Read Conflict of Interest Online
Authors: Allyson Lindt
Scott gestured to one. “Have a seat.”
She sat across from them, mentally summoning the appropriate version of her pitch for the intimate setting and planning marketing and media visuals to pluck from her bag when the time was right. She told her nervous energy to stop, that this was just any other presentation. But it wasn’t listening.
She exchanged a few more pleasantries and then dove into her pitch. The impassive faces staring back at her were unnerving, but she’d been through it before. Potential clients who thought they had the perfect poker face and wouldn’t let on whether or not they were impressed until all was said and done.
She explained who her clients were, some of the better-known executives she’d worked with, everything she knew from heart but could make sound enthusiastic and genuine.
And then Scott laid his arms on the table and dropped his forehead on top.
Zach elbowed him.
Scott jerked upright again, one eyebrow raised, and slumped back in his seat.
Kenzie clenched her jaw but kept talking. Part of her wanted to walk out right then. There was no way she was getting—or wanted—this contract, but pride wouldn’t let her give up. She had to at least put on a good show.
*
“Blah, blah, blah.”
That was all Scott heard. He watched her talk, pink-glossed lips accentuating every word with perfection. He struggled to keep his expression neutral as his thoughts drifted to what she could do with those amazing lips.
Like every other person they’d seen that morning, she was reciting a bunch of meaningless tripe that only made sense if someone wasn’t paying attention.
Which, at that point, he was trying not to do. She looked good, though. Her suit highlighted every curve at least as well as her jeans had. He could still feel her slender figure under his hands. Hear her breathing, her gasps. He blinked and shook his head, forcing the memories away, and tried to focus on the presentation again.
But it wasn’t as much fun as the fantasies. This professional version of her was everything he’d been afraid she was before they’d talked. He dropped his head into his arms.
Zach elbowed him sharply.
Scott rolled his eyes, leaned back in his chair instead, arms crossed, and exhaled. “Is there a reason you haven’t kicked this one out yet?” he whispered.
“I’m sorry, is there a problem, gentlemen?” Ice lined Kenzie’s question.
Zach’s lips drew into a thin line.
“Not at all. I was hoping you could answer a question for me.” Scott gave her his biggest grin.
Her smile didn’t look as happy. “Of course.”
He’d asked everyone else the same thing and had yet to get a satisfactory answer. “Tell me something about your company we can’t get off the website.”
She paused, her fingers twitched on the table, and then her smile slid back into place, and her blue eyes locked on his. “We go above and beyond to get the job done. We can make even the most dysfunctional couple look like happily-ever-after to the press, if that’s what’s required.”
Scott blinked. He hadn’t been expecting that. She didn’t mean him and her, right? Talk about conflict of interest. His eyes never left Kenzie’s. “Good to know, but not what we’re looking for. I’m sure you saw that when you prepped, and I can tell you’re well-prepared.”
A hint of pink crept over her face, and her cheeks relaxed, smile becoming more genuine.
So the person he remembered was still in there under the ice. The right compliment could win the professional her over. “Let’s try this again. What can your company do for us? What, out of this vast sea of boredom that is destined to be the rest of my day, do you bring to the table that no one else does?”
“Me.” There was no hesitation in her reply.
Good point. She was exactly what he wanted.
“Excuse us.” Zach grabbed Scott by the arm and yanked him into the hallway. “What’s the deal with her?”
“We like the same kind of coffee.”
Zach shook his head and tugged on the door, latching it shut. “Did you meet her at The Roasting Company or something?”
“Yup.” Scott let more of the memories tickle his thoughts. “But that’s not the point. It doesn’t matter that she’s hot. Whatever happened was two days ago and completely irrelevant.”
“So something did happen. That’s why she’s been half glaring at you, half swooning, since she walked in.”
Had she been swooning? Scott grinned. “Maybe.”
Zach exhaled loudly and rolled his eyes. “Swear to me you won’t use whatever it was as an excuse to make this entire thing not work.”
Scott was tired of the badgering. Not that he had any intention of cooperating with anyone they brought on. “You’re not honestly thinking of hiring her, are you?”
