All's Fair in Lust & War

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All's Fair in Lust & War Page 2

by Amber Page


  Besides, Jessie was the only one who knew what had happened...before. And what she had been trying to prove to herself that night in Vegas.

  Becky got up to close the door before turning to face her friend. Blowing her hair off her forehead, she said, “It was him.”

  “Him? Who? I’m not following,” Jessie said.

  “Mark. Mark was the man I met in Las Vegas. And things went a little bit further than I had planned.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “I spent the night with him...” Becky groaned.

  “Are you kidding me?” Jessie asked, falling back into her chair.

  Becky shook her head.

  Jessie tilted her head back and howled with laughter.

  “Oh, my God. Only you... This is...it’s unbelievable.”

  Becky glared at her. “I really don’t think this is funny.”

  “Of course you don’t. But, girl, you gotta believe me when I tell you it is.”

  Easy for her to say. She wasn’t the one living in a nightmare.

  Finally Jessie sobered.

  “All right, so Mr. One-Night Stand has become Mr. Works Down the Hall. What are you going to do about it?”

  “Nothing,” Becky said flatly.

  “Why? Was it...bad?”

  Pictures from their night together flashed through Becky’s brain. His lips kissing her mouth. His tongue on her breast. His hands...everywhere.

  “It was amazing.”

  “Did you hit the big O?”

  Becky blushed. “Oh, yeah. More than once.”

  Jessie looked thoughtful. “Then why not see if this could go somewhere? You know—like, casual relationshippy. Fate seems to be telling you it should.”

  Becky stood up, restless. “You know better than anyone why not. After everything that happened with Pence I’ll never have a relationship with someone I work with again.”

  Jessie came up behind her and hugged her shoulders.

  “I understand. But, Becky, that was a long time ago. You were a different person. And he was your boss, not a coworker. Besides, you can’t let him ruin your whole life. If you do, he wins.”

  Sneaking a look at the clock on the wall, she groaned.

  “We’ll have to talk about this more later, Jessie. I gotta go to the Hall of Doom.”

  “All right, girl. Knock ’em dead.”

  * * *

  Mark wasn’t sure how much more of this small talk he could take.

  He’d been sitting in David’s office for what felt like hours, talking about everything except the reason he was here. He now knew where the bald man’s favorite golf course was—South Carolina—what he preferred to drink—bourbon, straight up—and even how he had gotten his name—his mom had named him after Michelangelo’s David.

  But he still didn’t know what his first assignment was going to be or why it had to be secret. When David had called him to see if he might be interested he’d said only that he needed help winning a giant piece of new business—one that had the potential to change the future of the agency.

  That was interesting enough, but it was what David had said next that had sold him on the job.

  “Mark, I’ve been searching everywhere for someone who can help me bring this home. When your name came up I knew you were the man for the job. I need you on this.”

  “How did you get my name?” Mark had asked, afraid that it was another one of his stepfather’s pieces of charity.

  “Mark, you’ve taken home gold from almost every major advertising competition there is. Your name is everywhere.”

  Which meant this was a job he’d gotten on his own merits—not through his damned stepfather’s connections. Even better, David had all but promised him a permanent spot in the creative leadership team once they landed the account.

  It was the opportunity he’d spent the past ten years working toward. He couldn’t wait to get started.

  He just wished he knew what Becky had to do with it.

  When he’d looked her up, he’d been amazed at how talented she seemed to be. In the five short years she’d been working as a copywriter she’d earned herself numerous awards. The whole reason she’d been in Vegas was because she was being honored with another award—this one for a social-media campaign she’d masterminded that had gone viral.

  In short, she was as amazing in the boardroom as she was in the bedroom.

  And what he wouldn’t give to experience that again!

  He remembered how hot she’d looked, standing in his room clad only in her red lace bra and panties. And how much better she’d looked out of them...

  Unfortunately the look on her face when she’d found him standing in her office had been completely and utterly horrified—and, if he wasn’t mistaken, more than a little bit furious. He didn’t think she was having the same kinds of thoughts he was having right now.

  Just then there was a soft knock on the door.

  “Come in,” David said.

  The door opened and Becky quietly entered the room.

  He wasn’t sure how it was possible, but she looked even sexier in her blazer and jeans than she had wearing a cocktail dress.

  She flashed a quick look at him, and flushed when he caught her eye. Man, how he’d love to see how far down that flush went.

  “Thank you for coming, Becky, my girl,” David boomed. Although he couldn’t have been much more than forty, the man mimicked the vocal mannerisms of a Mad Men–style ad man. “Sit, sit, sit. We have a lot to talk about.”

  She glided across the thick red carpet and sat primly in the oversize club chair next to Mark.

  “I trust you had a good time in Vegas, my dear?” David asked.

  Becky seemed to force out a smile. “It was amazing, David. Thank you so much for letting me go.”

  “Of course—you deserved it. Besides, I knew you were one woman I could trust not to get too carried away in Vegas. I would have never sent that partner of yours. She’s trouble with a capital T.”

