เข้าสู่ระบบDr. Cole
The walls of the conference room were the usual blend of modern corporate chic—glass, brushed steel, and just enough accent lighting to suggest innovation without warmth. I’d already tuned out most of the artwork, focused instead on the numbers and mockups laid out across the sleek table.
The director of marketing, a man named Brian Keller, was doing his best to sell me on synergy, audience segmentation, and cross-platform visibility. All important—sure—but I wasn’t here to be dazzled by jargon. I was here to find the right team. A group who understood the brand my clinics represented. Not just clean lines and pastel logos, but trust. Discretion. Aesthetic comfort with clinical precision.
“We’ve got a few high-profile health and wellness campaigns under our belt already,” Keller said, flipping to another slide on the tablet. “But I think this one deserves a personal touch. I’d like to bring in one of our senior execs—she’s our top creative, and fast. She tends to get ideas the moment she sees the client.”
I nodded. “Sounds good.”
“She’s the one who ran the campaign for NorthStar Pharmaceuticals,” he added proudly.
Keller turned to his assistant. “Can you grab Beth?”
I leaned back in the leather chair, letting my mind drift for a moment while the assistant left the room. I had already visited three other agencies this month, and while most were impressive enough on paper, none had made me feel confident handing over the reins to my brand. Maybe this would be different.
A few minutes passed.
Then: the click of heels in the hallway. Confident. Steady. A rhythm that tugged at something low in my chest.
Keller stood, smoothing his tie. “Ah, here she is.”
I turned.
And for the second time in as many weeks, my world tilted off its axis.
Elizabeth.
No—Beth.
Five-inch heels hugged the curves of her calves, and a high-waisted black pencil skirt clung to her hips like it had been sewn in place. Her blouse was white, semi-sheer, the black bra beneath it sharp and deliberate. The top buttons were undone, revealing just enough skin to stir memory.
Her hair was down.
Her mouth was glossed.
And she looked nothing like the woman grinding on me in a dark club.
Except she did.
Exactly like her.
My eyes snapped to hers.
Beth froze mid-step.
Fuck.
The second her eyes met mine, the memory of her moaning my name in that exam room came rushing back—along with the way her thighs trembled beneath my hands. My jaw tightened.
Keller gestured between us. “Dr. Cole, this is—”
“We’ve met,” I said smoothly, rising from my chair. “Miss Monroe is actually a patient of mine.”
Beth didn’t even blink. “Yes, Dr. Cole has seen me professionally.”
The emphasis wasn’t lost on me.
Brian’s eyebrows lifted. “Ah. Well then… I’m happy to bring in someone else if that would be more appropriate—”
Beth cut in, voice crisp and confident. “Of course not, Brian. We’re all professionals here. If anything, that just makes me even more qualified to understand the target demographic.”
She smiled, polished and poised, but there was a flicker in her gaze when it slid back to mine. A silent challenge. Or maybe a reminder.
I nodded, forcing my tone to match hers. “Agreed.”
Keller seemed relieved. “Perfect. I’ll give you two a few minutes to get acquainted with the brief. Beth already has the pitch materials, and she’s great at reading the room—so I’ll let her work her magic.”
He patted the table twice and exited without another word.
The moment the door clicked shut, silence stretched between us like a wire.
Beth didn’t sit. Not yet.
Just crossed her arms and tilted her head.
“So,” she said. “Funny seeing you here, Doctor.”
Beth didn’t sit right away.
She just studied me for a beat, head tilted, arms folded beneath her chest. Then, with a slight smirk and a sparkle in her hazel eyes, she asked, “Are you stalking me?”
The tease in her tone landed like a match flicked onto gasoline. I cleared my throat, heat prickling the back of my neck.
“I—no. I had no idea you worked here.”
She let out a soft laugh, finally stepping closer. “Relax, I’m joking. Of course you didn’t know. But now that you’re here…” She slid into the seat across from me and scooped up the pitch folder. “Let me show you why I’m the best in the industry.”
She flipped through the materials quickly—too quickly, yet somehow not rushed. Her eyes scanned, focused and calculating, before she set the folder down and tapped her finger once on the table.
“One thing I noticed immediately? There’s zero social media strategy in your current campaign materials.”
I blinked. “Social media?”
Beth nodded, already in presentation mode, all confidence and polish. “In this day and age, that’s not just an oversight—it’s a death sentence for business growth. Especially in healthcare.”
