I wake up in a tangled fit of sheets with a curse on my lips.
All from the kind of insane dream you instantly rememberâand regret.
I wore my wedding dress.
Dad walked me down the aisle.
I was walking to meet Jayâwhat shouldâve happened in real life on that awful dayâbut when my dad put my hand in the groomâs, he wasnât that backstabbing mouse of a man anymore.
The stranger groom wore an impeccably tailored Haughty But Nice tuxedo.
He was taller and broader and more imposing than Jay, and his eyes sparkled like fine polished mahogany. When he smiled at me, I went from bride to butterflies to butter.
A giddy emotional noodle who couldnât decide if she wanted to break down crying in confusion, or in happy ugly tears for a man who pushes every button.
The second it hit me I was about to marry, I burst into a raven and flew away.
Okay, so dreams are hardly ever realistic, even when theyâre annoyingly real in other ways.
The raven probably came from my shoulder tattoo. Since I couldnât live down the constant jokes about being an English major named Poe, one day, I decided to just rock it.
I always loved âThe Raven,â
anyway.
The godly tux and Lincoln effing Burns obviously came from the stress I have to deal with at work. Oh, plus the glaring fact that Lincoln was the last person I talked to before I went to bed.
I donât have a crush on my boss.
Iâm not even stupid enough to think love is real.
Still, itâs the kind of dream you have to process.
So, I sit at my tiny table with my notebook, working through the chaos thatâs my brain the only way I know how. I dive into words, pounding out meter and rhyme and feelings like juggling knives.
When a sharp sound goes off behind me, I almost go tumbling out of my chair.
âYou should really start locking your door. Some crazy could walk in.â Eliza strolls inside, holding a steaming hot mug with both hands.
My heart leaps at the sound of her voice and I slam my notebook shut.
âYikes. Thanks for the reminder. Canât believe I forgot to lock up last night.â
Was I that distracted from talking to I donât want to know. I also donât need anyone else thinking Iâve fallen so far down the rabbit hole that Iâm writing angsty poetry inspired by my cinnamon roll snorting boss.
âYou okay? I didnât mean to scare you.â She sits down beside me and slides the mug over. âTry it. Iâm calling it Raven Blend just for you.â
âWhat? Now youâre cracking Poe jokes too?â
âNope. I named it after your bitchinâ tattoo.â
I burst out laughing.
God. Elizaâs humor reminds me that my encounters with the bosshole have made me overly defensive.
âSorry. I think I just woke up a little tightly wound today. Probably the new job or something.â I pick up the drink and take a long, pleasing sip. âOooh. Wow, Elizaâ
â
âPerks you up before the caffeine hits, doesnât it? Itâs two parts cinnamon and one vanilla.â
âItâs wonderful,â I say, praying Iâm not developing a cinnamon aversion.
âWhatâs wrong?â
I take another drink. Itâs good, but not mind-blowing the second time around, and I donât think itâs the coffee itself.
âOh, nothing. Nothing with this drink, thatâs for sure.â
âBut youâre feeling restless? Itâs that dillweed you work for again, isnât it?â
I sigh. âNo.â
âThe job? I was afraid writing about holy matrimony all day might be hard. But if anyone can do it, itâs you.â
âSorta. Technically, I guess itâs psycho-boss. The guy tries to be a twenty-four-seven asshat, and when he tries to be niceâ¦somehow, heâs just worse. Or itâs just me. After last year, Iâm overly sensitive with weddings. Iâm also not great at the whole forgiveness thing, especially when it involves dumb remarks from a dangerously handsome, powerful billionaire with my future in his hands. Not forgiving might be safer.â
âYou knew he was an attractive jerk when you took the job. Too bad you canât get hazard pay for that.â
âI know,â I say glumly.
âSo why did you do it?â
âHuh?â I shake my head. âI guess it justâ¦seemed like the next logical step. I couldnât be a lowly assistant with a sucky salary for the rest of my life.â
âI think thereâs more to it than that. You couldâve gotten other jobs in this city, Dakota, but you chose to stick it out.â She takes the mug and sips. âAlso, itâs a nice sunny day and weâre not wasting it. How about we talk it out on a bike ride?â
âReally?â I glance up, surprised.
