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Bad Night Stand (Billionaire's Club Book 1) by Elise Faber (15)

Fifteen

“Well, that was one way to make an impression,” Seraphina said. It was just before lunchtime, and I’d spent the morning learning the lay of the land from Rich and meeting the staff who would be working for me.

Two senior designers. Five junior designers. Seven people for whom I was now responsible.

The notion was daunting—the most employees I’d managed with Frank and Susan’s company was three and two of those had been college students on an internship. These employees were serious workers and enthusiastic about the projects they were designing.

“After lunch, Heather wants to meet with me to discuss timelines.”

“Did she mention anything else about the guard?”

“No,” I said, slipping my feet back into my heels and standing up. “But I also didn’t ask. I got the feeling she didn’t want me to, and since I’d been with the company for all of a half hour at that point, I didn’t think it was appropriate.”

“Getting someone fired in your first hour.” Seraphina grinned. “Why do I think your father would approve?”

I snorted.

“Speaking of the elder Mr. Roberts, have you told him yet?”

“He knows I moved,” I hedged.

Seraphina sighed. “It’s going to be worse if he finds out from someone other than you.”

“It’s going to be terrible if he finds out from me.”

“Abs.”

“Sera.”

Silence.

“I’m going to tell him.”

“When?”

I turned to the window and sat on the edge of my desk. If I looked into the distance, ignored the streets and highways and houses and buildings in between, I could pretend the rolling hills covered in grape vines was my only view.

Somewhere up there, my father owned several wineries. His house was in those hills. As a kid, I’d spent more time running through the vines and the gardens than inside. It had been simpler. Quieter. Less imposing.

Less scary than dealing with my dad. No, less scary than disappointing my dad.

Of course, that was before I’d realized that everything I did would disappoint my father.

This was no different.

“I’ll tell him.”

Seraphina caught the change in my tone as any good friend would. “Abs, it’s going to be—”

“I’m fine,” I said, and forced my voice to be chipper. “I’ve got to go. Don’t want to overshoot my lunch hour on day one.”

“Are you sure you’re—?”

“See you tonight?”

She blew out a breath. “See you tonight.”

I hung up and blinked away the tears, knowing that it was the hormones making my eyes a little watery, not because I was torn up about my father and my childhood.

I was twenty-seven, for God’s sake. A grown woman with her own life.

I could not have daddy issues.

I suspected I did anyway.

“Gross,” I grumbled and picked up my purse. There was a soup and sandwich place just down the block. I’d fill up on some carbs and maybe splurge on a cookie.

I walked into the hallway, passing Heather’s office, and nearly plugged my nose at the hint of sour in the air. It reminded me of—

Nope, not thinking about Mr. Thor Wannabe.

I breathed through my mouth until I’d gotten far enough from the scent that I didn’t feel like puking. Hopefully, one of the staff didn’t wear the same deodorant as Jordan.

After popping into Rich’s office and asking if he wanted me to pick up something for him—no, since he’d brought his lunch—I took the elevators down to the lobby and walked out into the fresh air.

Today the sky was clear, but it was cold and I immediately regretted not bringing my jacket.

Still, it wasn’t bad enough for me to go back upstairs. I toughed it out to the deli and ordered a salad and soup, sitting at a little table in the back while scarfing the two down and reading a book on my phone.

And I did splurge on a cookie. Double chocolate chip.

Belly pleasantly full and my body warmed from the soup, I headed back to the office.

This time no security guards accosted me on my way to the elevator. The extent of my excitement was when Francis—the guard who’d escorted Diego off to what I now imagined as a scary interrogation room, complete with two-way glass and intimidating lighting—smiled and waved at me.

I smiled back and got on the elevator. On the way up, I began regretting the double chocolate chip cookie. In the span of five minutes, I’d gone from pleasantly satiated to overly full. A good walk would have probably cured the feeling, I thought, and made a mental note to ask Rich where the stairs were.

The elevator opened with a ding and I stepped out onto RoboTech’s floor.

My office was down the hall to the right, in between Heather’s and Rich’s. It had a glass door and a large window in the front. Both had blinds that could be closed, but I hadn’t bothered.

Unless someone actually knocked—and even sometimes not then if I was really engrossed in a project—my focus was completely devoted to whatever I was working on.

There was still a trace of the smell in the air, so I hurried into my office and closed the door.

I plunked my purse on the table near the window pointing out to the vineyards and sank into my office chair. Immediately, I toed off my heels and stretched my aching feet. The black pumps might look amazing, but they were absolute torture to wear. And though they definitely appeared professional, I wouldn’t be wearing them again.

Flats all the way, baby.

