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Just Say Yes
Just Say Yes
Author: Jojo S.

Reality

Author: Jojo S.
last update publish date: 2026-05-13 04:22:34

Stevan

“Your mother is going to need additional dialysis sessions.”

The doctor said it with the same detached tone someone might use to confirm an appointment time, not like he’d just split my life open. He kept talking after that. Kidney function. Test results. Percentages. Numbers.

None of it really landed.

Only one thing did.

The insurance wouldn’t cover it.

“They’d have to be paid out of pocket,” he finished, already stepping away from the bed.

I nodded because that’s what people do when they have no idea how to respond.

The second he left the room, the silence became unbearable.

I worked at a branch office for a multinational company in Omaha, Nebraska. The pay was decent. Normally, it would’ve been enough. But my mother’s medical bills had already blown past anything I could realistically handle.

And no matter how hard I tried to think of a solution, every possibility felt thin and unreachable.

All I could do was look at her lying there, so fragile in that hospital bed, and feel utterly useless.

She looked too small somehow. Like the illness had been quietly stealing pieces of her while I wasn’t paying attention.

But when she looked at me, she still smiled with that same gentle calm she’d always had. Like she was the one trying to comfort me.

Then she asked the impossible.

“Don’t worry about it, sweetheart. We’ll continue with the treatments we already have. I don’t want you drowning in debt because of me.”

The words cut straight through me.

She didn’t know how badly I was already drowning.

The weight of everything pressed harder every day, crushing me under the constant realization that I still couldn’t give her what she needed. I had to find a way. Fast.

By the time I got back to work, my mind was a storm of numbers, dead ends, and desperation.

I didn’t know where to start looking.

I just knew I couldn’t afford to fail anymore.

The company allowed me to accompany my mother to her appointments.

I always submitted the medical documentation afterward, and since she had no one else besides me, they approved it without much trouble. At the very least, it was something I could still do for her. I refused to let her sit alone in hospitals while her body slowly betrayed her.

The moment I walked into the office, I saw my boss.

Instant disgust crawled under my skin.

The man was revolting. A parasite feeding off everyone else’s work while pretending the success belonged to him. Every time upper management praised our department’s efficiency, I knew exactly where that praise should’ve gone.

To me. To the team.

I was the one building reports, organizing demands, and fixing disasters before they exploded. Meanwhile, he spent most of the day hidden inside his office, feet up on the desk, collecting “favors” he barely even bothered to hide anymore.

Because everyone in that company understood the rule.

Sleep with him, or forget promotions. Forget raises.

It didn’t matter if you were a man or a woman. His bed was the shortcut for anyone desperate enough to climb higher.

And people like me?

People who refused?

We stayed exactly where we were. Working harder every year while being rewarded with absolutely nothing.

I stared at the closed door to his office and slowly exhaled.

Three years.

Three years without a single raise.

Maybe with more money, I could afford my mother’s treatments.

Even knowing exactly what waited for me behind that door, I decided to try anyway.

For her, I would do almost anything.

Just not what he wanted from me.

“Excuse me, sir,” I said as I opened the office door and stepped inside.

He looked up at me with a smile that instantly turned my stomach and motioned for me to come in. Then he stood, walked to the door behind me, and locked it with the casual ease of a man who’d done it countless times before.

Fucking creep.

“Glad you’re here,” he said, his hand settling on my shoulder for a second too long. “Are those reports finished? The president’s visiting the branch the day after tomorrow, and we need everything ready.”

He returned to his desk and sat down across from me.

I forced a polite smile before answering.

“Yes. I’ll leave everything on your desk before I head out. But… actually, I came to ask you something else.”

His expression shifted immediately. One brow lifted with interest, and his gaze lingered over me far longer than necessary.

“Of course, sweetheart. Tell me.”

I hated when he called me that.

The disgust was immediate, crawling beneath my skin like something dirty I couldn’t wash off. I took a slow breath, forcing my voice to stay steady.

“I’m dealing with some financial problems because of my mother’s health. I wanted to know if there’s any possibility of a raise.”

The second the words left my mouth, his smile changed.

Slow. Crooked. Predictable.

