by Meghan Quinn
He glances back at me again when he reaches the front door, yanks the handle, pushes the screen open to the porch.
I come up short. “You said this would only take a few seconds—why are we going outside?”
“It’s loud in here.” He yells to illustrate his point, pointing to his mouth like I can read lips.
I hesitate.
Poise my foot on the threshold, toe of my boot on the step before striding all the way out, cool air hitting me like a welcome force.
I breathe it in then out with a sigh of relief. God it feels so good.
“So…we’re outside.” I take the jacket out of my tote and slide both arms into it, zipping the front with a satisfying whirr. “And doesn’t this feel amazing? I was dying in there.”
He studies me under the porch lights, silently crossing his arms, a beer clutched in one huge hand.
No jacket, short sleeves, and a scowl.
I raise one brow, waiting.
He continues staring me down, wordlessly.
This guy is tall—good and tall—legs spread slightly, bulky arms crossed defensively. What I imagine a powerful baseball player stance to be, except without the uniform or glove.
I can’t take it anymore.
“What’s up? Did you see me across the room and decided I was irresistible? You just had to talk to me?” Haha. “Don’t tell me—you can’t resist a fuzzy brown sweater?” I try for brave and nonchalant, but my nerves betray me and my voice quivers.
His nose dips down, those brawny arms uncrossing, the cords in his forearms stretching. Claps his hands together like two giant cymbals, the noise echoing in the quiet yard.
“So, I’m just going to throw it down, all right? It’s nothing personal.”
Nothing good comes from sentences that begin with, ‘It’s nothing personal’, which is just a generic form of ‘It’s not you, it’s me.’
“It’s like this,” he continues. “The guys decided that for the rest of the night, you’re not allowed back in the house.”
“I’m sorry, what?” My voice raises a few octaves above my normal tone. “Why?”
His voice also goes up a few decibels. “The guys decided that for the rest of the night, you’re not allowed—”
I put my hand up so he’ll shut his gorgeous face. “Why?”
“What do you mean, why? Isn’t it obvious?”
Uh, no. “If I knew, I wouldn’t have been dumb enough to follow you out here, would I?”
“I’m not fucking around, sorry. You can’t go back—you’re being booted for the night.”
“Booted.” I snort. “By who?”
“By the guys. By me.”
“And who are you?”
“I’m their fearless leader—and the unlucky bastard that drew the short straw.”
My nose crinkles like I’ve just swallowed a Sour Patch Kid. “And what the hell is that supposed to mean?”
“It means you’re running interference and it’s driving my friends fucking nuts. They want you gone. Hope you have all your personal shit.” He smiles, eyes catching the tote bag hanging off my shoulder. “Never mind, I see you brought a giant fucking suitcase along with you.”
Continue reading JOCK ROW by Sara Ney —> HERE
LOVE SINCERELY YOURS
By Meghan Quinn and Sara Ney
Available October 9, 2018
PROLOGUE
PEYTON
Vivian: God, why is he such an asshole…?
Brielle: Don’t you think the better questions is, ‘Poor George, why is he never prepared?’
Peyton: George spends more time at the latte machine then his computer, that’s why—and look at how jolly he is. Like a cute little Santa Clause…
Vivian: Sigh. George’s wife makes the best apple pie.
Brielle: Oh crap, Vivian, look out, he’s coming for you.
“Vivian, what came out of your test study?” A man’s voice cuts into our our group chat and, unprepared, our co-worker stumbles to pull her notes up on her iPad.
Brielle: Shit, Viv is a goner.
Peyton: Oh I feel bad, she’s turning red.
Brielle: Yeah Viv, you’re turning SO red.
Peyton: Viv, you should see your ears…
Brielle: Maybe if the devil himself wasn’t breathing down her neck, she wouldn’t be sweating so much.
Peyton: To be fair, we are in the middle of a meeting—she should be prepared, not pretending to take notes but instead chatting online.
Brielle: Look how irritated he is. His nostrils are flaring.
Peyton: Yeah…look at his face. He looks like a dragon tempted to light the entire room on fire.
I turn to study it from my chair at the conference table, the long wooden slab a monolithic buffer between me and my boss. He’s at the head of this table, brandishing control and silver tongue over the room like a sharp sword.
No one is exempt from his contempt.
I watch as he reprimands my friend from the marketing department—her small office is two down from mine—laying both palms on the desk and leaning toward her.
“I have no new ideas to work with here. How the fu—” He stops himself from cursing midsentence, pausing to take a deep breath and starting over. Runs one of those large, masculine palms through his dark hair. “What the hell is it you do in your office all day? Stare out the damn windows waiting for inspiration? I want you outside for fucks sake—go climb a goddamn mountain. This is an outdoor adventures company, for fucks sake! Go outdoors!”
He pins a big, brawny guy named Branson with a hard, emotionless stare. “Innovations are your job, Branson. Take a tent out, set the fucking thing up, and find a way to improve it.”
He’s breathing hard, pissed off.
