What a fucking day.
I know Iâve pissed off the universe when Nevermore, the pastry thief, turns out to be the most qualified candidate we have for the wedding line.
Just my luck.
She might be a black cat disguised as an angel and incredibly naiveâwhy the hell did she spill her salary in the interview?âbut at least she has writing chops.
Thatâs what matters.
Thatâs what makes me take a chance on a hire thatâs one big red flag whipping me in the face.
Her personality might be difficult, but once sheâs settled into working under me, Iâm confident sheâll fall in line. If she brings the same spark to her ad copy, sheâll also make me money hand over fist, whatever our personality clashes.
When allâs said and done, thatâs the endgame.
Iâm ready to get the hell out of here by the time evening rolls around. I grab the cinnamon rolls I bagged up and leave, walking past rows of empty desks. My driver, Louis Hughes, the only employee whoâs been with the company longer than I have, waits at the curb. I open the door and slide into the back seat.
âWelcome back, Mr. Burns. Home?â he asks.
âWyattâs first,â I say, instantly aware of how he glances back with concern.
âWill do.â He pulls onto the street.
By now, he knows the address by heart, even if it isnât on any Google Maps.
I thumb through my email, responding to items Lucy flagged for me. Iâm going to be completely boned when she goes on leave. Her organizational prowess makes it infinitely easier to manage this company.
Iâve made it through five emails when the car stops in front of the familiar, large encampment. Thereâs a typical Seattle spring rain pelting the windows, turning the tents outside into smears of color against the night.
âHere we are. Should I come with you? Iâm always perfectly willing,â Louis offers.
âI wonât drag you out into the rain, Louis. Itâs just a short walk. Save your fussing for somebody that deserves it. I always come back, donât I?â
His eyes linger on me, dark with worry.
âAre you sure, boss? Forgive me, but this isnât the safest place. The papers said there were four robberies and two armed assaults here last week,â he says. âYouâre a public personality, Mr. Burns. If any bad actors recognized you and took the notion toâwell, I might be too late to help if Iâm warming my butt in the car.â
I chuckle. âLouis, I was a Marine. Plus, far more of those people out there are veterans than youâd think. If trouble goes down, Iâm sure Iâll have backup.â
Frowning, he nods.
âOf course, sir. Sorry to complain. Even after all these years, I sometimes forget youâre a little more bold on the streets than Tillie.â
âDonât be sorry. Ma needed to feel safe and you always did the job. I appreciate your concern. Give me twenty minutes before you send in the cavalry to find me.â I clap him on the shoulder.
Clutching Wyattâs cinnamon rolls, I get out of the car, walking briskly under whatever cover I can find because I didnât bother with an umbrella.
Iâm a real Seattleite to the core. Having spent most of my life in this town, the rain feels like my own pulse. Contrary to popular belief, nobody who calls this place home gives a damn about getting wet.
The cool water mists my brows, my hands, the back of my neck like the pure night reaching down inside me, scrubbing away the dayâs filthâespecially my two infuriating brushes with Nevermore.
Out here, itâs about what you expect with life on the streets.
Sadly, the Emerald City has a lot of bustling streets and parks and back alleys where this hard life is the only life anyone knows.
I pass a trio of men in worn jeans passing a bottle of cheap whiskey back and forth. Lonely women puffing cigarettes and cigarillos for an extra touch of warmth on a wet night. A once-red tent, now faded pink from the sun, small flower pots strewn around it.
Several tents later, I find him sitting beside a fire in front of his meager home, an old fishermanâs cap yanked down over his eyes.
His cheeks are sunken. There are black rings around his eyes.
Goddamn, my best friend looks like shit, and itâs got nothing to do with the fact that heâs homeless. Heâs been hollowed out, drained, the kind of tired sleep canât fix.
Heâs never been this beat down by the treachery that brought him here, and it makes my gut wrench.
I sit down beside him.
âSorry I couldnât bring you a roll the other day. Like I told you, a greedy crow snatched it out from under me at the last second,â I say, pushing the bag toward him.