Don’t stand up.

The thought hit me almost like an instinctive warning as tension slowly tightened through my body.

But like always, he ignored me.

He got to his feet and walked toward me slowly. Without a shred of hesitation, he slipped an arm around my neck and pulled me closer while his other hand dragged down my chest. That same disgusting smile spread across his face.

“We can discuss it, sweetheart,” he murmured, tracing a finger from my collarbone down toward my stomach like he already knew exactly how far he could push.

A shiver ran through me. Immediate. Involuntary.

Before his hand could move any lower, I grabbed his wrist and looked him straight in the eye, my disgust impossible to hide.

“I’m not doing this with you, and you know it. I’m serious about the raise. I work hard for this company.”

My voice sounded almost too controlled for someone seconds away from snapping.

He didn’t like that.

He pulled away sharply, like touching me had suddenly stopped being entertaining, then returned to his chair. The look on his face now was pure contempt.

“I’ll see what I can do,” he said flatly. “But you’re not the only person around here who works hard.”

It took me a second to process the nerve of that response.

Anger surged through me fast. Hot. Sharp. Dangerous.

Before I said something that would cost me my job, I turned around and walked out of the office.

I couldn’t lose that job.

Not now.

I dropped back into my chair, still burning with frustration. I wanted to say everything I’d been swallowing for the last three years, but I forced myself to stay quiet.

It wouldn’t matter.

It never did.

The second I sat down, my phone buzzed against the desk. A message from Diego.

Hey! I’m bringing my friend to lunch with us. I’ll wait for you downstairs. Bye!

I rolled my eyes.

That idiot never asked if I was free or even wanted to go. He just made decisions for both of us and expected me to follow along.

Still, there were only five minutes left until lunch break, and honestly, refusing didn’t feel like an option right then.

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  • Just Say Yes   Bipolar

    StevanEric lifted the wine glass to his lips, his gaze still locked on me, before speaking again.“Forgive the question, Stevan,” he began after a few seconds, pulling me out of my thoughts. “You mentioned your mother is sick. What does she have?”I blinked slowly. So he really wanted to keep talking about me—and that might have been the most disorienting part of this entire situation.“One of her kidneys isn’t working anymore. She needs more hemodialysis sessions until she can get a transplant, but the insurance won’t approve the extra ones,” I explained, trying to keep my voice steady.Eric’s expression shifted almost immediately. He set his glass down and leaned forward slightly, resting his arms on the table. Those brown eyes stayed fixed on mine with an intensity that felt almost too heavy to bear, like he was trying to see past every word.Instinctively, I wanted to look away. But this time, I couldn’t.“What would you do to get the money she needs for treatment?”The question

  • Just Say Yes   Orders

    StevanI stared at my reflection in the mirror, gripping the cool marble edge of the sink. My mind was a complete mess. I still couldn’t wrap my head around what the all-powerful CEO of the company could possibly want from me. Just being near him was enough to make me nervous—as if the car ride hadn’t already proven that.The worst part was that one sentence.“I found you interesting.”How could someone like Eric Winter say something like that to someone like me? He was the kind of man who made people lose their breath the second he walked into a room. Men, women—it didn’t matter. All it took was a few seconds of his attention, and the whole space seemed to orbit around him.So what the hell was so interesting about me?I knew I shouldn’t think like that. I knew I needed to stop seeing myself as lesser. But years of built-up frustration, insecurity, and rejection didn’t vanish just because an absurdly attractive man decided to say two kind words over lunch.I let out a slow breath, st

  • Just Say Yes   Confirmation

    EricI wondered whether my slipping control was simply the result of months of abstinence or if Stevan had managed to disarm me in a way no one else ever had. I hadn’t meant to bring up Ágata’s club, but the words were already out before I could stop them.He had mentioned his mother the night before, even if he probably didn’t remember half of what he’d said while drunk. I’d also noticed from the start how carefully he spoke about his boss—like someone used to weighing every word to avoid trouble.But I needed to hear the truth from him. Sober. Fully aware. With no alcohol tearing down his walls.“Stevan, you can tell me the truth,” I said, keeping my voice steady and low. “This won’t cause any problems for you. Your job is safe with me.”He took another sip of water. His fingers gripped the glass too tightly, the tension bleeding through despite how hard he tried to hide it.“The harassment… it does happen,” he finally admitted, eyes dropping to the table.My jaw tightened.“Has it

