I begin to show myself out, stopping to turn to her before I go. “My attorney will email you the pre-nuptial agreement. Please sign and return it by tomorrow, though if you’d like your attorney to go over it, I can give you an extra couple of days. Also, I’ll clear my schedule Monday so I can take you shopping.”
“Shopping?” Her head tilts.
“You’ll need an engagement ring.” I pull the door wide and step into the hall. “My driver will pick you up at nine Monday morning.”
“O-okay.” She blinks, eyes wide like she can’t believe this is happening.
But I can.
I always get what I want.
But to be fair, my reward is more than worth her while. I may be a self-serving bastard, but I’m a generous self-serving bastard.
As long as she does whatever I say, whenever I say … this little arrangement of ours will be a walk in the park.
Three
Mari
* * *
“I’m not going to call you ‘sir’ anymore.” I climb into the backseat of his freshly waxed limousine Monday morning as it gently idles outside my apartment. The scent of supple leather and Hudson’s Creed cologne fills my lungs with dizzying deliciousness the second I inhale. “I’ve been thinking about this all weekend.” Obsessing, really. “I made of list of things I wanted to discuss with you before we dive into all of this. I have expectations too, you know. And I think it’s really important that we—”
“Hot tea?” Hudson wears a warm smile as he hands me a paper cup with little tufts of steam rising from the lid. “You take yours with a splash of milk and one sugar. Or so I was told.”
“Oh. Um. Thank you.” I reach for the cup, my fingers brushing his. All things considered, this might be the kindest gesture this man’s made toward me since I’ve known him.
I settle into my seat, my shoulders relaxing slightly. He’s making an effort. This is good. This is a step in the right direction. This gives me hope that this thing might actually work out.
“Let me make one thing clear,” I continue, blowing through the lid of my cup, eyes darting to him. “I’m in this for the money and only for the money. And I don’t work for you. I’ll be working with you. Side by side. Like a team. So don’t treat me like your assistant anymore. Don’t ask me to fetch you coffee or your dry cleaning. Even if I were your girlfriend or whatever, I wouldn’t be running your errands. That’s not my style.”
His full lips arch into a coy smirk, but I have his attention. He’s listening.
“In order for this to look authentic, it has to feel authentic,” I say, placing my tea aside. “If it’s me you want, it’s me you’re going to get—not some sugar substitute version.”
The car stops outside a corner building, and an array of trademark red awning-covered windows catch my eye and silence my commentary.
“We’re here,” he says as his driver comes around to get the door.
I’m terribly underdressed for Cartier, but Hudson doesn’t say a word. He places his hand on the small of my back, leans into my ear, and whispers, “Try to keep it under six figures.”
I nod, swallowing the nervous lump in my throat, and an armed man in a three-piece suit opens the front door with a welcoming smile.
“There he is!” a woman with shiny silver hair and a red, Jackie O style dress sashays toward us with open arms. “Hudson, my love. How are you? So good to see you. Come, come.”
“Guinevere.” He leans in for a hug, smiling as she air kisses his cheek, and then he reaches for my hand. “This is my beautiful fiancée, Maribel Collins.”
Holding hands with Hudson Rutherford isn’t something I imagined doing in a hundred billion years, but I clear my throat, throw my shoulders back, and walk in step past case beyond case of diamond jewels as we follow the lady in the red dress to a private elevator.
We arrive on the third level a moment later, the woman still rambling on. Apparently she knows Hudson’s family well, having attended prep school with his mother decades ago.
“We’re going to be in here today,” she says, trailing through a set of double mahogany doors. I’m guessing this building is some former old moneyed industrialist’s turn of the century mansion, and this room looks like it doubled as a study or a library before it was converted to a private showroom. The