Authors: Winter Renshaw
DANE
Where the hell is he?
I jerk my watch out from under my sleeve and cross my arms
as I glance down from my office. A steady stream of morning traffic passes by,
none of them stopping outside the building. Knowing my brother, he’s arriving
in a chauffeured import because that’s the way they do it in New York. I
suppose we each house our own brand of arrogance from our respective posts in
the world.
Last night, I slipped out of the hospice center after Uncle
Leo had passed out and saw a text from Bellamy. Any other night I would’ve been
rather pleased by such a declaration, but not last night. I’m not quite sure
I’m in the mood to play around today either. She’s going to have it pretty easy
today as I’m not exactly in a teaching mood.
I squint against the dirty glass and make a mental note to
have housekeeping touch up my windows. This is completely unacceptable, and I
want Bellamy to have something clean to cling to when I eventually fuck her
against it.
A black car pulls up to the front of the building, and a
leggy blonde climbs out. I recognize her instantly.
I know what belongs to me when I see it.
A man climbs out of the passenger side and runs up behind
her, reaching for her arm.
“No fucking way.” I watch through a red fog, processing
everything in slow motion and balling up my fist when I see him lunge for her
arm and spin her toward him.
I storm from my office and head to the elevator, passing Harlow
on the way. Harlow is rarely on time for work, which serves as a reminder for
me to note the time once more. It’s four past eight. Not only did some strange
man drive Bellamy to work,
but
she’s late.
The doors ding and part and Bellamy steps off, clutching her
chest when I startle her.
“Dane. You scared me.” She clutches a coffee in her left
hand.
Since when is she a coffee drinker?
“Were you
waiting for me?”
“I was.”
“I’m so sorry I’m late,” she gushes. “I have an
explanation.”
“Do you now?”
“Yes…” she cocks her head to the side, not understanding the
seriousness and implications of this situation.
“Come to my office.” I take big strides until we burst
through the double doors I left open in my hasty attempt to beat her to the
elevator.
“Is…everything okay?”
“Does it look like everything’s okay, Bellamy?”
She sets her coffee down on my desk, and a small splash of
it spills from the lid to the wood.
“Clean that up,” I say, handing her a tissue.
She wipes it down and throws the tissue away. “I’m confused.”
“As am I.”
“Is this about the text last night? Is that considered
speaking out of turn? Maybe I shouldn’t have sent it. You didn’t respond, so I
wasn’t sure…”
“Stop talking, Bellamy.” I place a hand in the air to
silence her nonsense. “Who is the man that dropped you off this morning?”
Her expression freezes as her lips part just so. “Were you
watching me?”
“Answer the question.”
“He’s a family friend. My car broke down on my way home last
night. It had to be towed, and it’s in the shop. I needed a ride to work this
morning, and he offered.”
“Why did he chase after you?”
“Because I almost forgot my coffee.”
I take a moment, pulling in a deep breath because fuck do I
need it. She almost had me reliving my days with Jenessa, and that wouldn’t have
been good for either of us. My fingertips point together, forming an arrow
pointed at her, and as soon as I’m ready to speak again I say, “You call
me
, Bellamy. If you need something,
anything, you call
me
. You are
my
responsibility.”
“I didn’t want to bother you,” she said. “Next time, I’ll
know to call you. I’m sorry. Believe me when I tell you, you have nothing to
worry about with my friend.”
“Do you think I’m jealous?”
Her jaw hangs. “I-I just assumed. I mean, why else would you
care who takes me to work?”
“Jealousy implies what we have here…is
romantic
.”
“I know it’s not romantic.”
“It also implies I’m insecure, which I find extremely
insulting.”
“I know you’re not insecure, and I would never suggest
that.”
She’s damn lucky I’m letting her speak to me as Bellamy and
not as my sub. I would never allow a submissive to talk back to me and get away
scot-free with it.
“Just so we’re clear,” I say, as my phone rings. “We are
exclusive
. I have purchased your
exclusivity at a very fair price. I am your Dom. You are my sub. That is all we
are and all we’ll ever be. And you are not to associate with any other men, in
any way, while you are under contract with me.”
