Filed to story: Watch Out, I’m The Lady Boss (Eleanor & Sebastian) Book PDF Free
He usually insisted on a kiss.
Or some dumb excuse to touch my face.
I stayed awake, waiting.
Nothing.
Eventually, my eyes burned.
I tried to hold them open.
I lost.
Sleep dragged me under before I could work out what the hell he was plotting.
Sometime in the morning, I blinked awake.
My face was pressed against bare skin. Warm, smooth, and definitely not a pillow.
My arm was hooked over a chest that rose and fell i slow, steady breaths.
His chin grazed the top of my head.
My leg was draped over his hip like I’d lost all sense of self-respect in the night.
I stared at Sebastian’s throat and waited for the rest of me to wake up and explain how the hell this had happened.
His arm tightened around my waist. His voice was half-asleep.
“You crawled over in the middle of the night. I tried to stop you.”
I shoved at his shoulder.
“Bullshit.”
“I’m serious.” He didn’t open his eyes.
“You were like a heat-seeking missile. I nearly fell off the edge.”
I glanced over his shoulder.
He was one bad roll away from landing on the floor.
We were both tucked on the left side of the bed, under his duvet.
Which made no sense.
I’d gone to sleep hugging my edge, wrapped in my own blanket, chanting in my head that I was not, under any circumstances, allowed to touch him.
And yet here I was.
He gave a martyred sigh.
“You stole my blanket. Took over half the bed. Nearly killed me. Then woke up and glared like I wronged you.”
I squinted at him.
“Fine. I’ll be more careful next time.”
“Good.” He yanked me closer, one hand splayed across my spine.
“Now shut up and go back to sleep.”
He didn’t move again.
And for some reason, neither did I.
The next few nights, I kept going to his room.
It was easier than pretending I wanted to be anywhere else.
He didn’t try anything.
No wandering hands, no weird suggestions.
Just sleep.
Every night, same deal.
In the mornings, I always woke up in the same place, warm, comfortable, pinned against a wall of muscle and heat.
After a while, I stopped thinking of it as his bed.
It just became the place I slept.
He’d basically become my designated sleep buddy, thought.
But I knew better than to tell him that.
Over breakfast, I told him, “I’ve got that design competition coming up. The Aureate Awards. It’s in Riverbend.”
“That’s hours away. When are you leaving?”
“The event’s on the third. I’m flying out the day before.”
He set his phone down.
“Leave earlier. I’ve got meetings at the LGH site in Riverbend. I’m flying there tomorrow morning. Come with me.”
I shrugged.
“Sure. I’ve never been. Might as well go poke around.”
Riverbend was a seaside city that looked like a screensaver.
Mid-twenties weather all year.
Palm trees, fancy villas, streets that probably smelled like sunscreen.
Tourist central, especially during winter.
The competition organizers had picked it for that exact reason-easy press, guaranteed crowd, every photo perfectly backlit.
The next morning, we flew out at eight.
We landed just after noon.
The second I stepped onto the tarmac, sunlight smacked me across the face.
Sharp, blinding heat.
My jumper instantly became a prison.
“Why the hell did I wear wool?” I muttered.
“I should’ve just brought a T-shirt.”
Sebastian had both our suitcases.
I caught up, yanking off my jumper and tying it around my waist.
The terminal was packed.
Noisy, sweaty, impatient.
College students everywhere, some with rucksacks some with glitter on their faces.
It looked like a festival had thrown up all over the arrival lounge,
I stopped dead.
“Shit.”
Sebastian asked, “What?”
“It’s New Year’s Eve. Tonight. I forgot.”
“And?”
“And Riverbend does huge countdown events. Like fireworks, parades, DJs on the beach. I saw it on TikTok. That’s why this place is rammed. They’re all here to party.”
Sebastian looked around at the chaos.
Someone tripped over his suitcase.
A girl in sparkly boots screamed something about tequila.
“Good timing then,” Sebastian said.
“We get to see the celebration up close.”
I elbowed him.
“You planned this. Don’t even lie.”
He didn’t deny it.
A kid bolted past and slammed into my hip before I saw him coming.
I stumbled sideways, caught my balance, and turned just in time to see him disappear into the crowd.
A woman-mid-thirties, sweaty, frantic-snatched him by the hood and shouted a string of apologies over her shoulder.
“Jesus,” I muttered, brushing my jumper.