The Billionaire Game(25)



“You know that’s not true,” Lacey said gently but firmly. “First of all, this f*ck-up was on both of you—maybe you got unprofessional, but he started it by not listening to you. And you know that this wasn’t your one shot. Even if you keep insisting on not taking money from me and Grant—which, for the record, I think is prideful and unnecessary and shooting yourself in the foot—the world is full of people who would like to invest in your ideas.”

“But where the hell am I going to find them?” I asked, slumping down in my seat like a sack of particularly depressed potatoes. “I’m banging my head against a brick wall here—ugh, a brick wall would probably be softer than this, this is some bullshit kind of futuristic carbon fiber wall. What am I going to do next?”

“I can always have another word with HR about that wrongful firing…”

I sighed. “Lacey, I appreciate it, but I already told you—”

“Or a loan, investing!” Lacey added brightly, speeding right past her torpedoed first suggestion. “A loan wouldn’t really be taking money from us, since you’d be giving it back eventually!” She aimed her puppy dog eyes at me, pleading. “Seriously, there are only so many dresses I can buy, and it’s not like I want to crack open caviar for every lunch. Let me put my tacky new money towards an actually worthwhile cause. Please, Katie. Assuage my newly rich guilt by taking this cash off my hands. You’ll be doing me a favor!”

“Lacey, girl,” I said, taking her hand, “you are sweeter than all the combined contents of Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory, but I can’t. You are my best friend, and I wouldn’t risk that friendship for a million dollars, a massage from Jude Law, and a box set of books signed by Arthur Conan Doyle. I’ve seen too many good friendships ruined by money.”

“That wouldn’t happen with us—” Lacey started to protest.

“And even if that doesn’t happen,” I overrode her, putting my foot down so hard I was surprised the floor didn’t crack, “I would be stressed about it happening all the time, and I would be miserable. It’s off the table. It’s not even on the floor next to the table. It’s in another room, on a different floor, in a separate building, in a country halfway around the world where they don’t even use tables, that is how far off the table it is.”

Lacey pouted, but she nodded in reluctant agreement. “Fine. Well, all right. But I’m still going to think of something to help you. Best friends!”

“Best friends!” I agreed, and we clinked our paper coffee cups together.

There was a knock on the door, and Lacey’s assistant entered timidly. “Excuse me, Miss Newman, Miss Jameson. I know you said not to be interrupted, but there’s a gentleman here who’s getting very insistent. Something about a not-to-be-missed opportunity for Miss Jameson…?”

I started to get a sinking feeling in my stomach. Or was that excitement? “This guy wouldn’t happen to be, I don’t know, about six one with curly dark hair, green eyes, smirk that could knock your panties off at twenty paces, and an entitlement complex the size of Manhattan?”

“Wow, you know me so well,” a deep voice came from behind her. “It’s like looking in a mirror.”

The floor completely failed to open up beneath me and swallow me forever as Asher Young strode into the room, hands in his pockets as if he didn’t have a care in the world, smirk on his face like it had been sculpted in marble.

“You really need to work on your timing,” I told him, trying to still the traitorous butterflies in my stomach. “Unless you’re actually actively trying to enter conversations at the worst possible moment, in which case, congratulations, you have this timing thing down pat.”

He raised an eyebrow. Oh, that should not be doing the things it was doing to my southern regions. And there went that dimple—winking in and out of existence like a star as he smiled, those deep emerald eyes almost hypnotic as he lounged against Lacey’s desk at just the right angle for his jeans to hug his crotch and legs like a dream come true.

“I want to show you something,” he said simply.

Well son, I want to see something, so stop talking, step out of those pants pronto, and give me a little shimmy, I valiantly restrained myself from saying.

“I don’t know what you could have to show me that I could be interested in seeing,” I said coldly instead. I didn’t have time for flirting today. I was trying to get my life back on track, and Asher would get me so far off-track I’d be in a country with no railroads.

Lacey kicked me under the table. I looked at her, confused, and she cut her eyes at Asher, then back at me. When the message still didn’t come through, she gave Asher her most blinding smile and said. “One moment, please.”

Then grabbed my arm and pulled me to the window at the other side of the room.

“The hell, Lacey?” I said, not bothering to lower my voice. I’d just finished explaining that this guy was the worst news for my health since microwave pizza was invented, so why wasn’t she immediately kicking him out of her office?

Lacey rolled her eyes. “Go with him,” she whispered. “He obviously has something to show you.”

“Yeah, and he wants to show it to me in a discreet hotel bedroom—”

Lila Monroe's Books