Sex, Lies & Her Impossible Boss Read Online Free

Sex, Lies & Her Impossible Boss
Book: Sex, Lies & Her Impossible Boss Read Online Free
Author: Jennifer Rae
Tags: Fiction, Romance, Literature & Fiction, Contemporary, Sagas, Contemporary Fiction, Contemporary Women, Women's Fiction
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Kingswood a few weeks after she’d arrived. Everyone in Australia had a car. The general population seemed to all start driving around the age of eight and seemed so familiar with their vehicles they all named their cars. Matty Harbinger’s BMW was named Bruce. Although everyone called it Sebastian behind his back. Her red clunker was called Red. Obviously. She wasn’t great with coming up with witty nicknames.
    ‘What do you mean...nice?’
    ‘Nice. Pleasant. Lovely.’ She felt his eyes on her. ‘Do you need a dictionary?’
    ‘What’s wrong with what I’m wearing?’
    Cash sighed. ‘Nothing. I said you looked nice. Why do you get so defensive with me, Harris? Why do you argue with everything I say?’
    ‘I don’t do that.’
    ‘You’re doing it now.’
    Did she do that? She hadn’t noticed. It was just that everything he said was usually wrong.
    ‘When you said I looked nice I just thought you meant...something else.’
    ‘What else could I possibly mean?’
    ‘When you asked me what was I wearing you meant what was I driving.’
    ‘That was an autocorrect mistake on my phone. You’re just being difficult.’
    She wasn’t being difficult; she was trying to be professional. She needed to calm down and start again.
    ‘I’m sorry, Cash. I just wasn’t expecting you to say something...nice.’
    ‘Why?’
    ‘Because you never say anything nice.’
    Cash stilled and Faith swore under her breath. Offending him wasn’t professional either. If only she were better at being professional. Faith remembered a report she’d done the other week on getting what you want in the bedroom. Speak softly. Be frank. Look your partner in the eye and ask them their fantasies. If it worked for sex, maybe it would work in this situation. Faith cleared her throat.
    ‘Cash, I’d like to know what you want. How I can help you understand what it is I do.’
    She felt his eyes on her and gripped the steering wheel. She remembered the way he often looked at her. Unblinking. Intent; as if he was reading her mind through her eyes. He had a way of throwing her off balance when he looked at her like that, but she was safe as long as she didn’t look at him. And at the way he cocked his eyebrow at her.
    ‘What I want?’
    ‘Yes. I want to know what I can do to change your impression that what I do has no value.’
    ‘No value?’ He paused and Faith felt a trickle of sweat slide from the back of her neck into her shirt. Red had no air conditioning and it was close to forty degrees outside. ‘I never said your show didn’t have value. Some of the things you report on are obviously stories that need to be told. Your problem is you get too close. You want everyone to believe what you do—that love is the answer.’
    She turned to him then, her cheeks heating again and her palms slipping from the steering wheel in response to his annoyingly patronising tone.
    ‘That’s not true.’
    ‘Yes, it is. You invest too much emotionally. Journalists have to put distance between themselves and the issues they’re reporting on. That’s what creates objectivity.’
    Faith bristled. She didn’t need a lecture on objectivity. If only he knew how distant she was from the topics she reported on.
    ‘Sometimes you have to get close. That’s the only way you can get the truth.’
    ‘Advertisers don’t like close. They like light and fun.’
    ‘But that’s not what my viewers want. They want me to get close, to get involved. They want to know more.’
    He paused, then let out a sigh. Not a huge sigh but a little exasperated puff. ‘People are not interested in love and relationships and everything else you report on.’
    She stole a glance at him then. Of course people were interested in that—hadn’t he heard? Love made the world go round.
    ‘What about my report on online dating? That show got more hits on our website than any other. I talked to dozens of people who found love online and another dozen who found nothing but
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