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Book online Ā«Rock Hard: Bad Boy Bandmates & Babies Series Jamie Knight (the best electronic book reader txt) šŸ“–Ā». Author Jamie Knight



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back my already-washed hair with an elastic band that had already been on my wrist. Plunking my breakfast into the toaster, I did the short round trip from the door for my bag and keys, back to the kitchen.

Just moments after I entered the room, the toaster popped cheerfully, and I carefully plucked the hot pastry from its coils. Breakfast in hand, I was in the dew-chilled car before the sun was fully visible.

All the other drivers on the road must have been fucking insomniacs. Or real go-getters who loved their jobs more than they loved sleep. That was the only way my mind could fathom getting stuck in a traffic jam at that early hour.

It was a time of the morning when most sane people were still in bed. Or so Iā€™d been led to believe. I didnā€™t mind not being sane if it meant I got to work on time. Turned out I had company on the crazy train.

Despite the remarkable lack of movement, my motor was on, lest I miss the opportunity to move up another blessed foot. I dipped into the collection of CDs in my glovebox, which held as many pieces from my extensive collections as I felt safe carrying in the car.

I still couldnā€™t believe I was going to work for the guy who had started a revolution in music. I knew everything about my new boss, Seth Black, because he was my ages-old crush.

I had looked up anything I hadnā€™t known about him before applying for the internship, but I had already known a lot because I had devoured any news of him, anything he wrote or said, just plain everything I could get my hands on.

My music obsession had taken hold when I was 12 years old and had persisted up until the current day. I knew that Seth Black was as much of a purist as I was when it came to audio purity, and the majority of my collection was actually on vinyl. I just didnā€™t have space for the originals in my car, let alone my turntable.

Plus, he was fucking hot.

I knew I shouldnā€™t think of my new boss that way, but I couldnā€™t help it.

And yet here I was stuck in traffic on the first day I had the opportunity to work with him. I was impatient but told myself to calm down.

The player in my car made its familiar sound, the second of silence broken by time slowing crush of the backbeat as I cranked it up. A sound that made you stop and take notice, no matter where you were or what you were doing.

I got more than a few dirty looks from my fellow prisoners of consequence. They were more expressions of confusion that outright antagonism, which was more than I could say for the folk back home. They were tolerant of everything except difference.

I was barely through the first track on the album, jutting up out of the vinyl seat and practically vibrating with excitement and nerves, when finally, mercifully, the line of vehicles actually moved.

There were five entire minutes of time to elapse before I could officially be considered late.

I was, therefore, officially early.

Glass half full and all that.

But still I worried that I hadnā€™t gotten to the office before my new boss had arrived, which I felt to be some kind of cardinal sin. I was determined to come earlier and stay later than he did.

ā€œAm I late?ā€ I asked no one in particular, as soon as I walked into the office.

ā€œNot yet, on the upside he is, so youā€™ve got time,ā€ said the receptionist.

Clad in a black, Georgian-style dress, with spidery hair and just enough grease paint to look cool without over doing it, she wore her weirdness like a badge.

ā€œTime for what?ā€ I asked, innocent as a little lamb.

ā€œTo get to Sethā€™s office and wait for him, of course. You and Seth will be working very closely together. He likes to teach by doingā€¦ says it makes the information stick better.ā€

I certainly couldnā€™t argue with that. Doing things was always the best way I learned. We hadnā€™t even met yet and Seth Black and I were already agreeing on things.

Iā€™d always felt a sense of connection with him, not least because of our shared musical taste. One that I had yet to have contradicted. We would just have to see what happened when we were in the same room together.

ā€œIā€™m Holly, by the way,ā€ the receptionist said, rolling out from behind the counter.

Of course she was Hollyā€” the name suited her perfectly. I wouldnā€™t have been surprised if her surname was something cool like Spektor.

ā€œHolly Jones,ā€ she said, as though reading my mind.

It must have been a question she got a lot, and therefore could predict.

ā€œNice to meet you.ā€

ā€œHere we are,ā€ Holly said, stopping in front of a nondescript door.

ā€œThanks,ā€ I said to her rapidly disappearing back.

The door was unlocked. Iā€™d always been told to knock first, but I already knew Seth wasnā€™t in and unless I wanted to stand out in the hallway until he got there, I figured Iā€™d better go in and sit down. Unless it was all an elaborate prank and the door that I was standing in front of went to the janitorā€™s closet or something.

The ā€˜cool kidsā€™ in high school, known as ā€˜the cruel kidsā€™ to most of their victims, did something similar to freshmen every year. Lucky for me, when it was my turn, Iā€™d already seen them do it to someone else and wasnā€™t fooled. I was late for class but wasnā€™t fooled.

The office was a modern, minimalist space. From what I could see, there were two main sections of activity. A desk on which was set a computer and a landline phone, as well as

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