Chapter 6
6
KATE
E verybody in the back office at The Oyster is nice to me. I got the hang of their software program pretty quickly and the work is easy. I had to do twice as much for less money out in California every day, but in LA I wasn’t hired through the back door by my brother’s best friend.
Speaking of Rory, he’s frustrating me now. I see him about ten minutes every day. The guy’s never home. He’s always working or going out. Part of me wants to ask if I can go out with him and his friends sometime, but that makes me feel like a tag-along, like when I was a kid and he didn’t want me around. Maybe I just wish he wanted to ask me along sometime, get to know me better as an adult. He’s the only family I have left, and it makes me sad that we keep missing each other.
I’m in the employee lounge getting coffee when I get an alert on the group chat for the accounting team. Boss in building .
I turn to Martha who’s right behind me for coffee and raise my eyebrows. “Do I need to run back to my desk before he gets here?”
“Nah, he never comes to accounting. He’ll go to the executive floor. It’s just nice to have a heads up in case you have to go up there for anything.”
“Is he that scary?”
“He can be. But he’s also hot as hell.” She giggles nervously. I nod, because I get it. I also stare at my coffee for a second, dejected, because it might have been nice to say hi and see a familiar face since it’s not like my brother makes time to see me. I feel childish and irritated with myself as I go back to my desk.
I’m reading an email about an office potluck the next week when I sense him.
He steps off the elevator and a combination of expensive peppery cologne and pure sex hits me. My heart kicks up reflexively in response. I shut my eyes for a second and breathe deeply for the sheer pleasure of it. I glance at Martha and notice she’s holding a manila envelope in both hands. I know for damn sure it’s empty. We don’t use interoffice mail—we email or text. It’s stage business, something to do with her hands while she ogles him. She’s a genius, I decide.
He breaks off from the two suits walking with him and heads for me.
“Mr. O’Halloran,” I say.
He gives me a wry half-smile. “I came to see if you’re settling in okay.”
“I am, thank you.”
“You’re liking the job?”
“It’s great. It’s easy, everyone’s nice to me. I appreciate it. But you don’t have to check up on me.”
“I want to,” he says. “It’s a big shift from LA to back home I bet.”
“It is. It’s discouraging to know I failed. I mean, I’m grateful for the opportunity to start over and get my CPA, ride back into California in triumph, that kind of thing.”
“Sure. You’ll be riding in no time,” he says and my heart nearly jumps out of my chest at the double entendre he surely couldn’t have meant.
His gaze heats my blood and makes my breath come faster. I know I’m flushed. His dark gaze feels heavy on my face, my lips specifically. I want to step toward him, go around my desk and meet his eyes, be brazen and forget that the stakes, the rules, the fact that he’s not only my boss, but he’s Rory’s closest friend.
There might as well be an electrified barbed wire fence around him.
Looking at him now, I can almost forget that he’s been on the periphery of my world all my life, picking Rory up in his car while I waved from the front window. My brother’s friend, big and powerful and as out-of-reach as the moon. Handsome enough that I used to sneak pictures of him with my first cell phone—mostly crooked and sometimes blurry because I was trying to hide my spying.
“You okay?” He asks. I snap to attention and realize I’ve been daydreaming.
“Yeah, sorry. It’s just weird being in this position. But I really do appreciate everything you’re doing for me Mick.”
He laughs. It’s such a good laugh, deep and expansive and it twists something in the vicinity of my chest. “I mean Mr. O’Halloran.”
“Mick is fine, Kate.”
“You can call me Katie,” I say. I have to start thinking before words come out of my mouth, because this shit is embarrassing.
“Are you sure? You said in the interview it’s Kate now.”
“It is. Professionally.”
“Well, you’re at the office and I’m your boss. I’m not sure how much more professional it gets.”
“I know I’m at work,” I say, “but Rory still calls me Katie. You might as well.”
“I’m not your brother,” he says, and his deep voice feels warm and crackly when he says it.
“I know that too. Is this a memory test? I may be a nepo hire but I know who you are and where I’m at,” I roll my eyes at him. He is trying not to crack a smile but his eyes, those icy blue eyes I’ve always found so captivating are sparkling a little with amusement.
“You always did have a smart mouth on you,” he says.
“And you always thought you were hot shit,” I say in a low voice, grinning in spite of myself.
“Because I was,” he says matter-of-factly.
I can’t help but laugh. Wishing I could stand here and talk to him all day, I realize I might be sliding into dangerous territory. “Well, you’ve probably got some big meeting here and I’m keeping you from it.”
“They’ll wait for me,” he says nonchalantly.
He’s funny and sexy and I feel my cheeks heat. I probably have banners of feverish bright pink on my face right now. Flustered, I swallow hard. He’s crowding me. He smells amazing and the heat coming off his body is like being too close to the fireplace in winter. I stand there dumbly, unable to form another coherent thought.
“I can take a hint. I’ll let you get back to work.”
“I don’t want my boss thinking I stand around talking all day,” I say.
I sit back down at my computer, aware that he’s standing nearby and watching me. I sit poker-straight and log in to my workstation. After a minute he walks away and I watch him from the corner of my eye, those broad shoulders and that commanding stride.
I let out a breath I didn’t realize I was holding and get back to work.