Timeless Passion Book 1 Read online

Page 3


  In the silence, I could think and mentally prepare my list of objectives for the day. The only person in the office was my assistant, Cara, and she was paid extra to be there before everyone else. She was in her early thirties, and while I knew she had a life outside of the office, she didn’t seem to mind the early hours. Or if she did, she never complained to me. As I swept into the office, she hustled over and wordlessly handed me an aluminum coffee cup that was filled with my favorite blend, piping hot with a touch of cream. I gave her a nod and went into my office. I sat behind the desk and sipped the molten hot coffee while my computer booted up.

  I returned emails and got adjusted as the caffeine rush hit my system. When I finished, I checked the time and made my way to the conference room where, what was left of the marketing department, would gather in the next twelve minutes. I stepped inside the glass walled space and noticed that the Shock Watches display that had been set up at the symposium now hung on an easel near the head of the table. I smiled as I remembered stumbling upon Megan as she’d carefully inspected the sign. At the time, I’d wondered what she’d been looking at, what she’d been thinking, and I smiled even wider as I remembered the way she passionately told me just that after I’d asked for her opinion.

  I was still replaying the entire encounter over in my mind when the first sounds of footsteps and voices filtered into the room. I turned in time to see Marcy, Robert, Cary, and Linda make their way, two by two, through the double doors. They were all I had left. Nearly four months ago in the middle of the Shock Watches preparation, I’d discovered a ring of staff members involved in an inside scheme to skim money from their expense accounts. The whole thing had been a giant, tangled web of deceit, and I was still shocked that any of it had actually happened.

  At the time of discovery, I’d been tempted to scrap the entire department and start fresh, but my business adviser, and longtime family friend, Gary, helped me through the investigation process to separate the guilty from the innocent. In the end, five employees were fired and charged with the crimes and one other employee took issue with the entire situation and quit.

  The four team members that remained were less than stellar—especially after the shake up, but they were it. A problem I was hoping to repair at the symposium, but other than Megan—I hadn’t been blown away by anything I saw. Although, in fairness to the other contenders, after meeting her, most of what they said went in one ear and out the other.

  “Good morning,” I said once everyone had taken a seat.

  “Good morning,” they all echoed in unison, making me feel like a kindergarten teacher.

  I tugged at the knot of my tie to relieve the pressure. I didn’t want to—and really, couldn’t afford to—lose my patience with them, but their lack of enthusiasm was infuriating. Didn’t they understand that I had about two- point four million other things to do besides baby sit? God knows I paid them enough.

  Since the scandal, production had screeched to a halt and attitudes were less than desirable. I had a feeling they all thought they had me over a barrel since beggars couldn’t be choosers. That was true to an extent, but they didn’t need to know that. Timeless Timepieces was at a crucial transition period and couldn’t afford to start from scratch, but I kept a mental tally of everything, and when the time came, they were in for a rude awakening if they only offered scraps in exchange for their hefty paydays.

  “As you all know, I was at the UCLA marketing department symposium yesterday. I met with a lot of bright, talented people and received some fresh perspective on the Shock Watches campaign,” I started, still standing at the head of the table.

  “Did you ask anyone what they thought about a more Indiana Jones angle?” Marcy asked.

  I suppressed a groan. “Not good. Let’s look forward, not back.”

  Marcy’s smile fell from her lips. The Indiana Jones idea had been her pitch.

  “Did you make any job offers?” Linda asked before I could continue.

  “No, not formally, but there were a lot of promising candidates. I expect to set up some meetings in the following weeks,” I lied. Maybe a bluff would lessen their sense of job security and finally spark some real ideas.

  Robert, my least favorite of the team, chimed in, “So, what was the general feedback on the campaign?”

  I did my best to recite Megan’s ideas, but lacked her enthusiastic delivery and was met with blank stares.

  “So we need less electric blue and an action hero to sell them?” Robert scoffed, with a raised brow as I wrapped up the new pitch.

  My blood pressure spiked, but I kept my face passive, trying to hone in on the overall idea and theme of the suggested changes. However, nothing I said seemed to translate and the entire meeting spiraled downhill from there, and by the time I was back in my office all I had was a list of crossed out movie stars and a list of other crappy ideas that probably wouldn’t work anyway. I contemplated letting them all go and starting fresh with the entire department.

