Page 33 of Say Yes to the Boss


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“No. Sign them for me.”

“All right.”

“Will you come into the office? When Miss Fleming’s replacement starts.”

“You’re asking me to train your new assistant? And attend a dinner with your co-founders, pretending I’m now your wife.”

Ice-cold blue eyes meet mine. “You are now my wife.”

“The point still stands, though. You’re raising the requirements.”

His eyes narrow. “Yes, I am.”

“Then you’re going to have to up your ante.”

“Fine,” he says. The word is spoken through clenched teeth. “I’ll give you my entire Sunday to work on your start-up. Give me everything you have so far and I’ll give you my thoughts.”

“Thank you,” I say. “That will be perfect.”

He tosses back the rest of his beer and turns to the kitchen. “Wedding gifts,” he mutters. Then his eyes snag on the console table. “Why the fuck is there a glass dick on my hallway table?”

8

Victor

The house is empty and quiet, just like it had been when its occupant was still alive. But it hadn’t been this dark.

I look at the windows on the second story, and even up to the small, round one in the attic. All dark.

I spin the key around in my hand once, twice, before taking the steps up the old porch. The door creaks when it opens. I can’t remember it ever doing that before. There’d been a time when Grandfather would call Stanley’s name at the top of his lungs and the door’d be fixed in thirty minutes. Or, if Stanley had the day off, he’d march off to the gardener’s shed himself to get the oil.

Now the house smells dusty and shut-in. The bank hasn’t been here to keep the place clean and aired, and no wonder. Why would they?

I turn on the lights as I go, walking past the double-staircases in the hallway and into the dining room. The giant table is empty. We’d once been many people around it on the holidays, but when I lived here, there had been only me and him.

I make my way upstairs and pass the room that had been mine without looking inside. The door to his study is half-open, the way he liked to keep it. Half-open to let people know they could come in if they needed to talk to him. But half-shut to signal it would be preferable if they didn’t.

That was one of the many business and life maxims he liked to spread around him, always told in the same crusty voice, damaged from a life of whiskey and smoke. He’d let those tidbits drop like jewels, expecting me to treasure them. To live by them.

I push the door open and turn on the lights.

His office looks as it did the day we read the will. The giant oak desk in the middle of the room with the leather inlay, the bookshelves that line the walls. Two large windows open up to the giant oak trees on the property, clothed now in darkness.

I run a hand over the desk’s surface. The jade ashtray is empty. It would have had half-smoked cigars in it had he been here.

I look at the drawers in the desk. Eeny, meeny, miny, moe… I pull one open at random.

Papers are neatly stacked inside. His handwriting is unmistakable. Lists. Lists of everything, and for everything, as was his way.

The heading on the top one readsSpring Plans,and the first item on the list readsSchedule regular lunches with Victor in the city.

I shut the drawer again.

I might have gained the legal right to this house, but I can’t sort through the belongings of a man who had been intensely private, his shadow moving over my shoulder.

I can’t do it.

And I can’t have anyone else doing it either.

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