The Bargain (Executive Suite Secrets #1) Read Online Jocelynn Drake

Categories Genre: Angst, Contemporary, M-M Romance Tags Authors: Series: Executive Suite Secrets Series by Jocelynn Drake
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Total pages in book: 96
Estimated words: 89666 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 448(@200wpm)___ 359(@250wpm)___ 299(@300wpm)
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My relief dropped me back into my seat, my head resting in my empty hand. “You’re going to kill me one of these days, Dec,” I muttered.

“It wasn’t my intention to scare you. I thought you should know, since this seemed out of character for your assistant.”

“It is. He has my permission to use my office after hours, and I’ve invited him more than once to have a drink so long as he promised me he wouldn’t drive intoxicated. But getting drunk isn’t his style.” Something bad must have happened after he’d left the office to deal with that personal matter. “Do me a favor. Stay there. Don’t wake him up. Keep an eye on him to make sure he doesn’t try to drive home. I’ll be there in less than an hour. After I relieve you, you can head out to dinner with Pierce and Rome.”

“As you wish.” Declan hung up, but I was used to his brevity.

When I pocketed my phone, I found Pierce and Rome staring at me in shock.

“Your unflappable assistant is drunk in the office?” Rome asked.

“In your office?” Pierce added.

“Yes, and you both need to forget you ever heard about that. Something is wrong. This is not like Byron, and he needs my help. You two assholes go meet Declan for dinner. I have other plans.”

I needed to get to Byron.

My always perfect, stalwart, brilliant assistant was as Declan had described him—passed out, seated at the long shiny table off to one side of my office. The lights were turned low around most of the room. There was a glow over the table that glinted and danced along the crystal decanter and empty glass on Byron’s right. The decanter was only half-empty, and I’d had a good bit out of it prior to Byron taking some. Either Byron had been drinking before he’d made it to the office, or he was a cheap date.

As soon as I spotted Byron, I got rid of Declan, sending him off to dinner with our friends. I stood beside Byron’s sleeping form, my eyes skimming the scattered papers in front of him. They were reports from all the different departments and subsidiary businesses. There was also a legal pad filled with his notes, but the farther I traveled down the page, the less legible they grew.

After whatever shit thing he’d gone through, he’d returned to work on Courtland Enterprises’ problem of falling revenue. My heart simultaneously swelled and broke for him. If there was anyone in desperate need of a break, it was my poor assistant.

With Byron sleeping so soundly, I gave in to one of my greatest wishes. I reached out and lightly touched his hair, letting those fine silken threads brush along my fingertips. I shouldn’t. It was wrong. But if I couldn’t ever date him, I wanted to look back and have this tiny thing.

I rested my hand on his shoulder and shook him gently. “Byron? It’s time to wake up. I’ll take you home,” I said in a low voice.

The young man jolted upright, a piece of paper stuck to his cheek. I swallowed the chuckle that rose and plucked away the paper. The movement drew his gaze up to me as he seemed to have taken zero notice of the fact that I was still holding his shoulder.

I’d expected horror when he saw me. What I got was the widest grin I’d ever seen on Byron’s face.

“S’bastian!” he slurred. “What’re you doin’ ’ere? Oh, no! Is it Monday already?”

This time I laughed, ignoring the flutter in my chest at the sound of him saying my name for the first time. Well, almost saying it. “No, it’s Friday night. I came to take you home. It’s not good to sleep here.”

“Oh! Then I gotta clean up my mess.” He turned away from me and stretched his arms across the table, dragging the papers noisily to his body. I jumped forward and snagged the decanter and glass as they moved with the papers, and I deposited them on the hidden wet bar.

“We can leave the papers to deal with on Monday. They’ll be fine,” I reassured him as I returned to his side.

“Okay.” It was the most affable tone I’d ever heard from him. He pushed to his feet and flopped into the chair again as if his legs refused to hold him. Byron directed a quizzical look at his legs, swaying in his seat as if he were also confused by what happened.

When he made another attempt, I grabbed his arm and held him upright, stopping him from falling a second time. As we made our way to the elevators, I wrapped an arm around him while Byron mimicked me, putting his arm behind my waist while he laid his head on my chest.

“You’re tall,” Byron declared with a lopsided grin. He wasn’t wrong. I had a solid six inches on him, and I appreciated that I had a considerable height and weight advantage over him since he couldn’t walk straight.


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