Chapter Reveal~ The Perfect Illusion by Winter Renshaw
Coming April 27th
Itās only pretendā¦
And itās only three months.
Iām in the midst of scrawling āI QUIT!ā onto his fancy cardstock letterhead when my boss corners me. He needs a favor, he says. And then he asks how well I can act ā¦
Hudson Rutherford needs a fiancƩe.
With his old-moneyed parents forcing him to marry some bratty hotel heiress and his hedonistic, playboy lifestyle at stake, the only way to get them to back off is to make them think heās truly, madly, deeply in love ā¦ with meāhis third personal assistant this year.
But I can hardly stand working for him as it is.
Hudson is crazy hot and well-aware. Heās arrogant, spoiled, and silver-spooned. He checks me out when he thinks Iām not looking, and his life is a revolving door of beautiful women. Plus, he canāt even pronounce my name correctlyāhowās he going to convince his family heās in love with me?!
Iām seconds from giving him a resounding ānoā when he flashes his signature dimpled smirk and gives me a number that happens to contain a whole mess of zeroes ā¦
On second thought, I think I can swallow my pride.
But, oh baby, thereās one thing I havenāt told him, one teensy-tiny thing that could make this just a hair complicated ā¦
Hereās hoping this entire thing doesnāt explode in our faces.
And itās only three months.
Iām in the midst of scrawling āI QUIT!ā onto his fancy cardstock letterhead when my boss corners me. He needs a favor, he says. And then he asks how well I can act ā¦
Hudson Rutherford needs a fiancƩe.
With his old-moneyed parents forcing him to marry some bratty hotel heiress and his hedonistic, playboy lifestyle at stake, the only way to get them to back off is to make them think heās truly, madly, deeply in love ā¦ with meāhis third personal assistant this year.
But I can hardly stand working for him as it is.
Hudson is crazy hot and well-aware. Heās arrogant, spoiled, and silver-spooned. He checks me out when he thinks Iām not looking, and his life is a revolving door of beautiful women. Plus, he canāt even pronounce my name correctlyāhowās he going to convince his family heās in love with me?!
Iām seconds from giving him a resounding ānoā when he flashes his signature dimpled smirk and gives me a number that happens to contain a whole mess of zeroes ā¦
On second thought, I think I can swallow my pride.
But, oh baby, thereās one thing I havenāt told him, one teensy-tiny thing that could make this just a hair complicated ā¦
Hereās hoping this entire thing doesnāt explode in our faces.
Chapter One
Mari
Dear Mr. Rutherford,
I humbly request that you accept this as my two-weeksā notice. As of Friday, May 26th, I will be stepping down from my position as your personal assistant. Iāll do my best to ensure this is a smooth transition for the company.
Sincerely,
Maribel Collins
I press my pen into his thick cardstock, scratching out my neatly written resignation before crumpling the paper in my hand and pushing it to the corner of my desk. Itās too nice, and Hudson Rutherford does not deserve nice.
Itās half past seven, which means I have thirty minutes to come up with something better than thisāsomething thatās going to leave a lasting impression.
Iām his third personal assistant this year and itās only May. Thereās a reason no one can tolerate working for him longer than a month or two, and someone ought to point this out to him.
Might as well be me.
Clearing my throat, I try again.
Hudson,
Youāre rude and inconsiderate, and I no longer wish to work for you. You think the world revolves around you. Your excessive wealth disgusts me, as does your secret Rolodex of womenās phone numbers that you keep hidden in your third desk drawer on the left. Your good looks are overshadowed by your vanity and arrogance, and your kindness, Iām convinced, is non-existent. You treat your employees like indentured servants, and youāre the most hypocritical asshole Iāve ever met.
I work sixty hour weeks for you without so much as a thank you, a raise, or a glowing performance review. Iām tired of running your menial errands, and I didnāt spend four years at college to make photo copies and coffee.
I didnāt sign up for this.
You lied to me.
With zero fondness and absolutely no gratitude,
Mari
Sighing, I crumple this one too. I think my message got lost amongst all the spiteful word vomit, and the last thing I want to do is come across as trite.
Fed up is what I am.
Tired.
Underutilized, underpaid, and overworked.
But not trite.
I toss the wrinkled paper in the waste basket and grab one last sheet of letterhead. Ditching the formalities, I decide to go a more direct route. My mother once told me itās not in what you say, itās in what you donāt say. And my father always says actions speak louder than words. Maybe Iāve been overthinking this whole resignation letter? With my pen firmly gripped, I scrawl my final version.
Hudson,
I QUIT!
Mari
Itās perfect.
Smiling, I admire my work, fold it into thirds, then slide it into a cream-colored envelope with Rutherford Architecturalās logo in the upper left corner. Licking the seal and scribbling his name on the front, I stick it on top of a pile of mail I plan to hand to him the second he arrives. Iāll give him a moment to read it, and while heās doing so, Iāll pack up my things and make a beeline for the elevator before he has a chance to stop me.
āMary.ā I glance up from my work station to see Hudson strolling into work in his signature navy suit and skinny black tie. Heās early today.
āItās Mari,ā I correct him for the millionth time, inhaling his cedar and moss cologne. Itās the only thing Iāve come to like about this man. āRhymes with sorryāremember?ā
His eyes narrow in my direction, and as he angles toward me, I see his right hand lifted to his ear. Heās on the phone.
Hudson says nothing, only gathers the mail from the corner of my desk and strides down the hall toward the enormous glass-walled office that tends to make my stomach twist every time I have to walk in that direction.
