Happy Hour

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Happy Hour Page 4

by Piper Rayne


  I flip through the contract, my gaze running down the pages and see that he’s telling the truth—there’s no sex mentioned, nothing about nakedness, and no dollar figure.

  “What kind of favors do you have in mind?” I ask.

  His smile reappears. The same one he had in court the day when he secured my ex-husband far more than he deserved.

  “That’s where trust comes into play.”

  Is he kidding?

  I place the contract down and slide to the end of the booth. “No deal.”

  His large hand lands on mine, stopping me from leaving. “Listen.” There’s a desperation in his tone that keeps me in place.

  “I will not sign up to be your prey. Some plaything you call on a whim demanding I do something embarrassing or demeaning.”

  His hand tightens over mine, but I yank myself free.

  “Fine.” He snatches up the contract, and clicks his pen, then scribbles something down, initials it, and hands it back to me.

  I read over the added verbiage that states that no favor will be embarrassing or demeaning, his illegible initials scrawled next to it.

  “You’ve left me no choice. I could ask you out on a date, but you’d deny me. Five favors that all entail you seeing a side of me outside of the man you think I am. That’s all this is. We both know if we ripped up that contract and I asked you to go out with me you’d never give me a fair chance even if I could manage to convince you.”

  “Why?”

  He sips his drink. “Why?” he asks back, raising a brow.

  Back to his damn one word questions.

  “Yes, why are you going to this much work to prove to me you’re not who I think you are? You don’t even know me.”

  “I know more than I should at this stage of our relationship.”

  His eyes dip to his drink and I’m reminded of the fact he probably hired a private investigator on me, same as my lawyer did with Todd. He probably knows my habits. Knows about my dog Lucy. Hell, he probably knows what tampon brand I use.

  “To answer your question, I’m attracted to you and I think we could be good together.”

  I study his face for a moment, waiting for the punchline, but he seems sincere, which throws me. “A divorce attorney who believes in true love and marriage?”

  “More assumptions. I said nothing about marriage, nor would I ever—to anyone. I’m just giving you the chance to know the real me so that perhaps I have a chance with you.”

  I stare across the table at him, testing to see if he’ll crack. He doesn’t even flinch.

  If I wasn’t attracted to Roarke Baldwin, this would be an easy decision, but despite my better judgment, I am. The chance to maybe sleep with him and get him out of my system could be a win-win for us both.

  “We have one thing in common.” He tilts his head in askance. “I will never get married again.”

  “Then your decision should be simple.” He nudges the contract in front of me.

  I read it over, every sentence, every word. He’s right, there’s nothing that will secure him anything other than five favors, and the papers clearly state that none of them will be monetary or sexual in nature.

  I hold my hand out for the pen without looking at him.

  I’m strong and the worst that can happen is that I sleep with Roarke Baldwin. That’s not so bad. I could live with myself after—I think.

  I sign the contract, pushing down the feeling that I’ve just done something there’s no coming back from, and slide it back in his direction.

  “See, that wasn’t too hard.” He folds the contract up in thirds and shoves it into his front pocket. “I’ll make sure you get a copy tomorrow.”

  I down a big gulp of my drink. “And the venue?”

  He pulls out a card from his vest pocket and slides it to me. “Call this number tomorrow. They already have you booked. They just need some specifics.”

  “Have a great evening, Mr. Baldwin.” I slide out of the booth unable to sit across from the silver fox any longer without my willpower crumbling and begging him to forget the five favors, just take me home.

  “Leaving so soon?” he asks with a cocky grin, like he can read my mind.

  “Yes. Goodnight.” I turn and take one step away from the table.

  “You don’t even want to know the first favor?”

  I stop immediately and turn to face him again, securing my clutch under my arm. “Is favor number one that you’re going to keep me here against my will?”

