pasted a brave smile on her face and approached.
“I’m not sure,” Ally said, slipping her fingers under the lid.
“Hi, Dominic,” Ruth said.
An unprompted first name out of a staffer. It was about damn time. “Hi, Ruth. How was your weekend?”
She beamed at me. “It was great. How was yours?”
An explosion of fabric saved me from having a second go at the scotch hangover and lesbianism conversation.
It was pink and shiny, and to my eternal damnation, I noticed that it was the exact shade of Ally’s lips when they weren’t painted fuck-me red.
The women crooned and stroked the fabric as Ally pulled it free.
I snatched the card off her desk while she held the cocktail dress to her chest.
Ally,
Made this and thought of you.
Christian
Oh, I fucking hated that guy.
Meanwhile, my friend was doing a delighted twirl. If I’d been a generous guy, I would have had to hand it to the assface. The dress screamed Ally. The full, silky skirt nipped in to a tight waist with a gold, braided belt. The top was snowy white and draped over one shoulder, leaving the other bare. Colorful, soft, sexy. Just like the woman.
“Oh my God. There’s pockets!” Ruth screeched.
They were drawing a crowd. Women—and Linus—were coming out of the woodwork to swoon over the dress.
“Who sent it?”
“Who made it?”
“Good morning, Dominic.”
“You need to put it on!”
“This is better than flowers. Are you going to marry him?”
I headed into my office and slammed the door behind me.
“Just fucking friends,” I muttered to the empty room. But the rationalization didn’t help. I wanted to be more. And I couldn’t have it as long as she worked for this company.
I heard a ripple of laughter coming from Ally’s desk, and my inner asshole caveman came out of hibernation. Plan in place, I sat down at my computer and found the document I was looking for.
I was putting the finishing touches on my masterpiece on the screen when there was a jaunty knock, and my door opened.
“Irvin,” I said, glancing up.
He strolled into the room in that not-a-care-in-the-world way he had when he’d come across a particularly juicy tidbit of gossip. Still trying to mold me into a version of my father.
He shut the door behind him and gave me a smug smile. “Quite the excitement out there,” he mused.
“It would appear so,” I said dryly, skimming over the changes I’d made to the document. Unlike the managing editor, I didn’t have time for idle chitchat. I had a budding relationship to ruin and a lengthy actual work-related to-do list for the day.
“It’s always smart to reward a girl for her good deeds,” Irvin said, taking an uninvited seat across from me.
Disinterested, I lifted an eyebrow.
“Your assistant,” he clarified. “I heard she ‘drove the boss home’ Friday night.” The man made air quotes as he said the words.
My stomach plummeted and was replaced with the raging fires of hell. “Is that what they’re saying?” I asked, keeping my voice mild.
“Oh, nothing to worry about. A few of the gossip blogs picked it up this weekend and ran it as a blind item. Good for you, son. It’s about time you had a little fun on the job.”
I wanted to grab the man by his fucking Gucci tie, haul him out of the chair, and make him apologize to Ally. Then I wanted to toss him off the roof and burn down every blog that dared hint that I was anything like my father or that Ally was sleeping her way to the top.
“The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, does it?” Irvin crowed his approval. He slapped his knee. “Well, I’d better get back to it.”
“I’d appreciate it if you were a little more careful with the reputation of our employees here, Irv,” I told him. My tone should have frozen the man’s balls.
But he waved dismissively. “Russo secrets are always safe with me.” He gave a cheery wink and heaved himself out of the chair.
I watched him go, drumming my fingers on the desk. Irvin Harvey was rubbing me the wrong way and needed to be dealt with. He was shrewd and slimy, and I was certain he’d known exactly what my father had been up to behind locked doors here.
I’d speak to my mother about him soon.
But first, I took a red pen and underlined the new text I’d added under the Fraternization Policy.
Employees will not pursue relationships with designers or other vendors.
I was already standing when Ally stuck her head in the