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Baby for My Brother's Friend by Nikki Chase (35)

Megan

“Please wait here,” I say to the taxi driver as I step out onto the pavement, remembering to swing both my legs over to the side.

After seeing Britney Spears flash the paparazzi her hoo-ha, I could never forget the correct way to enter and exit a vehicle when wearing a skirt.

I wouldn’t be caught dead with such a vulgar picture of me being circulated for men to jerk off to. Not to mention, that particular guy who took the original snap must’ve made a ton of money off it.

Men are going to sexualize women. That’s just a fact. There’s no escaping it.

All I can do is make sure I stay classy. I wear conservative, office-appropriate dresses and blouse-and-skirt combos. Most of my skin is always covered, but that doesn’t mean I’m frumpy.

After all, I need to attract some male attention, just enough for me to get what I want from them.

Which is why I exercise and watch what I eat, so I look good in skin-tight clothes. That’s as much as I’ll ever reveal to people. If men are going to jerk off to me, they’ll have to use their imagination.

I’m not going to put out for any man. I’m not going to let anyone use me and discard me like men do.

That’s why I’m still a virgin, even though most girls my age are changing partners as often as they change their clothes. Their loss, I guess, if they want to trade in their dignity for some male attention.

As I make my way up the stairs into the school, it gets harder to maintain my balance, with how tight my pencil skirt is. I don’t usually have to deal with any stairs at the office. This is unfamiliar terrain.

I have to wonder why I bother at all, if Ethan Hunter—the one man I’m actually targeting—doesn’t even give me a second glance.

“Hi.” I wave and put on a friendly smile as I spot Penny Hunter on the bench where she said she’d be waiting.

She looks exactly like the pictures I Googled on the way here. Despite her youth, she has been featured on some business and gossip magazines. There are pictures of her being out and about with her dad.

She stares at me blankly. She has the same icy blue eyes as his father.

“Penny, right? I’m Megan. Your Dad told me to pick you up.” I keep the same smile plastered on my face. I may hate her dad, but she hasn’t done anything wrong to me.

“Hey,” she says flatly. Seriously, this whole family is horrible at greeting people. Is the lack of emotions a genetic thing or a rich-people thing?

“The cab’s waiting just outside.” I point toward the open double doors that lead outside, through which the yellow car is clearly visible.

“Okay.” Penny slings her bag over her shoulder and gets up.

We make our way into the cab wordlessly, which is fine. But once we’re inside, it gets too awkward to just sit in complete silence. Even the car stereo is turned off.

How do people talk to kids? I don’t get it.

Kids know nothing about anything I’m interested in, and that goes both ways. I have no idea what kids are into. I don’t know much about Pokémon or whatever.

Still, I have to say something.

“Have you been to the office before?” I ask the kid. She must be about ten, or maybe eleven. I don’t know. It’s probably obvious by now that I’m not really an expert on kids.

“Once or twice,” Penny says.

“How do you like it?”

“It’s an office.” She shrugs.

“Sorry your dad can’t pick you up today. That must suck.”

“No, it’s cool. He tries. Sometimes he just has other things to do.” For some reason, her answer surprises me. I was expecting her to be bratty and entitled, but she’s being pretty mature and understanding.

Maybe having a father like Ethan Hunter forces you to accommodate his schedule. Maybe she’s used to being pushed around. I wonder what he’s like at home.

“Yeah,” I say. “There’s a big meeting he has to attend this afternoon.”

“Yeah, he texted me. I don’t know why he acts like it’s the end of the world. He picks me up most days, and he misses one day. It’s okay. I’m not five.”

Ethan Hunter? Getting flustered over not being able to pick up his daughter? I wouldn’t have guessed.

I mean, of course he wouldn’t treat his daughter like he treats other people. Still, I never expected him to be such an involved parent.

“How old are you, Penny?” I ask.

“Almost eleven. My birthday is in two months.”

