One Bossy Dare: Chapter 2
One Bossy Dare: An Enemies to Lovers Romance
What the ever-living fuck just happened?
I survey the room, wondering if Miss Insanity will take the notion to come back to get the last word. My team stands around in a haze, trying to hide their grins and smart-assed whispers.
Destiny stares at me like the adorable pain in the ass she is, still perched in her chair, clasping her phone with both hands. When our eyes meet, she doesnât even try to stop laughing.
âHoly crap, Dad. You got told.â
âWere you livestreaming?â I snap, hoping like hell Iâm not about to be internet famous.
âUnfortunately, no.â
âUnfortunately,â I echo, raising my brows.
My daughter gives me a sheepish smile and then returns to her screen gazing.
âMr. Lancasterâ¦Iâm majorly sorry about that.â
I turn, glancing over the counter.
The barista with a beard thicker than the hipster frames sliding down his nose has his hands raised in surrender. I think one of them might be trembling.
âIâm sorry, again. She gets a tad overprotective. Eliza has coffee in her blood, man. Itâs easy to forget sheâs just another customer. If youâre worried, I donât think sheâll make her complaints public or anything. Sheâs not a big social media type. Sheâs justââ
âA total badass!â I look over to find my daughter standing with her hands on her hips. Destiny laughs shamelessly. âSheâs a honey badger. You remember that old meme? She sank her teeth in and didnât let go. Honey badger donât care!â
âIs there a point to this besides your own amusement?â I ask with a snort.
Shit. Only fifteen years old and Iâd swear she changed from a sweet little girl into this sassy creature I barely recognize overnight.
âYeah! Dad, there must be a hundred different ways you can walk into a store, sample drinks like a sane person, and give some honest criticism without acting like a giant raging diââ
âWatch your mouth, young lady. What do you know about raging dicks, anyhow?â
She bites her lips. âUmmânothing. Just that youâre one.â
Behind me, one of the marketing interns snickers. He shuts up the second my gaze lands on him before I shift it to my daughter.
âConsequence, Dess. Pick one.â
For a second, she looks startled before she glares at me. âLighten up. Itâs just a joke. Iâm fifteen.â
âWhatâs your consequence, Dess? Should I decide?â I say gently, approaching her.
She looks at the phone sheâs holding and back at me with a heavy sigh. âGuess Iâll be staying home tonight and readingâ¦â
âGood call, baby girl.â
Honestly, itâs not much punishment. The girl lives, eats, and breathes books, but a night in will keep her out of any other trouble.
She scowls at me and returns to her seat.
Giving my tie a quick pull, I turn back to face the baristaâWayne, I think. âYour friend had a point, even if she delivered her feedback with the grace of a wolverine.â
âHoney badger,â Destiny coughs from the corner.
I ignore her.
âItâs my fault, Mr. Lancaster. Iâll be sure to lock up next time before any confidential businessâassuming you donât fire me today,â he adds nervously.
I hold in a laugh.
âRelax. Iâm not firing anyone. Itâs no oneâs fault but hers that sheâs a walking hand grenade. More importantly, like I said, she had a point.â
âShe did?â He blinks at me.
I nod. âOur brand is reliable, unfussy fuel for every professional on the go. Itâs been like that for four generations of Lancasters, even as the brand name changed. But with the way the market keeps evolving, that wonât cut it in another ten years. We need something fresh and exciting. And before anyone suggests it, no, weâre not branching into sugar-lick fruit drinks and tea lattes like half a dozen other major chains that will remain nameless.â
âHey, is this the Badger Ladyâs brew?â Destiny calls from behind me. When I glance at her, sheâs holding up a mason jar of dark mystery liquid.
The barista nods.
I double-check his name tag. Wayne it is.
My eyes fall on Dess as she pulls the lid off the glass jar and sniffs.
âWhat are you doing?â I call.
Only, by the time I get the words out, sheâs lifting it and pressing it to her lips.
Shit. Surely sheâs not going toâ
The way her mouth opens tells me she is.
âDestiny, donât youââ
Too late.
Sheâs damn near chugging the stuff before I can say another word.
She rocks back on her heels, coughing and wiping her mouth with the back of her hand.
My heart leaps up my throat.
Shit, shit.