âItâs whatever.â He shrugs with his whole body, like it takes that much will just to roll his shoulders. âYou bring me one tonight?â
âHalf a dozen to make up for the shortage. I hope youâre hungry,â I say, offering him a thin smile.
Wyatt doesnât smile back. He reaches inside the bag, grabs a roll, and bites it in half the second itâs in front of his face.
Heâs still the most human when heâs stuffing his face with sugary carbs, his cheeks ballooning like a cartoonish chipmunk behind his grizzled beard.
He winks at me as he chews, and after a long while, he swallows and says, âThanks, man.â
My stomach drops.
Itâs amazing how a simple pastry brings him back like watering a wilted plant. Even so, heâs getting thinner by the month. Dirtier and more depressed, his once bright pale-blue eyes dimmer as the days wear him down.
I canât fucking leave him like this tonight.
Not without offering comfort I know heâll refuseâbut dammit, I always have to âWhen was the last time you ate?â I ask carefully, knowing how much he hates questions.
He slices a dismissive hand through the air.
âAw, hell. I donât know. A couple days ago?â He stares past me like heâs really trying to think.
âDid you eat the bear claw?â I ask, propping one leg on the empty box next to him to stretch.
âNah.â He shoves the rest of the roll in his mouth and shakes his head, taking his sweet time without elaborating. âI traded it to some lady for a couple duck eggs. Scrambled âem.â
I smile, hoping he isnât bullshitting me and actually got some protein into his system.
With Wyatt, unfortunately beggars be choosers.
Heâs one stubborn SOB. Always has been, and the streets turned what used to be an asset into a massive liability when the man barely cares about feeding himself these days.
I scan his surroundings, the modest possessions he keeps by the tent. An old canteen, a few empty ceramic pots, a broken bike lock that did nothing to stop some jackass from taking off with a small cart full of his stuff a couple months ago.
Something seems out of sortsâmore so than usual.
I canât pinpoint what until my eyes fall on his tattered boot.
A lonely, ripped-up boot.
Fuck.
So thatâs why he looks worse than usual. Heâs missing his goddamned leg. I swallow.
âWyatt, what happened to theâ?â
âAsshole with a knife jacked it last week,â he says dully. âI clocked him good in the nose, but he shoved me on the ground andâ¦yeah.â
I stare at the empty space, anger surging through my veins. âSomeone stole your prosthetic? For fuckâs sake, why?â
âWhy not? Iâve lost everything else. What the hellâs one more fake limb added to the pile?â He laughs bitterly.
Itâs a ruthless gut punch, and he didnât even mean it to be.
There are a lot of things in his life he didnât mean.
The man just doesnât give two shits anymoreânot even about his own lifeâand thatâs why that job falls to me now.
My jaw tightens as I look at him, already working on his second roll. If only he wasnât so far up his own ass. I could at least protect him from being preyed on by vultures and punk-ass kids willing to rob homeless vets for drug money.
Iâve made the same offer a million times. Now that heâs one leg short, will he finally be more open? Will he swallow his pride?
âYou know Iâve got an entire heated guesthouse and no company,â I say slowly. âIf you want to crash, you couldââ
âNo,â he spits back, giving me a scorned look.
Thereâs nothing I will ever hate about this man except for his suicidal ego.
Hell, the rejection was out like a shot, before I even finished. Thatâs faster than usual.
âItâs detached. It would be like having your own place,â I say, not ready to give up. âIt sits there whether anyone uses it or not. Sometimes I wonder why I have the damn thing when nobody visits.â
He shakes his head like Iâm forcing a ghost pepper up his nose.
âTry your charity on somebody else, Burns. There are folks here with reasons to live who need a good sleep and a hot shower a whole lot more than I do, like Miss Green Thumb a few tents down. You want to help, offer it to her. Iâm beyond that shit. Donât need it. I like my tent and washing off at the Y just fine.â
I let out a frustrated growl. I canât fucking help it.
