Office Mate – The Emory Games Read Online Rachel Van Dyken

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Funny Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 30
Estimated words: 28781 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 144(@200wpm)___ 115(@250wpm)___ 96(@300wpm)
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“…accident!” Ace said.

“Accident my ass, you must always know where to point the stapler! Do you know why she’s part of the escape room? Because nobody escaped the room when she had a psychotic break and ended up stapling her boss’s hand to a few documents, she painted it purple, nobody messed with her again, and every time someone stapled, people broke out in hives, people had to take mental health days, it’s why we don’t allow colored paperclips, the triggers are too raw.”

Someone cursed.

I couldn’t tell if it was Ace or Dustin or Max or my head making up things. I tried to sit up.

“No, no.” Ace pulled me against his strong chest. “If she has a concussion, someone needs to check on her.”

There was silence.

Two seconds of it? Maybe three?

Max’s voice sounded next. “Why yes, someone really should.”

My eyes fluttered closed after that, it was peaceful, wonderful, until something slapped me across the face.

I jerked awake in Ace’s lap, he grinned down at me. “Sorry, thought you were dead.”

Chapter Seven

Ace

“…sorry, thought you were dead.”

Actually, I was staring at the lump on her head wondering if I should grab more ice and had accidentally started playing with her hair and staring at the freckles on her cheeks, by the time I was done counting them I’d moved on to her full lips and the way she pressed them together when she slept.

It would be the only time I could have peace with her while being her partner, since I knew her well. She’d wake up, and I’d be all like oh hey I nursed you to health and she’d be like oh my shit, my hero, what happened?

And then I’d have to say, “I got scared, slipped, fell on my ass, and hit you in the head with a purple stapler. It was touch and go a bit, but hey you made it!”

Wow, add me to B team Avengers any day. On second thought, I stared over at the purple bruise on her forehead. Maybe C team?

Her long dark hair was a matted mess in her ponytail from tossing and turning on the couch, the sweat from terror didn’t help, and I had my own sweat going on since once she found out where we were and why I’d have to explain it to her, and she was going to figure it out soon. No, this was not her apartment, no, it wasn’t mine; it was in fact a penthouse suite given to us on another level of the hotel away from contestants so she could have privacy after the stapler incident.

Maybe if I just said it really fast, she’d only catch a few meaningful pieces and turn around and ask to watch a tv show or something? Did concussions make you lose short-term memory or would that be long-term memory? Hell, did I have a concussion by just sitting next to her? My brain was firing in all the wrong ways.

Bri stretched her arms above her head and yawned, she had two heavy blinks before looking down. “This isn’t my couch.” Those same eyes locked onto me and narrowed. “And you look nervous, unless you have to pee, which gives you a free pass.”

“Well, in that case…” I grumbled. “And it’s not your couch.”

I hoped that the chipper tone I used would be disarming, but who knew when it came to Bri, plus she had blunt force trauma to her head by way of office supplies.

Maybe if I was extremely agreeable, she wouldn’t keep asking. One could only hope.

She traced the white leather with her fingertip. “Is it your couch?”—she asked next—“Are we in your apartment?”

“No.”

“Did the stapler put me in a coma I’m not aware of, are you a mirage, and why am I laying dangerously close to your lap and why do you look ready to confess to homicide right now? Oh God, did I help you bury a body and just black out from the sheer trauma of the next challenge?”

I sighed, then did this rough exhale that kind of felt like I was about ready to have a panic attack and not because she’d be pissed, but because I was barely holding on by a thread as it was.

Concussed people should not be trusted with me.

At least not gorgeous ones I used to be in love with.

Used.

Right. Used. I was going to have to repeat that word a lot if I had to keep being her partner and work in close quarters with her, a penthouse suite out of a dream did not help, they even had the tiny ice in the freezer, the kind that she loved and used to force me to pick up on the way home from work from the one and only gas station in town that had it.

I always told her she was lucky I was on that side of town.


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