  He chuckles. “No.” He slides out and stands, his hand running down the length of my arm and I suppress a full body shiver. “Favor number one is that I can call you Hannah and you call me Roarke. There’s no more Ms. Crowley and Mr. Baldwin.”

  “Fine. Goodnight Roarke.” His name falls off my tongue way too easy, and I can’t help but wonder what it would sound like if I was screaming it while he drove into me.

  I am in such deep shit with this man.

  He leans in, his light scruff scratching my cheek before his soft lips land where my cheekbone meets my hairline. “Sweet dreams, Hannah.”

  Chapter Seven

  “Five favors?” Victoria cringes across from me.

  Chelsea’s eyes light up.

  Two completely different reactions from two very different women.

  I always enjoyed our morning recaps at the office but now that it’s me in the hot seat, not so much. They were waiting this morning to find out exactly what Mr. Bald—Roarke wanted.

  “Kinky. I like his style,” Chelsea says, the traitor.

  Victoria flips through the contract that was waiting in her email this morning. “You’re right, there’s nothing sexual.”

  “Seems like a waste.” Chelsea shrugs.

  “I take it Dean’s still tapped in? No more tears.” I raise a brow.

  “Only from coming so many times.” She smiles and I sip my coffee ignoring the grating jealousy.

  I haven’t had sex in way too long and even then, it wasn’t with a man who could do much for me. Having your two friends living their lives with a post-coital glow isn’t easy. Maybe that’s why I signed that contract last night. Subconsciously maybe I thought Roarke would solve that problem for me.

  “It’s a little romantic, no?” Victoria hands the contract to Chelsea who flips through it even though I’m sure she’s only really searching for the juicy parts.

  “A contract is never romantic.” I lean back in my office chair.

  Chelsea tosses it on my desk. “I kind of agree. But he’s gone to great lengths to win you over.”

  “My bet is that he’s still only really interested in sex,” I say.

  Victoria’s lips dip.

  Chelsea’s lips tip up even more. “Perfect. It’s a win-win. You’re not looking for a long-term relationship or marriage, right?”

  “Yes. But doesn’t this make it seem like he’s going to win me over by the time this contract is fulfilled and then what? I sleep with him and we both walk away?”

  I won’t tell them about how restless I was last night. Lucy kept getting up and moving because of my tossing and turning. Eventually she went to her dog bed on the floor. I can’t help but think I’m being paid for sex in some twisted way.

  “Please. You don’t have to sleep with him if you don’t want to. Five favors and he already used one up. That’s four left. You totally have this.” Chelsea acts like my little cheerleader.

  “I agree. You do as he says with one arm out. Don’t let him get too close. You were cornered and the fact he’s using his connections over you says what kind of guy he is. So, just do what he asks you to and be done with it. Whatever you do, don’t fall for him.” Victoria’s inner mama bear roars loud.

  “Girls, you know I can handle myself. We’re good. No worries.”

  “Shame really because I bet he knows his way around a woman’s body. Foxes know how to hunt.” Chelsea stands, taking her box of donut holes with her.

  “You’re really taking this whol
e I eat what I want to heart.” I point to the powdered sugar covering her breasts.

  “Shit,” she mumbles and sweeps the white sugar off of her, but it smears.

  “Live it up but remember it’s hard to work it off your ass off after the baby’s out. Trust me on that.” Victoria leaves the office.

  Chelsea looks at me. “I have no complaints. I’ll just have Tad whip me back into shape.” She smiles through another mouthful of donut and then heads down the hall.

  I swivel in my chair to face the skyline of Chicago through the window. Out of the millions of people who live and work in Chicago, how does my path keep crossing Roarke Baldwin’s.

  My phone vibrates on my desk and I swivel back around to pick it up.

  My dad.

  I accept the call and put it on speaker.

  “Hi, Dad.”

  “Hi, pumpkin. How are things at the foundation?”

  “Good.”

  “Did you contact that guy for the gala? He said he’d love to speak there.”

