Share

Chapter 2: Six Reasons to Panic

Penulis: Akash
last update Tanggal publikasi: 2026-06-07 20:57:11

Three years later.

"Breakfast! Now or never!"

Sloane set the last of the six bottles on the kitchen table, stepped back, and braced herself.

The bedroom door exploded open.

Six children hit the hallway at full sprint, a stampede of tiny feet and shrieking voices, and Sloane had approximately two seconds to regret every decision she'd ever made before they were on her.

"Mom—"

"Mama—"

"I got here first—"

"That's my seat—"

Dash, her smallest and most dramatically inclined, launched himself at her hip, missed, and rolled three full rotations across the kitchen tile. He came to rest against the cabinet, blinked at the ceiling, and looked deeply betrayed by physics.

Meanwhile, Cole and Cassidy had claimed her arms. The twins — Jax and Juliet — were wrapped around her midsection like barnacles, and little Ava had planted herself directly on Sloane's left foot and was riding it like a parade float.

Five babies hanging off her body. One on the floor questioning his life choices. Sloane stood in the middle of her kitchen, completely immobilized, a human jungle gym in a blazer she'd spent twenty minutes ironing.

"Down," she said. Then, when nobody moved: "Down."

She put on the voice. The one that meant business.

Six sets of wide eyes locked onto her.

One by one, like leaves falling from a tree, they detached themselves and shuffled to their chairs. Cole smoothed his shirt like he hadn't just been dangling from her elbow. Cassidy adjusted her ponytail. Dash climbed up from the floor with enormous dignity.

They grabbed their bottles. Drank. Watched her with the careful, assessing eyes of tiny attorneys.

Sloane exhaled. Her chest loosened.

God, I love these ridiculous people.

She pressed her fingers to her mouth to hide the smile, because if they saw it, the authority was gone and breakfast would never end.


This was her life, and she had walked into it with both eyes closed.

Three years ago, she'd had too much whiskey, too much heartbreak, and about thirty seconds of reckless clarity in an elevator with a stranger whose face she still couldn't fully forget. She hadn't expected consequences. She certainly hadn't expected six.

When the ultrasound tech had gone very quiet and then called in two additional colleagues to stare at the screen, Sloane had known something was wrong. When the doctor said the word sextuplets, she'd hit the floor before he finished the second syllable.

She'd considered every option. She'd cried in every bathroom in the greater Chicago area. And then she'd looked at that grainy black-and-white image — six tiny impossible heartbeats — and understood that the choice had already made itself.

She finished her degree. She had her babies. She came home.

Cole, Cassidy, Jax, Juliet, Ava, and Dash. Three boys, three girls. One shared set of her dark eyes and, she suspected, the same jaw as a man whose last name she still didn't know.

He wasn't just good at breaking hearts, she thought, not for the first time. He was terrifyingly good at everything else too.

Six at once.


After breakfast, Sloane handed off the chaos to Nina — saint of a woman, underpaid, impossibly patient — kissed every small forehead exactly once, and got out the door before her resolve could crack.

She had an interview.

Not just any interview. PIERCE Group.

Chicago's most powerful corporation. The kind of company that appeared in every business magazine, every Forbes list, every hushed conversation between desperate graduates who'd spent four years trying to earn their way through the door. The running joke among Sloane's classmates was that you'd rather be a receptionist at PIERCE Tower than a VP anywhere else. The company was that untouchable.

Sloane had applied for a front desk position.

It was not beneath her. She had six children and a nanny to pay and exactly eleven months of savings left. Pride was a luxury she'd surrendered around the third trimester.

She squared her shoulders as PIERCE Tower came into view, all steel and glass and intimidating vertical ambition, and told herself she wasn't scared.

You pushed six humans into the world without anyone holding your hand. You can handle a job interview.


The lobby was marble and silence and the quiet hum of money. A receptionist with a headset and the energy of someone who had already ended three careers before lunch directed Sloane to the forty-second floor and handed her a numbered placard.

Fifteen.

She counted the chairs in the waiting area. There were fourteen people ahead of her, most of them clutching leather portfolios and wearing the haunted look of people who had been waiting too long near greatness.