I canât help how seeing him give up rips me in two.
Yeah, itâs no surprise. I knew he was sailing into rough waters the minute he wound up on the streets. Iâve also never heard him sound quite so sure about being done until now.
Itâs not him. Heâs a fighter by nature.
He I should say, before that evil bitch destroyed him.
Before he began the slow, agonizing fall into the black pit of misery heâs in now.
Heâll never get over her, and he canât pull his life back together until he does.
âLook, Wyatt. Iâm not here to save you from yourself. Weâve both been through hell together. All Iâm offering is a break from all this for a day, a weekâ¦whatever. Take a vacation and come back here recharged. Thereâs no good fucking reason why you canât crash in my vacant guesthouse so we can have drinks together at the end of the day, and you know it.â
He snorts dismissively.
âWe can do that anyway. Youâre here now. No point in me mooching off my best friend or stinking up space someone else could use. Your rich neighbors and maid are gonna think youâve lost your mind, moving some random homeless guy in. And fuck, your momââ
âYouâre some random homeless guy,â I say sharply. âYouâre my best friend. I wouldnât be here without you.â I inhale sharply, feeling ghostly vibrations ripping through solid bone from that day. Even my muscle memory is keenly aware Iâd be six feet under without Wyatt Emory. âYou saved my life and you canât even crash at my place for a single night?â
He shakes his head like a bull, pulling at his wiry beard.
âItâs nothing. If shit went the other way, you wouldâve saved me too. You donât even have to keep up with the cinnamon rolls or my life. Hell, I donât even want to keep up with my life.â
Thatâs obvious, and a deep, toxic depression talking. I wish I could somehow reach inside him and rip it out of him like a parasite worm.
I hate that heâs his own worst enemy.
Always too proud to accept any help.
Only, now Iâm afraid he might be too scarred, too damaged to ever consider it.
Where the hell does that leave me trying to help him?
Do I just throw my hands up and watch a good man die?
Should I bother continuing this conversation?
I hold in a sigh because Iâm afraid Iâll exhale my soul. Talk is cheap, and tonight, itâs damn near worthless.
I doubt it gets us anywhere, except for frustrating Wyatt more, causing him to dig his lonely heel into the ground.
My eyes flick over him, cool and assessing.
Part of me says get back on his feet. Just haul him off in a headlock and get him help. Iâm sure Louis would help me wrestle him into the back seat.
Heâs on one leg and losing a few more pounds of muscle every month, even if heâs still as strong as a pit bull.
Itâs not like he could run, but the only thing thatâs kept the poor SOB alive this long is his damn stubborn pride. His agency.
Take that from himâhowever well intendedâand he might break forever.
I reach in my pocket and pull out a phone, holding it out to him.
âIf you wonât come home with me, at least take this. Itâs prepaid and has a lot of minutes on it.â
He stares at it silently. He doesnât reach for it.
âDamn you, Wyatt.
Keep it handy, just in case you need to call me or have an emergency. Itâs no big deal. I got a deal on it when I upgraded my phone, and yours broke a long time ago.â
He stares into the fire for a minute before he reaches out and grabs the phone.
Thank God.
âMy numberâs pre-programmed in the contacts. Number one. Call me anytime,â I say.
He doesnât answer.
We sit there in silence for a while together, two old souls set in their ways like concrete.
Itâs getting late. I should go. But how will he even get back in the tent on one leg without crawling? If I ask, heâll bite my head off.
Maybe if I sit here long enough, heâll ask for help.
He doesnât, though, and eventually I take the hint and leave.
As Iâm heading back to my town car on the curve, I wish the rain was colder. It canât dampen the hot fury lashing around inside me.
âI hope youâre happy wherever you are, Olivia, you backstabbing fuck.â I growl to no one, my fist tightening as I picture Wyattâs ex.
Thatâs another thing we have in common, even if he took more damage from his cheating ex.
As the rain picks up, I mutter a dark prayer to Mother Karma.