She looks like sheâs about to fall over. Every parentâs nightmare involving their kid and strange substances whips through my head.
Fuck.
What if it was motor oil?
Some sort of aged cognac?
A tobacco spit jar?
Why in Godâs name does my daughter have to sample a strange jar left behind by a caustic stranger who gnawed my ear off? Who does that?
Apparently, the kind of kid I raise.
âAre you okay?â I move to Destiny in several huge strides. âDess?â
I already have my hand on my phone, ready to dial 9-1-1.
When she looks up, sheâs grinning. âDad, this is crazy. Taste it. Itâs like a mule kick to the mouth.â
Is that supposed to be inviting?
I frown.
âI mean, a cup of this stuff would probably keep me up the entire week of finals.â She cocks her head. âI wonder if she has more⦠I want it.â
My eyes narrow. She sounds like a junkie looking for her next fix ofâwhat the hell was in that jar? Liquid cocaine?
âDestiny Lancaster. Didnât we watch Snow White enough times when you were little for you to know not to eat or drink anything left behind by strange people? For all you know, she couldâve been a witch.â Psycho chick certainly had the witchy temperament.
Her drink is pungent, though. I can smell it from here.
Destiny swirls the liquid like sheâs hypnotized.
âHow do you feel? Should I take you to urgent care?â I ask.
âNo, no. Iâm fine, Dad. Really.â
âGive me your phone,â I say, already reaching out.
âWhat? Why? Thatâs not fair!â Her voice becomes shrill and whiny on the last word.
Someone has to put the fear of God into herâor at least a few hours without texting and Snapchatâbut first I pick up the unholy grail and take a swig.
My employees stare at me like Iâve just flipped my lid.
Hell, maybe I have.
Itâs stronger than a triple ristretto shot and nearly causes a coughing fit. I choke it down, slowly realizing itâs some sort of hell-coffee.
Dammit, thatâs intense. And I spent five years of my life on the black sludge the US Navy calls coffee.
Once my tongue recovers from the initial shock, Iâm plunged into this unexpected universe of flavors.
Itâs smoky. Powerful. Toasted. Nutty.
Fucking good.
âTastes like a campfire,â I say slowly.
âA little. Itâs something, all right,â Destiny admits. It might be the first time weâve agreed on anything for a month.
Behind me, Wayne laughs.
âProbably her latest brew. Uh, weâve offered Eliza a job here several times. Aside from a brief stint last year where she worked a few part-time shifts, she wonât stay on. She spends most of her time experimenting with home-brewed coffee and pastries. Sheâs special that way. Iâm not sure what that one is. She lets me sample them a lot, but I didnât have time today.â
âWhat does she do?â I ask, hating that this strange woman has a death grip on my attention, even with her absence.
âI donât know, actually. Sheâs always said long shifts would cut into her brewing time.â
I take another stiff drink of black heaven.
Fuck me, this is it.
This is so much like the newness Iâve been looking for.
It slaps me across the face.
I need to know what this is right now.
I need to study it, refine it, and if Iâm lucky, package it in a Wired Cup logo. Every shop in our five-state region will want to serve this.
Weâve found Gen Zâs drink. A bold alternative to the sugar licks masquerading as energy drinks for college kids everywhere.
My almost college-aged brat said she only needs one cup to make it through finals weekâand I donât think she was exaggerating much if this stuff is as caffeinated as it tastes.
I look at my team, wondering why I pay these people to stand around and gawk at me.
âGet moving, people. Katelyn, take Destiny to the car, please.â
âWhat? Youâre throwing me out just when its getting interesting?â Dess protests. âDad, you wouldnât even know the mule kick drink existed without me! But sure, send me away like a five-year-old while you hash out how to sell this stuff for a bajillion dollars.â
I close my eyes and count to ten, tapping a hand lightly against my thigh.
âSomeday, my dear, I hope you have twins and theyâre both just like you at this age.â
âCome on, Dessy. Letâs go find you a new phone case online to replace the cracked one,â Katelyn Storm tells her. Nice save from my ever-reliable executive assistant. âIâve got your dadâs credit card.â
âWellâ¦okay!â Just like that, Destiny happily skips out the door.
Unlike me, Katelyn can speak her language.
Iâm aware I have my hands full, but sometimes I think thatâs a flimsy excuse. The reality is I have no idea how to handle a teenage girl.