  “Fuck! That was a pile of shit.” I mumbled as I raked my fingers through my hair, smoothing it back and away from my face.

  What I needed was simple—and yet impossible. I needed Megan to stand there and tell them exactly what she told me. From her, they would get it and understand. Even if she didn’t want a job, would she really object to coming in and simply sharing her feedback? Surely, I could find a way to make it worth her time.

  I smiled as I leaned across my desk and picked up my phone.

  Chapter Four — Megan

  I stared at the four walls that had become my self-imposed prison since three o’clock in the afternoon. I glanced at the time on my phone. It had been nearly four hours since I’d checked out one of the on-campus study rooms, which was basically a soundproof booth with transparent walls—which, I had to assume was to prevent people from using them like a one-hour motel—and a long table down the middle. They were doled out on a first come, first serve basis and were booked by the hour. In theory, I could be booted out if a new group came in since I’d been occupying it all afternoon, but the library was virtually abandoned on the Saturday afternoon. Tomorrow would be a different story. That’s when everyone and their brother would need to cram in everything they should have been doing the day before.

  I stood up to stretch when my friend Jeanine spotted me from across the vacant library and rushed over to my pod. “There you are!” She pushed into the room and looked down with a raised eyebrow at the stack of paper coffee cups scattered all across the desk. “How long have you been in here?”

  “Too long.” I cleared away the evidence of my frequent visits to the nearby coffee shop, pushing them off the table into a recycle bin.

  Jeanine brightened. “Okay, then. Ready to escape? The guys want to go clubbing tonight. Apparently there’s some cool, new DJ they’ve been worshiping from afar and she’s in town, just for tonight, at some club on the strip.”

  I rolled my eyes and plopped back into my chair. “And you raced all the way down here to tell me that? Really, Jeanine?”

  She crossed her arms. “Yes, I did! You’re welcome for trying to rescue you.”

  I pulled my long black hair into a low ponytail. “I’m sorry but come on. You’ve known me long enough to know that I’m not really a club girl.”

  “I know, but can’t you make an exception—just this once?” She pushed out her bottom lip in an exaggerated pout. I really want you to go.”

  I rolled my eyes. “Really?”

  She shrugged, her lips returning to normal. “It was worth a shot. How about dinner? Will you meet up with us afterward for some In-and-Out or something?”

  “Maybe,” I said. “I just have a lot to do here—French Lit midterm.”

  Jeanine frowned. “All right, but you’ve been at this all day. You need a little break.”

  I nodded, leaving out the part where I’d been taking frequent breaks to obsess and daydream about Grant, which was precisely the reason why I hadn’t managed to get much more t
han a paragraph or two typed up on the essay for my French Literature class. Although, I’d thoroughly enjoyed the class over the semester, writing was never my strong point, and with Grant popping in and out of my head it was like pushing through really thick mud.

  I was starting to wonder if the teacher would accept a sketched version of the essay instead. I was much better with tactile projects and could probably pump out some kind of drawing within an hour. With writing, the words were in my head but they got tangled by the time they made it to the paper. With art, it was a natural flow, that most of the time felt effortless.

  Jeanine stood by the doorway. “Promise you’ll call me later.”

  “I will.” I nodded and gave her a small smile.

  She waved and scurried out of the soundproof room to meet up with the rest of the crew. I watched until she was out of my sight, and then turned my attention back to the flashing cursor on my laptop screen. The paper was due in less than a week, and it was starting to feel like I had miles to go until I could hit the print button and cross it off my ever growing list of uncompleted homework projects. My senior year was rapidly winding up, and with that, came an avalanche of homework as the professors were bent on some kind of mission to get every last drop out of you before they forked over a glossy degree.

  I cranked up the Indie rock band music piping through my ear buds and tried to get back on task. I tapped out a few sentences, then deleted them, and repeated the cycle for a few minutes. After another hour of effort, I had a couple more paragraphs down, but I hadn’t dared to read the entire thing back yet—afraid that it was all crap.

  “Ugh,” I groaned, pulling the buds from my ears and tossing them down onto the table before me. It was hard to focus on the words of long-ago French philosophers when I couldn’t get the images of a man who would be more at home among the Greek gods than in a Beret on the French Riviera…although, he probably summered there…in a pair of swim trunks that clung to his thighs and—

  “Megan!” I scolded myself, thankful the study room was soundproofed. Although, the walls were transparent, so I still needed to keep it together. Anyone passing by would have a front row seat to my self-inflicted lecture, and that had to look a little weird.