Just this once, I wish that a good man whoâs suffered so much could find some relief.
I also wish prayers actually came true.
Monday morning, I get to the office before eight a.m.
Thereâs already a draft of new ad copy from Miss Poe waiting in my Inbox.
If she thinks a rushed job warrants her salary, she has another thing coming. Iâll bring her in and set her straight. I open the document, almost salivating at the opportunity to rip it apart and haul her into my office to chew her out.
Hold the drool.
I blink at the screen, seeing neat lines of ads mocked up with punchy phrases and paired with eye-catching images.
Itâs damn good. Spotless, in fact.
There isnât anything to sink my teeth into. I canât be disappointed at a job well done.
At least my hiring decisions are spot on, even when they involve a pastry thief in a seductive black dress.
Regardless, I have a meeting scheduled with her today so we can clear the air. Iâm not interested in leaving either of us languishing in a hostile work environmentâno matter if sheâs eighty percent responsible for said hostility.
Yeah, I wonât admit Iâm to blame for how we started out.
This line needs talent, focus, and zero distractions. Something tells me she wonât be the one to swallow her pride and make peace.
Time to step up and be the leader everyone respects around here.
If Iâm lucky, Iâll win her respect, too. She might start looking at me like Iâm the boss instead of an inquisitor holding her salary hostage.
Fifteen minutes later, she steps into my office. Her slender legs, curvy hips, and annoyingly luscious ass are outlined in fitted black slacks today.
Her full breasts are hugged by a sparkling silver blouse that yanks my eyes to the tightly formed V on her chest, straight to her cleavage.
Fuck me.
For several heady seconds, I canât yank my eyes off her. My fingers drum against my desk, wondering if I should impose a new dress code, because thereâs nothing inappropriate about this outfit.
âYou summoned me?â She says it too obediently. I half expect her to add to the end.
Then I catch the cactus-like look in her eye and realize itâs all sarcasm.
Damn this insufferable woman.
Damn her lips, too, so full and so sweet itâs a crying damn shame theyâre also full of it.
I never noticed her pout before. Maybe itâs just the siren-red lipstick accenting her look today, but hell.
I growl inwardly.
âSit down,â I say, motioning to the seat in front of my desk.
She nods, trots in, and sits down before she holds up a notepad and puts a pen to it. âDo you have corrections to go over?â
Good. Sheâs ready to work rather than waste our time trading insults.
I can respect that. Professional, businesslike, blunt.
I never wouldâve guessed she had it in her, but Iâm open to seeing another side of her. Too bad we have a very unprofessional subject to bat around.
I shake my head.
âYour copy is clean enough to eat. Thatâs not what I wanted to discuss,â I tell her, leaning back in my chair.
She lowers the notepad and pen, her eyes wider and more suspicious.
âOh?â
âA lot went down between the two of us before your interview.â I pause, clearing my throat. âI can certainly appreciate your talent and your backbone, Miss Poe. What I canât appreciate is ignoring the pissed off elephant in the room, that day you decided to make off with my Regis rollââ
âYou mean when were harassing me over a flipping cinnamon roll?â she spits, her eyes flashing.
Ah, thereâs my hellcat, and sheâs all claws today.
I glare at her like the sucker for punishment I am.
âActually, I meant you being too selfish to part with your precious cargo even for five hundred dollars.â Her mouth opens and I hold up a hand. âListen, it doesnât matter. Iâm not here to re-litigate two regrettable battles at Sweeter Grind. Iâm offering you a truce so we can work together like two gears in the well-oiled machine that is this company.â
She narrows her eyes, obvious acid on the tip of her tongue.
âWhy? If Iâm producing clean copy and doing my job, why wouldnât we get along? Professionally, I mean. You can see I do my job, regardless of any past brain-dead debacles.â
I pause, shooting her an assessing look.
