Se connecterTHREE MONTHS AGO. LAS VEGAS...
“It was good doing business with you, August.” “The pleasure is all mine,” I replied, shaking his hand. “And I assure you your continuous patronage of TAG vehicles will never be a mistake.” Baron Russo chuckled as he smoothed the crease in his jacket. “That was never in question. My family has used TAG for generations. This meeting was just… formality.” “As expected,” I said smoothly. “Still, I appreciate the opportunity to host you here.” We exchanged a few more pleasantries before the meeting wrapped up. Another deal secured, at least the board members would get their foot off my neck. By the time I returned to the suite, exhaustion had already settled into my bones. I loosened my tie slightly, sinking into the chair and gulping down a glass of whiskey. I winced as the liquid burned my throat before pouring another. “Would that be all for today sir?” a voice asked. Genesis. I didn’t look at her immediately. “You were right after all, my father handled legacy clients personally,” I replied. “It would have been inappropriate to do otherwise.” The admission felt strange coming from me. I rarely acknowledged when someone else was right according to Esme anyways… was I drunk already? I thought, lifting the half full glass of whiskey. “Obviously not,” I whispered as I refilled my glass. Genesis didn’t reply, the sound of papers shifting. Files being arranged. Efficient. Precise alone filled the room. She had always been like that. Quiet and efficient enough to last over a year working for me, something no other assistant had managed. And for the first time since she started working for me, she spoke back at me, shocking me. She had suggested I come personally to meet Baron Russo, like my dad and his before him had always done. I had ignored her, only to hear he was here in Vegas with our competitors sniffing around. I finally understood why she had insisted but I had been too head strong to admit it until now. I took the last gulp of whiskey, but strangely I was tipsy after only a second glass. The alcohol sat heavy in my system, dulling my usual sharpness, blurring the edges of everything around me. Including her. For the first time, I really looked at her, not as my assistant. But as a woman. She stood a few feet away, her hair pulled neatly into a bun, her posture straight, professional as always. Too composed. Too controlled. And suddenly… noticeable. Very noticeable. Maybe it was the alcohol or something in the air dulling my judgement. Or maybe I had simply never allowed myself notice her before. My gaze lingered longer than it should have. Tracing the contours on her body, her gray eyes and long fluttering lashes. “Mr. Thorne?” Her voice pulled me back. “I would leave you to rest. Your flight is scheduled for tomorrow morning. I’ll finalize the documents tonight and send them to the headquarters and…” She rambled on but I was barely listening, my gaze shamelessly stuck on her plum lips. I hadn’t realised how openly I’d been staring until she spoke again. “Mr Thorne, Is there anything you need me to do for you?” She asked, worry lines forming on her forehead. I leaned back slightly, studying her. “Be careful what you ask for princess,” I said, a little above a whisper. A faint crease formed between her brows. “Sir?” She looked confused now, uncertain whether I was joking or crossing a line. “I heard something about you,” I said, my voice lower now, slower as I leaned forward. “They call you ‘mini me,’ don’t they?” A small, almost reluctant smile touched her lips, but it disappeared just as quickly. “I think you are drunk sir, I’ll leave you to rest now,” she said, turning slightly. The thought of her leaving suddenly didn’t sit right with me, so before I could stop myself… “Stay.” The word came out sharper than intended. She paused. Then turned back. “I need to send these documents to the headquarters as soon as possible, sir.” she said nervously. “August” I said and she only raised one brow confused. “Call me August.” I clarified and the flustered look on her face did something strange to me. “Sir, I I…can’t, you are my boss and-” “Good, so you'll listen to your boss then, Genesis.” I said cutting her off, reaching for the decanter on the table, pouring her a drink as she squirmed in her seat and somehow that, her losing composure felt oddly satisfying. I extended the drink to her. “I can't, I have-" “It’s an order.” I cut her off. Silence. A flicker of something crossed her face, frustration, maybe. Then she took the glass. “Fine.” She drank it in one go. I watched her. She moved closer only to pick up a file as my eyes never left hers. My hand moved before I could think, closing around her wrist and stopping her mid-step. I didn’t even realize I was reaching for her until my fingers closed around her wrist. Grip tight, just enough to stop her from pulling away. She froze. “Mr. Thorne…” I poured another. And another. Somewhere between the second and third drink, the room shifted. The air changed. The distance between us didn’t feel as… necessary anymore. I couldn’t tell if it was the alcohol. Or something else entirely. We had both loosened up now, laughing easily, her voice was different now. Lighter. I leaned forward slightly, our faces almost touching. “You should smile more,” I murmured, loosening her bun. Her hair slipped