Her eyes blink rapidly.
Fuck.
I know what this means.
She nods and smiles through teary eyes before turning and
walking out. I resist the urge to correct her behavior since now is clearly not
the time, and I would never scold a sub for crying. Before I can call after
her, my phone rings.
“Yes, Marlene.” I shouldn’t be annoyed at her for doing her
job, but damn her timing.
“Your brother’s here, shall I send him back?”
“He actually checked in this time?”
“I told him you were…indisposed.” Marlene knows not to
bother me when I’m dealing with a hybrid employee.
“I’m available now. Send him back.”
Waiting by the mini bar for my brother, pick up a crystal
tumbler and contemplate pouring us a couple of drinks. It’s way too early,
barely past breakfast time, but I need a drink in the worst way.
“Hey, asshole.” I turn to see my younger brother, Beckham
standing there wearing his signature smug smile.
“You’re late.” I sit the tumbler back down. “As always.”
“Lighten up,” he scoffs, trudging across the room with his
hands shoved in the pockets of his linen pants.
“Just get back from Turks and Caicos?” I eye his casual get-up.
“Or are you on your way there?”
“One of us needs to take a vacation once in a while.”
“You get enough rest and relaxation for the both of us.”
“Who was the pretty blonde walking out of your office in
tears a minute ago?” Beckham has a twinkle in his eye.
“Hands off.”
“Oh, is she one of your…what do you call it?
Submissives
?” He waves his hands in the
air in a flamboyant fashion.
“Only simple minds poke fun at things they don’t
understand.” I take a seat at my desk and pull up my email. My brother’s only
been here five minutes, and already I’m ready for him to leave. “When are you
going to see Uncle Leo?”
It’s more of a command than a question.
“Today,” Beck says, popping down into a guest chair. He
rests an elbow on the arm and leans against his hand, gazing out the window. I
know he’s not ready. He’s been keeping a safe distance this entire time Uncle
Leo’s been sick, and we both knew this day would come. Beck’s not equipped to
deal with emotional anything, then again, neither am I, but I never excused
myself from being by our uncle’s side when he needed me most.
Beckham smacks the arms of the chair and stands.
“You going now?” My fingers stop typing against my keyboard,
and I turn to watch him head out.
“Yeah,” he says. “I’ll be back later.
Odessa’s
around here somewhere.
If you see a sassy redhead wandering the halls,
she’s with me.”
“Ah. You decided to make it official with her?”
Beckham cracks a smile and points his finger at me. “Don’t.”
The second my brother leaves, I head to Bellamy’s office.
Maybe I should’ve have been so intense with her this morning, but I said what I
said, and there’s no taking it back. I’m not above apologizing, and it isn’t my
intention to make her sulk the rest of the day.
I rap on her door but receive no answer, so I show myself
in.
She’s gone.
BELLAMY
“Excuse me, are you crying in there?”
I dab my eyes and stare at the space beneath the stall door
to see a pair of peacock blue pumps. I’m not sure if it’s Harlow or Brenna or
Caitlin, but I’m not about to let them see me like this.
I hold my breath, hoping that will force the heaving to stop,
but it only makes it worse.
“Hello?” The girl knocks on my stall door. “I hear you in
there. Open up.”
I don’t want to deal with the mean girls, and I don’t want
them ask what happened. To be honest, I don’t know what happened. There’s no
reason for me to be in a toilet stall crying my eyes out like the homecoming
king just dumped me on football Friday night.
“I’m Odessa,” the girl says.
So it’s not Harlow, Brenna or Caitlin?
“You going to come out?” The toes of her blue heels lean
forward like she’s standing on her tiptoes. “I’m really tall, and I can see
over the door, so you better come out. Okay, I’m not that tall. Never mind.”
I dab my eyes once more with the generous, four-ply toilet
paper Townsend Towers keeps stocked in the bathrooms, and unlock the door.
“Thank you, yes, there you are.” Odessa stands with her
hands on her hips and a relaxed posture, and immediately I can tell she’s the
kind of girl who’s not afraid to take on the world. A blanket of shiny auburn
hair frames a creamy, flawless complexion and her dark green eyes are framed
with the longest lashes I’ve ever seen. “Got a name?”
