It was a mistake to fuck her.
I was working under the assumption that sleeping with Emma would get her out of my system. Weâd have regular sex, it would eventually get boring, and then Iâd terminate our contract. Sheâd get a fat severance package and Iâd be able to walk away without a care in the world.
What I didnât count on was her tunneling her way into my subconscious.
I go to bed thinking about our next meeting. I wake up horny from dreams of her. I spend most of my day trying not to look at her too long or too intensely.
Itâs fucking ridiculous is what it is. I need to get my head on straight. And Iâve decided that the best way to do that is to make plans for lunch or dinner with a different woman every day for a week until this resolves itself.
It serves the dual purpose of keeping me distracted as well as keeping Emma in her placeâwhich is preferably right beneath me. Naked and spread-eagled.
But since that canât happen any time between the hours of nine and five, this is a better remedy. She doesnât get to question me about who I have lunch with and I donât need to feel guilty about welcoming a different woman into my office each day.
Sure enough, thereâs no guilt when I look at the name on my calendar today.
But the dread is real.
âMr. Oryolov?â
I keep my gaze fixed on my phone. The angelic white blouse that Emma is wearing today is giving me âpreacherâs daughterâ vibes and Iâve already wasted most of the morning imagining her on her knees in front of me, begging to be corrupted.
âYes?â
âJessica Allens has just arrived.â
I canât help my sneer. Jessica fucking Allens. Trust fund heiress. Socialite diva. Daddyâs girl. An all-around goddamned nightmare.
Sometimes, I wonder why I put myself through the indignity of her company. Then I remember: her daddyâs not just rich; heâs important. Hiram Allens is the cityâs newly appointed police commissioner, and for a man with my variety of irons in the fire, thatâs a connection I canât afford to pass up.
âSend her in.â Iâm forced to look up when Emma stays where she is. âWas there something else?â
Judging from the vein throbbing on Emmaâs forehead, there most certainly is.
âShe asked me to get her a finger bowl because, and I quoteââ Emmaâs face screws up in a haughty expression thatâs all nose and chinââshe âdoesnât like to use public restrooms.ââ
I press my lips together in a hard line to keep myself from smiling.
âAnd she asked me to get her some weird tea thing that Iâve never heard of. Gu-yusu⦠something or the other. I told her we didnât have that on hand, and she responded by dropping her fur coat and heavy bag right on my desk. Like sheâs in The Devil Wears Prada.â
I raise my brow. âIs that a euphemism?â
She snorts with laughter but manages to rein herself in fast. Her cheeks are flushed a delicate shade of pink. Of course, that might also be infuriation and rageâpretty common symptoms to have after spending any length of time with the resident princess-bitch of New York.
âItâs a movie.â
I glance back at my phone for no reason. But itâs necessary that I look busy whenever Emma is in the room. It helps me avoid any prolonged eye contact.
âThereâs some salted sakura tea in the directorâs lounge. She can make do with that.â
âDoubtful,â Emma mutters darkly.
âSheâs difficult,â I agree.
âThen why are you having lunch with her?â
Thereâs nothing ostensibly possessive about that question, but it rubs me the wrong way regardless. âIâm not sure I need to justify my lunch dates to my assistant, Ms. Carson.â
She stiffens instantly and, just like that, the vein in her forehead is back. âRight. Iâll just let her in then. Have a wonderful lunch.â
I suppose I deserve that snark.
Seconds after Emma exits, Jessica enters. She looks like sheâs going to a fancy cocktail party. Her genetically-engineered body is squeezed into a velvet bandage dress and her makeup is so thick that it almost manages to hide all the plastic surgery sheâs done to her face.
âRuslan, darling!â She walks gracefully for a woman in six-inch heels. âYou get more and more handsome every time I see you.â
My gaze slides to the door, then back to her Botoxed forehead. Pretty sure if I were to facepalm her, she wouldnât feel a thing.
I walk her over to the stainless steel table in the neighboring alcove and pull a chair out for her. We spend a good fifteen minutes talking about her damned acrylic nails before Emma shows up with the tea.