She leaned forward just slightly, enough to drop her voice to a flirtatious near-whisper.
“With a h-um—good-looking gentleman such as yourself?” She smiled, her gaze flicking briefly down my chest and back up to my face. “You should be all over social media. Let the patients see who they’re trusting. Show some behind-the-scenes moments, highlight testimonials, maybe even a few casual reels—white coat off, real human stuff. You’ll have new clients flooding your front desk before the week is out.”
I raised an eyebrow. “Is that so?”
Beth smirked. “Trust me.”
Then she cleared her throat and added, smoothly, “I mean… I’m not the best for nothing.”
I leaned back in my chair, intrigued despite myself. “This is the fourth agency I’ve been to this month. Not a single one of them mentioned that.”
She shrugged, the picture of humble confidence. “That’s because they’re not me.”
Her gaze held mine, steady. “There’s a reason we outperform all the others. Honestly, I’m surprised you didn’t come here first.”
I exhaled a soft laugh. “Well, I just went alphabetically. Figured I wouldn’t settle on the first one I visited. Wanted to shop around.”
She tilted her head, already preparing to counter.
“So that means after us you’ll be headed to—”
“No,” I cut in smoothly. “Won’t be necessary.”
Beth paused.
I held her gaze. “I already like what you’ve come up with in five minutes more than all the other firms’ full plans put together.”
That made her smile again—just a hint more genuine this time.
Our eyes stayed locked.
Something silent passed between us—sharp, charged, familiar in a way that shouldn’t have been possible in a boardroom. Her lips parted like she was about to say something else, but neither of us moved. Neither of us breathed.
Then the door creaked open.
“Back with the coffees,” Keller announced as he stepped inside.
Fucking perfect timing, man.
I wasn’t sure if I should be relieved or furious. I’d been sinking into her eyes like a man lost at sea—and maybe I wanted to drown a little longer.
Brian glanced between us, missing none of it. “So,” he said, clearing his throat, “I hope Beth here’s lived up to her reputation and given you something impressive.”
I forced a smile, leaning back. “Oh, I’m more than impressed, Keller.”
Beth gave nothing away—but I saw the flicker of something pleased in her posture. Confidence, quiet and earned.
“And,” I continued, “I do believe my search is over.”
Brian’s brows rose. “That quick? Well, we’re flattered. We can get a proposal drawn up and—”
“I’ll sign as soon as it’s ready,” I said, tone easy but firm. “But I have one stipulation.”
“Oh?” Brian asked, already bracing.
I turned toward Beth again. “Miss Monroe is in charge of everything.”
That caught both of them off guard.
“I won’t work with anyone else,” I added. “What she gave me in five minutes far exceeds anything I’ve seen from full-scale teams across three other firms. So I’ll be trusting no one but her.”
Beth’s eyes widened just a little—but she recovered fast. Keller looked at her, then at me, like he wasn’t sure if he should be thrilled or suspicious.
“Understood,” Brian said slowly. “That’s… very high praise.”
“It’s also non-negotiable.”
Beth crossed her legs and gave me a look that made it very hard to remember we were in a professional setting.
“I hope you’re ready to be dazzled, Dr. Cole,” she said smoothly. “Because I don’t do anything halfway.”
I smiled, but I didn’t trust myself to respond.
