
My Brother's Best Friend's One-Night Rule
Chapter 6
Avery
The glass reception area on the thirty-second floor was a temple of silent, intimidating wealth. I stood in the center of it, my new hire folder already crumpled at the edges from my grip. My cream-colored suit felt like a costume—professional, restrained, a uniform meant to bury the woman who’d been pressed against a brick wall in an alley. Bury her deep.
Eleanor, poised and sharp-eyed, had deposited me here with a final, efficient instruction. “Wait thirty seconds, then go in. He doesn’t like to be kept waiting.”
I counted my breaths instead. One… two… My pulse thrummed in my throat. At twenty-seven, the heavy oak door to the corner office opened inward, as if by some unseen command.
I walked into his world.
The office was vast, all dark wood and cold glass. The city sprawled below the floor-to-ceiling windows, a kingdom he’d conquered. Logan stood with his back to me, a silhouette against the morning sky, white shirt, sleeves rolled to his elbows. He didn’t turn.
“Close the door, Avery.”
His voice was different. Cool. Flat. It held none of the desperate rasp from the alley, none of the hungry heat from the hotel. I obeyed, the soft click of the metal hinge echoing like a gunshot in the oppressive quiet.
He finally turned.
This was the third Logan. Not the passionate stranger, not the furious, jealous man in the shadows. This was Logan Thorne, Managing Director. His expression was a calm, impenetrable mask. The storm in his eyes had been banked, replaced by a focused, professional chill. He’d put away the man from last night, locked him in a drawer just like he was about to lock away my signature.
He gestured to one of the two leather chairs facing his monumental desk. “Sit.”
I sat, my spine rod-straight. He didn’t return to his throne. Instead, he picked up a folder from his desk— thicker, heavier than the one HR had given me—and placed it before me.
“Read it. Then sign it.”
I opened the folder. The contents were a cold shower. A standard NDA. A conflict-of-interest disclosure. A Titan Ventures code of conduct. And then, a separate, single-page addendum. The header read: Supplemental Directive for Executive Assistant to Managing Director.
The language was legal, precise, and utterly damning. It outlined expectations of discretion, loyalty, and professional boundaries. And there, in clause 4.1, was the knife, spelled out in black and white: “Under the direct reporting relationship from Executive Assistant to Managing Director, conduct of an inappropriate
or sexually intimate nature shall be strictly prohibited and shall constitute immediate grounds for termination for cause.”
I read it twice. The words sexually intimate seemed to pulse on the page. My face grew hot. I finished and looked up.
He was watching me, his gaze analytical, as if studying a graph. “Well?”
“All of it?” My voice sounded small.
“All of it.”
I tapped the addendum. “Including the clause that says if I ever sleep with my boss, I get fired and lose any severance?”
He didn’t flinch. He didn’t smile. He just slid a heavy, expensive pen across the polished wood toward me.
The silent command was absolute.
You’re crazy. You’re signing your own humiliation into a binding contract. The thought screamed in my head. But beneath the shame, a darker, more stubborn part of me reared up. He wants you here. He moved heaven and earth to get you here, right next to him. This is his cage, but he’s locking himself in it, too.
My hand was steady as I picked up the pen. I signed each document. Avery Sinclair. Each stroke of the pen felt like a lie, like a promise to a version of myself that didn’t exist anymore. When I finished, I placed the pen down with a finality that echoed in the room.
He reached across the desk, took the folder, and opened a drawer. He placed it inside, shut the drawer, and turned a small key. The lock snicked shut. He pocketed the key, the outline of it visible against the fine wool of his suit pants.
“Rules,” he said, his voice still that terrifyingly calm monotone. He leaned back against the edge of his desk, looming over me. “New ones. Since the old ones didn’t hold.”
I said nothing. I just looked at him, at the hard line of his mouth.
“In this office, you call me Mr. Thorne. You don’t touch me. You don’t look at me the way you’re looking at me right now.” His eyes held mine, and for a fractured second, I saw a flicker—a crack in the ice—before it sealed over. “You do your job. You go home at six. You don’t text me after hours unless it’s regarding an active deal file. Is that clear?”
“Crystal,” I whispered, my own voice gaining a thin edge of steel. “And outside this office?”
He was silent for a long, stretching moment. His eyes dropped, just for a heartbeat, to my lips. A phantom touch that sent a bolt of heat straight to my core. He looked away, out the window.
“Outside this office,” he said, finally, “is a problem we’re going to solve later.”
A sharp, efficient knock broke the tension. The door opened without waiting for an answer. Eleanor stood there, a clipboard in hand. “Mr. Thorne. Your nine-thirty is holding. I can take Ms. Sinclair to her desk for
orientation.”
Logan gave a single, curt nod. He was already turning back toward his window, dismissing me. “See that she has everything she needs.”
I stood, my legs slightly unsteady. I smoothed my suit skirt, a pointless, nervous gesture. As I reached the doorway, his voice stopped me.
“Avery.”
I turned. He wasn’t looking at me; he was staring at his computer screen, his profile harsh in the daylight.
“Mark called HR this morning. He wants to know if his transfer to Singapore can be reversed.” A pause. “The answer is no. I just thought you should know—in case he reaches out to you directly.” His fingers tapped once on the keyboard. “He won’t be reaching out for long.”
The cold, casual cruelty of it stole my breath. He’d exiled a man for the crime of taking me on a date, and he was telling me about it like he was commenting on the weather. A warning. A reminder of his power.
I stood in the doorway, wanting to scream, to ask what he meant by that last, ominous sentence. But he had already picked up his phone, hitting a speed-dial.
“Guten Morgen,” he said, his voice shifting seamlessly into fluent, authoritative German. The conversation moved on. I was already forgotten.
Eleanor gave me a thin, professional smile and gestured down the hall. “Right this way.”
I followed her, my heels sinking into the plush carpet. The corridor seemed to stretch for miles. My new desk was in a sleek, glass-walled anteroom just outside his office door. It was a beautiful prison, with a stunning view and a direct line to the warden.
I sat in the ergonomic chair, my hands gripping the armrests. They wouldn’t stop shaking.
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