After the shoes, I was tempted to release the zipper on my skirt but figured that probably wouldn’t send the right message on my first day.

With a snort, I logged into my computer and pulled up my calendar. There was a request for a meeting with Heather in a half hour to discuss the projects she wanted to move on and their timelines. It was to be held in the conference room directly across the hall from my office.

I glanced up, noted the blinds to that room were closed, and shrugged as I got back to work. My email account had been set up and waiting for me that morning and it was already filling with messages. I had the feeling that just managing my inbox was going to be a challenge.

I set an alarm on my phone for twenty-five minutes later and got to work weeding through the messages. There was the typical new hire paperwork, most of which I’d already completed. There were project descriptions and proofs, an employee handbook, and several requests from the designers for meetings the following week.

After putting all the requests in my calendar and seeing the lack of available space, I decided that it was a good thing I’d started on a Friday. I might need all of Saturday and Sunday to recover from the scheduling nightmare.

Hopefully things would calm down after I’d settled in and had a chance to meet with everyone. Still, I couldn’t help but feel that this job was going to be trial by fire.

My phone buzzed and I jerked up from the computer, silencing the alarm. I slipped on my heels, gathered a notebook, pen, and my cell and crossed the hall. Unfortunately, I also got another sniff of the scent along the way. Jesus, was someone rubbing it on the walls? Why was it so strong?

Shoving down the nausea, I pushed through the door. The blinds were still closed, so I wasn’t ready for what I saw.

For who I saw.

“What are you doing here?” Jordan and I said at the same time.

He jumped to his feet and closed the distance between us.

“No.” I took a step back as his smell inundated me. My stomach churned. I felt saliva pool in the back of my mouth. “Stay there.”

“Why are you here?” He didn’t exactly look happy to see me, but he also didn’t appear angry.

“I work here,” I said, swallowing hard and pressing myself against the door. The wooden blinds rattled and screeched as they moved against the glass. I turned, straightening them before I did real damage.

In. Out. Don’t breathe through the nose. Do. Not. Puke.

“Why are you here?”

“I own this company.”

“Owned,” Heather said as I whipped around, noticing her for the first time. I hadn’t been able to see anything more than Jordan from the moment I walked in. “You used to own it,” she said.

Jordan’s jaw clenched. “I still hold the majority of shares, Heather.”

“Come sit down, Abigail.”

I blinked at Rich’s voice, feeling extremely overwhelmed, but nodded and crossed to the conference table.

“Mr. O’Keith, I’d like you to meet Abigail Roberts, our new Vice President of Design and Marketing.” Rich’s gaze shifted between Jordan and me. “But I suspect you two already know each other.”

Away from Jordan, I found I could breathe a little easier. The nausea was still there, but it wasn’t like I was going to poltergeist vomit in the next few seconds.

I might actually make it to the trash can if needed.

“No,” I said. “I’m not all that familiar with Mr. O’Keith.”

“Yes,” Jordan said at the same time. “I know Abigail.”

I glared at him. “You do not know me.”

He raised a brow. “Are we going to do this here?”

“No.” I sniffed, pulling out my notebook and taking the cap off my pen before looking around the room.

Well, I looked at Rich and Heather. Jordan I deliberately ignored.

Both of Heather’s brows were up. Rich’s eyes were darting between his phone and the rest of us.

“Let’s get started, shall we?” he asked after a moment.

“Yes,” I agreed, and if it sounded a little desperate then it was because I was a little desperate.

To forget that Jordan was sitting in the room with me.

To forget that Jordan’s baby was currently cooking in my womb.

Jordan sat down next to me. Even though there was an empty chair between Heather and Rich, he just plopped down and invaded my space.

His slack-covered leg brushed my thigh, making me shiver, but his eyes were on Heather as she began talking. I couldn’t concentrate on her words, not when he was sitting next to me, his heat seeping into the space around me, all Thor-like and handsome.

“. . . don’t you think, Abigail?”

I started, my eyes jumping from Jordan to Heather.

I had no idea what she’d been saying.

Fuck me.

“I’m not sure that six months is a reasonable timeline to bring something like the kids’ robot to market,” Rich said. “The engineers haven’t finished the programming. We have to test it with our focus groups. Send out early versions to bloggers—”

“The coding is almost done,” Jordan said, drawing my gaze back to him. “I’ll finish it by Monday. Then the engineers need two months tops. That gives four months for focus groups and bloggers. That’s plenty.”

“Okay wait,” I said. “So you’ll want market-level packaging ready to go in two months? We have nothing but a mock-up I made. Two months is not nearly enough time.”

“Hmm,” Heather said, making a few notes on her laptop.

