One Bossy Dare: Chapter 5
One Bossy Dare: An Enemies to Lovers Romance
My head might spin right off.
Iâm panicked at what I just agreed to.
A dare? A flipping dare?
On the one hand, this is a dream come true. On the other, Boss McGrumpyface is going to be an absolute donkey and a half to work for.
My stomach lurches like a frappe in the blender.
I canât pass this up. Dakota would smack me silly if I did, and so would Wayne.
Worse, Lancasterâs words resonated. Without even knowing me, he read my mind.
Itâs just a little sacrifice, isnât it?
And a chance to prove myself to this cocky fart wrapped in a suit.
If I just work in R & D for a year, I can do anything I want to after thatâ¦
Not to mention, it would be nice to make rent for once without dipping into listing old clothes on Poshmark. Iâm running out of things to sell.
âI trust we have a deal?â he asks, undeterred by the awkward lump in my throat thatâs stolen my voice.
Ugh. I still canât believe Iâm actually doing this.
âSo you want me to work for you? For real?â
The longer he studies me, the faster my brave face crumbles.
âI thought that was clear?â he whispers, motioning me to sit back down.
I watch him sit up in his seat, a proud peacock of a man.
He writes something on a piece of paper and slides it across his desk. I glance at the number heâs crossed out and rewritten with his initials next to it.
Itâs a contract.
For two-hundred thousand freaking dollars.
All for something Iâve been doing for free ever since I was old enough to drive.
Yeah, I need the smelling salts and a nice long nap. Or at least a primer on how people handle winning jackpots.
âI might, um, need a minute to think about thisâ¦just to be totally sure.â
A line forms in his forehead. Those dark-brown brows pull down in confusion. âYou make more than that as a part-time assistant, Miss Angelo?â
âItâs not the money,â I whisper. âItâs a mammoth decision.â
âTrue. Iâd offer you dinner to help you talk it out, but we have a strict HR policy against fraternization outside the office this late and in these circumstances.â
Oh, God.
Why does that hot look in his eyes say he wishes that policy were different?
Why do my toes scrunch up in my shoes?
âThereâs one more thing. Itâs not the compensation package.â I blank out. Itâs hard to ask with a straight face while my cheeks burn, especially because when heâs not talking heâs kind of delicious.
If he werenât a total buffalo dick who wasnât a breath away from being my boss, maybe Iâd take him up on that imaginary dinner someday.
The sly smile etched on his face doesnât help.
âWhat else do you want? Spit it out, Miss Angelo. I have to get home sometime tonight.â
Rude. But in fairness, I am holding him up.
âWayne deserves an apology when he gets that bonus. And you should thank him for keeping that store running. Lord knows itâd be in much worse shape without him,â I rush out.
For a second, heâs dead silent.
âLet me get this straight. Youâll walk away from two hundred big if I donât have a heart-to-heart with a random barista?â His eyes lance through me.
I smile and nod and try not to laugh hysterically at my own insanity.
âWhy?â he spits.
âRemember how I told you earlier that if you talk to him like that, youâll talk to me like that?â
âI didnât talk to him like anything. The coffee sucked and it had everything to do with the recipeânot his technique, which seems unimpeachable.â Lancaster tilts his chair back, pinching the bridge of his nose like heâs finally had enough. âAt the risk of you flipping me off and running out the doorâthis is a ludicrous condition.â
Stay strong.
It certainly feels like lifting weights to plaster on a neutral smile.
âTo you,â I throw back. âTo me, itâs important. I might make a bad batch of coffee through no fault of my own. I mean, itâs pretty natural when youâre experimenting. But even if itâs not the beans or the equipment or the recipe, everybody has a bad day sometimes. Everybody human.â
His eyes glaze over, shiny arctic blue when theyâre angry.
âFor the last time, the bland drink wasnât his fault. Whatâs the point of this?â
If he had a tail, itâd be slapping the ground in frustration.
I stare, never softening my ghost of a smile. âBecause, Mr. Lancaster. If weâre crystal clear now, then we wonât need to talk this out later when one of us has a bad day. No condescension. No talking down. No bossypants.â
âBossypants?â He glares at me. âIâll apologize to the damn barista if youâll sign the contract. Anything else?â
Holy hell.