  Becky’s laugh sounded even more forced than her smile had been. “Yeah, you know me. Married to my job and all that.”

  “Oh, not to worry, Becky. Sooner or later a fine-looking girl like you is bound to get snapped up. Then you’ll be too busy having babies to write brilliant campaigns for me anymore. That’s how it always goes. Right, Mark?”

  Mark was floored. People still talked like that? In an office? It was a miracle this guy hadn’t been slapped with a multimillion-dollar lawsuit yet. Or, judging from the fury flashing in Becky’s eyes, murdered.

  “I don’t know about that, David. I know plenty of working mothers who—”

  David cut him off. “Right, right. I know. Girls can do anything men can—blah, blah, blah. None of that matters right now, because my brilliant little sparrow is as single as they come...and I’m going to be keeping you both too busy for her to change matters any.”

  Becky sucked in a breath and seemed about to say something, but she never got the chance.

  “All right. Enough of this chitchat. Let’s get down to business, shall we? You two are among the most talented creatives this business has to offer,” David said. “And I’m going to need every bit of juice you’ve got. We’ve been asked to take part in the agency search for Eden. You both know what that is?”

  Becky nodded. “The yogurt company?”

  “You got it,” David said. “They’re coming out with a new line of low-fat, all-natural Greek yogurt flavors designed to get all those pretty hipster ladies hot and bothered. Our job is to figure out how to do that. And, since their advertising budget is a quarter of a billion dollars, we damn well better nail it.”

  Becky practically bounced up and down in her chair. “Oh, I’d love to get my hands on that one,” she said. />
  “Oh, those pretty little hands are going to be all over it. So are yours, Mark. Just...er...hopefully not on the same spot at the same time!” he said.

  Mark laughed uncomfortably. “No chance of that happening, sir.” At least not that David needed to know about.

  “Good. Now, the Eden people tell me they don’t want any ‘suits’ working on their account. They want something young and fresh...something none of our existing creative directors are. That means you two have the opportunity of a lifetime.”

  David got up from his chair and started to pace.

  “So here’s what we’re going to do. We’re going to break the agency into two creative teams. Becky, you’re going to head up one. Mark, you’ll be in charge of the other. Whichever one of you comes up with the winning concept and sells it to the client will win a fifty-thousand-dollar bonus—and become the youngest creative director this agency has ever had.”

  Mark blinked slowly, trying to wrap his head around this new twist. David had never said anything about a competition.

  “You’re making me compete for the creative director position?” asked Becky, her eyes sparking angrily in an otherwise pale face. “But you told me that when I came back from AdWorld the job was as good as mine!”

  “It is,” David said. “All you have to do is win the Eden account.”

  Mark watched as Becky sprang up from her chair. There was no doubt that murder was on her mind.

  “I will,” she said from between clenched teeth. Then she turned to glare at Mark. “And don’t you dare think for a second that you’ve got a shot!”

  With that, she strode from the room, controlled fury in every movement. Good thing he had no problem with beating a sexy woman at her own game, because there was no way he was losing this job.

  Turning to David, he said, “This competition’s going to be quite a challenge.”

  “I’m counting on you to win,” David said. “Don’t let me down.”

  “I won’t.”

  * * *

  Becky slammed her office door so hard the wall shook.

  “Wow. What’s up your butt?” Jessie asked.

  “David,” Becky said.

  “Ewww, that sounds uncomfortable!” Jessie giggled.

  Becky glared at her. “It’s not funny,” she said. “That stupid blowhard is trying to give away my promotion again.”

  “The one he swore would be yours after you got back from Vegas?”

  “The one and the same.” Becky sighed, her heels tapping a staccato tune across the cement floor as she paced.

  Jessie grabbed Becky’s coat. “All right, you’re going to tell me what’s happened. But not here. A discussion like this calls for hot-fudge sundaes.”

  * * *

  “You don’t have to win this by yourself! You’ve got your whole team behind you,” Jessie said between bites of hot fudge.

  “I don’t know who’s on my team yet,” Becky said, picking up her spoon, watching as the melting ice cream dripped back into her bowl. “I could get stuck with anyone.”

  “Did David lay out any rules when he said the creative department was going to be split in half?”

  Becky shook her head.

  “Then I vote we make the rules for him,” Jessie said, grabbing a pen and paper out of her green velvet purse. “All right. No thinking allowed. Tell me who would be on your dream team.”

  “You,” Becky said slowly.

  “Yeah, well, obviously. Who else?”

  Becky fell silent and looked out of the window at the busy street outside. Three girls walked arm in arm, laughing and talking as they went. Just then one lone man broke through their line, forcing their arms apart. They let him through, but shot up their middle fingers at him after he passed.

  “I know what we need,” she said, excitement zinging through her pores. “Jessie, we need girl power. Let’s make this a battle of the sexes.”

  “Wait—what?”

  “David thinks women creatives don’t have it in them to be as good as men. Let’s prove him wrong. Let’s gather all the women in the department on our team and let Mark have the men.”