Sloane had barely found a seat when the conference room door swung open and a woman stumbled out — blouse crooked, mascara fractured, moving at the speed of pure humiliation.

A man in a slim-cut suit followed her into the hallway. His voice was measured and cold as lake water in January.

"This company selects candidates based on merit. Anyone who misunderstands that policy is welcome to show themselves out."

The waiting room went very still.

The woman next to Sloane leaned close and whispered, "I heard the president is personally running the interviews today. That girl just tried to — you know." She mimed something eloquent. "With him."

Sloane blinked. "The president is in there?"

"Pierce himself." The woman's voice had taken on the reverent, slightly unhinged quality of a true believer. "Declan Pierce. Thirty-four, single, richer than God, and — I am not exaggerating — the most beautiful man anyone in Illinois has ever seen. If I don't get hired today, I'm framing my rejection letter."

Sloane almost laughed. Almost.

Something uncomfortable moved through her chest. Probably nerves.

Declan Pierce. She'd seen the name on the building but had never connected it to an actual person. Never seen a photo. She didn't read business magazines; she barely had time to read menus.

"Number fifteen. Sloane Carter."

She stood. Smoothed her blazer. Walked to the door.

You've survived worse. You've survived everything.

She pushed it open.

The room was quiet, clean, expensive — a long table, two interviewers on one side, and at the head of it, a man looking down at a document, his face angled away.

Then he looked up.

Sloane's hand went ice-cold on the door handle.

The sharp jaw. The dark, unreadable eyes. The particular stillness of someone who had never once been uncertain about anything.

No.

The air left the room completely.

No. No, that's not—

It was him.

The stranger from the elevator. The man she'd given herself to three years ago and never seen again. The man whose face had haunted her dreams and whose children were currently destroying her apartment on the North Side.

Declan Pierce wasn't a stranger.

Declan Pierce was the father of her six children — and he was staring at her like he recognized every single thing he saw.

Lanjutkan membaca buku ini secara gratis
Pindai kode untuk mengunduh Aplikasi

Bab terbaru

  • My New Boss Is the Man I Had a One-Night Stand With   Chapter 7: You'd Barely Make Minimum Wage

    Sloane didn't know him. But Stella did — she could tell by the way her coworker's whole posture shifted, spine snapping straight, smile jumping three sizes."Mr. Holt." Stella's voice went full professional. "Good afternoon."The man was mid-forties, broad in the way that used to be muscle and was now just presence, wearing a suit that cost more than Sloane's monthly rent. His eyes moved to Sloane slowly. Deliberately. The kind of look that takes inventory."New face," he said. Not a question."Yes, sir. First week." Sloane kept her voice even and her smile exactly professional enough. "Sloane Carter."He repeated her name like he was tasting it. "Sloane Carter." A slow smile spread across his face. "That sounds like a little girl's name."Sloane's smile didn't move a single millimeter."Dinner tonight." He said it the way men like him said everything — like the word no had simply never been invented. "You're coming."Then he turned and walked away.Sloane stared at the space he'd lef

  • My New Boss Is the Man I Had a One-Night Stand With   Chapter 6: Watched

    Nobody warned Sloane that the front desk job would slowly murder her feet.Six hours in. Heels on. Smile locked. Spine straight. Stella — the bright-eyed receptionist who'd been stationed beside her all morning — had rattled through the unofficial orientation with the cheerful efficiency of someone who had long ago made peace with standing eight hours a day.Answer before the third ring. Mr. Pierce's calls go straight up, no screening. If someone doesn't have an appointment and looks like trouble, they probably are.Sloane had nodded through all of it, cataloguing every detail, because this job was temporary and that was fine and everything was absolutely fine and she was not going to think about the fact that somewhere above her, forty-two floors up, the father of her children was probably sitting behind a desk the size of a small country.She was doing great.At 11:47, the energy in the lobby changed.It was subtle at first — a sharpening in the air, like the pressure drop before a

  • My New Boss Is the Man I Had a One-Night Stand With   Chapter 5: Run, Don't Look Back

