Ensnared (The Accidental Billionaires #1)(46)



“Give it,” he said as he pulled the bottle of Blackberry Red polish from my hand.

I watched as he wrapped his big hands around my foot and pulled it onto his lap.

“Oh, my God,” I said with amazement. “You’re really going to do it.”

He shot me a warning look before he went to work polishing my toenails. “I’ve always thought it was kind of an awkward thing for women to do themselves anyway,” he grumbled.

I leaned back in the chair. “It is. I hate it. But I’m wearing sandals, so I really have to paint my toenails.”

There was no way I was going to put up a fight. It was kind of nice to watch Eli with his head bent, his attention focused on getting the polish on straight.

Really, it was one of the sweetest things anybody had ever done for me.

Not that Eli hadn’t been an incredible caretaker during the last two weeks. He’d babied the crap out of me way too much.

I’d been uncomfortable at first when his mom had come over during the day when Eli was in the office. It was awkward in the beginning, and I told both of them over and over that I could take care of myself, but neither one of them was having it.

Over the course of the last two weeks, Elizabeth Stone and I had become friends. She was a woman of incredible business acumen, but she also had a heart of gold. Liz had taken over teaching me everything I needed to know about the business world during the day, so I was learning my way pretty fast. Obviously, it would take years for me to have the same understanding that she did, but I was starting to feel more comfortable with managing stuff myself.

“Shit!” Eli cursed as he got a tiny smear of polish on my skin.

I quietly handed him the nail-polish-remover towelettes. “It happens all the time.”

He put his head back down and wiped the color off my skin, and then resumed what he’d been doing. I had to be honest, from what I could tell, he was doing a better job than I would have. When it came to nails, I got impatient and just slapped the color on without much regard to whether or not I had covered every single tiny portion of the nail.

But not Eli.

He was laser-focused on doing a good job. Maybe that was why he was so successful. He pretty much threw himself into doing everything well.

One thing I’d noticed about him in the last weeks was how he was in the moment, giving something his all, even if it was only a normal task.

The intense fixation that had once made me uncomfortable now fascinated me. The man could multitask, but he never lost sight of his original mission.

“I know you gave me a guest list, but what is the atmosphere going to be like? What do celebrities and billionaires talk about when they’re out for the evening?”

I knew I was going to feel a little intimidated, but I wanted to be prepared.

The event was being held at some swanky country club, and a concert by some of the biggest names in music was going to follow the gala and dinner. I had no idea how Eli had talked those in-demand musicians into donating their time, but he said they had all refused payment.

Eli had convinced every one of them that it was a cause worth supporting.

He finally raised his head and put my painted foot carefully on the floor and lifted the other one. “What does anybody talk about? Their kids, vacations, hobbies, occasionally investments. Whatever comes to mind.”

“I’m a little nervous,” I confessed.

“Don’t be,” he answered. “They’re there to help you.”

“Don’t think I don’t appreciate that,” I said hurriedly, not wanting him to think I wasn’t grateful. “It’s just a little daunting to attend a party that I never would have been invited to when I was poor.”

“I would have invited you,” he countered.

“If I hadn’t come into money, we never would have met,” I said thoughtfully. “We didn’t exactly hang out in the same circles.”

“Maybe,” he confirmed. “But I think you’ll find out that not everyone there is filthy rich. And many of them weren’t born rich. Some are entrepreneurs who busted their asses to become successful, but they aren’t billionaires.”

“It’s amazing that all of those people are supporting my charity. It’s pretty humbling.”

“Your report helped,” he told me. “You have a talent for writing up the facts but making them personal.”

I’d worked hard on getting information together for possible supporters. “Maybe because it’s my passion.”

“It shows,” he said in a serious tone.

“The donations will help SWCF buy out some important corridors. Thank you.”

“Don’t thank me,” he requested. “Now that I’ve seen all the information, I get why preserving those pieces of land and keeping them undeveloped is critical to wildlife. In some cases, you can already see some species being completely surrounded. I’m not sure why it was never thought about before development.”

“It was, actually. But more often than not, big business wins out and the animals lose.”

He lifted his head and looked at me with a grin. “Not anymore. The more backing you get, the more weight you can throw around.”

Eli gently put my foot on the floor, capped the polish, and handed it back to me. “All done.”

“You’re an angel,” I said with a sigh. “Thanks. Not that you needed to do it, but they look so much better than what I would have done.”

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