This entire office space was his design. Glass walls. Zero privacy. Everything is clean-lined and modern. Chestnut-colored leather seating, white walls, reclaimed wood and custom mid-century modern lighting installations are working in tandem here to create a space buzzing with creative inspiration, and all decorative accessories have to be approved by the head honcho himself. I tried to bring in a gray ceramic planter last month for my dendrobium orchids and Hudson said it was too drab and industrialist. He claimed it would fuck with his energyāand he uses words like āfuckā and āenergyā because he thinks heās some kind of renaissance boss.
My heartās pounding crazy fast, and Iām stuck trying to determine if I should bolt now or wait. Hudson usually checks his mail first thing in the morning, but for all I know, heās still on his phone call.
Drumming my fingers against my glass desktop, my feet remain firmly planted on the wood floor, though they may as well be frozen solid. The second my phone rings, it sends my heart leaping into my throat. Iām not afraid of himāI just hate drama. And I have a feeling Hudsonās going to try to make this into a big thing.
āYes?ā I answer, my eyes scanning the caller ID. Hudsonās extension flashes across the screen.
He exhales.
Oh, god.
He read it.
And now, the moment of truth.
āMary, what is this?ā he asks.
āWhat is ā¦ what, sir?ā I ask. And thatās another thingāwhat kind of twenty-nine-year-old architect demands to be called āsir?ā
āThis invitation to the Brown-Hauer Gala? RSVPs were due two weeks ago. Call and find out if itās not too late,ā he says, his voice monotone. The tear of paper fills the background. Heās quiet.
āI thought you said you didnāt want to go?ā I ask. Iām not sure why Iām phrasing this as a question because he did say he didnāt want to go. As a matter of fact, I know I have it in an email ā¦
āI said that?ā he asks, a sardonic chuckle in his question.
āYes.ā
āI donāt remember saying that.ā He exhales. āI never wouldāve said that. Not to the Brown-Hauer. That gala hosts the whoās who in the architectural world, are you fucking kidding me?ā
His voice raises slightly, and my breath seizes. I should just hang up and get the hell out of here.
āMary,ā he says.
āMari,ā I correct. āRhymes with sorry.ā
In case he didnāt hear me two minutes ago ā¦
āCan you come back here for a second?ā he asks, his voice as stiff as his winning personality. āThereās something we need to discuss. Immediately.ā
Anxiety forces my jaw into a tensed state. I shouldnāt let this asshole get to me, and I know that, but heās literally the boss from hell. People like him are the reason happy hour was created.
At least he wonāt be my boss for much longer.
Iām almost positive heās read my note and heās calling me back to try and talk me out of it but I refuse.
My stomach churns, and I think Iām going to be sickābut not because Iām nervous.
Not because he scares me.
But because Iām pregnant.
And morning sickness is one hell of a bitch.
āI need a minute,ā I say, reaching for the bottle of room temperature water in front of me, though the sight of it intensifies my nausea. I meant to stop for saltines and ginger ale on the way here this morning, but I spaced it off because I was too preoccupied with second-guessing my decision to quit my job so abruptly with single motherhood on the horizon.
āYou may have a minute to spare, but I donāt,ā he says. āWhatever it is, Iām sure it can wait. My office. Now.ā
Hudson hangs up before I have a chance to protest, and before I can stop myself, Iām marching back to his office like Darth Vader on a mission, heavy breathing and all.
Iām doing this.
Iām standing my ground.
Iām quitting.
And Iām walking out of here with my head held high.
Normally Iād knock three times on his door and wait for him to tell me to enter, but seeing how all the walls here are made out of crystal-clear glass, heās looking directly at me, and Iām seconds from quitting, I donāt see the need.
Rushing into his office, I place my hands on my hips and plant myself in the doorway. Hudson reclines in his chair, his hands resting behind his neck as his full lips hold an amused little smirk that perfectly contradicts the snarky tone he took with me a few moments ago.
Everything about this man is a walking contradiction, and it drives me crazy.
āWhatās with the attitude, Mary?ā he asks, eyes scanning me from head to toe and back. āItās Friday. Lighten up.ā
I glance at his desk where my letter rests on top of the mail pile.
He hasnāt opened it yet ā¦
āWhat did you need?ā I ask, but only because Iām curious. I donāt actually intend on doing a damn thing for this smug asshole from this moment on.
āDid you get my email this morning?ā he asks.
Ah, yes. The infamous pre-work emails he sends from his treadmill at five in the morning. Not going to miss those.
My brows meet. āI havenāt had a chance to check it yet.ā
āIām going to need you to pick up my dry cleaning at ten. Drop everything off at my place afterwards, then stop by Palmettoās Deli to grab me a number four with no mustard. And make sure you check it before you leave. Last time you didnāt, and you know how much I despise soggy bread. Oh. And after lunch, I need you to call the Brown-Hauer foundation and get me on the list for their gala. Email me as soon as youāre finished so I know you didnāt forget ā¦ā
Heās rambling on, but I tune him out. My fists clench at my sides, and my vision darkens. He doesnāt need to qualify his requests with insults.
This ā¦
This is why I hate this man.
This is why I have to quit. Immediately.
I donāt care what he says, I refuse to let him talk me out of this.
I came to Manhattan with a gleam in my eye, my little Nebraskan heart filled with optimism and hope. I wanted to be successful. I wanted to be someone.
Little did I know, nobody in New York cares if you graduated at the top of your class at some tiny little private college just north of the Bible belt. All that matters out here, is who you know. And if you donāt know anyone? Then you have one of two options: screw your way to the top or work your ass off and hope that someone throws you a bone.
I had every intention of doing this with integrity, but clearly accepting a position at Rutherford Architectural was a bad move in the wrong direction.
So much for building up a respectable curriculum vitae.