  “I told you it’s about female empowerment so I’m having only successful women give the speeches.”

  “Don’t you think that’s kind of reverse discrimination?”

  The highway noise in the background tells me he’s talking on his Bluetooth while driving. Probably on his way to the golf course.

  “No, I don’t.”

  He chuckles to himself. “I’ve always loved your bullheadedness. Who trained you so well?”

  “You did.”

  “That’s right. I taught you how to act like a man.”

  I roll my eyes. My dad loves me, but there’s no doubt he missed the opportunity to raise a son.

  “I’d rather think of it as you taught me to be a strong female.”

  He chuckles again like what I said is funny. I toed that line with my dad for years when I was younger—trying to get him to see that his ideas were sexist and his beliefs were from fifty years ago. Some battles just aren’t worth fighting and I don’t want to spend my adulthood in conflict with my dad.

  “I told your mother that we had nothing to worry about.”

  “Thanks, Dad.” I pick the pen up off my desk and start flicking it side to side in my hand.

  “I mean so what about Todd, right? We’re lucky to have that bastard out of our life.”

  I drop the pen. Whoa, back the bus up. I thought we were talking about me being successful and able to stand on my own? That my mother who has never earned one dollar herself doubted my abilities?

  “What are you talking about?” I ask.

  “Todd,” he says louder. Like I’m his golf buddy who turned down his hearing aid. “The announcement of his engagement.”

  I spring up and out of my chair. “He’s engaged?”

  “Oh, you didn’t know. I assumed you heard before we did. It was all the buzz at the club last night during dinner. Supposedly she’s a nurse at the hospital. Seems a little sleazy to me, sleeping with someone who works underneath you, but his parents were raving about her.”

  The pit of my stomach shouldn’t feel as though I just ate a hearty helping of street meat. I shouldn’t give one shit about Todd or his upcoming nuptials.

  “He took her to Tahiti or somewhere tropical and had the ring put in some shell and wrote something in the sand. You know me, I zoned out after a little while, but your mother, she was worried about how you’d handle the news.”

  I’m sure she was wondering why I wasn’t worth that much planning on Todd’s part. I got proposed to at the club during a Friday night fish fry. Asshole. Now he takes his soon-to-be wife away on my dime for some elaborate proposal?

  I clench my fists but don’t respond, unable to find the right words.

  “Don’t let it bother you. He’s a jackass and an idiot for not knowing what he had. His parents are a bunch of dimwits. You know I’ve always thought that.”

  I giggle at my dad. He might’ve been hard on me and yeah, he’s a bit of a chauvinist, but when it comes to me, he has my back every damn time.

  “It doesn’t bother me,” I insist. “It just bothers me that he’s doing it with my money. What good is a prenup if you still have to give away half your shit?”

  “Now Hannah, you couldn’t have predicted Grandpa’s death to happen a year into your marriage. Nor the fact he was old school and thought once married you stayed married. The old fool thought he was being nice by putting Todd in his will along with you.”

  “Exactly that. Any true gentleman wouldn’t have taken the money, especially when he’s the reason the marriage fell apart. He’s a surgeon. It’s not like he’s barely scraping by.”

  “You afforded him a lifestyle he never would’ve had even with being a surgeon. You gotta let that go, move on with your life. I’m sure there’s another guy out there who’s been waiting to snatch you up.”

  “Snatch me up? Dad,” I sigh.

  “Oh, Hannah, you need to stop worrying so much. So what if Todd got more than he ever should have? He hired a great lawyer. Too bad it was before we could put him on retainer.”

  “He wasn’t that great,” I grumble.

  “That’s because you were on the opposite end. If he would’ve been yours, you’d have been kissing his feet.”

  “I don’t think so.” I pace back and forth in front of the window.

  “At least if you get married again and it doesn’t work out, we know who to call.” He chuckles.

  I roll my eyes again, happy my dad can’t see me. If he could, he’d tell me that’s no way to behave toward my father.