I look at Wayne. âMy apologies for that sceneâand the other one this morning.â
He shrugs. âHey, kids come in here every day. Itâs nothing. They usually pour the cinnamon and sugar out on the tables for me to clean up whenever theyâre not hogging tables and taking selfies. This was entertaining.â
I appreciate his bluntness. At least it was entertaining for someone.
âIâd like to give you a bonus, Wayne,â I tell him.
âBonusâfor what, sir?â He stiffens, fully at attention.
âConsider it a referral fee for bringing this insane, potentially coffee-smart lady to my attention. I just need you to find her and have a conversation thatâs a tad more civilized than my shouting match. Can you help with that?â
Wayne laughs. âIf I tell her you offered me a bonus, sheâll bite. But I ainât sure sheâll be happy about it.â
âMake it happen.â With a satisfied nod, I follow my entourage out the door.
In the back of the limo, Destiny taps on her phone, furiously moving both thumbs back and forth like sheâs playing an old Gameboy.
I almost hate that I gave it back to her, softie that I am.
âYouâd better not be posting anything involving that monster brew. Thatâs highly privileged corporate information now.â
She looks up and rolls her eyes. Theyâre a blue shade slightly lighter than mine.
âDad, secret coffee isnât nearly cool enough for my people. And after wasting all this time job shadowing you for this stupid essay, Iâve learned a few things.â
âYeah?â Iâm almost afraid to ask. âEnlighten me.â
âYou have no PR skills, for one. I really hope youâre leaving that to someone else in marketing or thereâs not going to be a company for me to inheritââ
I turn my head so she doesnât see me laugh.
âAlso, you should probably try brewing coffee for snotty rich guys before you freak out on baristas. That guy with the beard was almost paleââ
âAre you sure? Last I checked, youâre a snotty rich guyâs daughter,â I throw back.
More eye-rolling. An impudent huff.
She glances out the window, trying so hard not to look like sheâs rattled by her old man getting under her skin.
Everyone should have a teenager in their lives.
âI try pretty hard not to act like it, you know,â she finally says.
I stare. Iâm not sure what I think about that.
âAnd Dad, I wasnât doneâunless you find Badger Lady and somehow trick her into giving you her recipe, there are no patents or whatever for any monster coffee. Iâm not stupid.â
Isnât that the problem sometimes?
I hide a smile behind my hand as I scratch at my trimmed scruff.
Itâs not easy handling a smart fifteen-year-old with a whip for a tongue.
Something about the way the sun filters in through the window catches her profile, the light flitting around her like glitter. My smile disappears.
Just an illusion.
But fuck, for a second it could be Aster sitting there, staring back at me. Sheâs only missing her motherâs jade-green eyes.
When my late wife died, Destiny looked like a tall American Girl doll. Today, she looks too much like a ghost.
A walking stack of unresolved questions.
I stare at the mason jar still in my hand, watching the dark liquid swirl. Even when the sunlight hits it, this stuff is pitch-black.
Yeah, if Iâd had my head in the game, Iâd already have an interview set up with that headstrong, fearless face behind the witchâs brew.
I wouldnât have taken her shit if Iâd had my wits.
Weâll blame it on the ample figure I hate that I noticed.
The curves for days.
The prettiest amber-brown eyes sparking with anger like melting caramel.
I certainly wouldnât be waiting around for some bearded gnome at one of my shops to hook me up with an interview.
Twenty minutes later, Tom, my driver, pulls up to Wired Cup Headquarters and opens the back door. Destiny climbs out first and rushes off before I can move.
He helps my executive assistant out of the car, and I follow.
Katelyn Storm glances at the mason jar Iâm holding. âWant me to take that off your hands? I can drop it off in research now so they can analyze it.â
âTechnically, my young hothead is right. This isnât technically corporate propertyânot yetâeven if it was negligently left behind by its owner in her hit-and-run raid on my pride. I wonât open a legal can of worms over some coffee. Letâs track down that girl. Weâll have her friend at the store bridge the communication gap.â
She stares at me blankly. âYouâre serious, Mr. Lancaster? I thought you took care of making the connection? Isnât that why you sent me outside with Destiny?â
I wish. I was too damn riled up by that pixie and her mouth to handle it properly.
