“I attempted to hire you for your brain. Why don’t you use it and tell me what you think?”
She leaned forward, resting her elbows on her knees. “I think you are putting friendly people in positions of power and not just because they pay you to. Sheila Chandra is an elementary school principal. She doesn’t have pockets deep enough to pay your fees. You don’t just give Trip and his fat wallet the boot, you destroy the man’s career, citing the fact that he lied to you. But I think it’s more than that. I think you don’t like bad men in positions of power. Which goes against the reputation you’ve built for being terrifying, ruthless, and maybe even a little evil.”
I opened my hands. “What can I say? I’m a complicated man. You should go home to Nash.”
“He’s working late tonight. If I’m going to come on board, I want to know what you want out of all this. Are you hoping to get a U.S. President in your pocket?”
“Is that what you think?”
“On the surface, that’s what it looks like. But I wonder if you’re on some solitary quest to force the world to become a better place.”
“Don’t mistake me for some kind of hero.”
“Oh, I’m not. Let’s not forget the trail of ruined lives you leave behind you.”
I crossed my arms over my chest. “I don’t ruin any life that doesn’t deserve to be ruined.” At least I tried not to.
“But you take great pleasure in ruining the ones that do.”
“I do.”
Lina cocked her head and grinned. “Guess I kind of like that about you.”
“I’m delighted you approve,” I said dryly.
She gave me another long, assessing look and then nodded. “Fine. I’ll take the job at ten percent more than you offered since Nash and I are building a house and I want a closet the size of a basketball court. But if you start turning toward the dark side or whatever, I’m out of here.”
“Fine. Ten percent. No dark side. I’ll talk to HR. Now leave so I can focus on ruining more lives.”
“There’s something else I want.”
“What?” I asked, exasperated.
“I want in on the secret Hugo investigation.”
“What secret Hugo investigation?” I hedged.
“The one I’m not supposed to know about. Because of Hugo, I almost lost Nash, and he almost lost me. I want that man in a cell or a box. I’m not picky. But I do want to help put him there.”
“Deal. Now leave me alone.”
“One more question. Why are you such a dick to Sloane?”
“Go away.”
“And why is she a dick to you?” she asked, cocking her head.
“Goodbye, Lina.”
“If one of you doesn’t tell me, I’ll just have to start digging on my own.”
“And then I’ll rescind my offer and fire you.”
She rose and flashed me a grin. “I think it’s going to be fun working with you.”
“How’s Nash?” I asked as she headed for the door.
Lina turned, eyebrow arched. “Shouldn’t you be asking him that?”
“I’m asking you.”
Nash had gone through a dark period after being shot, one Lina helped pull him out of.
Her expression softened as it always did when she talked about her fiancé. I doubted she was aware of it and doubted more that she’d like attention drawn to that fact.
“He’s good. His shoulder is almost back to one hundred percent, and he hasn’t had a panic attack since the fall.”
“Good.”
“Speaking of Nash. I’m going to need to start my official full-time employment Tuesday. Because Monday is wedding dress shopping day.”
“If you’re looking for someone to ask you why you sound like wedding dress shopping is torture, you came to the wrong man.”
She scoffed. “I don’t sound like wedding dress shopping is torture.”
“I don’t care whether you do or you don’t.”
“I’m just not into the girly, fluffy bridal thing, and Naomi and Sloane took the day off to drive down here and watch me parade around like Bridal Barbie.”
Sloane. My heartbeat picked up.
Despite my best efforts, my brain cataloged each and every time the woman’s name came up in conversation.
Sloane would be in my city.
“Bring them by the office,” I said.
Lina looked as if she thought I’d lost my mind. “Why?”
“They’re your friends. I’m sure they’d like to see where you officially work as of two minutes ago.”
She narrowed her eyes and brought a manicured finger to her jaw. “Hmm. It’s almost like you want me to bring Sloane into your inner sanctum.”
“You’re annoying me. Go home before I fire you.”
“Be nicer to her,” she ordered.
“Or else what?”
“Or else I’ll make your work life as miserable as possible while still doing my job. And I’m really, really good at miserable.”
Emry: Is the pair of symphony tickets you had delivered to my house your way of asking me out on a date?
Me: Take them across the street. Knock on the door. And ASK. HER. OUT. But change your shirt first. You’re going for “dateable man,” not “cuddly grandfather.”
Emry: There’s nothing wrong with cuddly.
8
Wedding Dress Hives
Sloane
For the first time since my dad passed away, I was up, showered, dressed, and ready to go earlier than necessary. It was day one of my official comeback. Mom was right. I couldn’t wallow forever. I wasn’t good at it anyway. So today, I’d slap on some lipstick and a smile and go wedding dress shopping. Tomorrow, I’d officially go back to work.
I carted my breakfast dishes from the nook to the sink and grimaced when I found it already piled high with dirty plates and bowls. An oppressive weighted blanket of doom settled over my shoulders.
Energy was a precious commodity, and I’d already used all mine up putting my hair in a ponytail.
I had thirty minutes before I had to leave. I could do the dishes, but did I really have the mental energy for strategic dishwasher loading? I peeked inside and groaned. It was already full, and judging from the smell, the dishes on the racks were not clean.
Muttering to myself, I opened the cabinet under the sink and found the bottle of detergent. It was empty.
Irritated, I hurled it into the sink. The ensuing rattle and crash of dishes collapsing on themselves had the cat galloping into the room like an investigative pony.
“You know, you could help out around the house. Earn your keep,” I told her.
Meow Meow sneezed disdainfully and waddled past me.
I looked at the fork and knife clock on the wall next to the portrait of a fruit bowl.
If I left now, I could stop at one of those hip DC coffee shops where power-suited coffee aficionados began their day and treat myself to an expensive, unnecessary high-calorie drink.
Or I could cross something simple off my to-do list.
I blew out a breath, ruffling the hair that framed my face. There was one thing I could tackle now that would save me considerable trouble: My dating app profile. If I filled it out now, I wouldn’t have to lie when Lina and Naomi asked me about it.
I left the chaos of the kitchen behind me and drifted into the mulberry-wallpapered dining room with its heavy antique furniture. There, I flopped down in the velvet wingback chair between the built-in china cabinet that housed more liquor than china and the stained glass window.
Meow Meow launched herself onto the table, draping her considerable girth over the runner.
There was already a sizable ring of cat hair visible on the russet table silk. The dull morning sunlight cast a judgmental spotlight on the dusty table surface. I blew out a breath. Lethargic moping hadn’t done me or my house any favors.
“I put mascara and cute clothes on this morning. It’s a start. Tonight, I’ll dust and vacuum,” I said conversationally to the cat as I opened the app Stef had forced me to download. “Ugh. It’s called Singlez with a z.”
The pictures of “sexy singlez near me” had me perking up.