āMary, are you listening?ā he asks, leaning forward in his chair, his elbows resting on his glass desk. Behind him is an expansive view of downtown Manhattan flanked by floor-to-ceiling bookshelves filled with every architectural college text, magazine, and coffee table book known to man. If thereās one other positive thing I could say about Hudson Rutherfordābesides the fact that he smells like money and oozes obnoxious charm that apparently no one but me can see throughāis that heās passionate about architecture. The man lives, sleeps, and breathes design.
If I wasnāt so busy hating Hudson, Iād probably find his intense passion kind of sexy ā¦
āNo,ā I say.
āExcuse me?ā He scoffs, smoothing his thin black tie down his muscled chest before straightening his shoulders.
āWhen you speak to me like that,ā I say, holding my head high, āit makes me want to tune you out. I canāt help it. Itās an automatic reaction.ā
His jaw clenches, but his eyes glint, and I wonder if heās ever had an assistant speak up before?
Doubtful.
āAm I supposed to speak to you like youāre on my level? Like weāre equals?ā he asks, chuffing. āMary, Iām your boss. Your superior.ā
āWhich is exactly why you should talk to me with a little more respect. Itās called being professional.ā My lips are tight and numb. I canāt believe Iām saying this ā¦ āI make your coffee. I field your calls. I grab your lunch. I do anything and everything you ask because letās face it, Iām the idiot who signed up for this job, but you treat me like your whipping post. If you forget something, itās always my fault. If someone else forgets something, itās always somehow my fault. If youāre having a bad day, itās my fault. If I only work fifty hours instead of my scheduled forty, you make me feel like a slacker. If I ask for a day off, nine times out of ten, Iām told āno.ā Itās exhausting working for you, Hudson. Itās only been two months, and I canāt do it anymore.ā
āSo what are you saying?ā he asks. I try to get a read on his expressionless face, but itās impossible. Heās a man who holds his cards close to his chest at all times. Iām not sure whether heās panicked, relieved, or something else entirely.
Pointing to the letter on the top of his mail pile, I say, āI quit.ā
It doesnāt feel as liberating as I thought it would, and itās all rather anti-climactic, but itās done. I turn on my heels and show myself out of his office, hurrying to get the hell out of the place Iāve come to call the Pristine Palace for the last two months.
āWait,ā he calls after me as I head for my desk to gather my things. I glance behind me only to see him standing in his glass doorway. āIād like to make you an offer before you go.ā
Ha. Just as I expected.
I smirk, rolling my eyes as I keep walking. āNo, thanks.ā
āMary.ā Thereās a deep husk in his voice, but I continue strutting away, my heels clicking on the reclaimed wood floor.
When I reach my desk, I grab my bag from the bottom drawer and toss a few personal items inside: my hand cream, lip balm, a tiny bag of emergency chocolate, and my back up water bottle. Iād toss some company pens in there too because theyāre fancy as hell, but I prefer never to so much as glance at the Rutherford Architecture logo ever again. Before I forget, I slide the elevator key to his penthouse apartment off my keyring and slap it on the desktop.
āFine.ā The sudden, close proximity of Hudsonās voice jumpstarts my heart. I glance up to see him standing before me, his smooth hands splayed across my desk and his back arched. His sapphire blue eyes meet mine, refusing to let them go. āYou can quit. Be my fucking guest. Iāll have you replaced by tomorrow afternoon.ā
I offer a faux smile. āGlad everythingās going to work out for you.ā
I fling my bag over my shoulder and stand tall, eyes grazing past his shoulder toward the elevator bay where the doors part and Hannah from accounting steps off. Our eyes meet, and she gives me what is clearly her āOh, shit ā¦ā face.
Itās a shame I wonāt be sticking around long enough to tell her everythingās fine. Everythingās abso-fucking-lutely fine.
āGoodbye, Hudson. And best of luck in finding a suitable replacement. Iām sorry I couldnāt be what you needed.ā I move out from behind my desk and give him a sarcastic smirk, only Iām not prepared when he slips his hand around my wrist and guides me closer to him. āWhat the hell are you doing?ā
I yank my hand from his, clutching it against my chest, fingers balled into a tight fist.
āOne last thing before you go ā¦ā he says, his eyes softening just enough that I almost believe heās being sincere for the first time since Iāve known him.
Trying not to laugh too loud, I shake my head. āNo.ā
āHear me out,ā he says.
āWhy should I?ā
āBecause Iāll make it worth your while.ā
Rolling my eyes, I suck in a deep breath, mulling over the extent of my curiosity. What could he possibly need from me, a disgruntled employee in the midst of storming out of his office?
My stomach gurgles and another wave of morning sickness evolves into an impressive hot flash. A sheen of sweat forms across my forehead. I think Iām going to be sick, and if he doesnāt get the hell out of my way, Iām about to be sick all over his immaculate Prada suit.
The wave passes, dissipating into nothing, and I pull in a clean breath of the hospital-grade air Hudson insists on piping through the office vents because it helps ākeep his energy clean.ā
āIām sorry,ā I say, ābut there isnāt anything you could say or do at this point that would convince me to work another day next to you. I wonāt be doing you any favors, Hudson. You disgust me.ā
Oh, god. Here comes the word vomit, rising up my chest with unstoppable force.
āYou walk around like youāre better than everyone,ā I add. āYouāre self-centered. And arrogant. And cold. And inconsiderate. And rude. And youāre delusional if you think youāre going to get me to stick around, so, goodbye.ā
The corner of his mouth smirks, revealing a half-second flash of a dimple that sends an inconvenient and unexpected weakness to my knees. I hate how attractive this man is. And I hate how distracting his looks are.