“Bellamy. Do you work here?” I thought I’d met everyone, but
maybe not?
Her lips pinch. “Sort of. I work for Townsend Energy
Holdings but not here. I’m out of the New York office.”
When I inhale the air cools my lungs and almost makes me
forged I’d just been crying. “Oh, do you work with Beckham?”
“You know Beckham?” She says his name with an eye roll and a
bitten smile. “Or do you, like,
know
Beckham.”
“I’m not sure I follow.”
Odessa bats her hand. “Forget I said anything.”
I step past her and wash my hands at the sink before taking
a cool, wet paper towel and patting it against my warm cheeks. Walking back to
my desk is going to be difficult, especially knowing I have to pass the
reception desk where the other girls hang out.
“You’re crying over a guy, right?” Odessa stares at my
reflection in the mirror.
“Maybe.”
“He’s not worth it, whoever he is. They never are.”
“I know.”
“If you know that, then why’d you let one get you all worked
up?”
“It wasn’t really him; it was mostly the way he spoke to me.
It was hurtful, and he wasn’t supposed to hurt me. At least he said he
wouldn’t.”
She rolls her eyes again. “That’s what they all say, and you
know what? They’re all a bunch of fucking liars. Pardon my French.”
I suppose she’s right.
“You want to get coffee or something? Are there any good
coffee places around here that don’t have a green mermaid as a logo?” Odessa
points to the door.
Dane would be livid if I just walked out of here without
saying anything. “I don’t know. I should get back to my desk. My boss is
probably wondering where I am. I’ve been in here a while.”
“
Who
do you report to?”
“Dane.”
Odessa grins wide. “Oh, I’ve got this. You’re going with me.
I’ll deal with him if he gives you any shit.”
Somehow I don’t think
that’s how it works with him.
She takes my arm and drags me out of the restroom and toward
the elevator.
“I don’t have my purse,” I object.
“Good thing I have a company credit card.”
***
“How long have you been working here?” Odessa pulls out a
chair at a table next to the front window of a small coffee shop. “I don’t
remember seeing an email about you?”
“This is my first week.” I sit down and take a sip of my
hazelnut latte. It’s my second one today though I hardly touched my first one.
Cortland made us stop and get coffee together on the drive in this morning. He
thought it’d be cute, and he ignored me when I pleaded with him since we were
running late. “I’m his concierge.”
Odessa sits her cup down and squares her shoulders, the
corners of her mouth curling a moment later. “You’re shitting me.”
I shake my head, looking from side to side. “No.”
“I mean
,
I’d heard rumors that he
did that, but I didn’t know it was really a thing.”
Shit.
The non-disclosure agreement.
I should’ve memorized
the damn thing because I’m pretty sure I wasn’t supposed to disclose that I’m
on the payroll for sexual favors.
My hand claps over my mouth. “Odessa, please don’t tell
anyone what I just told you.”
“Were you crying over Dane?”
My chin dips, and I glance out the window.
“Please, tell me you weren’t crying over
Dane
.”
“He’s intense,” I say. “We have an agreement, and I’m just
not sure I’m what he needs, and I need this job.”
“You’re exactly his type.” She angles herself in her chair,
and her tone is flat. “Blonde. Blue eyes. Pretty. An innocent ingénue ready to
be shown the world…”
“I didn’t know he had a type.” Do I have a type? I guess if
I did, he’d be like Dane, but nicer.
A little less arrogant
and a little more transparent.
Someone I could get to know on a deeper
level and without being on all fours.
“Why do you need this job so bad? There are millions of
other jobs out there. Don’t work for someone who treats you like crap. You’ve
got to have more respect for yourself.”
“It’s complicated.” I lift my Styrofoam cup and swirl it
around to gauge how much is left. “Again, just please don’t tell anyone, okay?”
“Anyone I might tell probably already knows.” She shrugs and
takes another sip, her eyes following a striking man in a gray Macintosh jacket
and wayfarer sunglasses who walks by and smiles at her.