â¦I never expected him to agree.
I shake my head, which suddenly feels ten pounds lighter.
He looks down at the neatly clipped paper packet on his desk. âWill you sign the contract now? Iâll have it over to my legal team by morning.â
âNot just yet.â I point to the phone on his desk and give him a sad look. âIâm pretty sure Wayne is working right nowâ¦â
âRight now-right now? Youâre serious? You want me to call so you can witness my humiliation?â
âHow else would I know?â I ask softly.
âWouldnât Not Boyfriend tell you?â His death stare threatens to light my hair on fire.
âHeâs not my boyfriend.â Iâm thoroughly annoyed at how hard I deny it. âWeâre busy people. Unless I pop into the store, I only really see him when Iâm ordering coffee or serving breakfast at the homeless camp. Since Iâll be developing coffee, I might as well just get my morning coffee here too, donât you think?â
That bulging, powerful fist on his desk tightens.
âAngelo, we havenât even spent an hour together and I already donât like you. It normally takes a few encounters for me to despise people.â
âOh, good. I was worried it was just me. The feelingâs mutual.â
With a frustrated rumble, he rips up the phone and stabs at the buttons, dialing the number before he sets it down again. âStoreâs closed. Wrong timing.â
âOh! Well, lucky for you, I have his number in my contacts somewhere. Give me a secâ¦â I reach for my phone and pull up Wayneâs number, then pass it across the desk.
Lancaster glares at me as he punches the CALL button hard enough to crack my screen.
âCareful! You owe me a new phone if that comes back damagedâ¦â
His eyes could flay me alive.
âIs this Wayne from the Seventh Street store?â he asks.
I try not to explode laughing. He sounds like a naughty kid being forced to apologize to the neighbor for leaving dog poop in their yard.
âThis is Cole Lancaster. Listen, I wanted to apologize just in case my critiques of the new beverage line were overly harsh during the recent inspection.â He goes quiet, listening intently. âYes. Right. Good. Iâm certainly glad to hear there are no hard feelingsâ¦â
By the time he mutters a few more awkward words, I almost feel bad for enjoying how much he squirms.
Lancaster ends the call and chucks the phone back at me. âSign the damn contract. Now. Iâll expect you here at six a.m. sharp tomorrow morning.â
âOkay. I need a pen.â I can barely get the words out between the laughter trying to claw its way up my throat.
He practically throws a fat, expensive-looking fountain pen with his initials engraved in shiny platinum at me.
I slash my name across the paper without pointing out his obscene taste in pens.
I suppose Iâm feeling generous.
âFYI, I do my best brewing at nine,â I tell him, twisting in my seat.
âYouâll learn to do it at six.â His glare knifes through me. âSee you then, Miss Angelo. Welcome the hell aboard.â
Woof. Why do I get the feeling he wonât be much friendlier no matter how bright and early I show up?
âSee ya soon, boss.â I snicker as I slide the contract over, lift my purse, and walk out the door.
Yesterday, when he said âlab,â I honestly thought it was just a fancy name for a back-room roastery.
But this place is shock and awe from the second I step inside.
Imagine a fancy CDC lab and NASA unit having a baby dedicated to inventing addictive beverages. Itâs stainless steel and sleek machinery perched on marble everything as far as the eye can see.
Every contraption a master roaster could ever want in their wildest fever dreams. Thereâs high-tech equipment for weighing, measuring, temp testing, chemical analysis, and more.
My two-thousand-dollar coffee equipment at home feels like Stone Age technology.
With gear like this, I know I can make better coffeeâand maybe a cure for cancer while weâre at it.
A middle-aged woman not much taller than me with short curly hair appears at my side. âYou must be Eliza. Hello.â
I smile. âYeah, thatâs me.â
âGina Walker. Iâm the head of research and development.â She holds out her hand.
I shake her hand. âAwesome to meet you.â
âLikewise. Itâs not every day a fresh face handpicked by Mr. Lancaster personally shows up to join us. Iâm here to help you settle in. Let me show you to your desk.â She leads me to a cubicle. âWe donât spend a lot of time at our desks, but you have a computer and drawers. Itâs good to check your emails whenever you can. Sometimes youâll be testing all day, and thatâs fine. Just log it as you come in and out.â She picks up a clipboard full of lab sheets. âThese go to the testing stations with you, so you can record everything. Itâs important to log each step, ingredient, and device used. If we donât record it, we canât repeat it, and we certainly canât rely on our overworked brains to remember.â
Harsh, but sensible. I nod.