Eliza has always been more of a Pilates or yoga kind of girl. Not to mention somewhat of a homebody on the weekends when sheâs in full coffee mad scientist mode.
She grins and nods. âYes! Letâs go.â
âLetâs ride to Sweeter Grind first. My treat.â
âI just made you coffee.â She gestures frantically at the cup.
âAnd itâs great. But hardly anyone goes to Sweeter Grind for the coffee over other places here. Itâs all about the baked goods and the atmosphere.â
âTrue. Okay, Iâm in.â
Ten minutes later, weâre bustling downstairs to retrieve our bikes.
âSo what did the human dildo do this time?â Eliza asks.
âWe were in a meeting full of people, and he asks me how a woman with no ring on her finger knows so much about weddings.â
She grimaces.
âGod, the nerve. You should have asked him how a man with no game sells so much shit to women.â
I laugh hard. Sheâs in fine form today.
âIf I had your brain, I would have. He had it coming. Only, he called me up last night trying to apologizeâ¦â
âAt least, he tried, I guess? You should teach him social skills and charge him out the butt.â
By the end of our little chat, he actually seemed sincere. That should make me happy.
When we get to the cafe, I go to the counter.
âTwo Regis rolls, please.â
âIâm sorry,â the girl behind the counter says with a wince. âWe just ran out.â
âAgain?â My eyes bug out. âWait, donât tell me. A tall, growly guy with a black Centurion card?â
She laughs. âHowâd you know? We had half a dozen left about ten minutes ago. Same guy bought âem all up.â
The bosshole. Iâm a thousand percent sure as soon as she confirms.
âDid he have mocha-brown eyes?â
She giggles. âYeah. He was pretty built. The guy looked like he could rip you in two, except Iâve seen him before and heâs usually wearing a three-piece suitânot today.â
Eliza and I exchange a slow, agonized look.
I hate that I wonder what Lincoln Burns is wearing, too.
âHe used to come in and just buy a few rolls at a time, but now heâs likeâ¦hoarding them? He buys at least half a dozen Regis rolls a few times a week now,â the barista says.
Elizaâs gaze never leaves me.
âThatâs Captain McGrowly, all right,â I tell her. âAnd I think weâve found the source of his superpower.â
What the actual hell, though? Is his mom a cinnamon roll serial killer if she doesnât get her fix?
âI have no idea, but he really likes his Regis rolls,â the barista says. âHeâs been coming around for about a year. Do you want to try something new? The apple turnovers are good.â
I nod. âYeah, weâll take turnovers. Do you have any idea where he goes when he leaves?â
Iâm too curious. This is a man who doesnât take sugar in his coffee and stashed the goods in his drawer when I brought them.
The barista shrugs. âI donât know. Sometimes he comes in with a driver, but when itâs nice out like this, he takes off on foot. I think he was heading for the park today.â
âIs there anything between here and the park?â
âAnything youâd need six cinnamon rolls for? Not likely.â She gets into the bakery case and bags up two pastries for us.
I realize how dumb that question sounded.
I just wonder what heâs really up to.
Does his mom hang out there? Does he feed the birds cinnamon rolls and think they deserve no less than Sweeter Grind?
Rich people can be nuts, after all.
I pay and grab the paper sack holding our baked goods, then Eliza and I take our pastries outside.
âSo whatâs the plan?â she asks.
âNo clue. I say we eat our turnovers and enjoy the spring day.â
âDonât you want to find out what heâs doing at the park? She said he blew through about ten minutes ago. We could catch him,â Eliza suggests.
I pause, rolling it over in my head.
âSure, butâ¦it doesnât seem like a great idea, stalking my boss at the park on the weekend. Being curious about what he does with a pile of rolls every week isnât the best excuse.â
âI vote we live a little, Dakota, and my vote counts more,â she says with a grin. âWeâll stay back so he canât see us. He has a head start. He may not even be there anymore.â
âMaybeâ¦â I hate how good she is at luring me in.
âItâs Saturday! And itâs not like we have anything else to do besides enjoy the weather,â Eliza says.
âDonât make me regret this,â I say.
Itâs a quick ride to the park.
Iâve been to the edge of this place a few times before, this open green field with a wooded area at the back. At least what counts for wooded with a few lingering copses of trees in the city.
Once you get past the entrance and a little playing field, the open area is covered in row after row of tents, where the homeless camp out.