“Who would you tell?”
“Well, Beckham,” she says. “We tell each other everything.”
“Are you and Beckham together?”
Odessa’s mouth drops and she lets out a robust laugh that
causes the couple at the table across from us to stare. “Absolutely not. And
please don’t ever ask me that again.”
Her laugh suggests I’ve just assumed the most outlandish
thing in the world.
“Been there. Done that. Got the t-shirt.” She pulls her
small clutch from her lap and yanks out her phone. “Speak of the devil.”
I try not to watch as she feverishly types back a response
to Beckham’s text.
“I guess we have to head back,” she says. “I have to go with
Beck to see his uncle in hospice.”
“Oh?”
“That’s why we’re here,” she says, standing up and tilting
her cup back to get the last drop. After she tosses it in a nearby trashcan,
she whips out a tin of Rosebud Salve and coats her lips before popping in a
stick of gum. “Want one?”
“Sure.”
“So Dane didn’t tell you about Uncle Leo?”
“No.”
“I’m shocked. The man practically raised them, well, since
they were teenagers.”
We leave the coffee shop and head back. I’m dying to ask
more questions about Dane because silly me had only ever assumed someone as
put-together and driven as Dane had been raised in some perfect family unit
with two kids, a dog, and a picket fence.
“I wish you could’ve met Uncle Leo in his better days,”
Odessa says with a wistful gleam in her emerald eyes.
“Is there anything I should do for Dane?” I ask. “Anything
to help him cope with this?”
Her lips purse as her blue heels click on the cement
sidewalk. “I doubt it. If he hasn’t mentioned anything to you yet, he probably
doesn’t want to talk about it. The doctors say it’s going to be any day now. If
Dane’s a little more on edge than usual, that might be why.”
He’s always on edge. I’m not sure I’d be able to tell the
difference at this point.
“I see,” I say as we trek into the lobby and approach the
elevator.
When we hit our floor, we walk side by side past the
reception desk where the
gaggle of gossiping girls stand
.
I’m not sure how or why Dane tolerates that, but it never seems like they’re
working. Odessa shoots them a glare, and they all glance away like they share a
brain. She’s a deflector, that woman.
“You ready?” A dark haired man in a casual linen suit rounds
the corner and hooks his arm into Odessa’s, but she immediately retracts as if
she knows he’s doing it to annoy her. Must be Beckham because he looks almost
like a cut-and-paste version of Dane, only with a bit more playfulness in his
stormy eyes. “Where’d you go?”
“Coffee,” she says, nodding at me. “And it was on you,
so…thanks.”
“My pleasure,” Beckham teases, one eyebrow arched. He wears
the same dimples, dark hair, and hollowed jaw as his brother.
“It was great meeting you, Bellamy,” Odessa places her hand
across the side of my arm. “I’m not sure how long we’ll be around this week,
but I’m sure I’ll run into you again.”
I duck past them and head into my office, waking up my
computer to check my email. Not that I usually have any. I’ve yet to do any
real, actual work in this place. My heart jumps into my throat when I see an
email from HR asking me to head down to her office as soon as I get a chance.
This is it.
I’ve approached the end of the road.
I just want to forget this ever happened and move on.
Thank goodness my tears are all dried out. I stiffen my
wobbly legs and rise up, pulling my shoulders back. I’m going to march in there
take it like a grown woman and spend the rest of the day in the city because I
don’t have a car to get home, and my ride isn’t coming until five.
“Hey, Laurie,” I say a few minutes later, popping my head
into her office.
She pulls her glasses off and sets them down, reaching
across her desk for a stack of paperwork.
“Have a seat,” she says.
My heart thuds hard and deep, but I force a smile. I’ve been
raised to grin and bear things, and this situation would be no exception.
She places a form in front of me and hands me a pen. “You
forgot to sign your background check authorization.”
“Oh.” A shaky laugh settles in my throat as I grab the pen
and sign my name on the line. “Is that all?”
“That is all.” She slips the form from in front of me and
places it in a nearby stacker tray. “Carry on.”