âMaybe so. However, I still feel we should spell it out so itâs an easy working relationship.â I hate how she practically glows with the morning light spilling in. âIâll also feel better if youâll accept certain changes to benefit your work here in the interests of minimizing the potential for future conflict.â
âChanges?â she echoes, biting her lip. âAnd what conflict? God, you canât mean pastries againâ¦â
My lips twitch, trying to pull up a smile.
Because the fact that I do probably deepens her portrait of me as textbook psycho.
âFor one, you can quit biking to work. Weâll share the same ride in my town car and place our coffee order bright and early every morning, well before the cafe has a chance to run out of anything.â
She stares at me, incredulous.
âVery funny⦠You joking, right?â
âIâm doing you a favor. Pastry business aside, I thought youâd appreciate a ride, rather than facing the elements on yourââ
âDude. I happen to like biking to work, thank you very much. And you canât just order me to take a different means of transportation into work. You donât own me when Iâm off the clock, Mr. Burns, and justâwhat your obsession with the freaking cinnamon rolls? Do you have a pathological addiction to cinnamon or something?â
Adorable.
Sheâs strangely alluring when sheâs red-faced and staring at me in disbelief, her breath coming faster, giving her body this extra pulse thatâs a delicious hell on my eyes.
Also, itâs none of her damn business what I need the cinnamon rolls for. If they were purely for me or the office crew, Iâd say so. Itâs not my place to go around telling Wyattâs tragic life story, though.
So all I can say is, âSure.â
âHuh?â She blinks at me, clearly caught off guard.
âIâm not just an addict, but a pusher,â I tell her with a shrug and deadpan delivery. âItâs an awful habit I developed in my college days. It happens. Now when I log off as CEO of a multibillion-dollar company, I spend my nights on the streets, cutting up cinnamon rolls and dealing bagged up bites to anyone who wants a hit.â
âOkay. Now youâre definitely joking unless youâre completelyââ
âInsane? Try me, Nevermore. Why the hell else would I offer five hundred bucks for a cinnamon roll?â I fold my arms, glaring until itâs almost uncomfortable.
Lame story, but my delivery makes her wonder if itâs true for at least a few seconds. More importantly, it diverts her from the real reason.
Itâs not like Iâm trying to keep the man who saved my life alive or anything.
âYour sarcasm sucks,â she mutters quietly, heaving out a sigh. âI hope youâve got Anna or someone from marketing critiquing my writing. Iâm not sure youâd know a good story if it whacked you across the face.â
âAsk stupid questions, get stupid answers,â I say matter-of-factly.
âIt wasnât a stupid question. It was a fair one. Youâre legit crazy about cinnamon rolls. Itâs justâ¦weird.â Her voice goes up on that last word before she throws out a hand. âYou know what? Fine. Keep it a big dark secret. I honestly donât to know.â
Miss Poe stares at me like sheâs trying to decide if I just stepped out of one of her ancestorâs short stories.
True enough. She writes clean copy, and I donât want her to walk out of here so rattled she quits on the spot. Especially since Lucy told me this morning that sheâs starting to have contractions.
âYou have to admit, the Regis rolls are worth a princely sum.â
âYeahâtheyâre good. Just not psycho-stalker good.â She looks at me, her green eyes glittering and her lips twisting before they purse up in a duck face. ââ¦can I tell you what it looks like to the rest of the world? Assuming you even care, anyway.â
âIs there any way Iâd stop you?â I throw back.
She ignores that. âI donât think your mantrumââ
âMantrum?â
âMan tantrumââ
âHardly, Nevermore. Also, thatâs a pretty sexist remark and sexism doesnât belong in this workplace. My mother would storm the place like a mad hornet if I let that shit fly,â I grumble.
âNevermore?â For a second, she looks at me, too stunned to speak.
I should apologize. Juvenile nicknames arenât exactly becoming around here either.
Only, I donât want to, especially when the name suits her.
âLook, Mr. High and Mighty, I didnât want to start my first real morning here debating office power dynamics. Iâm pretty sure youâd lose. May I continue?â She ignores the hot glare I level on her and barrels onward without waiting for an answer. âThe rest of the world thinks your mantrum over the cinnamon roll happened because youâre an entitled prick. Youâre so used to being handed everything you want that you couldnât handle not being able to get your hands on your morning sugar fix, so you freaked.â
I glare at her as she continues.
