Henry
HEREâSÂ the thing about businessâyou always make your moves from a place of control.
I never ask a question without knowing the answer first. I never show people what I want unless Iâm assured of getting it.
And I never, ever operate from need.
Needing something is the surest way not to get something. I learned that lesson young.
Which is why it was a good thing those elevator doors opened.
I was enjoying her embarrassment too much. She really was smelling me. Her neck was so pink when I called her on it, her frown so pouty, it was all I could do not to press her to the wall and take that pretty little mouth like a rabid animal.
I cut out another trunk, focusing on getting my shit back together.
Part of Vickyâs genius is that she doesnât add up as a scam artist. Sheâs fun, interesting, easy to be with, pretty. Gorgeous, really, much as she tries to hide it. Sheâs creative. Tenacious.
A weaker man might fall for her, might not care she puts all that goodness to use as a grifter.
She stares down at her tiny tree, inspecting her handiwork. She sets it down and uses the tweezers to make a quick adjustment while the glue is still drying. The tip of her tongue edges out the side of her mouth as she concentrates, peeking just up over the very corner of her upper lip.
If I was a different manâa more gullible manâI might be turned on by that. I might be imagining the taste of that tongue, maybe even the soft rasp of it against my cock.
I get up and go to the window, to the familiar old view, force my mind far away, back to the long afternoons after school in this room with Brett and Renaldo. Dad would be on his jet somewhere and weâd have escaped from this or that bored French au pair and found Renaldo, gotten him to bring us up here. He was running a lot of the operations by then, but he was never too busy to teach us model making. Or heâd take us out to the sites and weâd watch the subs work, tag along while he lorded over the superintendents on building sites across the five boroughs.
Renaldoâs eighty-five now. He canât move around or remember much, but coming to work means everything to himâmore than all the golden parachutes Locke Worldwide can give him, so we have him on models. The trees weâre making took him days. It would crush him to see them down. Heâs frail like that.
I miss those days of getting lost in making the structural bridges and the tiny models. It calms me. I might be a happier person if I could just design, but the company needs me.
I slide the new trunk over for Vicky and her tiny gluing technique. âThatâs a good one,â she says brightly.
I give her a look, like I donât need her compliments on my model-making technique.
She looks back down, chastened.
I watch the rise of her chest, the shift of light on the dark fabric covering her breasts that Iâve spent a lot of time trying not to wonder about.
She forms a kind of kiss as she blows on the drying glue. Does she know sheâs doing that?
Of course she does. Sheâs a grifter. I need to always remember that.
Again the pink tongue tip!
A lot of women lick their lips at meâthe long gaze, the lick of the lips, they have their place. But the most lewd lip lick has nothing on the appearance of Vickyâs pink tongue tip during intense concentration. Her and her witchy little smile and mad tree skills and pink tongue tip.
Hot damn.
She holds it up for me to see, twirling it, inspecting it. âWhat do you think?â
Iâm not looking at the tree.
âWhy did you leave Vermont?â I ask.
âWhat?â
âTwo young girls. Their parents die. Why leave?â It seemed suspicious to me when I read it in the report. âWhy not stay?â
She looks away. âPrescottâs in the middle of nowhere. Very rural.â
âIf I wanted to know that, I wouldâve looked on Google.â
She casts her gaze down; thick lashes sweep over high cheekbones. I sense sheâs hiding something, and Iâm glad. I want her to lie, and for it to be obvious. Something to counteract how nice it is to spend time with her. How much I admire her quiet focus. Her sense of humor.
âSurely you knew people there. You came to a strange city.â
âI didnâtâ¦like it there.â She glues a tiny curl to a new tree.
âWhy?â
She says nothing for a long time. Eventually she speaks. âThis thing happened when I was in high school, and people hated me. Really hated me. Not normal hate but a certain incident got me a high level of hate all through that area. I didnât do anything wrong, butâ¦â She trails off. âIt doesnât matter. It was one of those things.â
Her story has the ring of truth, and I want to hear the whole thing, but I know instinctively that pressing for more will back her off. Is this where her tenaciousness came from? Is it why she chose to scam people out of their money? As a form of payback? There are times when she seems to have a grudge.
âIt must have beenâ¦hard.â
âAlone and hated is a different country,â she says softly.