āCalm down, Mary.ā His voice is low, and when he leans in close, I find myself inhalingāand enjoyingāthe warm, musky scent radiating off his skin. āI know Iām a pain in the ass to work for. Well aware.ā
āThen why donāt you try to change that?ā
āWhy should I? Thereās an entire city full of girls just like you begging to work here. Why should I have to change who I am to accommodate them? Besides, thereās a whole world of assholes just like meāno, worse than meāwaiting on the outside. If my employees canāt handle me, theyāre sure as hell not going to be able to handle the next guy. The way I see it, Iām doing you all a favor. Iām prepping you for the real world.ā
āI refuse to believe bosses like you are the norm.ā
āThen youāre extremely naĆÆve.ā He huffs, his indigo-blue eyes lifting to the ceiling then back to me. āAnyway, three million dollars.ā
āThree million dollarsāwhat?ā I squint at him, not sure where heās going with this.
āIf you agree to help me out, Iāll give you three million dollars. Cash. And then youāll never have to work with this insufferable asshole ever again.ā
Heās got to be joking.
āAside from the fact that youāve officially lost it, Iām not sticking around, not here. Not as your personal assistant. Iām better than this.ā
āIām not asking you to be my personal assistant.ā
āOkay, whatever it is, Iām not interested. I have a degree in business analytics and international marketing with a minor in finance.ā My arms tighten across my chest. Iām not interested in his bait money or whatever the hell kind of stunt heās attempting to pull. āI know my worth, and I know when a job isnāt worth it.ā
āSo you understand that three million dollars is a pretty generous chunk of change, yes? Since you, uh, minored in finance and you know all about ā¦ worth?ā Heās trying to fight a smile, like heās not taking me seriously.
āCan you not?ā I lift my hand to my right hip.
āNot what?ā
āCan you not be so patronizing? It never ends with you.ā
āIāll work on it,ā he says. āIf you stick around.ā
āNo need,ā I remind him. āIām not.ā
āSwallow your pride and agree to help me,ā he says. āYou wonāt regret it.ā
āNo,ā I say with as much conviction as I can drum up. A wave of nausea rolls over me once more, a silent reminder that itās not about me anymore. āWhatever it is ā¦ no.ā
Three weeks ago, after a sexually debilitating dry spell no twenty-five-year-old should ever have to endure, I downloaded one of those stupid dating apps that everyone knows is really only used for hooking up, and I found myself the perfect one-night stand.
I thought I was smart about it. Iām on the pill. He used a condom. All precautionary measures were taken.
He was Ivy League educated, or so he claimed, and he had one of those rich people names, Hollister. His photos were all Nantucket and sailboats and he quoted F. Scott Fitzgerald in his bio. When we met, Hollister was friendly and well-mannered, well-groomed and clean cut. With disarming honey brown eyes and thick, sandy brown hair, he was everything he had shown himself to be. And the night was satisfying enough if not a little boring. But it filled the void and accomplished the mission, and we both went on our ways.
But a few days ago, I happened to pop open my birth control pack and realized I was four sugar pills in with no sign of Aunt Flo. An hour later, Iād purchased an array of tests from the local Duane Reade, never believing in a million years Iād find myself face-to-face with a myriad of blue plus signs and happy faces.
Thatās the day the bottom dropped out.
Hollister was the first person I calledāit only seemed right since he was the father. But his number was conveniently no longer in service. I had no way of getting a hold of him and no way of knowing what his last name was. I even spent hours trying to find him again on the dating app, but it was as if heād just disappeared into thin air.
So now itās just us ā¦
Me and this tiny little life Iām now fully responsible forāon my own.
This weekend Iāll pack up my place, rent a moving truck with whatever credit remains on my MasterCard, and hightail it back to Nebraska. I canāt afford to raise a baby in this city, at least not by myself. And now that I donāt have a job, I canāt afford the rent on my shoebox studio anyway.
āYouāre a fool.ā Hudson watches me sling my purse over my shoulder, and then he eyes the elevator bay in the distance. āWith this money, the right investments and a little time, you could be an extremely wealthy woman. Now youāre going to spend the rest of your life working for assholes exactly like me because you were too proud to say yes to this one little favor.ā
āYouāre planting doubt in my head,ā I say. āYouāre trying to manipulate me. I see through you, Hudson. Always have. Youāre nothing more than a self-serving asshole. You couldnāt shut it off if you tried.ā
āYouāre right. Me and every other man in this city.ā His soft, strong hands slip into his pants pockets and he exhales like a man who shamelessly owns his behavior and makes no apologies. āAnyway, arenāt you curious? Donāt you want to know what I want from you?ā
āNot really.ā My lips bunch in one corner. āYou pay me forty grand a year here, which isnāt really a livable wage in this city I might add. And you work me to the bone. I shudder to think of how much work three million dollars would entail.ā
āCan you act, Mary?ā he asks, ignoring my refusal.
āThatās random.ā
āItās not random at all. Itās pretty straightforward. Stop wasting my time and answer it.ā
āI was in drama club in high school,ā I say, smoothing my hair from my face and pulling my shoulders back like a proud drama nerd. āAnd for a couple years in college. Iāve done community theatre as well.ā
Hudson smiles.
Iāve never seen him full-on smile like this.
āPerfect.ā His blue eyes crinkle at the corner. āI have to have you, Mary. Youāre hired.ā
My jaw hangs. āIām ā¦ what? I didnāt say ā¦ I donāt want ... no.ā
Hudson wraps his hand around my wrist, pulling me just outside the front doors of the office and out of ear-shot of the rest of the office.