Iâve definitely had my memory hole days where I brewed up the perfect drink and then couldnât replicate it to save my life.
Even if everything here is beyond futuristic, Iâm always down for improving my technique.
âEverything happens here,â Gina continues. âRoasting. Mixing. Brewing. Literally everything. Thereâs a place to record observations at the bottom as well. These sheets need to be scanned in daily to keep us current on what works and what doesnât. But if youâre still working late, itâs no big deal as long as theyâre all in the system by Friday.â
I put my purse in my drawer and grab my clipboard. Maybe too eagerly.
Gina smiles. âExcited to get started, huh?â
âYou have no idea. At the risk of sounding like a huge dork, coffee is my life.â
âYouâre in good company then.â She laughs. âLet me show you where the beans areâ¦â
We walk back to the lab area, where there are huge floor-to-ceiling storage compartments with hermetically sealed covers. Theyâre all brimming to the top with various beans listed from lightest roast to darkest. Notes about their chemical composition and origins are on the labels, too.
Gawking, I lift one of the covers and inhale the freshest scent Iâve ever smelled because itâs so good.
For a second, I wonder if I got flattened by a bus the day I walked out of that store after colliding with Lancaster. Because Iâm in heaven.
Gina hands me a small container full of freshly roasted Sumatran beans.
âMr. Lancaster said you made some unusually delicious coffee in a mason jar. He requested we start with that, if itâs okay with you.â
âIâm happy to show you, but I brewed it over a campfire. Any idea how we would replicate that in the lab?â
âInteresting.â She taps her chin, thinking. âWeâll fire up a grill for starters. If you need to, you can put the kettle directly on the flame. What kind of wood do you need?â
I grin.
There are long days and happy days in life.
Miraculously, this is about to be both.
Several hours later, Gina stops by and finds me stirring the pot.
âSmells intense! Is it ready for a taste test?â she whispers, adjusting her glasses.
âI think so.â I ladle a cup for myself and take a cautious sip. I smile as the brew nips at my tongue. âYep, ready!â
I ladle out a second cup for Gina.
She takes a tiny sip at first and then a bigger one.
ââ¦is that a hint of bourbon? This is amazing.â
âNo actual bourbon, but it does have notes like something that came out of an aged barrel.â I grin proudly while she sucks down the rest of her drink.
Only a few hours on the clock and Iâm already feeling accomplished.
Thatâs a rare thing for sure. Of course, if we spent all day drinking our samples, weâd be so wired we wouldnât be able to function.
But clearly, she canât help herself with this one. I can tell sheâs giddy before the caffeine even gets into her system.
I expect her to ask for another cup, but instead she says, âIâm going to call the lab techs over. Everyone should taste this stuff. Be right back.â She takes a couple of steps and looks back over her shoulder. âAwesome first day, Eliza.â
Be still, my heart.
A few minutes later, Gina returns with half a dozen people. I serve them each a cup, and they all compliment my coffee with surprising sincerity.
âWould you be offended if I use cream and sugar? It has a complex flavor, but itâs very strong,â one woman asks.
âNo. Fix it however you like. Youâre the one drinking it.â
âThanks! Iâm Chrissy, by the way.â
âEliza,â I say.
âWe all know who you are. Iâm Ryan,â another tech says. He slurps his coffee and gives a fast thumbs-up. âThis is bussin. Donât think Iâve ever had fire-brewed coffee before.â
Iâm flipping blushing.
âI know. The first time I tasted the difference, I was shocked. Iâm thinking Iâll call it sâmorâofee or something.â I smile awkwardly. âOr maybe Iâd better leave that part to marketing.â
Chrissy laughs. âOh, like sâmores coffee? I love it.â
âHm, one problem. How do you think youâll replicate this in a store without safety issues? Having the flame seems pretty key.â Ryan asks.
I freeze. Itâs an honestly good question.