If thereâs one thing I despise, itâs turning into a mess in front of my daughter.
How the hell did I let some twenty-something brunette chick get to me, anyhow?
âThe barista said heâd put us in touch,â I tell her. âWhy complicate anything?â
Kate grins at me. Sheâs about ten years my senior, but sheâs been with this company and my family for so long, she knows me better than I know myself at times.
âMiss Opinion really left an impression on you, huh?â
Iâm not taking her bait.
I toss her an ice-cold stare.
She clears her throat. âSo, if I manage to track down your new frenemy, whatâs the chance sheâs worth the trouble?â
What the hell does she mean?
âIâm not passing up this coffee. If that little fire-breather wants to sell me something I can patent or hash out a new product in our lab, sheâs worth a few smartass remarks.â I hold the jar up and shake the remaining liquid inside.
âYeah? And what if she brings that attitude into the office?â
I frown. âIt canât be worse than anything Iâve dealt with before. Feisty is practically the only kind of young woman I deal with.â
She gives me a knowing smile. âBut this isnât a teenage girl. Sheâs a grown woman. You wonât just be able to yank her iPhone away if she mouths off.â
âYeah? Watch me.â I enjoy the startled look she flings back. Let her wonder whether or not Iâm joking. âSpeaking of teenagers, I hope you can keep Destiny out of trouble this afternoon?â
âTrouble? Sheâs only a rebel punk for you.â Katelyn laughs. âIsnât she still a four point oh brainiac? Youâve done a fine job with her, all things considered. I was always shocked you didnât crack and bring in more nannies to help.â
âMostly because no nanny could ever handle her,â I lie, hating the real reason. âDonât think I wasnât tempted.â
My assistant holds up a hand and giggles softly.
âSheâs one smart nut off the tree,â I admit. âSometimes, sheâs almost too smartâand constantly glued to a device that invites trouble.â I shake my head, raking an annoyed hand through my hair. âI wonât gripe about kids and their phones. Itâs pointless. Still, I wonder. What hell would I have raised if Iâd had one at her age?â
âThank God weâll never find out.â She gives me a reassuring look. âDonât worry. Iâll keep her in line like always.â
Itâs her mom tone that sets me at ease. The same tone Iâve heard her use with her own kids for years.
I chuckle to myself. Destinyâs in for it now.
Katelyn Storm lives up to her name. When she flips into mom mode, nobody gets by with anything.
Somehow, I think the jokeâs on me, though.
Destiny was raised by a sailor, and I know Iâm the reason sheâs got a mouth like one. With my career, my stress, and my flaws, the harshness bleeds out.
I can hardly blame my daughter sometimes for hurling my own caustic words back at meâif only she didnât do it in a voice that sounds more like my dead wifeâs with every passing month.
But if wishes came true, I wouldnât feel that hard knot in my gut whenever Asterâs face flashes in my mind.
I know I should just count my blessings and shut the hell up.
Sheâs a great kidâsolid grades, harmless friends, no police visits yet. Iâve only got a few more years with her before sheâs off to college.
Dess doesnât know where sheâs going to school yet, but I doubt itâll be anywhere near here. And honestly, Iâll endorse that decision with minimal grumbling.
My baby girl needs distance to work out her lifeâas long as Iâm still a phone call away to bail her out for the times any missteps trip her up.
Hell, maybe distance is what I need, too.
That girl is the glue thatâs held my world together for fifteen goddamned years.
Sheâs the reason I still wake up and stomp into this office.
Once sheâs gone, Iâll be staring down a chasm.
If Iâm being honest, I need this new spin on old drinks for more than the next quarterâs profits.
Hell, Iâm desperate for a new line of beverages. Fresh tricks to refine. Wired Cup has survived generations of market changes for a reason. Weâve always adapted.
Weâve laid down roots in the northwest for good reason. Not just branding and quality, but because my great-grandfather swore he wouldnât compromise the integrity of our product.
Weâre not sitting ducks, waiting to be knocked out by the competition. Though without something new, something bold and electrifying, weâre facing the worst kind of death by boredom.
I wonât let that happen.
Once Iâve had time to catch up on emails for an hour, I head for Kateâs office. I find Destiny sprawled out on the floor, playing with her phone.
