Free Read Novels Online Home

Stripped by Piper Lawson (10)

9

Ava

I curled up with my sketchpad at Lindy’s Monday afternoon. The day before Lex had innocently mentioned the magazine was working on the editions that would feature spring collections. So we had to get our asses in gear.

I tried all the usual tricks to get my creative juices flowing. Listening to music. People-watching. Drawing flowers, animals, and abstract shapes before going back to clothes.

Nothing happened.

By the time I looked up again it was six pm. None of the new skirts or tops I’d come up with worked, together or on their own. After wasting dozens of sheets I tossed my pad on the couch in front of me, squeezing my eyes shut. Angry tears burned behind them.

“Lindy, can I get a large black?”

When I looked up, my neighbor was across the café at the long oak counter.

“Working late tonight, sweetie?” Lindy asked him while she rang up his order.

“Yeah, but at least it’s from home.”

“Sure thing, hon. I’ll bring it over.”

If Nate was handsome in a suit, he was devastating in a black T-shirt and jeans. Already annoyed with myself for not getting anything done today, I let my eyes run down his body. Bit my tongue to keep from moaning. We’d never get another shot at last year, but there was no denying the long and exotic list of things I’d do with that much Nate Townsend pressed up against me.

Though we’d only gone out once, I was attracted to Josh and pretty sure he liked me. But my libido was playing fast and loose. Which explained why I was reacting like Nate Townsend was a giant bar of Swiss chocolate and I’d been on a diet.

For almost seven months.

I started twirling my pencil in my fingers to distract myself. A trick I’d learned a long time ago, it’d stuck with me even though I hadn’t done it in a while. I could build up some pretty good speed.

Nate turned and caught me looking.

Under his heavy stare, my thumb stuttered and the pencil I’d been wrangling escaped, arcing gracefully away from me.

The horror played out in slow motion. The pencil caught the lip of a coffee mug on the next table and bounced inside, kicking up droplets at the surprised-looking man sitting there.

“Fuck!” I jumped up. The guy was probably eighty, and his eyes widened behind thick glasses. Up close I could see where the coffee stained his shirtsleeve.

“Ohmigod I’m so sorry.” I ordered a fresh drink from Lindy, grabbing some napkins while I was at the counter, then went back to the man, dabbing at the spots on his shirt.

When I finally turned back to my couch, red with embarrassment over assaulting a senior citizen, Nate had taken a seat at the opposite end. He had my sketchpad in one hand and my pencil, which he must’ve fished out of the man’s drink, in the other. He held both out for me and I took them as coolly as I could.

“Just practicing for the circus. Mom always said it was good to have a backup career.”

“Are you kidding? You made that man’s day.” A faint smile appeared in his eyes. Eyes that were brighter today than I’d seen them, though maybe it was a trick of the light.

We hadn’t crossed paths in the three days since the gala, when I’d found myself practically backed up against a painting with him on top of me.

The worst part: I’d liked it. I’d liked it a lot. In fact, before he’d turned all smug at the end, I’d been dangerously close to committing a random act of hormones. Had thought more than once of that mouth on mine, those hands on my skin, that hard body grinding into mine…

“What are you working on?” Nate leaned forward, nodding to my sketchpad. I ignored the way the denim tightened over his legs.

“Travesty’s spring line.” I gestured to the man I’d interrupted. “Copying from that guy over there, actually. He’s the next Tom Ford.”

He took my prompt about the lawsuit. “You heard about the motion.”

And just like that, my mood got worse. “Yeah.”

John had phoned us earlier in the day to let us know our first attempt to get the case thrown out hadn’t worked. Lex and I had sat in silence for more than a few minutes after hanging up. It had been a reality check. We’d hoped this would’ve been the end of it. Instead, John had prepared us for the worst: that if we wanted to fight this in court, it could take months.

“Most judges would’ve thrown the case out.” Nate’s voice broke into my thoughts.

The “raises money for charity” Nate Townsend was clashing in my mind with the “sues helpless girls” version. It made my head hurt.

I looked at him, eyes narrowed. “You know who you are right now? You’re the airline agent,” I accused. “You know. The one who sympathizes with customers while he swipes their credit cards for extra baggage fees.”

He frowned at my comparison. “Ava, lawsuits can suck. But they’re necessary. Part of a system to restore justice. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t.”

“You’re completely missing the point. We don’t have two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, Nate. So why are you doing this?”

“I shouldn’t be talking about this. Hell, I shouldn’t be talking with you at all.” His jaw worked like he was trying to decide how much to say. In the end he leaned toward me and lowered his voice. “The thing is, I can advise Bryson all day long. But when it comes down to it, I work for him, Ava. Not the other way around.”