âWe could make a concentrate. Though nothing beats the taste when itâs piping hot,â I say, racking my brain for options.
âLiquid concentrate or powder?â Gina asks, peering at me over her glasses.
âUh, Iâve only ever done liquid.â I sip my coffee slowly. âHonestly, I donât know how to make a powder concentrateâ¦â
Everyone looks up then. For a second, I think theyâre stunned silent at my ignorance.
Nope. Iâm not that lucky.
A walking coffee curse is moving toward us on long legs stuffed into trousers so expensive they make my skin crawl.
The friendly crowd scatters like birds, clearing a path for Cole Lancaster to come stalking through.
Ugh.
âWhat are you doing here?â I bite off.
He scoffs. âLast I checked, I owned the place. Including this military-grade coffee lab.â
âOh, boy, here we go.â I roll my eyes. âYou just canât describe anything without sounding like a Bond villain, huh?â
âMrs. Walker emailed me, gushing about how good your coffee is. I decided to show up for a personal taste test,â he says bluntly.
Gina comes closer to the pot and takes the ladle.
âNo. Let Miss Angelo do the honors,â he orders, holding up a hand. âNo sense in stealing her thunder, after all.â
I bite my tongue so hard itâll be sore later.
He closes the space between us, waiting expectantly for me to pour his coffee, his eyebrow raised in that smug godfatherly way.
Definitely supervillain vibes.
And Iâd rather brew coffee for every cartoon bad guy ever invented than give Cole damn Lancaster the satisfaction of taking a piping hot cup from my hands.
Heâs clearly enjoying this, his brow quirked in just the right way that makes him ten times more annoying and somehow more gorgeousâwhich only makes him even more annoying.
Double ugh.
What the hell makes him think I want to waste my time serving him coffee? I guess being King Dick makes him think everyone should trip over each other for the privilege?
I wish I could serve up a super-concentrate strong enough to choke that look off his face.
For now, I toss a steaming ladle of black liquid into a paper cup and thrust it into his hand. I hope it melts right through the container.
âEnjoy,â I snap.
He winks.
He freaking winks at me.
And he takes his sweet, sweet time sipping from the cup, holding the liquid in his mouth so reverently youâd think I just handed him the cure for old age.
Also, I hadnât noticed how full his lips are around that halo of beard that looks like it would scratch just right.
Not until now.
Like I needed to notice that.
He holds the scalding liquid in his mouth, turning it over, ice-cold calm and assessing. The man towers over me, an intimidating beast even when his shields are down mid-sip.
My eyes are stuck to him nowâglued to his broad chest and the wild ripples of muscles that become more visible every time he moves, pulling the silk suit tautly against him.
God, I hate how attractive he is.
I extra hate how heâs in my space.
I triple hate how his lips move as he rolls his tongue inside his mouth, making me imagine all the awful things that tongue could do besides make my blood pressure skyrocket.
This feels like the longest coffee sampling ever.
Of course it is.
When Lancaster finally swallows, I wonder what year Iâm in.
âDivine, Miss Angelo.â His unexpected compliment almost makes the torture worth it. âThough even Prometheus had to bring his gift down from the gods.â
âCome again?â
âPrometheus. A Greek god whoââ
âI know Prometheus, professor!â I snap. âWhat does that have to do with my coffee?â
He chuckles. âHow are we mass producing this wonder-brew for the people?â
âWait. You just had to bring in the Greeks to ask about production?â
âA little mythology reference never hurtââ
âSo, instead, you were confusing and pretentious? Nice. Also, we were discussing how to mass produce it when you came rolling through,â I tell him.
If Iâm hoping to get under his skin, he doesnât bite.
âWhat did you come up with?â he asks neutrally.
âWe were considering the fire issue,â Gina starts, but the bear in a suit holds up his hand.
âI want to hear it from Miss Angelo, Mrs. Walker. After all, she knows coffee better than me.â
I look at Gina, who seems bewildered, and glare at him for not noticing.
What the actual hell? Why is he such a hardass?
âThe team has two thoughts,â I say, careful to credit everyone. âGina says we could try a powder concentrateââ
âAnd do you think concentrate would be worth serving to my customers?â Lancaster asks coldly.