    That hand.Sloane stared at Declan's fingers locked around her wrist and couldn't stop thinking about it — the same hand that had snapped a grown man's wrist like a dry twig thirty seconds ago. Cool skin. Ironclad grip. Not a tremor of hesitation.This man is dangerous."Hello again, Miss Carter."His voice dropped low, mouth close enough to her ear that his breath grazed the curve of her neck — warm against the October air, devastatingly deliberate. Every hair on Sloane's body stood up at attention.Do not react. Do not you dare—Her entire nervous system reacted."What a coincidence!" She spun toward him with the brightest, most unconvincing smile of her life. "Crazy city, right? So small! Anyway — thank you, truly, no need to — I have somewhere to be, so—"She yanked her wrist free, turned on her heel, and walked away at a speed that stopped just short of an outright sprint.She did not look back.She absolutely did not look back."I'm home!"The apartment door had barely swung ope

  • My New Boss Is the Man I Had a One-Night Stand With   Chapter 4: Caught

    The second the revolving doors of PIERCE Tower spat her back onto the sidewalk, Sloane tipped her head toward the gray Chicago sky and let out a breath that was one syllable away from a scream.What have I done?She'd just accepted a job — been hand-picked — by the man whose DNA her six children were currently running around her apartment on. The most powerful CEO in Illinois. The stranger from the elevator she had spent three years convincing herself she would never see again.Okay. She gripped her portfolio and started walking. Don't panic. Think.Could she call tomorrow and decline? She could say the commute was too far. Say she'd received another offer. Say literally anything that wasn't I cannot work twenty feet from you because together we accidentally created a set of sextuplets and I'd very much like to keep that information on a need-to-know basis forever.She was so deep in her own head that she almost walked past it.Almost.The shouting cut through the Loop noise like a bl

  • My New Boss Is the Man I Had a One-Night Stand With   Chapter 3: The Man Who Remembers

    It was him.Sloane's brain screamed it. Her body already knew — every nerve ending firing at once, her stomach dropping forty-two floors in a single second.Move. Say something. Do NOT let him see it on your face.She forced her feet across the threshold, chin up, expression smooth, heart detonating behind her ribs.He doesn't know it's you. You were twenty-two. Different hair. Different makeup. Different everything. You barely recognized yourself from three years ago — there's no way he—Declan Pierce was already looking at her.Not the polite, professional scan of a man reviewing a candidate. Something sharper. Something patient and deliberate, like a man who had just found the thing he'd been quietly looking for and was in absolutely no rush to say so.Breathe. Smile. You're a professional. You have six children to feed. BREATHE.Sloane pulled out every ounce of composure she owned, arranged it across her face like armor, and sat down across from the interview panel.The first inte

  • My New Boss Is the Man I Had a One-Night Stand With   Chapter 2: Six Reasons to Panic

    Three years later."Breakfast! Now or never!"Sloane set the last of the six bottles on the kitchen table, stepped back, and braced herself.The bedroom door exploded open.Six children hit the hallway at full sprint, a stampede of tiny feet and shrieking voices, and Sloane had approximately two seconds to regret every decision she'd ever made before they were on her."Mom—""Mama—""I got here first—""That's my seat—"Dash, her smallest and most dramatically inclined, launched himself at her hip, missed, and rolled three full rotations across the kitchen tile. He came to rest against the cabinet, blinked at the ceiling, and looked deeply betrayed by physics.Meanwhile, Cole and Cassidy had claimed her arms. The twins — Jax and Juliet — were wrapped around her midsection like barnacles, and little Ava had planted herself directly on Sloane's left foot and was riding it like a parade float.Five babies hanging off her body. One on the floor questioning his life choices. Sloane stood i

Bab Lainnya
Jelajahi dan baca novel bagus secara gratis
Akses gratis ke berbagai novel bagus di aplikasi GoodNovel. Unduh buku yang kamu suka dan baca di mana saja & kapan saja.
Baca buku gratis di Aplikasi
Pindai kode untuk membaca di Aplikasi
DMCA.com Protection Status