reply, tugging on one shirt cuff to fiddle with the onyx link there. “This is a salaried position, semi-autonomous, and I’ll expect you to figure things out proactively, not wait around for me to direct you. If I call you at three in the morning to do something for me, I expect you to do it. I’m a hard taskmaster, and I demand absolute loyalty and dedication. More than that, I require you to use that brain you have shown you possess, unlike my last assistant. Let it get lazy, and you’re fired. If you exceed my expectations, I’ll give you a raise in thirty days. Any questions?”
I almost laugh at her incredulous expression. I’ve managed to one-up her by offering more than she demanded. I can tell she’s wondering if she’s sold herself short. Frankly, I would have paid whatever she demanded. I don’t expect she’ll last long. The people who work directly for me never do. I demand a lot and people rarely meet my expectations. For now, she has an immediate solution to my problem, and she sparks my interest in the otherwise monotonous world I seem to occupy lately.
If she ends up in my bed, even better. I have a feeling she’d be a fantastic fuck, especially if she channels all that sass into her lovemaking.
“Um… do you want me to finish cleaning your suite?” she asks, and I’m disappointed she has to ask.
But she doesn’t know me yet. She doesn’t know I follow through on every single promise and offer I make. So I’ll give her a pass. “No. Like I said, I’ll make sure your duties are covered by someone else. I’d like you to get that Desert Rose venue secured. Afterward, come down to the executive offices. You can work on getting the suppliers updated with the new location and the attendees notified of the change of address.”
“Yes, sir,” she replies. Given the tone of her voice, I half expect her to give a sarcastic salute of her hand.
My palm tingles again, but I ignore it. This is just business now.
CHAPTER 4
Bailey
“Bailey,” my mom calls out from the living room. Actually, it’s more of a long wheezing plea. Without hesitation, I leave her kitchen, which I’d been cleaning, to see what she needs. She smiles sheepishly as she adjusts the nasal cannula that delivers the life-saving oxygen to her body through her nose. “Honey… this tank is almost out. Think you can exchange it before you leave?”
“Of course,” I reassure her, glancing over at my dad in his recliner. He has it fully cocked back, watching Wheel of Fortune, ignoring my mom and me. My mom immediately tries to defend him. “His back is terrible today, or else he’d do it.”
“I know, Mom,” I say gently, giving her a smile. Neither of us buys the excuse, but it’s the game we play every time I come to visit.
It sucks having parents who have seemingly turned old and infirm way before they should have. My parents are both disabled, yet only in their early fifties. My mom has chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, thanks to her years as a cotton textile factory worker. She’s never smoked a day in her life, but her lungs are shot. She’s dependent on oxygen now.
My dad has a bad back—worker’s compensation injury years ago—and while there are many things he can’t do, he can most definitely change out my mom’s small bottles of oxygen. It’s just a matter that he doesn’t want to, and, moreover, he knows I’ll handle it.
Honestly, I don’t mind, though. I love both of my parents—warts and all. My mom I hate to see suffering this way, because she was just always on the go and active. It kills her to sit in her house day in and day out, not being able to work or get out into the world as she wants.
My dad took to disabled life, not requiring much to keep him happy. As long as he had good TV to watch and a comfortable chair for his back, he was a satisfied man. While it doesn’t make him a bad person in my eyes, because I do indeed love him just as much as my mom, it just makes it glaringly apparent I got my drive and determination from my mother.
I come by several times a week to check on them. Each visit, I perform a household chore to keep their place clean and habitable. My mom doesn’t have the stamina