âIâve dealt with concentrates before. Theyâre not bad, but not always perfect.â
âA shame. Iâd rather have perfect,â he snaps.
Wouldnât we all, Mr. High and Mighty?
âMy other idea might be expensive. What if we looked at installing some sort of grill in the stores? Even if it was just a glorified Bunson burner with wood chips, that could do it,â I say, rolling it over in my head as I speak.
âIâll have to check with the supply team, but thereâs no reason it couldnât work,â Gina adds.
âThereâs one,â he says.
âWhatâs that?â And more importantly, do you have a better solution? But I donât say it out loud.
âI canât add burners to every store just for a new beverage line,â he says. âItâs impractical.â
âHow much is a small grill?â I ask.
Gina pulls out her phone and starts tapping the screen. âTheyâre not expensive. We can get a good one installed for under three hundred dollars.â
âPer store,â the Grumpfather finishes, scowling.
âDo you trust the drinks or not?â I ask point blank. âBecause if theyâre truly good, youâll make that back per store before the first day is overâ¦â
âYouâre not factoring in the installation costs. Plus, most of the barista bars donât have the space. It doesnât matter, though. One new gourmet product isnât enough to satisfy my vision.â
âSo, what do you want then?â I ask.
âNothing less than a whole line of these scorched drinks, paired with food. The barbecued coffee shrinks its production cost if it wins us better sell-through of other items. That brings us back to perfection. Every last one of the drinks will have to be perfect to attract new customers.â He inhales sharply like heâs watching it all unfold in his head. âAlso, Iâd like the updates directly from you, Miss Angelo.â
âMe? Why?â
âThis is your baby. Gina may be your immediate manager, but I want you to own it,â he says.
âBut Gina gets paid to deal with you. Thatâs what management is for, right?â
Behind us, a few of the lab techs still standing around snicker.
Theyâre gone the instant his glare falls on them, though.
Then he turns the evil eye on me, like he wants to say something, but heâs holding back. âYou donât need to fret over the chain of communication. I said I want updates from you.â
The way he emphasizes that last word sends a shiver up my spine, like two strong fingers sliding across my skin.
âDonât you have a meeting to go to? Or something?â I add desperately.
âIâm in a meeting.â
Eep. I swallow the lump building in my throat.
âI bet you have more important people than me to talk to, so by all means, feel free. Weâll keep making progress, boss.â I smile sweetly, hoping heâll believe me.
Nope.
Thatâs when I realize weâre alone. And he doesnât waste a single second before he moves closer and brings his lips to my ear.
âNot while I have this new employee whose big brain comes with a bigger mouth. If I donât get her broken in, sheâll trample my authority. That shit wonât fly.â
Oh, God. Why does my heart feel like a trapped hummingbird?
âI-I feel your pain,â I stammer, trying to pull myself together. âI work for a guy who acts like heâs a mafia kingpin rather than a guy who sells caffeinated drinks. He has a lot of bad habits. Heâs rude and annoying and forgets heâs a paper pusher, not a drill sergeantââ
âWatch that mouth, Angelo. Paper pushers donât make multi-million-dollar decisions every day. Have you been talking to Destiny?â
âDestiny?â I jolt away from him, realizing he was brushing my shoulder.
Holy hell, the heat he leaves behindâ¦
âDonât lie for her. Did my daughter put you up to giving me hell?â
I blink. âUmmâare you okay? Why would I be goofing off with your teenage daughter?â I laugh at the absurdity. âWhen would I even talk to her?â
He shrugs one shoulder, his face back to his default ice-cold mask.
âShe called me a drill sergeant the other day.â
âOh, so Iâm not the only one who noticed? Unbelievable.â
He rolls his sky-blue eyes with a low growl vibrating his huge chest.
For a second, I wonder if heâd make the same noise in very different circumstances. The pleasant kind where a woman frustrates him with more than words, where she drops to her knees and opens his pants and reaches in to find out just how big that ego is andâ
âThe point is I need another scorched drink by the end of this week,â he clips. âShow me youâre worth a senior salary and the two bonuses for the barista,â he says.
âIs that supposed to be intimidating?â If so, challenge accepted.
I fold my arms, staring defiantly at that grump-tastic face of his.