Zach smirked. “She’s exactly what you need.”
Scott bit back a growl. “I almost slept with her.”
“Almost isn’t worth anything. You’ll find an excuse for every single person we bring in. At least her, you talk to. She came highly recommended, and it’s obvious she’s good at what she does.”
Scott rolled his eyes, but he wasn’t as disappointed as he expected to be. At least she’d be a fun distraction, and maybe he could get her to forget work long enough to finish what they started. He kept his creeping excitement from his voice. “Fine.”
Zach was already heading back down the hall. “Let her know. I’ll cancel the other appointments. We’ve got better things to do.”
Scott couldn’t hide his pleasure as he slipped back into the room and took the seat across from Kenzie. “Sorry about that.”
“No problem.” Her demeanor didn’t give anything away.
That sucked; he was going to have to change that. Professional and prepared was one thing, but unyielding was completely unacceptable. Maybe acknowledging the elephant in the room would help. Besides, if he couldn’t make her smile genuine… He wanted to see that flush again.
He leaned in, hands clasped and resting on the table, and voice low but distinct. “Saturday was killer, and I’m sorry I had to cut things short.”
Her brow creased, voice flat. “Of course.”
So much for breaking the ice. He leaned back. “I see. Am I the only one who enjoyed myself?”
A waver disrupted her stern tone. “Mr. McAllister—”
“Scott,” he corrected her.
She barely paused. “As far as this presentation is concerned, those two people in that coffee shop are not the same as the two people sitting here. Or at least one of them isn’t. If you’re not interested in my services—my publicity experience—then I’m not sure why you’re wasting my time.”
Still not afraid to speak her mind. Still absolutely intriguing. “I never said I wasn’t interested.”
“No, but your demeanor through the entire meeting did. I’m not surprised you’re looking for outside help, but you’re going to have to be ready to change before it will do you any good.”
There was nothing to change, but the conversation would be over if he told her that, and he wasn’t ready for it to end. “And you’re the person who could help me do that if I were to admit I had a problem?”
“I could be. As long as you understand if anyone were to think you hired me because of what may or may not have happened between those two people who weren’t us, it would devastate my career. I’m not interested in that.”
Wow she was tough. That was sexy. And mildly irritating. “So no kissing and telling. I can do that.”
“You’ve already told your business partner.”
He glanced behind him at the closed door. “Zach doesn’t count, he knows everything about me. And apparently he thinks that gives him license to choose my keeper for the next few months. The job is yours if you’re not afraid of the challenge.” He couldn’t help slipping the last line in. Something told him she was exactly the opposite of afraid of challenge. That she’d jump on the chance.
Her mouth twisted in thought. “I’m in on one condition.”
Damn that was a good look for her. “I assume there will be several conditions. Put it in the contract and we’ll negotiate.”
“You may not want this in the contract.” She brushed an invisible strand of hair from her face. “The blonde in the lobby—your girlfriend or his?”
He studied her, curious about the question. “You’re jealous?”
Her flush grew. “Hardly. I understand you’re doing this for business reasons, but frequently that intersects with people’s personal lives. I don’t care what you do in your spare time as long as you keep it out of the news, but if you’re dating someone who doesn’t know how fast and loose you play with other women, I need to know if that has to be spun in a positive light when she finds out and dumps you.”
Wow, okay, he hadn’t expected that. He bit back a chuckle when he realized she was serious. He’d wanted to make the conversation more pleasant, not less so. “First of all, fast and loose? You approached me. Second, I’m two hundred percent single.” He drummed his fingers on the table. “Rae’s not my girlfriend, she’s Zach’s fiancée. We’re close, but I swear on my next game not crashing and burning at release that we’re just friends.”
She tilted her head to the side, studying him for a moment. It accentuated her neck. Soft, kissable … yeah, this was going to be fun.
“All right. You’ll have the contract this afternoon. As soon as it’s signed, we can talk,” she said.
He couldn’t hide his grin as he stood. “Looking forward to it.” Keeping his investors happy, being able to skirt their lame-ass edict, he was definitely looking forward to it.