  I buried my face in my hands and applied my thumbs to my temples, drawing small circles to loosen the pressure that was threatening to turn into a massive stress headache. What the hell was wrong with me? He was just a guy! I’d never lost my shit this much over a guy before. I’d even made it through junior and high school without suffering the clichéd boyfriend breakdowns that plagued most of my classmates.

  Even in college, I’d been able to maneuver the new dating landscape without much of an issue before. Granted, I hadn’t really gone on that many dates, and anything that lasted long enough to be considered a relationship, generally ended amicably within the first six months, and in most cases, we stayed friends when it was all said and done. I hadn’t experienced the heartache and crash and burn that most of my friends had, and therefore had no experience to draw from in regards to knowing how to get Grant and his deep, dark, sultry eyes out of my head.

  It wasn’t even just that he’d been so ridiculously good looking. It was everything about him. The way his lips curled into his bad boy grin, the powerful muscles that were so evident underneath his charcoal suit, and I couldn’t even think about how intoxicating he smelled. It was like he’d just stepped out of the pages of a magazine—or was the star of his own action movie. But no, he wasn’t a model—or even a movie star—no, that would be far too pedestrian—no, no. Grant Alexander Christiansen was just a mother trucking billionaire who not only took over his family’s empire when his father passed away unexpectedly, but he also had a huge venture capitalist who had invested in many of the country’s newest, and fastest growing companies in the past five years. Oh, yeah, and he hadn’t even hit thirty yet.

  So, I might have done some Googling…

  I rolled my eyes at the entire thing. It was too much, really.

  Meeting him, and conversing with him would have been enough to stay with me, but the fact that he’d offered me a job with his company on the basis that I’d completely destroyed his newest marketing campaign was insane. I mean, someone should probably do a CAT scan on the man.

  The wackiest part of it all was that I was starting to think that my major mistake in the entire conversation hadn’t been ripping apart his ads but in saying no to the job offer in the first place.

  Sure, Grant had been over the top. He obviously thought very highly of himself and expected those around him to hold the same opinion, but in some ways, considering his resume, didn’t he have a right to?

  I wasn’t sure what kind of job he was really offering me, but working for a company like Timeless Timepieces was something to add to my resume that could open a lot of doors for me down the road.

  The problem was—I didn’t know if I was interested in the kind of doors I would, in theory, have available. In my first few years at school, I’d changed my major nearly half a dozen times, which was the main reason why I’d been forced to add an extra year to complete my degree—a fact that my father and brothers would never let me forget. I’d originally enrolled as a business major, thinking it would make my dad happy to have me follow in his footsteps and do something with accounting or business management.

  Of my four brothers, the oldest, Sam, had gone to college and he’d chosen a path radically different than the one my dad had wanted, choosing a sociology degree to help him with social work. It was low paying, but Sam felt it was a fulfilling career. My three middle brothers — Kevin, Phillip, and Robbie were all a little less focused, and while Kevin dabbled with college courses after high school, he ended up dropping out when he met his girlfriend, Sonya. She had a daughter from another relationship and Kevin became a bit of a stand in dad when they got together. However, that mostly meant floundering through a string of restaurant jobs that never seemed to last longer than a year. Phillip and Robbie both still lived at home with my dad and me, much to my father’s chagrin. Phillip and Robbie were a little rough and tumble and always got into something that brought the drama to my dad’s attention, but he didn’t kick them out, no matter how much stupid shit they got into.

  When I started the business major, my father was thrilled, but it quickly became evident that it wasn’t a good fit for me, and I switched to psychology, then anthropology, and finally marketing, before admitting that none of it was a good fit, dropped most of my classes and reworked my entire course load to pursue a graphic design degree. Art had always been my passion, but for a few years I let other’s nay-sayings get in the way of me chasing it down. Most people told me that while I had a natural talent, it wasn’t ever going to be something that would pay the bills and that I should go back to a more traditional route. My first day of class after making the switch everything felt right, and I hadn’t looked back since then. That was all I needed to know.

  Grant’s left- field job offer had stirred up old arguments, and I found myself questioning my choices. Which, I really didn’t have time for—considering that there were only two months left until the degree would be in my hands and I could really start my life.