âHere you go, Ms. Allens.â
Jessica scrunches up her nose. âNo guayusa?â
âWeâre fresh out, Ms. Allens.â
âDisappointing.â
The vein seems to have taken up permanent residence on Emmaâs forehead. But apart from that little tell, her face gives nothing away. âIf thatâs all, thenâ¦â
Sheâs backing away from the table when Jessica snaps her fingers. âHold on. Where did you put my coat and bag?â
âTheyâre on my desk, Ms. Allens. Exactly where you dumâleft them.â
Jessica is not even looking at Emma when she speaks. âThat coat is worth more than your entire apartment. Make sure itâs looked after.â
Emmaâs jaw clenches. Now that Jessica is looking away, she lets her professional mask slide right off. If looks could kill, Jessica would be a smoldering pile of ash.
I canât say Iâd mind.
The moment the door shuts, Jessica rolls her eyes. âWhat a ditz, huh? Finding good help is so hard these days.â
Something inside my chest roars to life. I canât quite put my finger on it, but itâs accompanied by a very specific thought: No one insults my woman.
On the heels of that thought is pure fucking terror.
What the fuck? My woman?
âAhem! Ruslan? Whereâd you go, handsome?â
I blink away the little red spots that are honestly a welcome distraction from Jessicaâs face and do my damned best to appear like Iâm actually happy to see her.
We spend the next hour flitting from one mundane subject to the next. The only consistent thing about the conversation is the fact that she bookends each topic with the mention of a friend whoâs getting married or about to get married; a friend whoâs pregnant or trying to get pregnant.
I keep my phone close the whole time, but try as I might, some of the stupid bullshit sheâs spewing still manages to slip through.
â⦠donât you think?â
Since Iâve completely missed her question, I fall back on my tried-and-true default. âHm.â
Her eyebrows hitch up with excitement. âI knew it. Itâs the broody, silent ones that are big teddy bears on the inside.â
Okay. So maybe itâs not a foolproof response. âCome again?â
âIt would be a terrible shame if you didnât have children, Ruslan. I mean, look at that jawline of yours! Those genes need to be passed on!â
I nip that shit in the bud immediately. One: Iâm not the fatherly type. Two: I have no idea what this womanâs children would actually look like; shit, Iâve forgotten what she used to look like. And three: the thought of procreating with her just made me violently sick to my stomach.
âChildren arenât on my radar.â
âOh.â Her face drops. âButââ
I make a show of glancing down at my Rolex. âItâs been a pleasure catching up, Jessica. But I have meetings to get to.â
âOh. Okay. Shall we schedule another date soon? Maybe dinner next time?â
I nod. âIâll have my assistant contact yours.â
I open the door for her and Jessicaâs eyes veer straight to Emma. She makes a point of placing her hand on my chest, her eyelashes fluttering unnecessarily.
âThanks for a mesmerizing lunch, handsome.â She leans in, her lips coming for mine. I turn my face deftly to the side and her kiss finds my cheek.
âJessica.â
I step back into the safety of my office and close the door on her faltering smile.
Well, that was a fucking shitshow. But it did get me thinking.
Apparently, everyone has babies on the brain. Everyone except me. I need to make sure that Iâm covered with Emma where thatâs concerned. The contract has a detailed section on contraception that Emma signed, indicating she was on the pill. But that leaves the responsibility squarely in her hands.
I thought I was comfortable with it at the time, but the more I think about it, the more I want to take back some control. Condoms arenât my favorite thing, but Iâm willing to wear them if theyâll prevent an unwanted pregnancy with my secretary.
Itâs alarming how fast the image rushes to the forefront of my mind. Emma, wearing a blouse similar to the one sheâs wearing todayâexcept that it billows over her stomach to accommodate the child sheâs carrying. My child.
No.
Thatâs just the caveman in me talking. I donât even want a child. I certainly donât want one with Emma.
No matter how much my dick is suddenly obsessed with the idea.