Read A Night to Forget Online

Authors: Jessica Wood

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Erotica, #General, #Contemporary

A Night to Forget (8 page)

“Hi, my name is Emma Anderson. Today’s my first day.” I smiled at her as excitement and anxiety coursed through me.

“Oh yes, you must be one of our first year marketing associates,” she smiled, “Here’s your orientation packet. Orientation will be held in the main conference room on this floor. Just walk around the corner and it will be the first door to your right.” She motioned behind her. “Most of your class has already arrived, so you should go on in.”

“Thank you so much. It was nice meeting you.” I smiled and quickly walked past the receptionist desk and opened the door to the conference room.

About a dozen faces looked up towards me when I walked in. I found an empty seat next to a girl about my age.

“Hi, I’m Sarah. Sarah O’Brien.” The bright-eyed girl smiled at me as we shook hands.

“Hi Sarah, I’m Emma Anderson,” I said as I smiled back. I looked around the room. There were an equal number of men and women chatting excitedly in small groups around the conference table.

“Is everyone here in our class?” I asked Sarah as I looked around.

“Yup. I heard there’s 15 of us in total. What group are you in?” she asked.

“What group?”

“Yeah, in your orientation packet,” she said, pointing to the packet the receptionist gave me earlier. “It tells you what group you’ll be working in,” she explained. “Apparently we’ll be split up into five groups and each group will be led by one of the marketing managers. I’m in Group B,” she said enthusiastically.

“Oh, let me check.” I opened my packet and looked through the materials. “I’m in Group B, too!” I said with delight. Sarah seemed like someone I could get along with, and I was excited that she would be in my group.

“Awesome,” she said.

Just then, two people walked into the conference and the room fell silent.
They sat down at the two empty chairs at the end of the conference table.

“Good morning, everyone,” said a jovial man with peppered gray hair, “My name is Joseph Fisher, and I’m
the CEO and one of the founding partners of Fisher & Morrison Consulting. I want to congratulate you all on graduating this past May. You would not be sitting here before me if you did not all work hard and excel in college. So I want to commend you for that.” He smiled across the room.
There’s something familiar about his face
, I thought as I watched the man.

“Today is the start of your careers, and I am confident that you will each show the same dedication and hard work you had in college towards your work here at Fisher & Morrison,” he continued. “I want to introduce you all to Claire Wilson, the Director of Marketing for Fisher & Morrison.”

“Thank you Mr. Fisher,” Claire said to before turning to us. “Good morning, everyone,” Claire said with a stiff smile as she looked around the room. “Why don’t we go around the room and introduce ourselves before we get started?”

It took only a few minutes for the 15 of us to introduce ourselves to the group.

“Ms. Wilson will be running the orientation today,” Mr. Fisher said as he got up. “It was very nice meeting you all, and I look forward to working with everyone soon.” Mr. Fisher smiled again, and this time, I could see a dimple appear on his aged face.
He must have been a handsome man when he was younger
, I thought.

After Mr. Fisher left, Ms. Wilson went over office protocol and rules for the rest of the morning. At noon, lunch was brought into the conference room and we took a 30-minute break.

As we ate our lunch, the guy from across the table from Sarah and me looked over at us.

“Hi, I’m Josh,” a guy with blond hair and blue eyes said as he extended his hand over the table towards me.

“Hi, I’m Emma,” I said with a smile, “and this is Sarah.” I gestured at Sarah.

“Hi Sarah,” Josh said as they shook hands.

“So not that I was eavesdropping or anything earlier,” Josh said sheepishly, “but I heard you guys say that you’re both in Group B. So am I.”

“Great,” Sarah said, her eyes twinkled with excitement. “I wonder which marketing manager is going to be our group leader.”

“I heard Group B will be led by the son of the CEO who was here this morning, Joseph Fisher,” Josh said.

“Oh
really?” Sarah’s voice went up an octave and a group of people chatting nearby looked over at us. “Oh really?” Sarah said again in a softer voice as she looked around with an apologetic expression on her face.

“Yup,” Josh said with a nod. “I don’t know anything about the guy though.”

“I do,” Sarah said and her face turned bright red.

“Why, what do you know about him?” My curiosity
piqued.

Sarah quickly glanced at Josh and shifted uncomfortably. “Well, I had heard that he’s really attractive, and well … I Googled him,” Sarah said, her last few words barely audible.

“Oh man, you stalked our group leader?” Josh said with a laugh, “That’s hilarious.”

Sarah’s face turned redder. “I wasn’t stalking,” she said defensively. “I
was just being … being,” Sarah’s voice trailed off, at a loss for words.

“She was just doing her homework,” I said in her defense, “Why wouldn’t you do a little research on your future boss if you could? I only wish I thought of that myself.”

Josh shrugged. Sarah looked over at me with a grateful smile.

“So what did you find out about him,” I asked.

“Oh, I found out a lot about him online. Even though he’s the son of the F&M’s CEO, it looks like he earned his position here. He went to Harvard for undergrad and then Stanford for business school. And he was in the top of his class at both,” she eagerly said.

“Wow, that’s impressive,” I said. Josh nodded in agreement.

“And, Emma, I saw some pictures of him, and—” she paused for dramatic effect, “—let’s just say, if he’s half as good looking in real life, I’m not sure I can concentrate on our projects with him as our group leader.”

I laughed, and looked over at Josh. “Well Josh, if what Sarah’s saying is true, you may have to take one for the team when Sarah and I lose focus,” I teased. Sarah stifled a giggle.

“Hey, how is that fair?” Josh protested.

“Who said anything about fair?” I shot back with a laugh.

“But what if I find him distracting too and can’t concentrate? What then?” Josh countered, trying to sound serious.