Dr. ColeI’m halfway through closing up for the day, reviewing a few of the shots Beth and Rachel flagged on the laptop, when the front door creaks open.I freeze.Beth glances toward the hallway. “Did you forget to lock the door?”“No. I locked it.”Footsteps. Confident, unhurried.Madison.She appears in the doorway a moment later, all glossy lips and long lashes, holding a packet of updated literature against her chest like she’s delivering it out of the goodness of her heart.“I was just going to drop this in the mail slot,” she says, eyes sweeping over the room—lingering far too long on Beth—“but the door was open. I figured someone was still here, so I let myself in.”You figured wrong.I manage a polite nod. “Madison. What can I help you with?”She smiles, all saccharine sweetness. “Just thought I’d hand these off personally. Saturday hours, huh? Very professional.”“Photoshoot,” I say, gesturing toward the setup. “Marketing for the practice.”Beth steps up beside me, and I shi
BethSaturday morning is crisp and golden, the kind of autumn light that makes everything feel a little cinematic. Which is perfect, considering what we’re doing today.I pull into the medical plaza with a car full of camera gear, branded props, and a best friend who has already finished her second energy drink and is humming the Magic Mike soundtrack under her breath.“Please behave,” I warn her, shutting the car door with my hip as I balance the tripod bag and my laptop case.Rachel grins like she’s been asked to do the opposite. “I always behave. Just not necessarily well.”God help me.Dr. Cole’s office is closed to patients today, but he offered to open up for our on-location shoot to grab some organic photos of him and the staff in their natural habitat. Real smiles. Real moments. The kind of thing that elevates a brand beyond generic stock photography.The front door clicks open before we even knock.“Good morning, Miss Monroe,” he says, perfectly pressed as always in tailored
BethThe movie’s still playing, but I couldn’t tell you what it’s about. Something with car chases. Or spies. Or both. I’m not really paying attention.Not with Tommy’s hand between my thighs under the blanket, slow and possessive like he owns the real estate. I shift against the cushions, trying to play it cool, but his palm flattens and slides, dragging over my inner thigh with maddening precision.“You’re squirming,” he murmurs, voice low in my ear. “That mean you’re ready for more?”I bite my lip.He shifts beside me and lifts the blanket slightly. “Why don’t you come get on top of me and ride this cock like you want to.”Heat floods every part of me. I glance toward the open blinds. “Right here?”His mouth curves into that cocky half-smile. “You weren’t so concerned about the windows the other day when I fully raised the blinds and fucked you against the window.” He draws a breath and continues, “Here on the couch with the slats of the blinds open is hardly a comparison.”I hesita
BethThe office was quiet in that end-of-day way—soft clacks of keyboards slowing, phones ringing less frequently, the hum of fluorescent lights louder than usual.I shut down my laptop and slid it into my bag, still riding the afterglow of a successful meeting. The contract was locked. The campaign was greenlit. And I somehow managed to get through lunch with Dr. Cole without jumping him across the conference table.Barely.“Hey, rockstar.”I glanced up as Brian leaned against my office doorframe, holding a half-empty coffee cup and wearing his usual late-day smirk.“Oh God, please don’t call me that,” I said, laughing as I zipped my bag. “You’ll jinx it.”He stepped inside, sipping his drink. “Just wanted to say congrats again. That contract’s no joke—it’s not a one-and-done campaign. That’s a long-term deal, full retainer. You basically just guaranteed us six months of monthly checks.”I paused, my hands stilling on the edge of the desk. “Wait—seriously?”Brian nodded. “Dr. Cole si
BethI hit save on the proposal draft and lean back in my chair, eyes bleary from staring at the screen too long. The layout is clean. The campaign strategy is airtight. The slide deck even has a fucking animated intro.In short: I nailed it.I chew the edge of my thumb for a second, then grab my phone and scroll through my recent calls.His name is still just listed as Dr. Cole.My thumb hovers for a beat too long before I hit call.It only rings once.“Dr. Cole.”“Hi—hi. It’s Beth Monroe,” I say quickly. “I just wanted to confirm a time for you to review the proposal?”A pause. I can hear him shifting on the other end of the line.“I’ve got my lunch hour free,” he says, calm as ever. “And the hour after lunch just opened up. Will two hours be enough?”“Plenty,” I reply, trying to sound breezy. “That’s more than enough time.”“I’ll come to your office then. No need for you to pack everything up.”“Oh—okay. Yeah. Great.”We hang up, and I immediately get up to straighten my desk like
Dr. ColeMonday mornings are usually a mess of overbooked patients and paperwork.Not today.I stand in front of the oversized wall calendar in the break room, coffee in hand, trying not to think too hard. It’s a slow day. Just two morning patients—one of which already blindsided me—and a pharma rep visit. Madison.I rub the back of my neck. She must’ve called ahead and scheduled something official. Probably wants to talk about the new migraine injectable or whatever the latest patent-pending bullshit is.She’ll be here in fifteen minutes.I check my watch, then head back to my office and shut the door behind me.The silence presses in.Elizabeth was here. In this building. Sitting in that exam room like any other patient.Asking for emergency contraception.I didn’t look at the name on the chart first. Rookie move. I wasn’t prepared—seeing her there, fidgeting on the edge of the table, wearing guilt like perfume.It shouldn’t bother me.We’re not together. Hell, we’re barely even any






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