Rock Chick Revolution(112)
She had also been hiding her outfit in her earlier position, and as it fully hit me, it took a while for it to process through my system so I didn’t hear her next words.
This was because she was wearing a jeans mini-skirt with a little poofy ruffle at the edge, a pink tank top that should get a medal for its act of heroism by stretching itself nearly to the limits in keeping her bosoms contained, a bolero vest that was edged in what looked like silver rope, and a hot pink, champion-boxer-wide, buckle-at-the back leather belt covered in rivets that formed the shapes of lassoes, wagon wheels and cowboy boots.
And, not to forget, her feet were encased in pink cowboy boots with wagon wheels stamped in the toe and lassoes decorating the sides.
A theme.
“Comprende?” she asked, and I focused on her face.
“What?”
“Ralphie is gonna help us decorate and get this place stylin’,” Daisy said to me. “I have office furniture catalogues that’ll be comin’ in the mail in a few days. I figure your office, the big one.” She waved behind her. “I’ll be out here.” She waved to her feet. “We’ll set up a desk and computer in there for Brody and Darius to use when they’re around.” She waved to the small office. “And obviously that’s the conference room,” she finished, tipping her platinum locks toward the conference room.
“Daisy,” I took a step toward her, “I think Dad’s got an old desk in the garage. I can get him to unearth that and get it here. We’ll get you a decent desk. Other than that—”
I said no more because Daisy snapped, “What?”
“Oh no, child,” Shirleen entered the conversation. “You got a choice spot here. You don’t move some old desk into it, slap a computer on the top and say ‘I’m in business.’ You gotta send the right message. And that message is you ain’t Rockford. You’re Allyson Nightingale, a fine piece of badass ass with class who can take care of biz-nezz.”
“And the right message is also cherry wood,” Daisy proclaimed.
“Oak,” Shirleen countered immediately.
“Black,” Ralphie stated and looked at me. “It’ll set off The Majestic.”
“Uh… guys, I don’t have any money for carpet, paint, office furniture or fancy paintings,” I shared.
“Sadie will give you a discount,” Ralphie assured me on a big smile.
“Okay, let me amend,” I began. “I have some clothes. Someday hopefully soon, I’ll have an insurance check that will need to be used to buy me more clothes and various and sundry other items, like jewelry, roller brushes and CDs. And whatever paltry sum I have after that I’ll need to use to live on until Daisy and I make a go of this.”
Daisy chimed in, “Me and Marcus’ll—”
“No, honey,” I cut her off gently. “You won’t.”
Daisy’s face fell.
“A minute,” Ren said, and then I found myself dragged into the hall with my hand in his.
I knew what was coming, so the minute he stopped me in front of him, I started, “Baby—”
“You got twenty-five thousand dollars.”
My mouth dropped open.
Then I snapped it shut and closed my eyes.
I opened them and leaned in, putting my hand with the coffee cup to his chest.
“That’s very sweet, honey, but no way. I haven’t even talked to you about paying you back for the year’s rent. I can’t take—”
“You aren’t taking.”
I blinked. “What?”
“I’m investing. We can discuss distribution of your profits when you make them. Until then, it’s an investment.”
“You’re investing?”
“I’m investing.”
“In me?”
“Yes.”
I swallowed, feeling good things, really good things, but unsure.
“I don’t know,” I whispered. “What if I can’t—?”
His hand dropped mine so he could wrap it around the side of my neck and he dipped his face close, ordering, “Don’t.”
“Don’t what?”
“Don’t doubt yourself. Not now. Until this moment, you were sure. Very sure. Be sure. Take the investment, make those offices something that anyone walking into them will trust you’ll get the job done, then be sure and get the job done.”
Well, one could say Ren was succeeding wildly in trying to be okay with me opening a private investigations agency.
Still.
“This is too much,” I whispered.
“It’s investing in your future, which is tangled with my future. How is that too much?” he asked.
I said nothing.
“If I didn’t have a plan and was at odds and you were in the position to invest in something I wanted to do, would you do it?” Ren pressed.
“Absolutely,” I answered.
“So because you’re a badass, you can’t take the same from me?” he pushed.
Seriously.
Totally.
Completely.
How awesome was my man?
To share this with him, I muttered, “Okay, okay. You’ve convinced me.”
“Good, then kiss me and go in there and tell them they got twenty-five K to blow on makin’ my woman’s space right for her.”
Kristen Ashley's Books
- Where Shadows Meet
- Destiny Mine (Tormentor Mine #3)
- A Covert Affair (Deadly Ops #5)
- Save the Date
- Part-Time Lover (Part-Time Lover #1)
- My Plain Jane (The Lady Janies #2)
- Getting Schooled (Getting Some #1)
- Midnight Wolf (Shifters Unbound #11)
- Speakeasy (True North #5)
- The Good Luck Sister (Wildstone #1.5)