“That mock-up you made is nearly perfect,” Rich replied, leaning back in his chair. “I’ve been consulting with our manufacturers. We have the supplies to replicate it already available in our warehouses. It can be used with very few manipulations.”

“All right,” I said, nodding. “Just to be clear, do you want my focus to be this before all else? Because if there are indeed no major changes and we’re using the design I laid out, I could probably get what we need in eight weeks. All the other projects will need to be back-burnered though.”

“Heather?” Rich asked.

Another few taps on her keyboard, another “Hmm.”

“Jordan?”

He inclined his head. “This needs to get to market as quickly as possible.”

“Why?” I asked. “A kids’ robot isn’t exactly a new concept. What’s the rush? Why not take our time and line up the toy for next year’s Christmas season?”

Heather nodded.

Rich nodded.

Jordan frowned. “It needs to be out as soon as possible.”

“If that’s the case and we’re being realistic here,” I said, “I’m going to need to pull all the designers from their other projects and put them on this with me. Is that going to impact other deadlines?”

“No,” Jordan said. “Our Christmas push has come and gone. We have nothing due until the spring.”

It was my turn to say, “Hmm.”

I couldn’t figure out why this was so important to Jordan. Why was he pushing the project forward in such a rush? Wouldn’t it make more sense to hit the market during a major shopping season? Why did he want to release in May?

Something was off, but I couldn’t pinpoint what it was.

“Use whatever resources you need,” he said.

“You’re overstepping your bounds,” Heather interjected. “This isn’t your company anymore.”

“It was my company for a decade, Heather,” he snapped. “And my R&D is what keeps it alive during lean times.”

“We’re not in lean times,” she countered. “I’m signing the contract with the Army.”

“Which is idiotic at best.”

“You sold the company to me. You trusted me to make the best decision for its future when you took your payday and checked out,” she said, her chin lifting. “All was well and good until you decided that you couldn’t hack it doing nothing on a beach.”

“Now who’s overstepping?” He leaned forward in his chair. “You know damn well why the military is a horrible idea.”

“No,” she said. “I know why you think it’s a horrible idea. What I see as a businesswoman is an opportunity for sustainable and stable income for the next twenty years.”

“Fuck,” Jordan muttered and shot to his feet. The action was so abrupt that I jumped, knocking my phone, notebook, and pen to the floor.

He and Heather froze, turned to examine Rich—who looked as uncomfortable as I felt—and me.

“We’ll continue this later,” Jordan said.

Heather closed her laptop and stood, much more calmly than Jordan had. If her spine was as rigid as granite, then that was the only outward sign of her being upset. “There’s nothing further to discuss. You wanted out of the business side. You’re out.”

“I’m still the majority shareholder.”

She strode toward him, laptop under one arm. “I will bring Dad into this, if I need to, bro.” Heather walked past him.

“You wouldn’t.”

“Hmm.”

Jordan rolled his eyes but didn’t say anything further.

“And you know exactly what he’ll say,” she chirped. “Rich, a word in my office?”

Rich gathered his things and was out of the room in less than thirty seconds, leaving me alone with Jordan and his dark storm cloud of anger.

Yeah, that I didn’t want directed at me.

Carefully and quietly, since Heather’s words seemed to have triggered some sort of contemplative coma, I slid my chair back and knelt to pick up my notebook.

My pen had rolled under the table and I had to crawl underneath to retrieve it. I was on hands and knees, arm outstretched, fingers just grazing the cap when I realized I should have just left it.

I had a box of twenty-three identical others in my office.

“You’re killing me in that skirt,” Jordan said softly.

I gasped and tried to stand, which basically meant that I tried to give myself a concussion by cracking my head against the underside of the heavy oak table.

“Shit,” he said and crawled under next to me. “Are you okay?”

“No,” I groaned, collapsing on my side, one hand covering the aching spot on the back of my head. “Why would you do that?”

He touched my arm cautiously. “I didn’t mean to startle you.”

“Well, congrats.” I glared over at him. “You did anyway, plus you messed up my hair.”

He grinned. “I like your hair messy.”

My stomach fluttered before I reminded myself of who exactly Jordan was. No flutters. Nope. No freaking way.

“Here we go again,” I said. “Am I going to get Dr. Jekell or Mr. Hyde?”

“Neither.” He crawled closer. “You’re going to get Jordan. Just me, none of the other bullshit that’s colored my past or our interactions. You’re going to get the real me.”

The words might have been considered sweet if I could have actually processed them.

But I couldn’t.

Because Jordan coming closer meant that he’d exposed his armpit.

“Satan’s deodorant,” I gasped, clamping my hand over my mouth as the smell hit me.

Nausea roared and that too-full feeling from a half hour before exploded.

Literally exploded.

Everywhere.

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