âThen, when I wouldnât immediately cave and relinquish it for whatâs probably pocket change to you, it bruised your fragile little ego so much that you just had to clobber me the second time with the only thing that matters to you. The only thing that makes you think youâre better. Money.â
Fuck, the mouth on this raven.
When she puts it like that, Iâll admit, it does sound pretty bad. I want to tell the pastry witch sheâs wrong, but my brain seizes, tripping over the way sheâs called me out.
âI called you in here to offer an olive branch, Miss Poe. Not to burn this place down,â I warn darkly.
âOh, okay.â She pauses, rolling those eyes like jade marbles. âI have a better idea.â
âWhat?â
âI quit. Effective immediately.â
Before I can even breathe, sheâs out of her seat, heading for the door.
Iâm up like lightning, flying past her and blocking the door.
âQuit? You canât justââ
Her look says âThis just isnât worth it, Burns. I wanted to make this work, but it was wishful thinking, and wishes donât come true.â
âNinety days,â I snap off, my mouth moving faster than my brain.
âHuh?â
âNinety goddamned days,â I repeat, pinching the bridge of my nose before I look at her again. âIf you make it until then, Iâll quadruple your performance bonus. And based on what you turned in this morning, keep that up, and Iâm sure youâll make at least an extra hundred thousand. Not from the company coffers, but my own.â
Thereâs a long, terrible pause before she huffs out a breath.
âAgain, youâre trying to buy me. How cute.â
I inhale sharply. âNevermore, Iâm trying to make you comfortable the only way I know how. Iâm offering you a choice.â
She tilts her head with a sarcastic smirk.
âEven canât sneer at six figures for a few months of work. If youâre out the door after that, I wonât stop you,â I say, shaking my head. âI want you here. Working on my wedding line. Not wasting another minute bickering over frigging sweets.â
âNinety days,â she repeats to herself, her brows pulling together thoughtfully.
I wait, trying not to make it obvious Iâm holding my breath.
Iâm not sure when the fuck I started to care this much, or why.
Sheâs a stranger and a royal pain in the ass. Letting her go before sheâs even started shouldnât feel like losing something critical.
âWell?â I prompt, scuffing my shoe against the floor. âWe donât have all day, lady.â
âI suppose a quick payoff like that be fair compensation for putting up with your rudeness.â
I blink. âMy rudeness?â
Does she hear herself? Iâm offering to pay her from my own pockets for the privilege of retaining her servicesâand sheâs calling me fucking rude?
âThatâs right. And to help make sure it wonât be a problem, make the Sweeter Grind run every morning and grab your stupid coffee and your stupid Regis roll. And Iâll do it on my bicycle. In the event thereâs only one Regis roll when I arrive, Iâll generously give it up to you.â
Not what I expected her to say.
Not at all.
I fucking despise how itâs a sane offerâprobably a better one than I deserveâand I wonder why.
Is it because sheâll give me three months? Even when she clearly hates my guts more than ever?
âAm I such a tyrant you canât stand sharing a car for twenty minutes?â I ask.
She hesitates.
âCan I be honest?â she asks softly, looking up with her long lashes fluttering.
What the hell? Sheâs been holding back?
âAre you ever not honest, Miss Poe?â
âWhen I saw you in the interview, I almost turned around and walked right out. Staying here isnât an easy decision. But I donât want to give you the satisfactionâI â
Her sheer disgust rips through me like an arrow.
âI took the job for the payâand Iâll give it ninety days for the same reasonâ but that doesnât mean I have any desire to be friends,â she says, deepening the wound. âTaking a car together every morning punishes me for something I didnât do. So Iâll pick up your coffee, but letâs limit our interactions to the office, okay?â
âIâm trying to make amends,â I say slowly. âWeâll be working very closely together andââ
âYeah. Right there. Itâs the âcloselyâ part thatâs the problem. We both love our jobs, right? At least, I want to love mineâ¦â
I nod. Whatâs she getting at now?