“Are you
sure
you want to go there?” I asked with amusement, “I got the impression you liked girls,” I teased. I quickly glanced at Sarah, who was blushing.

“Fine, you win,” Josh said with resignation, “I’ll come save the day when you guys are gawking over him,” he said as he rolled his eyes.

“Our hero,” Sarah and I said. We looked at each other and laughed.

“Oh yeah, what’s this guy’s name anyway,” I asked between fits of giggles.

“His name is Br—”

Just then, the conference room opened and five people walked in after Ms. Wilson. I looked up from our conversation, and I immediately froze.

Why does that guy look so familiar? Ohmygod, it can’t be—it can’t possibly be him
.

But it was.

There, standing next to Ms. Wilson was none other than Brandon.

I stared, shell-shocked and confused as waves of anxiety, pain, and happiness washed through me.

“Is this a dream?” I uttered under by breath, audible enough that only Sarah seemed to have heard me.

She turned to me and whispered, “Did you say a dream?”

“Um, no sorry, I—I was just talking to myself,” I whispered back.
Ugh, why do you always seem to blurt out stuff at the worst moments! What if he heard you?

I looked up at Brandon. Yes, i
t was definitely him. While my heart fluttered with joy, my stomach twisted with anguish and I felt sick. For the last six months, I desperately wanted to see him again, but this wasn’t how I imagined things to be. How was it possible that he works here?

Still paralyzed by the shock of seeing him, I barely heard Ms. Wilson’s introduction of the five people next to her.

“—and this is Ms. Josephine Kim, she will be the group leader for Group A. And here we have Mr. Brandon Fisher, and he will be the group leader for Group B …”

I inhaled sharply when I heard his name—his full name.

“That’s
him
,” Sarah whispered to me in excitement, “Wow, those pictures don’t do him justice. Can you believe he’s going to be our group leader?”

“I—I can’t believe this.” I was stunned. The man who haunted my dreams every night, the man who I met in Cancun, the man who took my virginity was
the
Brandon Fisher, the son of the CEO and founding partner of the company I was going to work for. This man who I fell in love with and broke my heart was going to be my group leader. My boss. This was too surreal. My head was spinning and I could not think straight.
How could this be happening?

“Now that I have introduced your group leaders, why don’t we go through each group and have you guys introduce yourselves to your group leader?” Ms. Wilson’s words broke into my thoughts.

Fear suddenly shot through me and I felt queasy. I wasn’t sure if Brandon had spotted me yet, but I wasn’t ready for him to see me—I wasn’t ready to face him.

But before I knew it, I heard Sarah introduce herself next to me
. “Hi Brandon, I’m Sarah O’Brien and I’m on your team. I look forward to working with you,” she said as she beamed at him.

Then to my horror, the entire room turned their attention to me, including Brandon. For a brief moment, I thought I saw a spark of recognition in his eyes, but then it was gone. Pain paralyzed me as he stared at me blankly. I expected him to look
as shocked as I felt when I met his gaze. I expected—no, I
needed
some reaction from him to justify this pain that I’ve carried inside my heart for the last six months. But I got nothing—his smile was warm, but empty.

Sarah nudged me, “H
ey, it’s your turn,” she whispered. I blinked and realized the entire room was looking at me expectantly.

“Um. Hi. I’m Emma
,” I said slowly, “Emma Anderson, and I’m in Group B as well.” My face felt hot as I fought back the tears.

“Hi Emma. It’s very nice to meet you. I look forward to working with you,” Brandon said, his deep voice was warm and inviting. I looked at him in disbelief, confused by the sincerity in his voice.

Can it be possible that he forgot about me?

Finally, I inhaled deeply
and said, “Thank you. It is nice meeting you too,” I said. If he really had forgotten about me, I refused to let him think that I had spent any time thinking about him since that night in Cancun. I could not give him that satisfaction.

He smiled at me before his attention moved on to Josh, who began to introduce himself. Brandon’s warm smile was like a cold dagger twisting at my heart. Sadness overwhelmed me at the realization that if he
had forgotten about me, then that night must have meant nothing to him. He hadn’t lost me my number. He never called because he never wanted to see me again. I blinked back the hot tears that were threatening their way down my cheeks.

After the introductions, the group leaders left the conference room, and the rest of the afternoon’s orientation session went by in a blur.

At the end of the day, many of the new associates were heading to the Ferry Building down by the wharf for happy hour.

“Are you sure you can’t come?” Sarah asked.

“Yeah, sorry. I have some other plans,” I lied. “But I’ll see you tomorrow.” I put on a fake smile.

“Okay, sure. I can’t wait! We actually get to start working with Brandon tomorrow. He’s so hot,” Sarah said with a giggle.

“Yeah, he is,” I said weakly. “See you tomorrow.”

Chap
ter
8

“Emma, what’s going on?” Jill asked over the phone as I picked up. “I saw that I got five missed calls from you, but you didn’t leave a message.”

“Oh, Jill. It was awful,” I exclaimed.

“What was?” she asked, “Wasn’t today your first day at work? What happened?”

“I saw him. He—he’s going to be my boss,” I said, still in disbelief.

“Emma, I don’t understand. Who’s he?”


Him
. Brandon. The guy I slept with in Cancun. The guy from my dreams. The guy that never called,” the words rushed out of me.

“What?! You saw him again? In San Francisco?” Jill asked, still confused.

“Yes,” I croaked, “He’s Brandon
Fisher
,” I said as I emphasized his last name, “As in
Fisher
& Morrison Consulting. He’s the son of the CEO and founding partner, and he’s going to be my boss.”


Woah,” Jill said. “Let’s try to get Steph and Gloria on the line too to hear this. This just got crazy, and I know they’ll want to hear this.”

Within seconds,
Steph and Gloria came on the line.

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