We stop and I scan our surroundings. None of the people on the benches or milling around the edge of the park fit Luciferâs description.
âNo sign of him yet. Letâs hide the bikes and stay close to the wooded area.â I hop off my bike.
Eliza scans the encampment. âAre you sure thatâs a good idea?â
She has a point. The bikes could be jacked and sold to buy food or supplies by any bad actors in the camp. âWeâll stay close enough to see them.â
She nods and we move behind the trees, hiding our bikes in some brush.
âThis isnât the kind of park Iâd expect a dude with a fashion empire to frequent,â I say, my brows knitting together.
âWhat? You mean youâre surprised your billionaire boss hangs out in a tent city? I mean, Seattleâs no stranger to places like thisâit sucks and I feel for the people who live hereâbut yeah, itâs pretty weird for Mr. Moneybags to come strolling through here. I wonder why?â
We trudge on for a few more minutes before Eliza stops, grabbing my arm.
âHey, wait, I think I see him!â She extends her arm, pointing in front of us and to the left.
âHow do you know? Youâve never seen him.â I follow her finger with my eyes and I donât spot him at first.
âIâm guessing heâs the only person here who looks like an Instagram thirst trap? That guy fits the descriptionâholy mchottie.â
Sure enough.
Lincoln stands in all his sculpted glory, dressed in dark-blue jeans that accent his powerful hips and a button-down shirt with military shoulder traps. Thereâs a Sweeter Grind cup pressed to his mouth.
A few seconds later, he sits on a box next to a man with an overgrown beard and a face smudged with dirt.
Lincoln pulls a cinnamon roll out of the bag and then hands the rest to the bearded guy. They both have coffees from Sweeter Grind.
The entire scene does not compute.
I think my brain crashes and reboots several times before I realize my heart stopped beating seconds ago.
I might be watching the sweetest, most unexpected thing ever.
Heâs feeding the homeless.
Guilt crashes over me in a tidal wave. Was he planning to feed a homeless guy this entire time with that roll I wouldnât sell him?
âDakota, is it him?â
âYep. Good eye,â I say, blinking. âYouâre looking at the dude who throws fits over Regis rolls. I guess he has coffee and pastries with homeless people. Iâll figure him out.â
âMaybe he isnât as big of a jerkwad as you thought?â
Hmm.
Is it possible?
He did call me up yesterday to apologize. But then again, if he hadnât been such a nosy prick in the first place, he wouldnât have needed any sorries.
ââ¦I donât know,â I say, realizing I donât really know anything about him.
âTheyâre talking about a kid,â Eliza says.
âYou hear them from here?â I look at her.
âMy grandma was deaf my whole life. I used to stay with her while my mom was at work. She taught me to read lips. The crazy beard beside him says heâd give up his other leg and both arms to see his son again.â
âOther leg? Does that mean he gave up one leg already?â
âI donât know. Canât tell from here, but the best I can follow, it seems like maybe he did,â she says.
I donât need her lip reading to process what happens next.
Lincoln drops a hand on the strangerâs shoulder. He says something with a gentle, heartfelt expression. His head is tilted down, and Eliza canât read his lips.
But the other guy smiles for the first time since weâve been here, and Lincoln doesnât immediately move his hand. The billionaire jackass certainly doesnât treat the homeless guy like an untouchable.
Iâm stunned.
Also, a little humbled.
â¦hadnât I called him entitled? Repeatedly?
But catching Lincoln Burns in this parallel reality makes it harder to hate him for his rotten behavior.
Thatâs a good thing.
Itâs like I can feel a big, jagged piece of my defenses falling down and crashing to bits.
Theyâre talking again. I paw at Elizaâs arm like a hungry puppy.
âWhatâs he saying now?â I whisper.
âBossholioâs askingâno, more like beggingâthe homeless guy toâ¦come home with him? What the hell?â
Yeah, Iâm lost.
Charity is one thing, but that makes zero sense.
Itâs hard enough to reconcile this scene with the self-absorbed fiend from the coffeeshop and the prying tyrant at the office. But this is beyond anything I imagined.
Everything I thought I knew about this gorgeous, bad-tempered freak is officially upended.
I donât need Eliza to read lips to know the homeless man isnât impressed by this invitation. He lurches up and shoves Lincoln away with what looks like harsh words. Then he disappears inside the tent behind them and zips it up.