“Look. I know we’ve just come off the holiday season and everyone is beat—but if we don’t get some advances with our designs to boost sales, this fiscal year is going to end up being complete shit.”
He drones on, deep voice reverberating off the walls as we all sit silently, holding our breath.
Vivian: Uh, hey, guys? Do you think he still wants my notes?
Brielle: Fuck your notes, Viv—don’t say another word unless your “notes” are actual notes.
Peyton: Pretty sure you lost your moment before he stood up and starting pacing like a tiger at the zoo.
Vivian: Thank god—I had nothing new to ad.
I watch across the table as Vivian slouches with relief, a sly smile playing across her bubble gum painted lips. Her lithe fingers tap away at the cell phone she’s holding beneath the table, and I know her next message isn’t to us.
Brielle: Do you not have notes because you were so focused on flirting with the guy tet online that has—how did you put it…
Peyton: Meat steaks for pecs?
Brielle: Yeah, that guys. “Meat steak guy.”
Vivian: I can’t be accountable for my actions! I have to flirt!
Peyton: You don’t even know if he’s real.
Vivian: Who cares if he’s real—he’s the prefect distraction.
“I want everyone to crawl back to their hole of an office and pull an idea out of their ass by noon. This is the summer of ‘roughing it.’ Our target demographic—Harry can provide the data—is the millennial, and the yuppy. If you don’t know what a yuppy is, google it. If you can’t figure it out how to do that, clear the shit out of your desk.”
At the mention of his name, Harry blanches, an unattractive contrast to the muddy green color of his short sleeve plaid shirt. His neck turns a ruddy burgundy, which only serves to highlight the stubble his razor missed when he shaved this morning.
Brielle: Did you guys just see that? Harry wiped his brow, he’s legit sweating.
Peyton: Yeah, I saw that—gross. He looks like he’s about to barf—you heard what happened though, right?
Vivian: No, what happened?
Peyton: Rumor has it, the ad copy he proofed for Mountain Man Magazine had three errors in it.
&n
bsp; Brielle: NO IT DID NOT!
Vivian: THREE?? Ohhhh shitttttt….
Peyton: Yes, three.
Our boss levitates Harry with a pair of eyes so gray I squirm, though they’re not directed anywhere in my direction.
Thank God.
Bossman holds up three fingers.
“How could you let three god-” He stops himself again, pushing his large, hand through his thick, ruffled hair. “How could you let three errors get through proofing? You had one job, Harry. One. Keep us from looking from looking illiterate.”
He has a point; an ad has no more than 100 words in it.
“I’m so sorry, Rome, I, uh, had a headache that day,” Harry fidgets with the handkerchief in his hand. It was given to him by his wife, embroidered with his initials and a heart that’s gag worthy sweet—too bad he’s using it to wipe the jittery sweat pouring from his temples.
It’s not a good look for Harry—or anyone for that matter.
“You’re giving me a headache.” Boss man surrenders to his chair, head in his hand.
“I’m sorry, Rome, I—”
“No, Harold, I’m the one that’s sorry.” His meaning couldn’t be more clear: I’m sorry I hired you. I regret it. I intent to fire you if you fuck up one more time. “There will be no more second chances.”
He straightens to his full height, addressing the room full of minions.
“For the love of all that’s holy—someone give me something by noon.”
My fingers, about to tap out another message to my friends, cease their mission.
It’s ten fifteen in the morning.
He wants ideas by noon.
I have an appointment with him at eleven.
Shit.
When my eyes up from the small screen cradled in my hands, they connect with a set of steel gray ones. Dark brows an expressionless line. Full lips, impassive.
He is so good-looking.
Beautiful, even.
Such a waste on a man so emotionally unattached.
Still.
When our eyes lock—a little too long to be coincidental—
heat rises up my chest, neck, then cheeks. Colors my entire face and has me reaching to press a palm there.
It’s warm, too.
I shiver.
I have an appointment with him at eleven.
And he isn’t going to like what I have to say.
CHAPTER 1
ROME
Why the fuck is she staring at me like that?
She hasn’t’ said a goddamn word in—I check my watch—three minutes.
Allowing the seconds to tick by despite her discomfort, or possibly because of it, I let the silence stretch in front of us unpleasantly long. Uncomfortable and challenging situations are what I do best, and I thrive on them.
Tic.
Tock.
No worries, my sardonic smile says at her. I have plenty of time. An entire twenty minutes penciled in just for her, per her request, to sit here pissing away my precious time. Waiting for her to open that pretty mouth and speak her mind.
Instead she shifts in her seat, the gray skirt she’s unable to tug down hugging her hips. It’s tight and prim, complimented by a stark, white button down shirt. Black glasses sit primly perched on the tip of her nose, the dark slash of eyebrows above their rims, raised in surprise.
She doesn’t look like any marketing coordinator I’ve ever met, and I certainly had no idea there was someone who looked like her working for me. Under me.
Four floors down.
She looks like a goddamn accountant. Or secretary. Or the principal of an east coast prep school.
I swivel in my leather chair before plucking a pen off my desk and pinching it between my fingers, studying it with half hooded eyes.