āListen,ā he says, voice low. He tightens the space between us. āIām sure youāre wondering what the fuck Iām about to propose and rightfully so. But believe me when I tell you itās going to change your life. And mineābecause Iām a self-serving bastard and we both know that. But itāll be the easiest three million youāll ever make in your life, and when itās all said and done, youāll never have to see meāor work for anyone like meāever again. Itās win-win, Mary. And youād be a damn fool to walk away.ā
I inhale, harboring a breath before letting it go. When our eyes meet, I silently chide myself for remotely considering making a deal with this devil.
Sure, heās impossibly handsome with his chiseled jaw, dimpled smirk, coffee-colored hair, steel blue eyes, runnerās build, designer wardrobe, and genius IQānot that Iāve taken inventory of his assets before ā¦ but none of that is enough to overpower the ugliness that resides beneath his perfect, polished faƧade.
Without saying a word, I turn on my heel and press the call button on the nearest elevator.
āWhat are you doing?ā he asks, voice rushed.
The doors part, and I step on flashing a smirk and shrugging my shoulders. āBeing a damn fool.ā
Mari
Dear Mr. Rutherford,
I humbly request that you accept this as my two-weeksā notice. As of Friday, May 26th, I will be stepping down from my position as your personal assistant. Iāll do my best to ensure this is a smooth transition for the company.
Sincerely,
Maribel Collins
I press my pen into his thick cardstock, scratching out my neatly written resignation before crumpling the paper in my hand and pushing it to the corner of my desk. Itās too nice, and Hudson Rutherford does not deserve nice.
Itās half past seven, which means I have thirty minutes to come up with something better than thisāsomething thatās going to leave a lasting impression.
Iām his third personal assistant this year and itās only May. Thereās a reason no one can tolerate working for him longer than a month or two, and someone ought to point this out to him.
Might as well be me.
Clearing my throat, I try again.
Hudson,
Youāre rude and inconsiderate, and I no longer wish to work for you. You think the world revolves around you. Your excessive wealth disgusts me, as does your secret Rolodex of womenās phone numbers that you keep hidden in your third desk drawer on the left. Your good looks are overshadowed by your vanity and arrogance, and your kindness, Iām convinced, is non-existent. You treat your employees like indentured servants, and youāre the most hypocritical asshole Iāve ever met.
I work sixty hour weeks for you without so much as a thank you, a raise, or a glowing performance review. Iām tired of running your menial errands, and I didnāt spend four years at college to make photo copies and coffee.
I didnāt sign up for this.
You lied to me.
With zero fondness and absolutely no gratitude,
Mari
Sighing, I crumple this one too. I think my message got lost amongst all the spiteful word vomit, and the last thing I want to do is come across as trite.
Fed up is what I am.
Tired.
Underutilized, underpaid, and overworked.
But not trite.
I toss the wrinkled paper in the waste basket and grab one last sheet of letterhead. Ditching the formalities, I decide to go a more direct route. My mother once told me itās not in what you say, itās in what you donāt say. And my father always says actions speak louder than words. Maybe Iāve been overthinking this whole resignation letter? With my pen firmly gripped, I scrawl my final version.
Hudson,
I QUIT!
Mari
Itās perfect.
Smiling, I admire my work, fold it into thirds, then slide it into a cream-colored envelope with Rutherford Architecturalās logo in the upper left corner. Licking the seal and scribbling his name on the front, I stick it on top of a pile of mail I plan to hand to him the second he arrives. Iāll give him a moment to read it, and while heās doing so, Iāll pack up my things and make a beeline for the elevator before he has a chance to stop me.
āMary.ā I glance up from my work station to see Hudson strolling into work in his signature navy suit and skinny black tie. Heās early today.
āItās Mari,ā I correct him for the millionth time, inhaling his cedar and moss cologne. Itās the only thing Iāve come to like about this man. āRhymes with sorryāremember?ā
His eyes narrow in my direction, and as he angles toward me, I see his right hand lifted to his ear. Heās on the phone.
Hudson says nothing, only gathers the mail from the corner of my desk and strides down the hall toward the enormous glass-walled office that tends to make my stomach twist every time I have to walk in that direction.
This entire office space was his design. Glass walls. Zero privacy. Everything is clean-lined and modern. Chestnut-colored leather seating, white walls, reclaimed wood and custom mid-century modern lighting installations are working in tandem here to create a space buzzing with creative inspiration, and all decorative accessories have to be approved by the head honcho himself. I tried to bring in a gray ceramic planter last month for my dendrobium orchids and Hudson said it was too drab and industrialist. He claimed it would fuck with his energyāand he uses words like āfuckā and āenergyā because he thinks heās some kind of renaissance boss.
My heartās pounding crazy fast, and Iām stuck trying to determine if I should bolt now or wait. Hudson usually checks his mail first thing in the morning, but for all I know, heās still on his phone call.
Drumming my fingers against my glass desktop, my feet remain firmly planted on the wood floor, though they may as well be frozen solid. The second my phone rings, it sends my heart leaping into my throat. Iām not afraid of himāI just hate drama. And I have a feeling Hudsonās going to try to make this into a big thing.
āYes?ā I answer, my eyes scanning the caller ID. Hudsonās extension flashes across the screen.
He exhales.
Oh, god.
He read it.
And now, the moment of truth.
āMary, what is this?ā he asks.
āWhat is ā¦ what, sir?ā I ask. And thatās another thingāwhat kind of twenty-nine-year-old architect demands to be called āsir?ā
āThis invitation to the Brown-Hauer Gala? RSVPs were due two weeks ago. Call and find out if itās not too late,ā he says, his voice monotone. The tear of paper fills the background. Heās quiet.