I glance at Eliza. âOuch. Was he a dick about it when he invited the guy to come stay with him?â
She shakes her head slowly.
âHe wasnât. Not at all.â
âButââ
Eliza shrugs. âI donât get it either.â
With an angry look, Lincoln picks up an old coffee can beside the tent and shoves a wad of bills in it before slamming the lid back on.
âHe gives them money, too?â
âLooks like it,â Eliza whispers.
He puts his hand in front of his face like heâs keeping the sun out of his eyes and surveys the line of trees at the back of the park. When he turns our way, I duck down, even though I thinkâ
âweâre too far away to see.
âOh, crap. Whatâs he doing?â I whisper.
âNot sure,â she says.
But the second he starts toward us, panic.
âDid he see us? Eliza? Thereâs no reason for him to come this wayâ¦â
âI donât think so.â
âYeah, well, Iâve seen enough. Time for that bike ride!â I run back a few paces to grab my bike, hop on, and pedal as fast as I can through the trees to get the hell out of here.
Iâm not even sure where Iâm going. I just need to stay out of sight, to avoid being caught by Burns after I eavesdropped on such an intimate moment.
I barely remember to look back to see Eliza behind me, straining to catch up.
Monday morning, I drag myself out of bed and get dressed.
Iâm about to bike to Sweeter Grind when I remember thatâs not my job this week.
I can go straight to the office today, get to work, andâenjoy a visit to the principalâs office, apparently. One look at my phone has me frowning. Itâs barely the buttcrack of dawn and Lincoln Burns is already in my texts, scolding me.
he says Awesome.
I send back, my fingers punching the screen.
Awesome again, staying mired in suspense.
Twenty minutes later, I get to the office as fast as my body can move those wheels. Anger is a hell of a workout.
Burns leans against his office door, filling the space like an annoyed bear protecting its den.
âNevermore,â he says coldly. âBreakfast inside.â
âThank you.â I give him the worldâs fakest smile.
I walk into his office, brushing his massive chest as I slide past and hold in a sigh.
No bad case of the Mondays ever felt so dire.
He closes the door behind us and moves to his desk with a single word.
âSit.â
âYour wish is my command,â I say flippantly, flopping down in the chair across from him. âWhatâs wrong now? You said my work was stellar.â
He slides my coffee and cinnamon roll across the table like some grizzled cop in the movies giving the hotshot rookie his badge.
âYour work is unimpeachable. Thatâs not why weâre here,â he tells me, pushing his massive hands against the desk.
Heâs good at this whole intimidation act, Iâll give him that. Too bad for him thatâs never really worked on me.
âWhy are you so pissed then?â I ask.
âPissed? Is that what you think?â
âErâIâm not sure what weâre talking about,â I throw out, taking a huge bite of cinnamon roll heaven. Mostly so I have a reason to not look at him.
He opens his desk, pulls out a napkin, and slides it over.
âYou have frosting on your mouth.â
While swallowing, I take the napkin cautiously and wipe my face, trying to decipher that look in his eyes. God, what is his deal today?
Is this about the park?
His nostrils flare as he draws in a deep breath and says, âFor someone who doesnât like people rummaging around in her personal life, you have no issue digging in mine. How â
Boom. Hammer, meet head.
The way he calls it certainly feels like a cranial blow.
â¦so he might be a tad better at the whole intimidation schtick than I gave him credit for.
âUmmâyou mean because I called you close to midnight on Friday?â I try, praying thatâs it. âLook, bossman, Iâm sorry. I thought it was fine because we just talked.â
âDo I hire dumbasses, Nevermore?â he grinds out.
Iâm taken aback by the question and sit up straighter, mostly so I donât rock back in my seat.
âUm, no?â I blink. âIâm not sure what youâre getting atâ¦â
Is this some weird backhanded insult? Is he calling a dumbass?
âYou know what Iâm talking about. And because youâre not a dumbass, that means youâre a terrible liar,â he growls.
Holy hell.
I scratch my chin, averting my eyes before I meet the steel trap of his gaze again.
âMr. Burns, I have no fricking clue what you mean. But letâs say I didâwhich I donâtâbut , weâd be even because you dug firstâ¦wouldnât we?â
âNo, maâam. We are so far from even you couldnât get there by jet.â He lifts one big hand and places it in the other, loudly cracking his knuckles.