Feign boredom.
I’m anything but.
Click the end cap once, twice, watching this woman’s large brown eyes track my movements from the other side of this mammoth desk. Her brows pinch, thinly veiled patience wearing thin.
Peyton.
Shit, when I saw her name in appointment calendar, I assumed the person walking through the door would be a male. Imagine my surprise when the delicate wrist gently knocking on my doorframe belonged to the woman seated at my conference table this morning.
She’d been on her cell phone during that meeting, I’d bet my right nutsac on it.
I glance down at the sheet of paper at stare at each letter of her name; I’ve never had a sit down, or meeting, with this woman a single time she’s been with my company.
Five years.
Even with a solid track record for results (according to my secretary’s snooping), she’s never once been in my office. Peyton somethingorother, whose last name I can’t fucking pronounce and won’t bother to try.
Why bother? She has one prissy foot out the door of the company I built.
I part my lips and put us both out of our misery. “Does your supervisor know you’re here?”
“Not yet.” She begins, spine straightening, breasts straining against the starched shirt. “I wanted…” she pauses, inhaling a nervous breath.
“Why didn’t you go to HR first? That’s protocol.”
I like being direct. Favor bluntness over candy coated bullshit, no matter what the flavor someone is trying to feed me.
“I wanted to give you my two week notice in person. I thought it would be personable.”
Personable.
Is she fucking serious? Who does that?
“You’re quitting. Do you think I give a shit about being personable?” Or polite? Or her trying to be considerate?
Those traits have no place in this office.
It’s an office not a daycare center; we’re here to make money, not pander to hurt feelings.
Another pause from Peyton before her shaky breath says, “I thought since it was your company, it would behoove me to not burn any bridges down.”
Behoove.
Isn’t she just fucking adorable? I suddenly imagine her from a small town in the middle of nowhere USA, where parents teach their children manners and spend quality time together on the weekends. Family movie nights and all that feel-good bullshit.
I snort, clicking my pen.
Peyton. What kind of a name is that?
A man’s name, that’s what.
“You didn’t want to burn down any bridges.” I repeat with a sneer, thumbing the cream colored paper she’d set down on my desk upon entering. Her letter of resignation, printed out on resume paper. “I don’t just burn down bridges, I drain the rivers and fill them with concrete.”
Then I go camping along the banks of the rivers remains; I own an outdoor adventure company, so finding a tent would be easy.
Peyton’s mouth puckers, surprised or shocked or disgusted by my candor, I can’t tell.
I skim the paper in my hands. “It doesn’t say where you’re headed next. Do you not have need for a letter of recommendation? Because I must say, Peyton,” I lean back in my chair, letting it squeak on its rusted old hinges. “Quitting is a piss poor way of wringing one out of me.”
Her head shakes, the dark hair pulled back in a tidy bun at the nap of her neck doesn’t budge an inch. All it’s missing is a hair net.
I let my eyes drift from the tips of her shiny leather heels to the collar of her starched dress shirt.
Narrow my eyes. “Do you always dress like that for work?”
She glances down at her blouse, touching a pearl button fastened against her throat. “When I have an important meeting, yes.”
“It’s a goddamn outdoor adventures company and you have a librarian bun in your hair.”
She stiffens, eyes falling to the blue silk tie knotted around my throat; the broad shoulders of my suit coat, no doubt labeling me a hypocrite. Tough shit, it’s my company. I do what ever the fuck I want, and I too have an important meeting this afternoon with advertisers. I’m not about to show up in a goddamn lumberjack plaid shirt with the sleeves roll
ed up to my elbows.
Peyton fiddles with a gold, hoop earring. “I thought our meeting warranted a little extra effort this morning.”
“Well you could have saved yourself the trouble. When someone quits on Roam, Inc., I no longer have use for their time.”
“But Rome, I was hoping…” She uses my first name instead of my last, lifting an arm, brushing a lock of hair behind her ear that isn’t there; a nervous habit she can’t partake in because it’s pulled back in that damn matronly bun. “I came in to suggest that though I’m striking out on my own, my services could still be of use to you.”
“Your services?” A chuckle escapes my lips despite myself, lips settling into a sneer.
When I think services, my mind goes immediately into the gutter: escorts and blow jobs and loose woman. Sue me for immediately thinking about sex.
She must read my thoughts reflected in my eyes, because hers flutter and the skin on her exposed neck ignites to a hot red.
“My design services, yes. I’m finally—”
Agitated by the excited glint in her eye, I cut her off. She’s leaving and has the balls to begin a pitch for her sub-contract work?
I don’t fucking think so, sweetheart.
“We’ll manage just fine without you, I’m sure.” I lean forward, hands folded on my desktop, sleeves of my dress shirt cuffed and rolled to my elbows. “I’m not successful because I spend my time sensitivity training the shit out of everyone who needs it. This is a business, not a hobby. And since you insisted on this little meeting, let me fill you in on something; a valuable lesson that might come in handy for your next job, if you will.”