āI thought you said you didnāt want to go?ā I ask. Iām not sure why Iām phrasing this as a question because he did say he didnāt want to go. As a matter of fact, I know I have it in an email ā¦
āI said that?ā he asks, a sardonic chuckle in his question.
āYes.ā
āI donāt remember saying that.ā He exhales. āI never wouldāve said that. Not to the Brown-Hauer. That gala hosts the whoās who in the architectural world, are you fucking kidding me?ā
His voice raises slightly, and my breath seizes. I should just hang up and get the hell out of here.
āMary,ā he says.
āMari,ā I correct. āRhymes with sorry.ā
In case he didnāt hear me two minutes ago ā¦
āCan you come back here for a second?ā he asks, his voice as stiff as his winning personality. āThereās something we need to discuss. Immediately.ā
Anxiety forces my jaw into a tensed state. I shouldnāt let this asshole get to me, and I know that, but heās literally the boss from hell. People like him are the reason happy hour was created.
At least he wonāt be my boss for much longer.
Iām almost positive heās read my note and heās calling me back to try and talk me out of it but I refuse.
My stomach churns, and I think Iām going to be sickābut not because Iām nervous.
Not because he scares me.
But because Iām pregnant.
And morning sickness is one hell of a bitch.
āI need a minute,ā I say, reaching for the bottle of room temperature water in front of me, though the sight of it intensifies my nausea. I meant to stop for saltines and ginger ale on the way here this morning, but I spaced it off because I was too preoccupied with second-guessing my decision to quit my job so abruptly with single motherhood on the horizon.
āYou may have a minute to spare, but I donāt,ā he says. āWhatever it is, Iām sure it can wait. My office. Now.ā
Hudson hangs up before I have a chance to protest, and before I can stop myself, Iām marching back to his office like Darth Vader on a mission, heavy breathing and all.
Iām doing this.
Iām standing my ground.
Iām quitting.
And Iām walking out of here with my head held high.
Normally Iād knock three times on his door and wait for him to tell me to enter, but seeing how all the walls here are made out of crystal-clear glass, heās looking directly at me, and Iām seconds from quitting, I donāt see the need.
Rushing into his office, I place my hands on my hips and plant myself in the doorway. Hudson reclines in his chair, his hands resting behind his neck as his full lips hold an amused little smirk that perfectly contradicts the snarky tone he took with me a few moments ago.
Everything about this man is a walking contradiction, and it drives me crazy.
āWhatās with the attitude, Mary?ā he asks, eyes scanning me from head to toe and back. āItās Friday. Lighten up.ā
I glance at his desk where my letter rests on top of the mail pile.
He hasnāt opened it yet ā¦
āWhat did you need?ā I ask, but only because Iām curious. I donāt actually intend on doing a damn thing for this smug asshole from this moment on.
āDid you get my email this morning?ā he asks.
Ah, yes. The infamous pre-work emails he sends from his treadmill at five in the morning. Not going to miss those.
My brows meet. āI havenāt had a chance to check it yet.ā
āIām going to need you to pick up my dry cleaning at ten. Drop everything off at my place afterwards, then stop by Palmettoās Deli to grab me a number four with no mustard. And make sure you check it before you leave. Last time you didnāt, and you know how much I despise soggy bread. Oh. And after lunch, I need you to call the Brown-Hauer foundation and get me on the list for their gala. Email me as soon as youāre finished so I know you didnāt forget ā¦ā
Heās rambling on, but I tune him out. My fists clench at my sides, and my vision darkens. He doesnāt need to qualify his requests with insults.
This ā¦
This is why I hate this man.
This is why I have to quit. Immediately.
I donāt care what he says, I refuse to let him talk me out of this.
I came to Manhattan with a gleam in my eye, my little Nebraskan heart filled with optimism and hope. I wanted to be successful. I wanted to be someone.
Little did I know, nobody in New York cares if you graduated at the top of your class at some tiny little private college just north of the Bible belt. All that matters out here, is who you know. And if you donāt know anyone? Then you have one of two options: screw your way to the top or work your ass off and hope that someone throws you a bone.
I had every intention of doing this with integrity, but clearly accepting a position at Rutherford Architectural was a bad move in the wrong direction.
So much for building up a respectable curriculum vitae.
āMary, are you listening?ā he asks, leaning forward in his chair, his elbows resting on his glass desk. Behind him is an expansive view of downtown Manhattan flanked by floor-to-ceiling bookshelves filled with every architectural college text, magazine, and coffee table book known to man. If thereās one other positive thing I could say about Hudson Rutherfordābesides the fact that he smells like money and oozes obnoxious charm that apparently no one but me can see throughāis that heās passionate about architecture. The man lives, sleeps, and breathes design.
If I wasnāt so busy hating Hudson, Iād probably find his intense passion kind of sexy ā¦
āNo,ā I say.
āExcuse me?ā He scoffs, smoothing his thin black tie down his muscled chest before straightening his shoulders.
āWhen you speak to me like that,ā I say, holding my head high, āit makes me want to tune you out. I canāt help it. Itās an automatic reaction.ā
His jaw clenches, but his eyes glint, and I wonder if heās ever had an assistant speak up before?
Doubtful.
āAm I supposed to speak to you like youāre on my level? Like weāre equals?ā he asks, chuffing. āMary, Iām your boss. Your superior.ā
āWhich is exactly why you should talk to me with a little more respect. Itās called being professional.ā My lips are tight and numb. I canāt believe Iām saying this ā¦ āI make your coffee. I field your calls. I grab your lunch. I do anything and everything you ask because letās face it, Iām the idiot who signed up for this job, but you treat me like your whipping post. If you forget something, itās always my fault. If someone else forgets something, itās always somehow my fault. If youāre having a bad day, itās my fault. If I only work fifty hours instead of my scheduled forty, you make me feel like a slacker. If I ask for a day off, nine times out of ten, Iām told āno.ā Itās exhausting working for you, Hudson. Itās only been two months, and I canāt do it anymore.ā
āSo what are you saying?ā he asks. I try to get a read on his expressionless face, but itās impossible. Heās a man who holds his cards close to his chest at all times. Iām not sure whether heās panicked, relieved, or something else entirely.
