For His Pleasure: The Boxed Set, Books 1-6 (For His Pleasure, For His Taking, For His Keeping, For His Honor, For His Trust, For His Forever)

For His Pleasure: The Boxed Set, Books 1-6 (For His Pleasure, For His Taking, For His Keeping, For His Honor, For His Trust, For His Forever) by Kelly Favor

Book: For His Pleasure: The Boxed Set, Books 1-6 (For His Pleasure, For His Taking, For His Keeping, For His Honor, For His Trust, For His Forever) by Kelly Favor Read Free Book Online
Authors: Kelly Favor
Ads: Link
she’d been drugged. Her eyes were heavy. No chance yet for coffee, and she needed some caffeine badly.
    The time dragged on. She pressed her ear to the door and listened but there was nothing. It didn’t sound like he was in a meeting or anything.
    She checked her cell phone. It was now 9:30. She’d been up here waiting almost half an hour.
    After another twenty minutes torturously passed, she sank to the floor and sat with her back against the wall. Had he forgotten she was out here?
    Of course not. This was all planned, deliberate, just like everything else Red did.
    Unfortunately, he was still the head of this company and she was just an intern, so she couldn’t disobey him now.
    Another half an hour passed and she started to nod off.
    “Well, well, this is cute,” a voice said.
    Startled, she looked up to see a tall, statuesque brunette coming towards her. Nicole got to her feet, her cheeks burning. “Sorry, I’ve been waiting out here for so long, I just got tired—“
    The woman laughed condescendingly. “No need to apologize darling, I myself have had one too many cocktails on a Friday night. Of course, it’s not Friday yet, is it?”
    Nicole stammered incoherently. The woman stared down her nose at her. She was tall, very well put together. She was obviously older, more experienced, but still beautiful in a kind of frighteningly serious way. She reeked of money and class and even sex.
    And then she was knocking on the door to Red’s office. He opened it slowly, smiled at the woman. “Ah, Talia, how nice to see you. Come in, come in.”
    Talia walked inside. As Red shut the door without so much as glancing at Nicole, she heard the woman laugh. “I see you have a little wrinkled hobo laying outside your door. Trying to recreate skid row right here at Jameson International?”
    Both of them laughed and the door clicked shut, muffling their brutal guffaws.
    Nicole held back her tears. She was furious. At herself for allowing him to make a fool of her, and at that bitch for thinking she could treat her like a piece of dirt. But more than anything, Nicole was angry with herself.
    Maybe Danielle was right. Red didn’t respect her at all.
    She considered leaving, just walking out of the building and never returning.
    Ignore his calls, if he made any—get a new job. Move on with her life and forget Red Jameson ever existed.
    But she knew that she couldn’t really do that. Which only made her more angry and hurt. She was at his mercy in every way and he knew it.
    Another forty minutes went by before Talia left. She left as she’d entered, laughing and joking intimately with Red. On her way out she brushed by Nicole without so much as a word.
    When the woman disappeared from view, Red turned to Nicole with a brutal expression. “Get in here.”
    “She’s a bitch.”
    “I said get in.”
    She strode past him and he closed the door behind her.
    “What was all that about?” she asked.
    “You don’t ask the questions around here,” he spat. His voice was barely controlled. She saw that he was absolutely as furious with her as she was with him.
    “I didn’t do anything wrong. I don’t deserve—“
    “You don’t deserve?” he scoffed, walking to the bar and pouring himself a glass of water from a pitcher. He didn’t offer her anything. “You don’t even know what you deserve. You’re a child.”
    “I know that I should be treated with respect.”
    “Bullshit. Who told you that? One of your little teeny bopper friends?”
    She flushed. Everything she thought, he seemed to know it. “Is this because I came in late to work today?”
    He drank some of his water. “You say that as if it’s a minor detail.”
    “My train was delayed.”
    “You think that because we have a relationship outside of work, you can waltz in here after nine o’clock, you think you can get away with murder now.”
    “No. That’s not true.” But she doubted her own words. She had gotten up late this morning. Would she

Similar Books

The Lost Boy

Dave Pelzer

Breathe

Sloan Parker

Second Shot

Zoe Sharp