She sees me standing in the doorway and smiles up at me. âI threw together three aesthetic music videos this afternoon. You still like Johnny Cash, Dad?â
âWithout question, and I suppose thatâs a good skill to have.â Then I remember sheâs here to shadow and square my shoulders. âArenât you supposed to be working? Or at least taking notes about the work everyone else is doing?â
âEh, yeah, itâs justâ¦â She lays a hand over her face, groaning softly. âCoffeeâs so boring.â
âYou let her play on her phone ever since we got back?â I look at Kate, whoâs hunched over her laptop.
She doesnât raise her head. âKeep her out of trouble, you said. Sheâs not knocking over any liquor stores, right?â
I hold in a sigh.
âHave you started tracking down wolverine chick yet?â I ask.
âHoney badger. Get it right,â Destiny mutters.
âWhat was her name again?â Katelyn asks.
âI donât remember. Call the store and find out.â
âHuh? I thought you chased us out so you could creep her info.â Destinyâs eyes never leave her screen.
âRegardless, Iâd like to run a proper background check before she gets here. We canât hire a bank robber or Peeping Thomasina, no matter how good her coffee concoctions might be.â
âYeah, right!â Destiny lowers her phone and gives me a disbelieving look. âUm, stalker-ish much?â
âYes. Also, I want a proposal ready before she arrives. We can seal the deal and wonât have to worry about her working for any competitors,â I say, brushing off my daughterâs complaints about my methods. âSheâs also less likely to stall negotiations if we hit her with a number on the spot. Make it a fair, generous offer. Dess, Iâll show you how we do hiring proposals once Katelyn has her researched.â
My daughter looks like I just pushed a rancid lemon wedge into her mouth.
âIs this what you do all day? Guzzle coffee and spy on people?â
âWhen you put it that way, I really do deserve a break at home. More decaf and less snark,â I tell her, looking at Kate. âHave HR ready. Iâll sign off on everything, but weâve got to move fast. I donât want to risk blowing this.â
âYeet,â Destiny says.
âWhat?â I ask.
Kate finally looks up from her laptop over her glasses. âThatâs young-speak for cool. My kids say it all the time.â
âBah, Iâm lucky I havenât heard it before.â I wonder how the copywriters ever keep up with trends in slang.
âYou hear that, Dessy? Youâre the expert here in talking young,â Katelyn says with a wry smile. âSince your dear old dad has me running after espresso machine suppliers who shortchanged us last month, I donât have time to go on a honey badger hunt. So, youâve got your first task.â
Destiny pops up from the floor. âYou want me to call?â
âYeah, the shop on Seventh Street.â
âYouâve managed to cure her bonelessness, Katelyn. Miraculous.â I snort as I look at Dess. âWhy canât you pop up like that when I tell you to get moving?â
âYouâre a drill sergeant. Duh.â
âI was a lieutenant. Sergeants are noncommissioned,â I mutter.
âSo, you admit youâre a drill sergeant?â
âWrong. I outranked your average RDC and you know nothing about the US Navy.â
âWhatevs. I know it made you a total hardass for life,â she whispers under her breathâstill loud enough to hearâas she rolls her eyes.
While Destiny dials the store, I head back to my office.
Iâm perched in my tall leather chair before I realize Iâm still holding the damn mason jar.
Weâll track down its owner soon enough. I try to focus on reports, but my eyes keep catching on that small glass container.
Even if I had this sample reverse engineered, I canât use it right now. Plus, itâs too delicious to waste.
I do what any sane person would.
Bottomâs up.
My office door pops opens and Destiny bounces in.
Perfect timing.
Naturally, she catches me drinking from the mason jar and shakes her head with a loud click of her tongue. âReally, Dad? Youâre drinking your own research?â
I give her my best mackerel-eyed stare. âSheâll be here soon enough and weâll have a fresh sample we can actually use. Why waste this one?â
âOkay. I think you just have a thing for coffee made by people you hate.â She pauses. When I donât even crack a smile at her silly comment, she sighs. âHer nameâs Eliza Angelo. Sheâs not on LinkedIn or Facebook, so I had to do some digging. Youâre welcome.â
âEveryoneâs on Facebooger for reasons I will never understand.â
Destiny shakes her head again.