Pointing to the letter on the top of his mail pile, I say, āI quit.ā
It doesnāt feel as liberating as I thought it would, and itās all rather anti-climactic, but itās done. I turn on my heels and show myself out of his office, hurrying to get the hell out of the place Iāve come to call the Pristine Palace for the last two months.
āWait,ā he calls after me as I head for my desk to gather my things. I glance behind me only to see him standing in his glass doorway. āIād like to make you an offer before you go.ā
Ha. Just as I expected.
I smirk, rolling my eyes as I keep walking. āNo, thanks.ā
āMary.ā Thereās a deep husk in his voice, but I continue strutting away, my heels clicking on the reclaimed wood floor.
When I reach my desk, I grab my bag from the bottom drawer and toss a few personal items inside: my hand cream, lip balm, a tiny bag of emergency chocolate, and my back up water bottle. Iād toss some company pens in there too because theyāre fancy as hell, but I prefer never to so much as glance at the Rutherford Architecture logo ever again. Before I forget, I slide the elevator key to his penthouse apartment off my keyring and slap it on the desktop.
āFine.ā The sudden, close proximity of Hudsonās voice jumpstarts my heart. I glance up to see him standing before me, his smooth hands splayed across my desk and his back arched. His sapphire blue eyes meet mine, refusing to let them go. āYou can quit. Be my fucking guest. Iāll have you replaced by tomorrow afternoon.ā
I offer a faux smile. āGlad everythingās going to work out for you.ā
I fling my bag over my shoulder and stand tall, eyes grazing past his shoulder toward the elevator bay where the doors part and Hannah from accounting steps off. Our eyes meet, and she gives me what is clearly her āOh, shit ā¦ā face.
Itās a shame I wonāt be sticking around long enough to tell her everythingās fine. Everythingās abso-fucking-lutely fine.
āGoodbye, Hudson. And best of luck in finding a suitable replacement. Iām sorry I couldnāt be what you needed.ā I move out from behind my desk and give him a sarcastic smirk, only Iām not prepared when he slips his hand around my wrist and guides me closer to him. āWhat the hell are you doing?ā
I yank my hand from his, clutching it against my chest, fingers balled into a tight fist.
āOne last thing before you go ā¦ā he says, his eyes softening just enough that I almost believe heās being sincere for the first time since Iāve known him.
Trying not to laugh too loud, I shake my head. āNo.ā
āHear me out,ā he says.
āWhy should I?ā
āBecause Iāll make it worth your while.ā
Rolling my eyes, I suck in a deep breath, mulling over the extent of my curiosity. What could he possibly need from me, a disgruntled employee in the midst of storming out of his office?
My stomach gurgles and another wave of morning sickness evolves into an impressive hot flash. A sheen of sweat forms across my forehead. I think Iām going to be sick, and if he doesnāt get the hell out of my way, Iām about to be sick all over his immaculate Prada suit.
The wave passes, dissipating into nothing, and I pull in a clean breath of the hospital-grade air Hudson insists on piping through the office vents because it helps ākeep his energy clean.ā
āIām sorry,ā I say, ābut there isnāt anything you could say or do at this point that would convince me to work another day next to you. I wonāt be doing you any favors, Hudson. You disgust me.ā
Oh, god. Here comes the word vomit, rising up my chest with unstoppable force.
āYou walk around like youāre better than everyone,ā I add. āYouāre self-centered. And arrogant. And cold. And inconsiderate. And rude. And youāre delusional if you think youāre going to get me to stick around, so, goodbye.ā
The corner of his mouth smirks, revealing a half-second flash of a dimple that sends an inconvenient and unexpected weakness to my knees. I hate how attractive this man is. And I hate how distracting his looks are.
āCalm down, Mary.ā His voice is low, and when he leans in close, I find myself inhalingāand enjoyingāthe warm, musky scent radiating off his skin. āI know Iām a pain in the ass to work for. Well aware.ā
āThen why donāt you try to change that?ā
āWhy should I? Thereās an entire city full of girls just like you begging to work here. Why should I have to change who I am to accommodate them? Besides, thereās a whole world of assholes just like meāno, worse than meāwaiting on the outside. If my employees canāt handle me, theyāre sure as hell not going to be able to handle the next guy. The way I see it, Iām doing you all a favor. Iām prepping you for the real world.ā
āI refuse to believe bosses like you are the norm.ā
āThen youāre extremely naĆÆve.ā He huffs, his indigo-blue eyes lifting to the ceiling then back to me. āAnyway, three million dollars.ā
āThree million dollarsāwhat?ā I squint at him, not sure where heās going with this.
āIf you agree to help me out, Iāll give you three million dollars. Cash. And then youāll never have to work with this insufferable asshole ever again.ā
Heās got to be joking.
āAside from the fact that youāve officially lost it, Iām not sticking around, not here. Not as your personal assistant. Iām better than this.ā
āIām not asking you to be my personal assistant.ā
āOkay, whatever it is, Iām not interested. I have a degree in business analytics and international marketing with a minor in finance.ā My arms tighten across my chest. Iām not interested in his bait money or whatever the hell kind of stunt heās attempting to pull. āI know my worth, and I know when a job isnāt worth it.ā
āSo you understand that three million dollars is a pretty generous chunk of change, yes? Since you, uh, minored in finance and you know all about ā¦ worth?ā Heās trying to fight a smile, like heās not taking me seriously.