  My life, my way. No assistance from handsome billionaires required.

  I gave up on the essay and shut my laptop before shoving it back into the army green messenger bag I’d found at a resale shop ages ago. It was patched up with different pieces of fabric that made it look a little more like a quilt than a bag, but it was one of my favorite pieces, no matter what anyone else thought. I slung the bag over my shoulder and left the room, stopping only to give the key back at the front desk. On my way back to my car I texted Jeanine to let her know that I was going home to get ready and would meet them for dinner at the burger shop.

  * * * *

  “Where are you going?” my dad asked as I snaked through the kitchen on the way out of the house. He sat at his makeshift desk in the breakfast nook off the kitchen
with a cup of coffee in hand—probably the leftovers from the full pot he brewed each morning—studying something on his computer.

  I stopped on the other side of the counter. “Out with some friends.”

  “Who?”

  “Daddy,” I whined, rolling my eyes. “Jeanine, Taylor, and Max.”

  He removed his glasses and stared at me. “Is it a double date?”

  “Oh my God. Really, Dad?”

  “It’s an innocent question,” he replied.

  Everything inside of me wanted to throw back some smart mouthed retort, but I knew any sarcasm would only prolong my escape from the house.

  I sighed. “No, Jeanine is dating Taylor, but I am in no way interested in Max. We’re just a few friends hanging out.”

  Although I’d celebrated my twenty-second birthday a few months before, in my dad’s eyes, I was still his fourteen year old little girl who knew nothing of the world. God, he probably still assumed I was a virgin. My mother had died shortly after my birth, leaving my dad with four boys under ten and a newborn daughter to take care of alone. He’d done the best he could but had developed a weird mix of being a workaholic and an overprotective parent.

  “All right, Sweetheart, have a good time. Try to get back before too long though, you know I worry about my little girl. This city is full of weirdoes.”

  I rounded the corner and pressed a kiss to his cheek before hauling ass out of the house before he could start up a lecture on not leaving my drink unattended, jaywalking in the dark, and which areas of the city to avoid altogether. I’d heard it all a thousand times before, and I was already edgy enough without the extra ammo.

 