âCan you just tell me what you think I did?â I sputter. âI justâ¦I donât like games. Spit it out.â
âStalking the boss is a serious offense.â
My heart skips. I hate how my blush betrays me more than words ever could.
âWhat? Because of my Google-fu?â An exaggerated laugh falls out of me. âMaybe donât wind up on the internet and I wonât read about you?â
I know Iâm playing with fire. But Iâm going to make him say it.
If he saw me, I want to hear it from his lips.
âHow about you and Tweedle Dum following me to the park on your day off? Ring a bell?â His voice is a quiet storm.
Yeah, Iâm so ready.
His look cuts me in two, so hot and glaring itâs like heâs stripping me naked right here in this office.
âThe parkâ¦what makes you think it was me?â
âYouâre whispering, for one, and that isnât something you do,â he says, stabbing up a finger midair. âTwo, you donât think the blond ponytail gave it away? Iâd know that hair anywhere, Nevermore. Do not bullshit me.â
âWait, wait, wait,â I mutter, waving my hands frantically. â
your evidence? A blond chick in a city of almost a million people happens to be at the park with you, so it must be me? And that must mean Iâm stalking you? Iâm in awe. I never thought Iâd meet Sherlock Holmes.â
He isnât impressed.
Neither am I, honestly.
The bosshole leans forward and stares into my eyes.
âSweetheart, itâs not just the hair. Although itâs a perfect platinum-gold shade I havenât seen too oftenââ
âSo, you like my hair?â I stare at him.
He rolls his eyes.
âNot the point. Youâre the only woman who wears a black dress with silver corded straps while biking. Were you going for a joyride or out to a cocktail party?â
âIf it were meâand I havenât said it wasâbut if it the options are joyride or the library. Keep it straight.â
His gaze only deepens until itâs bone-deep.
âNevermore, Iâm not a betting man. However, if I were, Iâd bet every dollar I own that only you have a raven inked across your shoulder,â he says.
Ouch.
Busted.
He knew, and heâs toying with me now.
I touch my shoulder, making sure my sleeveless dress is thick enough to cover the tattoo. It is. Iâve never shown it off at work.
He smiles.
âItâs a nice accent on a well-toned body on a sunny day. Between you and me, it was damn hard to look away from,â he rumbles, his eyes flipping me now.
Heat pumps under my face.
So heâs noticedâand likesâmy âwell-tonedâ body.
I put a hand on the desk to stop my knees from shaking.
ââ¦so maybe it was me. And what if it was? Am I fired?â
He hesitates for a horrible second.
âMaybe.â
I bolt up in my seat.
âI thought we agreed to ninety days! And we werenât following you. I swear. Thatâs not fair, Burns.â
âNeither is spying on your boss. Unless youâre telling me you always hang around homeless sites for fun?â
I doubt heâs serious about the firing threat. He just wants to see me squirm.
âDo you?â I fling back.
âThatâs my business, and mine alone,â he clips, sliding back in his chair.
âWhy?â
âBecause what I do away from work isnât your concern,â he growls, irritation creeping into his tone.
âWhy?â I repeat just to screw with him.
âWere you even listening?â
I smile slowly. âA boss once told me I have to go three whys deep.â
âIâm not a fucking client,â he snaps. âAnd you should stick to your morgues and haunted houses. Youâre no comedian, Miss Poe.â
âAnd youâre my boss, Mr. Burns,â I say sweetly. âYouâre the ultimate client. But you know how itâs none of my business why you were at a tent city inside a public park?â
âOf course I know. Thatâs what I want to figure out.â
I try not to laugh. Why does it feel so good getting him worked up?
âItâs technically none of your business why I was at the same public park on a gorgeous day, biking with a friend. Itâs not impossible or even implausible for two people who frequent the same coffee shop a few blocks away to wind up at the same public park, is it?â
Ha. Argue with that.
âHave you been there before? Donât lie to me now. Itâs very important I can trust the people I work with,â he says, towering in his seat as he straightens, his hands clasped in front of him.
I canât help the way my eyes wander to those fingers. For a man who spends so much time in the office, his hands look rough. Worn.