  “But there are more guys than girls in our department. It won’t be an even match,” Jessie said.

  “Numbers aren’t everything,” Becky said. “Especially since the product in question is aimed squarely at women our age.’”

  Jessie put down her spoon. “You, my dear, are brilliant.”

  “Well, yeah,” Becky said. “Haven’t you seen my awards shelf?”

  “I have.” Jessie snorted. “You think it’s bigger than Mark’s?”

  “Hmm, I don’t know,” Becky said, her mind showing her wicked images of Mark’s thick penis twitching in her palm as she kissed his muscled chest. “I honestly don’t know much about him at all. Other than the fact that he’s magic...”

  “Magic?”

  Becky started, reluctantly letting her daydream disappear.

  “That’s what I told him he was. Magic Man from Vegas.”

  Jessie stared at her, her blue eyes almost green with jealousy. “Man, that must have been one good night.”

  “The best,” Becky said. Seeing the question in Jessie’s eyes, she put her hand up in a “stop” gesture. “But it was just one night. I don’t want or need a man in my life right now. What I need,” she said, grinning, “is a team of Magic Women. Let’s go put it together.”

  “I knew my girl was in there somewhere. And—” Jessie grinned, handing Becky the check “—since you’re about to be fifty thousand dollars richer, I’ll let you get this.”

  Becky rolled her eyes. “Fine,” she said. “But only because you’re about to work your ass off for me.”

  * * *

  Mark was staring out through the window of his office at the crowds teeming past on Madison Avenue, wondering what on earth he had gotten himself into.

  Usually he was brought in to save the day. Agencies never called him until they were facing a problem they couldn’t solve—a challenge they couldn’t meet. He got to play the part of vagabond hero. He came in, slayed the dragon, claimed a few hot nights with the delicious advertising damsels he had rescued, then left.

  He didn’t get to know the other players in the story. Never bothered to worry about whose toes he was stomping on, or what effect his actions had on those left behind when he rode off into the sunset.

  His life, both professional and personal, was very much a case study in the “Wham, Bam, Thank You, Ma’am,” approach to life. And that was the way he liked it.

  After all, the one and only time he’d allowed himself to fall in love he’d found out the hard way that it had been his stepfather’s name—or, more aptly, his money—that had gotten him the girl. And when she’d found out that Mark would never inherit the family fortune Sandra had turned to someone who did have top billing on a rich man’s will.

  The day he’d found Sandra in bed with his stepbrother hadn’t been the first time he’d cursed his stepfamily, but it had been the last time he’d admitted to being part of it.

  These days he didn’t need anybody or anything. Well, nothing except for a killer job and a place among advertising’s greats—a place he’d earned on his own.

  So why did a certain blonde keep interrupting his thoughts?

  Just then Becky strode in, fire in her eyes.

  “Wow, hey—thanks for knocking,” he said, trying to ignore the way his pulse quickened when she entered the room.

  She stalked forward until she was standing directly in front of him. She took a long, slow look around the room and he knew she must be taking in the overly plush carpet, richly upholstered furnishings, the floor-to-ceiling windows and comparing it with her own small if brightly colored closet.

  “Nice setup,�
�� she said. “What’d you do? Sleep with David to get it?”

  He snorted. “I think you know that’s not the way my tastes run, babe.”

  Her face flushed, and he would have given anything to know what she was thinking. She looked up at him and he could see the heat veiled behind her professional fury.

  “Let’s get one thing clear,” she said. “What happened was supposed to stay in Vegas, just like David said. It will never happen again.”

  “Never, huh? That’s a long time.”

  She looked away quickly, but not before he saw the desire flashing in her eyes.

  “I’m serious,” she said, folding her arms across her chest. “I’ve worked too hard to get where I am to let some man screw up my life again.”

  The disdain in her voice struck deep. So she thought she could just dismiss the maddening attraction that raced between them, huh? It was time to prove her wrong.

  He pulled her into his arms and tilted her face up to his, giving in to the urge he’d been fighting since she’d walked into the room.

  “I think you know I’m not just ‘some man,’” he said, as he brushed his lips across hers. “I’m magic.”

  With that, he deepened the kiss. For a second she stiffened, but then something in her seemed to give. With a soft moan, she relaxed against him and opened her mouth.

  He lost himself in the chocolate-flavored cavern as hunger roared to life. Their tongues darted and danced and he pulled her closer, wanting more.

  He was reaching for the buttons on her blouse when the sharp whistle that signaled the arrival of a text message on his phone blared.

  Becky jumped back, staring at him with undisguised horror.

  “I’m not sure if you’re magic,” she whispered. “But I am beginning to think you might be the devil.”

  Mark took a breath, shaken by how fast he had lost control. Obviously the heat that had sparked between them in Vegas had been no fluke.

  “I’ve been called worse by my competition,” he said. “But usually not until after I beat them.”

  She briefly closed her eyes, and when she opened them again her stare was fiercely competitive.

 

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