“I see.” My wild guess was correct after all.

And…that’s it. I’ve run out of topics to talk about. I could never find a common ground with kids. I’m just not a kid person.

“How old are you?” Penny asks, keeping the conversation going, to my relief.

“Twenty-one.”

“You’re almost twice older than me.”

“I’m almost twice your age,” I correct her without thinking about it.

“Yeah. You’re twice my age,” she replies without complaining, admitting her mistake and correcting herself.

“Do you like it when your dad picks you up?”

“Yeah.”

“It must be better riding that fancy car than this cab, huh?” I know Mr. Hunter is really fond of his black convertible Porsche. I stare at it with envy sometimes when I see it at the office.

“It’s okay,” she says in a casual tone that reminds me it’s a mundane, everyday thing for her to ride in a luxury car.

If it wasn’t for her father, maybe I’d have a car of my own. But instead I’m just barely scraping by, even though I take public transport everywhere.

“Sometimes he buys me ice cream after school and that’s nice,” she continues.

“When I was your age, I had to walk to the school and back myself every day.” Damn, I sound like an old grandma, talking about how good kids these days have it, compared to how it was back in my day.

“I used to do that, too,” Penny says.

“Nobody picked you up?” I frown. Surely, even if he’s busy, Ethan Hunter could hire someone to drive his daughter anywhere she wants.

“No.”

“How old were you at that time?”

“Six,” Penny says.

“We’re here,” the taxi driver announces.

I look out and realize he’s right. I’ve been so focused on Penny I haven’t even been paying attention to where we are.

The steel-and-glass skyscraper that belongs to Penny’s dad looms just outside the cab, so high I can’t see the top from this angle.

I give the driver a couple of bills and tell him to keep the change. Ethan Hunter is many things, but he’s not cheap.

As his assistant, I get to use a company credit card and a monthly cash allowance. These things are for work expenses, of course. But there’s not much oversight and I can get away with using some of the money on myself.

I’ve never tried to do that, though. I’ve come too far to jeopardize things for just a few extra dollars. If I pull this mission off, I’m going to get a much better reward—and I’m not just talking about money.

“How far did you have to walk to get to school?” I ask as Penny and I wait for the elevator at the lobby.

“Like, a mile or two, I guess.”

As the elevator arrives to take us up to the eighty-seventh level, I wonder why Ethan Hunter would let a small kid traverse that distance on foot. That’s almost torture, considering how young Penny was, and how short her legs must’ve been.

I walk through the empty office and reach my desk, which is just outside Mr. Hunter’s office door. He likes his privacy, so he has set aside this whole floor for himself. Which is why I work alone and eat alone most days. I don’t really mind it, though. I enjoy solitude.

I take my usual seat at my desk and say, to Penny, “Sit wherever you like.”

I assumed she’d sit down on one of the designer couches in the waiting room. Like other things in this office, they look good but they’re pretty low on the comfort factor.

But instead, Penny tiptoes toward her dad’s office door and presses her ear against the wood.

“Penny!” I whisper loudly. “You’re not supposed to do that.”

If Mr. Hunter finds out I’m letting his daughter eavesdrop on his interview, I’ll get in trouble. And then all my hard work will amount to nothing.

Penny doesn’t budge, even though she’s staring right at me. I watch as her eyes widen and her skin grows pale. She looks alarmed.

“Oh, no,” she says softly, her voice shaking.

“What’s wrong?” I ask with concern.

Maybe she’s just being a brat and doing whatever she wants. Maybe I should just yank her off the door and tell her to behave.

But something tells me there’s more going on. She seems like a kid who has grown up before her time, like someone who’s more mature than her peers.

Maybe I’m just projecting, because that’s the way I used to feel myself, when I was a kid.

Whatever the reason, my heartbeat picks up as I wait for her response. I have a feeling this might be serious.

Penny’s eyes grow dark with conviction. When she opens her mouth, she says, “You have to do something.”

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