The Rule Book (Rule Breakers #1)

“Is that why you have so many rules? I find it hard to believe the rules are in place just because you’re young and worried about things that might affect your company.” It made sense. His family history was enough to make even the sanest person go crazy.


He paused and seemed to contemplate it. “Maybe. But I think that rules help me keep boundaries. It’s the stuff I can’t define that scares the shit out of me.”

I smoothed my hand down his arm and looked up at him. “The indefinable is what makes life worth living. People aren’t meant to live by a book.”

“That may work for you, Lainey, but I can’t afford for my business life to get muddled with my personal. The only exception is you. I’m willing to try this, because you’re worth it.”

“Thank you for letting me in.”

He nodded. “I’m not perfect. This is really hard for me, but I’m trying.”

The elevator opened, and we stepped inside. Brogan hit the button for his floor. “Since you’re so determined to try, how about a round four?” I smiled up at him.

The doors closed and Brogan pushed me against the wall. “Now, that I can manage.”





Chapter Twenty-Three


Lainey Taylor Rule of Life #72

Never assume parents always have their kid’s best interests in mind.

The week after Christmas, I returned to work. Brogan and I had been inseparable except for the few days I was at my mom’s house, which I’d spent on her couch watching movies. The doctors said the new chemo meds were effective, and she’d be given her last dose in a couple weeks. She was a fighter and was kicking cancer’s ass.

The past few weeks with Brogan had been a whirlwind of stolen kisses, staying up way too late, and the giddy, sleep-deprived new relationship feeling that washed over me every time I thought of him.

Yellow sunflowers sat on my desk when I entered the building. I smiled, and my heart swelled past capacity. We weren’t in an open relationship in the office, but this was close enough.

A string wound around the base of the flowers, holding a tiny envelope. I slipped it out and opened it.

Meet me at Hillside Park at 8 p.m.

B.S.

Okay, were we going running? Talking about this during work was completely off-limits, but this seemed like a weird request. I shook it off and continued my usual morning ritual of checking my clients’ social media accounts, checking the Cloud, and preparing posts.

I spent the rest of the day buried in paperwork, and by the time I got home to the apartment, I only had forty minutes to shower and change before I had to leave for the park. Such an odd place to meet, but I guessed since he walked Bruce there everyday, it wasn’t too out of the norm.

After washing my face and reapplying my makeup, I pulled my jacket off my chair and breezed out of the apartment. The early-January night still had a bite of winter, and my wet hair started to crisp at the ends.

I sat on the bench that was a central viewing point of the small park.

“You’re very punctual,” came an unfamiliar voice.

My gaze shot up to an older man who I recognized from a photo Brogan had shown me. Brogan’s father.

I wrapped my coat around me tighter. “You sent the flowers?”

“You sound surprised.”

Uh, ya think? “How do you even know me?” But it clicked before he could answer. The guy with the camera a couple weeks ago. He wasn’t from a tabloid. But would Brogan’s father really stoop so low as to have him followed? And why?

“I’ve been following you for a few weeks now.” He tossed a manila folder onto the bench beside me. I opened it up and found zoomed in pictures of Brogan’s condo. Us sitting at the kitchen table. Us kissing at the stove, Brogan’s hands climbing up my back. Us in the bedroom. “Seems you guys have gotten to know each other very well lately.”

My heart sank. If these got out, what would it do to Brogan’s company? And the bigger question—what kind of monster would take photos of his son without his permission?

“What do you want?” I spat the words, closing the folder on our most private moments. My stomach rolled, and I thought I might be sick. My privacy. My body on full display. Someone other than Brogan had seen this, and that invasion sent a ripple of anger and disgust blasting through my veins.

“I have a business proposition.”

“Oh?” What was this, the friggin’ mafia?

“I want you to leak a few of these pictures onto your clients’ accounts tomorrow.” He passed over his phone, and I swiped through images of clients of Starr media in very compromising positions. Positions I’d need at least ten years of yoga and a bottle of wine to even attempt.

My cheeks heated, and a wave of nausea washed over me. “This would be social suicide for these people.”

He grinned. “Yes.”

My lips curled in disgust. A father trying to ruin his only son’s career? Sick. “That would go against everything Brogan stands for. This company means everything to him. What makes you think I’d do that to him?”

He sneered. “Because I have something you want.”

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