âGood. Then that should be enough. In fact, that enough.â
âWhat do you mean?â I rake a hand through my hair, fully regretting this stupid peace summit.
âWe can coexist as professionals and leave it at that. Frankly, Iâve never been great friends with anyone I ever worked with anyway and always kept my distance.â For a second, she glances away, as if sheâs revealed too much. Then she continues. âSo. How about I write some awesome copy and send it to you for approval or revision? I can check in at team meetings and take notes, or you can mark the document, and Iâll correct it. If we just talk business and do our jobs, thereâs no reason to even worry about being frenemies or whateverâ¦â
âFrenemies?â I echo.
She gives me this fake plastered-on smile I want to yank right off her face.
What the hell would it take to make her smile for real? I must be sick in the head for wondering when I did a pretty damn good job of making sure Iâll never see it.
Not that it matters.
âDakota, this organization is a team. If I canât get along with my own right handââ
âUm, Lucyâs your right hand, isnât she? And you two have a great vibe. Iâm just a copywriter.â
âYouâre a highly copywriter assigned to a flagship product line who reports directly to me. You are an appendage like my own hand. Care to guess how many other writers fit that criteria?â
âNot really. Since you keep mentioning your right hand, though, Iâd see somebody if itâs giving you grief. That must be pretty awkward when you use it toâ
â
âGo to hell, Nevermore,â I snarl. âI wanted to set things straight, not continue sniping at each other like middle schoolers.â
She barely holds back a snicker.
âAnd yet arenât you the one who started the silly nicknames?â
My brow furrows. She makes it painfully hard to ignore her fuckery.
âMiss Poe, you donât understand. If the rest of the team sees us at each otherâs throats, office morale crashes andââ
âThey wonât,â she clips, slowly walking to the other side of the room. âI promise you my work will get done so efficiently no one will ever question it. I wonât even let anyone know about our little agreement, or the fact that I think youâre certifiableââ
âDo you always tell your boss whoâs just given you a huge bonus that heâs a nutjob on your first day?â I raise my brows in challenge.
âNo. But then again, Iâve never had a boss who ruined my breakfast before I started working for him, either.â
I wish I could just be honest.
If she knew about Wyatt, sheâd know Iâm not a lunatic chasing his next sugar high and maybe show some remorse for her bullshit.
âWe donât know each other very well, but I trust youâll find I never do anything without a damn good reason.â
She crosses her arms. âYou mean you had a good reason to harass me and buy out every cinnamon roll in the shop the next time you saw me? Were you feeding half the city?â
My brain grinds like itâs rusted shut. Yeah, buying all the rolls for revenge might have been petty.
I could apologize.
Obviously, I could, but then where would that leave me with this green-eyed pixie who glares up at me like sheâs smelling blood in the water?
I stare back as something resembling a vacant smile turns up my lips.
âI offered you a roll at the interview, and I had a good reason for needing them that day.â
She raises a brow. âLetâs hear it.â
âAt this point, it doesnât matter. I donât answer to you,â I snap.
âRight. Because your reason doesnât exist.â
âWhat?â My smile contorts into a frown.
âClearing the air was your idea, boss. You say you have this wonderful reason for desperately needing four dozen cinnamon rolls, but you canât say what it is. Iâd be willing to bet five hundred dollars to a Regis roll the reason doesnât existâoh, wait! Only one person in this room is rich enough to make a bet as uneven as that, though, and it certainly isnât me.â
âIt exists,â I growl.
âDoes it?â I hear her heel tap the floor impatiently.
I glare at her, burning her into the ground.
âItâs not your concern, Miss Poe. We should be discussing the vision here and workplace morale in more detail. That will help you understand why Iâm bothering with this shit show.â I pause as she looks at me, wide-eyed and dripping disdain. âLook. Iâve worked hard to build an efficient work culture here. Iâm not going to watch it get hammered apart purely because we get along like a mongoose in a cobra pit.â
âAm I the mongoose or you?â she asks absently.
