâve never met. But experience tells me that her comment was a calculated attack on one of Graceâs best features. It reeks of jealousy, but Iâll hold that opinion for now until I get a bit more information, which Iâll definitely be pumping Grace for during our after-school chats from now on.
âThank you for trying to teach me how to braid, but I will never be able to do whatever you just did. Iâve tried, even watched YouTube videos, but I get tangled in knots every time.â He moves his fingers around a little, bumping them into one another to demonstrate how awful he is at braiding, and I canât help but laugh. He lowers his voice like heâs confessing a crime. âOne time, I got it so twisted at the bottom that we had to cut the knot out. I think it traumatized me more than Grace, but I donât want to do that again. Ever.â
Iâm not surprised he canât braid, but I am surprised he admitted thereâs something heâs not good at. As a rule, men like Cameron donât go around highlighting their weaknesses. But heâs exposing one to me without hesitation.
âAlright, Iâll make it a mission to teach Grace, then, so she can do it on her own after Iâm gone.â
It slips out, the reminder that this is a temporary gig, and it sits heavily in the air between us.
âIâm not interviewing other nannies,â Cameron blurts out, and I get the sense he didnât mean to tell me that. Like heâs got words flying off his tongue too, which is an interesting development for the âthink first, speak later, or maybe neverâ man.
âWell, Iâm not looking for other jobs. Or possible vacations,â I reply, because a share deserves a share.
A smile slowly steals across Cameronâs lips, and itâs downright dazzling. I think the one on my face matches it.
âWant some tea? Ooh, with the new honey?â I ask, stepping past him to go to the kitchen. And when I glance back for his answer, I find him openly staring at my ass.
Before he catches me catching him, I whip my head around. The grin on my face now is entirely different. And much more daring.
Because I just realized that Cameron Harrington isnât immune to my charms. Not the literal ones on my braceletsâstill pretty sure he hates thoseânor my physical ones. And maybe not my personality ones either since heâs not looking to throw me out the front door for getting overly involved with Grace.
At the cabinet, I stretch up on my tippy toes to grab my favorite mugs from the second shelf and unexpectedly feel him come up behind me. âHere, let me,â he says, his long arm reaching over my shoulder.
I drop to my feet, my back grazing against the hard planes of his chest and my ass skimming over the bulge in his slacks. Heâs not erect, but thereâs no denying that heâs large, even in a soft state.
A familiar wave of heat rushes through me as my core clenches, reminding me that itâs been a long time. A very long time.
He sets the mugs on the counter, and then his hands find the edge of the white stone, gripping it tightly as Iâm surrounded by the cage of his arms. My breath catches as I freeze in place, and I swear I hear him inhale deeply. Like heâs sniffing me.
Slowly, I turn in the circle heâs created around me to find that his pupils are dilated, but his expression is hard and unreadable as he scowls at me.
He looks⦠angry.
No, thatâs not it. The intensity is the same, but the heat in his eyes is different and the scowl doesnât seem directed at me, even though his gaze drifts from my eyes over my cheeks to my mouth before returning to my eyes.
Is he going to pin me to the counter and take my mouth? Or pick me up and fuck me against the counter, right here in the kitchen?
Do I want him to do either of those things? Both?
Not wanting to examine the answers to my own questions, I stammer, âThanks. For the mugs.â
The moment stretches, neither of us moving. Weâre so close that a kiss seems inevitable, except heâs a few inches taller than me, so one of us will have to adjust for that. The only problem is⦠it wonât be him. Heâs got an ironfisted grip on his restraint and wonât release it for anything, not even his own desires. And it wonât be me. Heâs everything I secretly desireâstable and reliableâbut I wonât cross that line with my boss, not even for him. In a twisted Schrodingerâs cat way, if he did respond to my advances, itâd ruin the very thing I do like about himâhis predictability.
âI think Iâll do whiskey tonight instead of tea,â he says, stepping away sharply. âYou want one?â
I feel floaty, like his gravitational pull was the only thing holding me in place, and now that heâs gone, I could simply drift away into the ether.
But as his words process, I laugh internally. Could he be hoping for a bit of whiskey dick? With what I just felt against my ass, I donât think heâs gonna be that lucky.
But given the look in his eyes, neither am I. âSure.â