Chapter 1

Every time my assistant booked a private room for me, he brought his girlfriend along.

I let it slide. The room was on his way home anyway.

Then today I pushed the door open and found a sticky note slapped on the head chair:

"Freeloaders not allowed."

I peeled it off and turned to him. "What's this about?"

His girlfriend was already sitting in the head seat, glaring at me.

"Can't you read?" she snapped. "Mooching off my boyfriend every damn day. Have you no shame?"

"If you can't afford Michelin, don't show up. I can't stand cheap old hags like you. Honestly, if I lived your life, I'd kill myself."

I just stared at her, baffled. Justin rushed over and lowered his voice.

"Boss, I'm so sorry. She thinks I'm paying for this dinner."

"She's a bit of a princess. Doesn't like sitting with people who can't keep up. Tell you what. Let us eat first, and you can order after we leave."

Then he took my black card and handed it to the server.

I stood there for a second. Then I picked up my phone and called the restaurant manager.

"Send security to the private room. Someone stole my card. Call the police."

I am the CEO of the illustrious Sinclair Group, a publicly traded company ranked among the top 50 globally.

I never thought I'd see the day when I got jabbed in the face by some twenty-something and called a freeloading old hag.

Especially since the black card was mine. The room was booked under my name.

Five minutes after I hung up, the manager Mr. Davis showed up at the door with two security guards.

Justin saw them and dropped his fork. It clattered against the plate.

Davis stepped over to me and kept his voice low. "Ms. Sinclair. Which one took your card?"

"Him." I tipped my chin at Justin.

Davis turned. His tone went cold. "Sir. Return the card. We've already called the police."

Vivienne still hadn't caught up. She slammed her palm on the table and shot up.

"Return? That's my boyfriend's card! Who do you think you are, some middle manager waltzing in here?"

Davis didn't even look at her. His eyes stayed on Justin.

Justin was sweating. "Boss, I mean, Ms. Sinclair, let me explain."

The word Sinclair landed. Vivienne paused. Then she laughed.

"Sinclair? Her? Justin, don't fall for it. She can barely afford lunch and she's pretending to be a CEO?"

She didn't get to finish. Two uniformed officers were already in the doorway.

"Who called this in? Credit card theft?"

I raised my hand. "I did."

The cop looked at me, then at the matte-black card in Justin's hand. "This yours?"

Justin's lips moved. Nothing came out.

Vivienne jumped in. "Of course it's my boyfriend's—"

"I'm asking him." The cop cut her off. "Sir. Is this your card?"

Justin finally cracked. He bowed his head. "No. It's... it's Ms. Sinclair's."

Vivienne's face went blank. From smug to nothing in two seconds.

"What?" She turned to him. "What did you just say?"

He didn't answer. He walked straight over to me, bent at the waist, voice shaking.

"Ms. Sinclair, I'm sorry. It's my fault. I shouldn't have taken your card. I shouldn't have let Vivienne talk to you like that."

The cop looked at me. "Ma'am. We've confirmed the facts. Do you want to press charges?"

I stared at Justin. Didn't say anything.

His eyes went red. "Ms. Sinclair, my mom's in the hospital. She was your secretary for eight years. You know her. She's a good woman, never caused anyone a problem in her life."

"If something happens to me, there's no one to take care of her."

"Please."

When he said his mom, something in me eased up.

Mrs. Brennan worked for me for eight years. Never took a sick day. Never picked a fight with anyone.

Three months ago she had a stroke and had to retire.

The day she left, she sat on the sofa in my office and rubbed her hands together for a long time before she got the words out.

"Ms. Sinclair, my son Justin just left his last job. I was wondering. Could you give him a shot? Just as an assistant."

In eight years, Mrs. Brennan had never asked me for anything. That was the first time.

I said yes, for her sake.

The cop was still waiting on me.

I sighed.

"Forget it. No charges."

Vivienne was still standing there, half confused, half furious that she didn't get to win.

Justin grabbed her elbow and pulled her toward the door, muttering, "Come on, come on, let's go, I'll explain at home."

I sat down in the head seat. I almost laughed.

The CEO of Sinclair Group, in her own private room, just got called a freeloading old hag.

If the story had ended there, fine. No harm done.

But that was just the beginning.

Chapter 2

After that, Justin behaved himself for a while.

Daily reports came in on time. The restaurants he booked were ones I actually liked. My calendar ran clean.

Vivienne didn't show her face again.

I figured he'd learned his lesson.

Then last week, he started coming in late.

Monday—twenty minutes late. Subway signal issue, he said.

Wednesday, fifteen minutes. Broken elevator.

Friday, half an hour. Dead phone, alarm didn't go off.

I didn't bother calling him out. I was busy. And there was still his mother to think about.

What finally caught my attention was an expense report.

Friday afternoon, Connie from finance brought me a stack of receipts to sign off on.