Theyâre the kind of hands that could do appalling things to me in my darkest dreams. The ones Iâm totally not having where my boss grabs me, shoves me against the nearest wall, and shoves his hands between myâ
âMiss Poe? Are you home or did the ravens make off with your brain today? I asked a simple question,â he snarls.
âNo. Itâs not usually a place I go. Iâm more the type to head over to Alki Beach or maybe take the ferry over to Bainbridge for the day. But where did you see Eliza and Iââ
âThatâs Tweedle Dum? Eliza?â
I glare at him.
âWhere did you see us before we all wound up at the same park?â I ask pointedly.
âSaturday morning? I only saw you at the park,â he says.
âThen I couldnât have followed you there. Thanks for proving my point. No stalker, no drama, so maybe letâs just get on with our day like grown-ups?â
his snapping brown eyes say.
âI must have overlooked you at Sweeter Grind,â he says slowly.
âDoubtful. Since weâve established I have nice bright hair and a tattoo on a well-toned body youâre obsessed with, you wouldnât have missed me.â
âTouché.â He levels a long look on me.
Why does that make my blood run hot?
âYouâve seen me go to the park from Sweeter Grind before,â he says, his eyes sliding up and down my torso, hot and assessing.
âAnd I just instinctively knew youâd be there?â I make an exasperated sound. âI donât think so, man. I might like my horror and fantasy but Iâm no psychic.â
He shrugs. âMaybe you found it on some nosy little ratâs social media. You like reading about me.â
I snort. âWhat? Your trips to the tent city are so frequent theyâre online?â
Heâs quiet for a moment, deep in thought.
âNo. That canât be the case. Iâve never seen anyone following me or snapping pics, no matter how often I go.â
âThen how could I have read it?â I slap my thigh.
Iâm so annoyed. And extra annoyed that getting this riled up is a two-way street. Itâs like weâre just feeding off each otherâs suspicions now.
âHow did you find out I was there?â he demands.
I start laughing.
âYou took all the Regis rolls again. Duh. We got to the shop after you blew through. Iâll admit, I was curious, and Eliza put me up to it. I wanted to know where you went with the rolls and the Sweeter Grind girl said you head for the park sometimesââ
âWhat is it with you and those damn cinnamon rolls?â he barks.
âYouâre asking Youâre the one who needs at least half a dozen every dayâ¦â
âShe told you how many I bought? That should be confidential.â He sounds mortified.
I laugh helplessly again.
âNope, everybody knows youâre a junkie. Sorry, buddy.â
âAll joking aside, I donât think you should go back there. Not for work, and not for your personal stomping grounds.â
Oh my God.
Heâs serious, isnât he?
My boss is trying to dictate what parts of the city Iâm allowed to visit.
âYeah, no, thatâs definitely not your business.â I roll my eyes right out of my head.
âProbably not, but this isnât about your juvenile spying. It isnât always the safest place if youâre not sure where youâre going or who the bad people are there. You and Tweedle Dumââ
âWould you quit calling her that?â I lean forward, flicking a fallen lock of hair over one ear.
âYou and your seem like easy targets,â he corrects.
âThatâs not your problem,â I snap.
But Iâm actually stunned that he gives two craps about my well-being. Even if he tells me with zero tact.
âWrong, Nevermore. Itâs very much my business if I lose my best copywriter and her sidekick to some sneaky fuck looking for an easy paydayâor worse.â
The way he bites off that last word leaves a yawning silence. Ominous.
ââ¦I doubt Iâm your best copywriter, Mr. Burns,â I say. âYou have people with vastly more experience than me under their belts.â
âYour ideas are fresh and funny. That is, when your wit goes in a focused direction with our product and isnât trained on me.â He thumps his chest with a hilarious glower, his brow pulled low.
Amazing. Heâs so far up his own butt that he actually believes his BS.
But he does genuinely care about me getting robbedâor and thatâs unexpectedly sweet.
I take a slow sip of coffee, trying to shake this weird dizzy feeling.
âAre we done here? As much fun as itâs been, I have a mountain of work. Can I go?â
His look leaves me anchored in placeâand thatâs when it hits me.
As long as I work here, Iâll be answering to a man who canât take a joke or get a clue.
I just wonder what sin I committed in some past dreary life to wind up at the mercy of Lincoln freaking Burns.