slowly between my fingers, and for a second neither of us spoke, just staring into each other’s souls. “And you should listen to your assistant more,” she said slowly, dragging out the words slightly like she was tempting me, as she pulled me in by my tie. That made me laugh. A low, unfamiliar sound. For a moment, neither of us moved. Then everything blurred. Her laughter was the last thing I remembered before everything went dark.I had always been careful, so waking up naked beside my boss that morning, my boss who wasn’t even my type, felt like the beginning of a disaster I wouldn’t survive.After everything that followed, I convinced myself I could forget him. Forget Vegas. Forget that night ever happened.Now it was all crashing back.I wanted this over with as quickly as possible, so I got ready in silence, fixing my hair the best I could before joining them downstairs.I slipped into the passenger seat beside the driver, deliberately ignoring the back door he had held open for me as I walked toward the car.The drive to the courthouse felt suffocating.My heart wouldn’t slow down.I kept staring out the window, trying not to look at him. Trying not to notice the veins in his forearms as he adjusted the sleeves of his shirt, calm and controlled like none of this touched him.Like I didn’t affect him, like he affected me.A bitter laugh almost escaped me.Who was I kidding?Of course he wasn’t affected.I w
Then silence after I knocked stretched painfully long. Then, a second later, the door creaked open. I froze. There she was, Genesis Michaelson, the very woman I’d spent over twenty-four hours trying to find, while finding out things about her I never thought off. For a moment, neither of us spoke. She looked… different. Not the composed, perfectly put-together assistant I remembered. Her hair wasn’t neatly styled, greasy with strands falling all over her small face, her eyes tired from lack of sleep. Her clothes were simple, worn even. But it was still her. Unmistakably. Those gray eyes. The same ones that had held my attention longer than they should have, even back then. Her gaze met mine. Shock flickered. Then it disappeared. Replaced by something colder. “Why are you here?” she asked quietly. Her voice was unsteady. I let my gaze move over her slowly, taking everything in. “You disappeared,” I said. “I was fired.” “I didn’t-” “You would have,” she replied, t
THREE MONTHS AGO. LAS VEGAS... “It was good doing business with you, August.” “The pleasure is all mine,” I replied, shaking his hand. “And I assure you your continuous patronage of TAG vehicles will never be a mistake.” Baron Russo chuckled as he smoothed the crease in his jacket. “That was never in question. My family has used TAG for generations. This meeting was just… formality.” “As expected,” I said smoothly. “Still, I appreciate the opportunity to host you here.” We exchanged a few more pleasantries before the meeting wrapped up. Another deal secured, at least the board members would get their foot off my neck. By the time I returned to the suite, exhaustion had already settled into my bones. I loosened my tie slightly, sinking into the chair and gulping down a glass of whiskey. I winced as the liquid burned my throat before pouring another. “Would that be all for today sir?” a voice asked. Genesis. I didn’t look at her immediately. “You were right after all, my f
“So, Miss Michaelson, it says here you worked at Thorne Automotive Group as an executive assistant?”The interviewer glanced up at me, skepticism already written across her face.And at that moment I regretted putting it on my resume.I had wanted to leave that part of my life behind me. Completely.But after months of searching with no results, I didn’t have much of a choice.I didn’t attend a prestigious school.I didn’t have impressive work experience before or after TAG.No one was willing to give me a chance.Until now, after I added it to my resume.I forced a smile. “Yes. I worked there for a year.” “Mm-hm.” She flipped through the file.“So which of the executives were you assisting?” She then stared squarely at me as opposed to how casual she sounded.I smiled politely.“I signed an NDA there so I can't give details about my work there, but I really did work there.” I said, the lie rolling freely, I really did sign an NDA but that didn't stop me from mentioning the executive
“I’m sorry, Mr. Thorne, but our records indicate that you are already legally married.”For a second, I thought I had misheard him.The officiant sat across from me, his fingers hovering uncertainly over his keyboard, his expression caught somewhere between discomfort and confusion, the later matching mine.The room fell silent, as I tugged at my tie, suddenly feeling constricted.“What are you talking about?” My voice was calm, but it carried enough weight to make the man stiffen. “Until that marriage is resolved, sir, this marriage cannot be legally recognized.”My jaw tightened.I didn’t raise my voice. I didn’t need to.A few inches from me, Violet let out a sharp, disbelieving laugh that quickly dissolved into panic.“What do you mean by our marriage cannot be legally recognised?” she snapped, her voice rising. “August, what is he talking about?”Her panic filled the room, sharp but I barely looked at her before turning back to the officiant. “There has to be a mistake somewher