“Do you think we did it?”

“What?” He looked surprised.

“It’s a simple question. Do you think we—I—did it? Copied Bryson’s work.”

“It doesn’t matter what I think.”

“It does.” To me, it does.

He scratched his head. “If I’d known it was you I wouldn’t have taken the case.”

“That’s not an answer. But if you think we did it, why do you even care? About me and Lex.”

Nate leaned back on the couch, one arm stretched across the back. He glanced out the window. For a moment, in the T-shirt and jeans, he could’ve passed for a student, except for the heavy expression on his face. I had a strange impulse to draw him.

Finally, he turned back. “Are you asking me not to care?” His eyes were moody and the effect added dangerous undertones to his words.

Lindy took that opportunity to bring over Nate’s coffee, breaking the tension. “Nate, honey, I wanted you to meet Ava, but it looks like you’re already friends. Ava’s new in town. And she’s single. Can you believe it? This gorgeous little ray of sunshine.”

“It’s staggering. She’s a real charmer.” Nate’s mouth twitched at the corner, and it was clear he loved Lindy as much as I did. And obvious from her behavior that she was equally charmed by him.

Ugh.

“Lindy,” I started, “you’ll be glad to know I had a hot date this weekend. He’s sexy, he’s employed, and he irons his own shirts. I’ll give you the dirty details later.”

“Ooooh. You better, sweetie. Come find me when you’re done with this one.” She bustled back in the direction of the counter where someone was calling for her.

When I looked back, my neighbor was watching me intently.

“Hot date?”

“As much as I’d love to say, ‘No one you know,’ it’s someone you know. Josh.”

My Josh.”

His tone irritated me. “There wasn’t a label on him, Nate. Did you skip that day in kindergarten when the teacher talked about sharing? Let me help. Sharing is when—”

“Dammit, I know what sharing is.” Nate shifted in his seat. “I mean that we cross paths again after months, and barely a week later you’re everywhere.”

“Well,” I said slowly, “you’re the one who moved me into your building. Starting to seem like a dumb idea, isn’t it, Suit?”

“It was. But it doesn’t matter, because you still can’t date Josh.”

I crossed my arms. “Excuse me? Why not?”

He lifted a shoulder as if to say the answer was obvious. “He’s a first-year law associate bent on succeeding at any cost. You spend your days assaulting old men in coffee shops with pencils.”

Why was he being weird about this? He’d said himself there wasn’t anything between us. So what would bother him about one of his friends going out with me?

I was distracted by the watch on Nate’s wrist as he reached back to scratch his neck. A Rolex. It hadn’t jumped out when he was wearing the suit, but with the T-shirt and jeans it glinted like a diamond.

Unless …

No.

But it made sense.

Nate Townsend was New York royalty. Rich family, powerful, respected. When Nate and I’d met at the club, none of that had come up. We were equals. We both wanted something from each other. But now …

I hadn’t pegged him as a snob, but it fit.

The darling of the city didn’t think I was good enough for his Ivy League friends. Scrappy designers and high-paid lawyers didn’t mix. Unless it was dark and private. And had an expiry date of less than twenty-four hours.

A metallic taste burned the back of my throat.

“What?” Nate demanded.

“Josh isn’t just a lawyer, you know. He’s a self-made man. Starting from a blue-collar family, going to Yale, making it in the big city on his own. He’s got talent, but most of all he’s got dedication. That’s what I like most about him.”

I trailed off under Nate’s hardening gaze. “Unlike me,” he responded. “Because I’m some brainless dilettante who bought his way through law school.”

I wanted to shout No, that I hadn’t meant that. But I was still reeling from his snobbery, so I bit my tongue.

“You really think I live a charmed life? Even after what you saw last winter. What happened between us last winter,” he challenged, a muscle working in his jaw. Nate’s mouth was pressed into a line, his eyes stormy. The bright blue was long gone, replaced with deep oceans and darker places. It seemed impossible that just a few minutes ago I’d been imagining touching him, because the man in front of me now was untouchable.

His words suddenly reminded me of another wild, untouchable version of Nate Townsend. The memory came flooding back like it’d happened yesterday, images and sounds and feelings flashing through my brain.

“Forget it. Your silence speaks volumes,” Nate said before I could even form a response. “If you’ll excuse me, I’m sure I have a trust fund that needs spending.” He shot me a last unreadable look before standing and crossing to the door, leaving me stunned and his coffee on the table.