āCan you not?ā I lift my hand to my right hip.
āNot what?ā
āCan you not be so patronizing? It never ends with you.ā
āIāll work on it,ā he says. āIf you stick around.ā
āNo need,ā I remind him. āIām not.ā
āSwallow your pride and agree to help me,ā he says. āYou wonāt regret it.ā
āNo,ā I say with as much conviction as I can drum up. A wave of nausea rolls over me once more, a silent reminder that itās not about me anymore. āWhatever it is ā¦ no.ā
Three weeks ago, after a sexually debilitating dry spell no twenty-five-year-old should ever have to endure, I downloaded one of those stupid dating apps that everyone knows is really only used for hooking up, and I found myself the perfect one-night stand.
I thought I was smart about it. Iām on the pill. He used a condom. All precautionary measures were taken.
He was Ivy League educated, or so he claimed, and he had one of those rich people names, Hollister. His photos were all Nantucket and sailboats and he quoted F. Scott Fitzgerald in his bio. When we met, Hollister was friendly and well-mannered, well-groomed and clean cut. With disarming honey brown eyes and thick, sandy brown hair, he was everything he had shown himself to be. And the night was satisfying enough if not a little boring. But it filled the void and accomplished the mission, and we both went on our ways.
But a few days ago, I happened to pop open my birth control pack and realized I was four sugar pills in with no sign of Aunt Flo. An hour later, Iād purchased an array of tests from the local Duane Reade, never believing in a million years Iād find myself face-to-face with a myriad of blue plus signs and happy faces.
Thatās the day the bottom dropped out.
Hollister was the first person I calledāit only seemed right since he was the father. But his number was conveniently no longer in service. I had no way of getting a hold of him and no way of knowing what his last name was. I even spent hours trying to find him again on the dating app, but it was as if heād just disappeared into thin air.
So now itās just us ā¦
Me and this tiny little life Iām now fully responsible forāon my own.
This weekend Iāll pack up my place, rent a moving truck with whatever credit remains on my MasterCard, and hightail it back to Nebraska. I canāt afford to raise a baby in this city, at least not by myself. And now that I donāt have a job, I canāt afford the rent on my shoebox studio anyway.
āYouāre a fool.ā Hudson watches me sling my purse over my shoulder, and then he eyes the elevator bay in the distance. āWith this money, the right investments and a little time, you could be an extremely wealthy woman. Now youāre going to spend the rest of your life working for assholes exactly like me because you were too proud to say yes to this one little favor.ā
āYouāre planting doubt in my head,ā I say. āYouāre trying to manipulate me. I see through you, Hudson. Always have. Youāre nothing more than a self-serving asshole. You couldnāt shut it off if you tried.ā
āYouāre right. Me and every other man in this city.ā His soft, strong hands slip into his pants pockets and he exhales like a man who shamelessly owns his behavior and makes no apologies. āAnyway, arenāt you curious? Donāt you want to know what I want from you?ā
āNot really.ā My lips bunch in one corner. āYou pay me forty grand a year here, which isnāt really a livable wage in this city I might add. And you work me to the bone. I shudder to think of how much work three million dollars would entail.ā
āCan you act, Mary?ā he asks, ignoring my refusal.
āThatās random.ā
āItās not random at all. Itās pretty straightforward. Stop wasting my time and answer it.ā
āI was in drama club in high school,ā I say, smoothing my hair from my face and pulling my shoulders back like a proud drama nerd. āAnd for a couple years in college. Iāve done community theatre as well.ā
Hudson smiles.
Iāve never seen him full-on smile like this.
āPerfect.ā His blue eyes crinkle at the corner. āI have to have you, Mary. Youāre hired.ā
My jaw hangs. āIām ā¦ what? I didnāt say ā¦ I donāt want ... no.ā
Hudson wraps his hand around my wrist, pulling me just outside the front doors of the office and out of ear-shot of the rest of the office.
āListen,ā he says, voice low. He tightens the space between us. āIām sure youāre wondering what the fuck Iām about to propose and rightfully so. But believe me when I tell you itās going to change your life. And mineābecause Iām a self-serving bastard and we both know that. But itāll be the easiest three million youāll ever make in your life, and when itās all said and done, youāll never have to see meāor work for anyone like meāever again. Itās win-win, Mary. And youād be a damn fool to walk away.ā
I inhale, harboring a breath before letting it go. When our eyes meet, I silently chide myself for remotely considering making a deal with this devil.
Sure, heās impossibly handsome with his chiseled jaw, dimpled smirk, coffee-colored hair, steel blue eyes, runnerās build, designer wardrobe, and genius IQānot that Iāve taken inventory of his assets before ā¦ but none of that is enough to overpower the ugliness that resides beneath his perfect, polished faƧade.
Without saying a word, I turn on my heel and press the call button on the nearest elevator.
āWhat are you doing?ā he asks, voice rushed.
The doors part, and I step on flashing a smirk and shrugging my shoulders. āBeing a damn fool.ā
Wall Street Journal and #1 Amazon bestselling author Winter Renshaw is a bona fide daydream believer. She lives somewhere in the middle of the USA and can rarely be seen without her trusty Mead notebook and ultra portable laptop. When sheās not writing, sheās living the American dream with her husband, three kids, and the laziest puggle this side of the Mississippi.
And if you'd like to be the first to know when a new book is coming out, please sign up for her private mailing list here ---> http://eepurl.com/bfQU2j
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