âThereâs no way youâll come up with another scorched drink this good in three days, no matter how talented you are.â
âAnother dare? That mightâve worked to lure me in here, but now itâs getting boring.â I laugh bitterly. âBad news, Grumpfather.â
âWhat?â He leans forward, his eyes shifting slowly side to side.
He was already too close to me. Now, I can smell him, hints of worn leather and citrus and something almost animalistic.
Lancaster makes it so hard to force him to eat his own words. Annoying.
And I hate that I kinda like the way he towers over me.
âRemember how I mentioned recipesâpluralâin the interview?â I pause, waiting for him to nod. âI have like twenty pages of drinks like this.â
âBull. Who keeps a recipe book full of scorched drinks?â
âYour big mouth new hire, apparently.â
âLet it go,â he whispers, pushing closer again, eyeing a few techs moving around us within earshot. âNaturally, I was joking.â
âI could, but yâknowâI wonât.â
âIâm ordering you to let it go then.â
I laugh. âOrdering me?â
âAs your boss, Iâm suggesting in the strongest possible terms that you wipe that conversation from your head.â He glowers at me.
âOr what? Youâll like fire me already?â
âIt would be a dreadful loss,â he says, all hot breath in my ear.
Oh, God, Iâm tingling.
Tingling from head to toe as I lean into him.
Weâre so close now it hurts.
Weâre almost touching.
âMake the next one a speciality drink,â he says, inhaling slowly like heâsâwait, is he smelling me?
I donât know how I keep standing.
âWhat?â I mouth silently because I canât find my voice.
âI need a drink I can charge more for, Miss Angelo, like a mocha or latte. Since youâre bored with beginner challenges, perhaps youâll find this more to your level.â
Oof. So maybe I was born with a big mouth after all.
âButââ
âOh, so thatâs not in the recipe book, is it?â His thin, arrogant smile could devour me. âHave fun. Iâll be back soon to try my mocha. Or will it be a latte or shaken drink? Surprise me.â
Iâve never wanted to kick another human being so badly.
Especially when his puffed up arrogance only makes him hotter in that evil villain way.
âSee you then,â I say, forcing it out without a hint of fear.
âReally? You sound so confident?â He looks surprised.
âEverything Iâve ever come up with was in my living room, using secondhand equipment in a space no bigger than a closet. Now Iâm in a beautiful lab with the best stuff mega-money can buy and three full days to experiment. Thereâs no reason I canât have a new drink by Friday thatâs so good youâll whimper.â
Our eyes connect for what feels like forever.
I watch his muscular throat moving, swallowing, like heâs drinking me in. Or maybe heâs just checking whether or not I have a death wish.
âMake me cry then, Miss Angelo,â he throws back.
Then he turns and exits without another glance.
As he leaves, I realize we have an audience again. The lab techs are staring, but no one says anything.
Finally, Gina speaks. âThat wasâinteresting. I see you already have a dynamic with the big boss.â
Sheâs too polite.
âSorry,â I say. âI didnât mean to distract anyone.â
Slowly, she adjusts her glasses. ââ¦should I go talk him down, or will you really have something by Friday?â
âIâll have something, all right. Trust me.â If it sucks, the taste test will just be more fun, I guess. âI just need a little time to hash it out,â I add.
I jog back to my cubicle and collapse in my office chair.
Why is it so hard for me to just shut up?
Iâve never had a good brain-to-mouth filter, but something about this guy makes me extra fluent in sarcasm.
Another screaming sign heâs trouble incarnate.
The kind you need to keep a good six feet away from at all times to remain healthy.
Even if he wasnât my off-limits boss, I wouldnât give him the time of day. Not if I had a functioning brain.
Do I still have one?
Sometimes, I wonder.
Eliza, youâve been down this road before. You and classy older men swarming with secrets do not mix, my brain reminds me.
Thanks, brain, but Iâm not getting lost down memory lane right now. I need a new freaking sâmores drink by Friday.
I canât lose another dare to Cole freaking Lancaster.
His smug victory lap would humiliate me for life.
With his stupid cocky face lodged in my mind, I spend the rest of my first day Googling the ingredients in a dozen different types of marshmallows.
He shouldâve known it the second I took this job.
I wonât go down easy.