I flipped to the back and stopped.

Seven restaurant charges in a row. All billed to my business entertainment account.

Amounts ran from three thousand to twelve thousand.

Six different Michelin-starred restaurants. Plus one private club.

All this month.

Every line read the same: "Business entertainment, Ms. Sinclair."

I had never set foot in any of those places that month.

I called Justin in. "These charges. You remember these?"

He leaned over. Took a quick look. Smiled.

"Oh, those. A few partner companies came in last month for site visits. I set up the dinners while you were traveling. Didn't want to bother you. I handled it myself."

I pulled up my calendar.

He was right that I'd been out of town those days. But no partners had come in for site visits. Not one.

I didn't push it. Just nodded. "Loop me in next time."

"Of course, Ms. Sinclair, of course." He smiled and walked out.

The second the door closed, I called the front desk at the Round Table.

"Can you pull up a record for me? Night of the twelfth, dinner charged to my account. How many people. Which room."

"One moment, Ms. Sinclair." Pause. "VIP Room 2. Party of eight. Your assistant Justin made the booking. Said it was an important client of yours."

"Eight?"

"Yes. He brought a young woman. The other six came with her."

So that was the "business entertainment." Justin, Vivienne, and her friends. Eating on my account.

"Anything they said during dinner?"

She hesitated. "The young woman was pretty loud. Something about how her boyfriend ran a big business, and all those restaurants were under contract with him. Eat whatever, basically."

I hung up.

I opened my laptop and pulled every charge Justin had run through the company this month.

Seven restaurants. Three high-end florists. Two luxury orders. One five-star hotel stay.

All under "general operating expenses." All labeled "Ms. Sinclair."

Grand total: one hundred and thirty-seven thousand.

I closed the folder.

Mrs. Brennan. You raised yourself one hell of a son.

Chapter 3

I didn't confront Justin right away.

Not because I felt sorry for him. I wanted to see how far he'd go.

The answer came faster than I expected.

Saturday afternoon. I was heading out to my place in the hills for a couple of days off.

I'd bought the property three years ago. Quiet area. I stayed there now and then.

Before I left, I called Justin out of habit. Wanted him to check that the cleaning service had been by.

He sounded edgy on the phone.

"Ms. Sinclair, there's actually some plumbing work going on at the house today. Property management said it's not livable until next week."

"Plumbing? I had it inspected last week. Everything checked out."

"Must be a new issue. They just told me. Maybe stay in the city this weekend?"

"Fine." I hung up.

Twenty minutes later, I drove out there myself.

From half a block away I could see four or five cars parked at the gate.

One of them was a company sedan.

Justin had the keys.

I pulled over and walked up to the front door.

It was cracked open.

Music and laughter spilled out of the living room.

I pushed it open and walked in.

The white leather couch was streaked with red wine.

The coffee table was buried under takeout boxes, beer cans, and cigarette packs.

The floor was covered in shoe prints and crumbs.

The Persian rug I'd shipped over from Italy had eight holes punched through it from stilettos.

Ten or twelve people were sprawled around the living room. Men and women. Drinking, playing some hand game.

Right in the middle of the main sofa sat Vivienne.

Two girls next to her were eating it up.

"Viv, your boyfriend is so generous. This place has to be worth twenty million, easy."

"Way more than that." Vivienne swirled her wine glass. "This is the smallest one Justin owns. He's got a penthouse downtown and a riverside loft too."

"Oh my god, Viv, you got so lucky."

"Please. I have great taste."

I stood there in the doorway. Didn't say a word.

Vivienne caught me in her peripheral vision. Her glass stopped mid-swirl.

Then she recognized me.

She got up and walked over with a look of pure disgust. "What are you doing here? Again?"

"You first," I said. "How did you get in?"

She put her hands on her hips. "This is my boyfriend's house. I used his keys. Is that a problem?"

"How about you tell me how some random woman walked herself in here?"

Her friends got up too, looking me over.

A girl with bleached hair sneered. "Viv, is this the freeloader you were talking about? She's back?"

"God knows why." Vivienne folded her arms. "Mooched a meal off my boyfriend at the restaurant, got kicked out. Now she's trying to mooch a house."

"Listen, lady. Stay away from my boyfriend. Don't think a few years on him gives you any leverage. He's not going to fall for some old trick."

Footsteps on the stairs.

Justin came jogging down with two bags of takeout. "Viv, your truffle fries—"

He saw me. His knees buckled. The bags hit the floor.

"Ms... Ms. Sinclair?"

Vivienne turned. "Why are you calling her that? Justin, you're the boss, she works for you. Why would you call her ma'am?"

Justin's mouth was open. Nothing came out.

I looked at him. Kept my voice flat.

"Justin. You have thirty seconds. Get everyone out of my house."

My Assistant’s Girlfriend Called Me a Poor Old Hag

Chapter 1
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