    Play Maker Read onlinePlay MakerKnight Moves Book 3 Read onlineKnight Moves Book 3Timeless Passion Book 3 Read onlineTimeless Passion Book 3The Devil You Know (Ashby Crime Family Romance Book 3) Read onlineThe Devil You Know (Ashby Crime Family Romance Book 3)Tied Read onlineTiedFinn Read onlineFinnSEAL'd Perfection Book 4 Read onlineSEAL'd Perfection Book 4Wicked Read onlineWickedLoaded (Reckless MC Opey Texas Chapter Book 4) Read onlineLoaded (Reckless MC Opey Texas Chapter Book 4)Santa's Perfect Package: A Collection of Holiday Romances Read onlineSanta's Perfect Package: A Collection of Holiday RomancesMayhem Madness: Reckless Bastards MC Series Books 1-7 Read onlineMayhem Madness: Reckless Bastards MC Series Books 1-7Timeless Passion Book 1 Read onlineTimeless Passion Book 1Tempted: Reckless MC Opey Texas Chapter Read onlineTempted: Reckless MC Opey Texas ChapterTemporary Assignment The Complete Collection Read onlineTemporary Assignment The Complete CollectionPlayer - The Elite Part Three Read onlinePlayer - The Elite Part ThreeEntangled Heart Read onlineEntangled HeartTimeless Passion Book 2 Read onlineTimeless Passion Book 2One More Night Read onlineOne More NightFate Interrupted Books 1-3: The Complete Series Read onlineFate Interrupted Books 1-3: The Complete SeriesPlayer - The Elite Part Four Read onlinePlayer - The Elite Part FourKnight Moves Book 1 Read onlineKnight Moves Book 1SEAL'd Perfection Book 2 Read onlineSEAL'd Perfection Book 2Locker Room Read onlineLocker RoomOn The Run - The Elite Part Nine Read onlineOn The Run - The Elite Part NineSEAL'd Perfection Book 3 Read onlineSEAL'd Perfection Book 3Rookie Move Read onlineRookie MoveLocked Read onlineLockedWicked: Reckless MC Opey Texas Chapter Read onlineWicked: Reckless MC Opey Texas ChapterRuthless Sinner (Ashby Crime Family Romance Book 8) Read onlineRuthless Sinner (Ashby Crime Family Romance Book 8)Monster Baller: A Single Dad Sports Romance (Bitsberg Knights Duet Book 1) Read onlineMonster Baller: A Single Dad Sports Romance (Bitsberg Knights Duet Book 1)SEAL'd Perfection Book 5 Read onlineSEAL'd Perfection Book 5Colton Read onlineColtonJack - The Elite Part Ten Read onlineJack - The Elite Part TenPlayer - The Elite Part Five Read onlinePlayer - The Elite Part FiveA Soldier For Christmas Read onlineA Soldier For ChristmasLoaded Read onlineLoadedFamily Ties Read onlineFamily TiesKeeping Gemma Read onlineKeeping GemmaLocked: Reckless MC Opey Texas Chapter Read onlineLocked: Reckless MC Opey Texas ChapterBeautifully Broken_Reckless Bastards MC Read onlineBeautifully Broken_Reckless Bastards MCMiles Read onlineMilesMonster Baller Read onlineMonster BallerRoddick: CAOS MC Read onlineRoddick: CAOS MCBig Time: A Bad Boy Sports Romance Read onlineBig Time: A Bad Boy Sports RomanceAll Star Read onlineAll StarWolf Me Baby Read onlineWolf Me BabySpring Training Read onlineSpring TrainingDirty Liar: An Irish Mafia Romance Read onlineDirty Liar: An Irish Mafia RomanceDirty Truth: An Irish Mafia Romance (Dirty Liar Book 2) Read onlineDirty Truth: An Irish Mafia Romance (Dirty Liar Book 2)Lucas: An Army Wives Novel Read onlineLucas: An Army Wives NovelLine Of Fire Read onlineLine Of FireOnce Upon A Beast Read onlineOnce Upon A BeastCAOS MC: The Series Read onlineCAOS MC: The SeriesPlush Book 3: A Billionaire Romance Read onlinePlush Book 3: A Billionaire RomanceLucas Read onlineLucasShow Time: A Bad Boy Sports Romance Read onlineShow Time: A Bad Boy Sports RomanceSinfully Scarred: Reckless Bastards MC Read onlineSinfully Scarred: Reckless Bastards MCRoc Hard Read onlineRoc HardJack Part One and Two (The Elite) Read onlineJack Part One and Two (The Elite)Slow Burn - a Novel: The Elite Read onlineSlow Burn - a Novel: The EliteMick: CAOS MC Read onlineMick: CAOS MCOnce Upon A Beast: A Billionaire Fairytale Read onlineOnce Upon A Beast: A Billionaire FairytaleHeavenly Hacked Read onlineHeavenly HackedMiles: An Army Wives Novel Read onlineMiles: An Army Wives NovelBring The Heat: A Bad Boy Sports Romance (Bad Boys of Summer Book 1) Read onlineBring The Heat: A Bad Boy Sports Romance (Bad Boys of Summer Book 1)Unwrapped: A Navy SEAL Holiday Romance Read onlineUnwrapped: A Navy SEAL Holiday RomanceCreatively Crushed (Reckless Bastards MC Book 6) Read onlineCreatively Crushed (Reckless Bastards MC Book 6)Beautifully Broken Read onlineBeautifully BrokenWonderfully Wrecked_Reckless Bastards MC Read onlineWonderfully Wrecked_Reckless Bastards MCDeliciously Damaged Read onlineDeliciously DamagedTemporary Assignment The Complete Collection: A Military Romance Read onlineTemporary Assignment The Complete Collection: A Military RomanceMy First Second Chance Read onlineMy First Second ChanceHeavenly Hacked (Reckless Bastards MC Book 5) Read onlineHeavenly Hacked (Reckless Bastards MC Book 5)Cash: CAOS MC Read onlineCash: CAOS MCBaz (CAOS MC Book 5) Read onlineBaz (CAOS MC Book 5)On The Run - The Complete Series: The Elite Read onlineOn The Run - The Complete Series: The EliteKnight Moves Vol. 1-5 - The Complete Series: A Navy SEAL Romance Read onlineKnight Moves Vol. 1-5 - The Complete Series: A Navy SEAL Romance