  “No worries there. It was hard enough for me to become a Crowley again after the divorce. I’m not giving up the name a second time.”

  That’s the truth. Who knew how hard government offices made it to change back to your maiden name? When I had gotten married, the attendants would smile and ask me when the wedding was, how he proposed, where we honeymooned. When you tell them you’re divorced their lips turn down and they don’t ask any other questions.

  Of course then again, what are they going to ask? How many years did it last? Whose fault was it?

  “Oh pumpkin, you had one failed marriage. Look at Uncle Harrison, it took him five tries before he found the right one. We just have to protect ourselves better. Next time we know to tighten up the prenup. Simple. Don’t go off and punish every other man because Todd was an ass who was looking for his chunk of gold. I told you I never liked those people from the moment they moved in.”

  “Thanks for the pep talk, Dad.” I smile to myself.

  “I’m at the course now. I don’t want you to close yourself off from other opportunities. Your guy is out there somewhere.” He switches the phone off Bluetooth and onto speaker.

  “Gregory!” one of his buddies says in the background.

  “Great day for golf,” my dad says.

  “Okay, talk to you later, Dad.”

  “Yep, talk to you soon. Come by for dinner on Sunday. Your mom is worried about you.”

  “I’ll try,” I say, knowing I probably won’t.

  “Try harder. Bye, sweetie.”

  The line dies and I lean my shoulder on the glass window.

  Todd’s engaged.

  As much as I was happy to sign the divorce papers, I can’t help but wonder, what makes her so special? More special than me.

  My phone buzzes from where it still sits on the desk so I step over and see the number I programmed in yesterday on the screen with a notification. I pick up the phone and open it to read the message.

  Roarke: Ready for favor number 2?

  Me: How did you get my cell phone number?

  Roarke: Feel lucky that I haven’t used it until now.

  Me: Yay me. What’s the favor?

  Roarke: I have to go out of town this weekend. Family emergency. I need someone to housesit.

  Me: Housesit?

  Roarke: Yes.

  Me: Are you asking me to water your plants and feed your fish?

  He can’t be seriou
s. He’s going to use a favor for me to babysit his empty house?

  Roarke: No. I’m asking you to spend the weekend at my place while I’m out of town. I have a kitten and he’s just getting comfortable. Are you allergic?

  Shit, say yes, Hannah. Say you’ll go into anaphylactic shock.

  I start to type out the lie and then delete it then start to type it out again, but for some reason unknown to me I can’t hit send on the lie.

  Roarke: I’ll take your silence as a no.

  Me: I think this is a little over the boundaries.

  Roarke: It’s not sexual or embarrassing. Do you find me asking you to housesit demeaning in some way?

  Bastard.

  Me: Aren’t you afraid I’ll snoop?

  Roarke: Quite the opposite. I’m hoping you do.

  Me: Who are you?

  Roarke: I believe I’ve overheard your employees referring to me as the silver fox, but you can just call me Roarke.

  Roarke: ;)

  Me: I have a dog and I have no idea if she gets along with cats.

  Roarke: Puppy?

  Me: Yes.

  Roarke: Boy or girl?

  Me: I take it from all your questions that you don’t still keep tabs on me?

  Roarke: You think I had you followed? Is that what you’re worried about?

  I don’t answer because I want to say yes, I do. This round robin game we keep going through is growing tired.

  Roarke: Back to the puppy and kitten debacle. Bring your dog. If they don’t get along, I’ll give you a number to call for someone else to come over. Deal?

  Me: I suppose so.

  I’m not going to stick up my nose to such a simple favor. Especially one where I don’t even have to be around him to fulfill.

  Roarke: Perfect. I’ll have a key dropped off today and I’ll text you the address. Please keep it confidential. As you’re aware, many people don’t like me and I’d rather they not know where I live. There will be a note on my kitchen counter with directions.

 

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