âNope. Everyone old uses it, you mean. Not her. Sheâs listed as a virtual assistant on Instagram and Upwork, which means basically nothing. The HR lady said that depending on who her clients are, that could mean sheâs struggling to get byâor it could mean she rakes in six figures.â
âThatâs solid digging, little bee. Though not terribly helpful in getting a proper salary proposal together for HR,â I say gently.
She stares at me like she canât believe I paid her an honest compliment.
âKate and I researched it. VAs typically pull in thirty to seventy thousand dollars a year with the high earners being outliers. Kate thinks we should put two proposals togetherâone for an average VA and a backup if you think sheâs an outlier.â
I stare at my daughter.
âVery thoughtful. Thanks, now I can retire.â
âDad!â She stomps her foot. âIt was mostly Kateâs idea, so give her a raise. Iâm just the messenger. She says sheâs already working on the proposals for you.â
A smile pulls at my lips.
Most kids would take credit and try to use it to gain some reward. Somehow, I still have a selfless, honest daughter behind the brat.
I just need a reminder sometimes.
âI have the best assistant,â I say, turning to the mini fridge behind my desk for a water.
Destiny grins. âYeah, you do. You donât even know how many of my friends have asked if you need help. The older juniors and seniors would kill to have a summer job with youâlike literally go all Jane the Ripper. They all think youâre fire and itâs gross.â
Iâm swallowing water from the bottle I just opened when she says it. Iâm lucky I donât spray mineral water from an Icelandic glacier all over the goddamned place like a human sprinkler.
âWeâre in luck. Iâm not in the market for a girl half my age whoâs going to hit on me even if Mrs. Storm resigns tomorrow. Tell them Iâm nobodyâs fantasy.â I cough into my hand again, trying like hell not to stare awkwardly. âAlso, thatâs a subject weâll never bring up again.â
âJeez, Dadâ¦â
âHowâs shadowing? Not the sleeping pill you imagined?â
She squeezes her eyes shut and grimaces, scrunching her small face.
âDaddy, I love you, but I stand by what I said. Your job is boring AF.â
âAnd I know what that stands for, Dess. Youâll be grounded AF if you keep that up.â She flinches before I carry on. âStill, I suppose youâre right. Boring or not, someone needs to run this joint after I step aside, and youâre an only child.â
âNot my fault! You shouldâve gotten remarried and had more kids. Itâs not like you were short on ladies lining up for dates.â She makes a yuck face.
Technically, sheâs right.
Thatâs why I humor her with a lopsided smile, ignoring the fact that I was busy with a little girl and a massive family legacy company. Not to mention a lifetime of fucking damage from the hell that ended my marriage prematurely.
âSee? Youâre turning green.â I point at her. âIf I ever dated long enough to give you a little brother or sister, the kissing would traumatize you for life.â
âUgh, Iâd get over it. Canât be worse than talking about contracts and hiring proposals for as long as I live, right?â She gives me a sour look.
âThere comes a point in your life when itâs not so boring anymore.â
She stares at me like Iâve sprouted a second head.
âUmmâno. Shoot me now?â
âNah, but Iâll help you take the edge off, and since youâre too young to drinkâ¦â I spin around to the mini fridge again, fetching a can of root beer I know she loves and two cold glasses. While I pour the sodas, I look at her. âIf you seriously donât want to waste your life on contracts, what do you want to do for a living, Destiny?â
Iâm genuinely curious.
She was thirteen the last time I asked that question. She told me she wanted to run a petting zoo on a superyacht to Antarcticaâif only she could stand the water.
âEh, I donât know. Maybe I could be a YouTuber or big influencer for fashion or something?â
My grip tightens on my root beer as I take a swig.
âYouâd better start liking the coffee biz. Thereâs no way Iâm letting you show off skimpy dresses for strangers. Donât care how old you are.â
âOh, Dad.â She huffs a breath loudly. âThatâs another reason you shouldâve had a bigger family. Even with, um, everything that happened when I was a kidâIâd be an excellent babysitter. And youâd finally have someone else to throw crap at instead of piling it on me.â
She may be right, but we need our funny moments.
God help her if she thinks Iâm about to stop anytime soon.
I just hope I havenât bitten off too much with that brown-eyed hellion who seems to hold the key to our next big innovationâand possibly my own madness.