  • Just Say Yes   No Way Out

    StevanEric watched me in silence, unhurried, his gaze steady and far too perceptive. For a moment, I had the uncomfortable feeling that he could see straight through me, reading every anxious thought racing through my head.“Stevan, I chose to have this conversation outside the office precisely so you’d feel free to tell me the truth,” he said quietly. “So I expect you not to lie or hold anything back. A lot of people think certain things go unnoticed in my company. They’re very much mistaken.”The way he said it made my skin prickle. It sounded like he already knew more than he was letting on. Maybe he was aware of the power trips. Maybe even the harassment.My stomach knotted instantly.“I’m usually the one who puts those reports together,” I answered, trying to keep my voice steady even as my hands trembled under the table. “He gives the orders. I follow them.”Eric’s expression shifted—just a flicker, almost too subtle to catch, but I saw it. It was enough to tell me I’d only con

  • Just Say Yes   The Reason for the Invitation

    StevanThe silence inside the car grew thicker with every passing second. I had no idea how to act around Eric after what happened at the club. Since he hadn’t mentioned a single word about it, I figured he wanted to keep that night buried.Maybe I should do the same. Stick to work. Keep things professional.“You don’t have to be so nervous around me,” he said suddenly, breaking the quiet.There was a hint of amusement in his voice and the faintest smile tugging at the corner of his mouth—the same look he’d worn at the club.Heat flooded my face.“Sorry… honestly, it’s kind of hard not to feel a little nervous sitting in a car with the CEO of the company. It’s intimidating,” I tried to keep my tone light, but my voice came out shakier than I wanted.He glanced away from the road for a moment, one eyebrow lifting slightly.“Intimidating?”My heart stumbled. God. How could someone look even more attractive with just that small expression?“So I intimidate you?” he asked calmly, clearly

  • Just Say Yes   Do I Still Keep the Rules?

    EricWhen I returned to the department, I found Stevan focused on his computer screen, typing furiously—likely trying to make up for the morning’s delay. The moment he sensed my presence at the entrance, his whole body reacted. It was subtle, but I noticed. The tiny jolt, the way his shoulders tightened, those green eyes widening for a split second before dropping.It stirred something in me all over again.“Ready for our lunch?” I asked.He gave a quick nod, almost too fast.From the corner of my eye, I caught his colleagues watching us with shameless interest. Stevan looked even more uncomfortable because of it and walked silently at my side, clearly doing his best to ignore the stares.As we passed the department head’s office, the man stepped out almost immediately, blocking our path.“Is something wrong?” he asked, far too anxious for someone trying to sound casual.“No. We’re just going to lunch,” I replied, my tone unchanged.The surprise that flashed across his face was almost

  • Just Say Yes   Clumsy

    EricFrom the comfort of the sofa, I let my gaze drift down to the pulsing chaos visible through the one-way glass. The music throbbed below, bodies moving under flashing lights, noise and heat rising like steam.Up here, none of that existed. Just silence. Predictability. Exactly how I preferred i

  • Just Say Yes   The Waiter

    Since I had the evening free, I already knew where I was going.The club was private, discreet, and predictable. Exactly the way I liked it.Everything there operated within expectations. Impeccable service. Interactions were limited to what was necessary. No surprises.It was one of the few places

  • Just Say Yes   I Need a Contract

    EricI ended the meeting with a curt nod and closed the door behind me harder than necessary.No one said a word. They never did.I strode down the corridor while employees either averted their eyes or suddenly became very focused on their screens. That was exactly how I preferred it. Control wasn’

  • Just Say Yes   Bad Luck

    I said goodbye to Diego with a tired wave and headed home.The apartment was quiet when I arrived. My mother was already sleeping peacefully in her room. I paused in the doorway for a moment, watching the slow rise and fall of her chest. The sight brought a quiet wave of relief… and a new, heavier

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