Had it really only been twenty-four hours since her sales pitch? At least Scott had been serious about bringing her on fast. And she still couldn’t believe he’d hired her in the first place. Her company had sent the contract over before lunch the day before, and he’d signed and returned it early enough to insist she start on Tuesday.
And here she was. Kenzie smiled at the receptionist as she approached the front desk. Her stomach was doing somersaults at being back in their offices, memories of the weekend before still teasing her. But work was work. “Is Mr. McAllister in?” She’d seen his SUV in the parking lot—part of the reason her imagination was running wild—but there was no reason to let anyone else know that.
“I’ll tell you one more time. Call me Scott.” He strode around the corner, pausing with an eyebrow raised when he saw her.
The way his gaze raked over her sent a rush of anticipation through her veins. She clenched her jaw, trying and failing to ignore the reaction.
A crooked smile played on his face before vanishing, and he brushed past her. “You’re here for the day, correct?”
He was walking away from her? She spun and followed him toward the elevator, letting the confusion show in her voice “Yes.”
“Nothing important or outstanding vying for your attention?”
“Only if you consider getting to know you important.” She stared at his back.
“I hear it is sometimes.” He pushed the down button. “That means I can get some actual work done. Are you coming?”
“I, uh…” She stepped into the elevator with him, not sure what to make of the abrupt attitude. “Apparently.”
He was wearing jeans and a Hulk T-shirt. He glanced at her, and then went back to staring at the blips of light counting down floors as they descended. “I told you, casual office environment.”
“This is what I wear to work. You’re going to have to learn to do the same.” The fragmented conversation made her stumble, but she wasn’t going to let him take verbal control.
“I doubt I’d wear the skirt as well as you. What are the odds you have sneakers in your car?”
“Pretty good.” Or at least she’d regain control as soon as she figured out what they were talking about. They stepped into the parking garage she’d left only moments earlier. “I suspect you already know this, but we’re moving away from your office.”
“Grab them.”
She bit back a snarl at the order, and took her time strolling two rows over to her car to grab her running shoes. What had happened to the man who didn’t seem capable of taking anything seriously?
He waited by his SUV, patiently holding her door, not saying anything else until they were both inside. “We only have a couple more hours of good light. After eleven or twelve, it turns to shit.”
Maybe he was actually going to try and make this publicity thing work. The language was going to have to go. She made a mental note. “The lighting where?”
Harsh sun assaulted her when they pulled into morning traffic, and she dropped her sunglasses into place. Within a couple of minutes he had maneuvered them out of the downtown pack of cars, and they were heading in the opposite direction of the last of the straggling commuters.
“The beach.” He merged onto the interstate, heading west toward the airport. “You can play twenty questions with me along the way.”
None of this information was helping. “I’m not dressed for the beach because, even if I wasn’t expecting to be in an office today, we’re in Salt Lake. No beaches.”
His expression cracked, and he laughed. “Sorry, I can’t keep a straight face any more. This whole ‘I’m too important and busy to be polite’ thing doesn’t do it for me. How do you even pull that off? Is it like a switch—on is flirty and fun Kenzie, and off is carrying the weight of the world in her laptop bag?”
The question dug deeper than she wanted to admit, mingling with the accusations of Riley’s she still hadn’t been able to forget. At least he hadn’t called her frigid. She flopped her head back against the seat and exhaled. “It’s not a switch, but the situation is different now. Why are we going to the … beach?”
He kept his attention on the road, still grinning. “Okay, I’ll concede there are no crashing waves, and you probably don’t want the sand between your toes, but it’s a lake, and I think that means the land around it qualifies as a beach. I’m drafting out a location in a game, and I need pictures, visuals, and a hands-on experience.”
At least he hadn’t pushed the other issue. “That doesn’t sound like an executive’s job. Why don’t you have someone else do it?”
He spared her a glance, brows raised in disbelief. “For the same reason I do game testing. If I surrender my favorite parts of work just because someone sticks a nameplate and a title on my office door, what’s the point of being in charge?”