Inhaling deeply, I donât dignify her question with a response.
âWhatever. I guess I just find it hard to believe a man whoâs almost criminally obsessed with his breakfast cultivated an atmosphere where people to be friendly with each other. Then again, if friendliness is a job requirement, is it really friendliness or just forced socialization? And do you really think we can just call a truce and forget our run-ins? I donât think so. Iâve never had so much venom from a total stranger in my life. Iâve only ever met one man who might be as self-centered as you, and even that might be a stretch.â
âWho?â I grind out. Iâm a lot of things. Workaholic, yes. Jackass, sometimes. Self-centered, no.
âHuh?â She reaches up, fixing a loose lock of hair, suddenly avoiding my eyes.
âYou said youâve only met one man as self-centered as me. Who is he?â
She stiffens and goes red, clearly regretting the ammunition sheâs handed me.
âOh, so Miss Nevermore has secrets too?â
Sheâs even redder now, and I canât tell if itâs shame or anger.
âNone of your business,â she says quietly.
Too quietly, really.
Why is she so flushed? What happened to her fire?
âSee? Sometimes you have the answer, but itâs not worth sharing with the world,â I say gently.
Her eyes whip to me, hurt and furious.
âI highly doubt itâs the same thing.â
I shift in my seat, curious who could leave this frosty impression on her.
âLetâs make a deal right here. Tell me who beats me in the pompous jackass department, and Iâll tell you my reason for trying to jack your Regis roll. We can understand each other, Miss Poe. You go first,â I tell her.
Of course, I canât give her the full truth in naked detail. If she answers the question, Iâll come up with something.
Predictably, she stares at me in awkward, cold silence.
âIs there a fucking draft in here or is it just me?â I wonder out loud, giving her a stare that could melt the arctic circle.
I already know she wonât play ball.
Whatever else this strange blond slip of a woman in black is, she makes a mule look accommodating.
âThatâs what I thought,â I say coldly when she doesnât answer. Iâve regained control of the conversation, at least. âNow, moving on, Iâd like to walk you through my vision.â
She glances at her digital watch and then grins at me like I didnât just knock out her soul.
âSorry. Iâd love to stay and chat about your corporate vision, but Anna needs me in a meeting in five minutes and this place is huge. Have a blessed day, Mr. Burns.â She turns and strolls to the door, puts her hand on the knob, and looks at me over her shoulder. âJust text me your morning coffee order. Iâll be happy to bike it in for you tomorrow. Although, that sounds more like an assistantâs duty than a copywriterâs. Iâm not sure what coffee runs have to do with marketing, but since you Iâm a team player.â
She throws the door open.
Damn her, I never insisted on anything with the coffee.
âWait,â I call.
She freezes, glancing back in slow motion.
âWhat?â
âYou have a notepad. Just write it down now. Make it a large black coffee with a dab of heavy cream and two Regis rolls.â I reach into my wallet and pull out two crisp twenties, which I push across my desk to her. âSince weâre not friends, thereâs no reason for me to have to text you, or for you to pay for my order, and since this is a personal matter, it shouldnât involve a company card. Iâll expect my change.â
Our eyes clash like two warring cats, all teeth and claws in the silence, snarling for dominance.
âDid you get that or do you need to write it down?â
âGot it. Iâm not a moron. Iâll remember,â she mutters, walking out the door.
Goddammit.
So much for the cease-fire.
Iâm starting to think my failure with Wyatt brought her into my life. Iâm not a particularly religious man and I donât put much stock in that old saying about God giving his biggest battles to his strongest warriors.
Thereâs something painfully ironic there, though.
Because I couldnât move one mountain of a man, now Iâve got a stone-cold second peak to deal with. And unlike Wyatt, Miss Poe has the pedigree to make my life a frozen hell.