I watch, mesmerized, as she starts another round of gluing, positioning the branches at the angle of the good trees.
Sheâs silent for a while. Then, âBeing hated, itâs like a burn. It keeps hurting long after. And little things that donât hurt other people sting like hell. Sometimes even sunshine hurts. I donât know why Iâm telling you.â
I know why. Because being in this workshop together feels out of time. A break in the storm.
I shouldnât be empathizing with her, shouldnât be feeling this strange connection to herâsubterranean. Like an underground stream, rushing between us.
She shoves the finished tree into a piece of foamcore and sets it next to the rest of the newly minted trees.
âShould we redo this light pole?â
âProbably,â I say.
She picks up the most torn, most damp one, strategizing.
I grab a flat of balsawood. âThe long sticks are the hardest to cut. Thereâs a trick to it.â I grab a ruler and make two slim cuts, then work the piece off with my thumb.
Her bright eyes meet mine as I hand it over. Itâs here I notice that her eyes arenât just brown; theyâre brown with bits of green in the cracks, like tiny shards of beer glass from different colors of bottles.
âWhat?â she asks.
I tear my gaze away from hers, struggling to tamp down the thundering of my heart. Grifter, I remind myself. Grifter grifter grifter.
The reminder steels me. We set up the rest of it.
âThis looks good.â I kneel and inspect it from the ground the way I know Renaldo will.
She sets her hands on her hips. âYou canât even tell.â
I check it from another angle. âYou canât.â
âAre you going to tell me why itâs so important to have it right?â Sheâs been burning with curiosity about that.
âNope,â I say simply.
âWhat? Youâre just not going to tell me?â
âHmmâ¦â I press my lips together. âNope.â
Her lips part. âJust nope?â
I shrug.
âOh screw off. You think youâre so funny.â She folds her arms. âHenry. All eyes upon Henry, prince of all he sees. Heâs New Yorkâs most eligible bastard! He knows all your names and oh my god, heâs soooo funny.â
âWhat did you just call me?â I ask, biting back a smile.
âYou heard me.â
I tweak a tree, trying not to enjoy our wrong friction and how much she doesnât give a shit.
When I look back up, her focus is on the model. Not on meâon the model. âYou said it would look different if you got your way. If it wasnât so far into the pipeline. How would it be different?â
The question surprises me. Sheâs serious. She really wants to know. âHave you ever noticed how a lot of new buildings create a dead zone around them? Hunks of metal and stone that stop everything?â
âWell, thatâs the point, right?â
âIt shouldnât be,â I say, bending a tree. âI want buildings that arenât a one-sided conversation. Buildings should never feel like walls. They should feel soft instead of hard.â
I look up, expecting her eyes to be glazed over, but instead, they sparkle with curiosity. This little scammer in her librarian getup turns out to be the one woman interested in my shit. âI donât get it. How can you make a building like that?â
Of course, sheâs a maker just like I am. Making her ridiculous dog collars between grifts.
But suddenly Iâm telling her. And suddenly sheâs asking for pictures.
I have my phone out. I show her my favorite building, the Pimlicon in Melbourne. âLook at how porous it is. It doesnât block anything, it doesnât impose its will.â I show her the curved greenery transitions. âSee how it invites and engages?â
She takes the phone, studies the Pimlicon. âLike a dance.â
I go next to her. My skin hums with electricity. âExactly. Something like this would create a sense of place that draws people. The Ten is good for what it is. Locke is going to deliver better than anyone else, but if I had total control Iâd do something vastly superior. Look at the way these structural elements inviteâ¦â I pause, because the way sheâs staring at my face is unnerving.
She looks back down. âWhy design it in the inferior way?â
âItâs a Kaleb project, and heâs protecting our profit. He has a minimum profit-per-square-foot dollar figure thatâ¦keeps things boring.â
I feel her gaze trail across my chest, my hands, like a hot caress. Damn if it doesnât get me hard.
âAnd you want to make something cool,â she says. âScrew the profit.â
âNah. Iâm not running a charity. We can make more money my way.â
Her gaze burns into mine. âYour vastly superior way.â
Teasing words tinged with affection. Suddenly Iâm seeing her for the first timeâthis beautiful, impossible woman who makes a dog throne to mess with me.
Sheâs supposed to hate me, but she wants me.
And hell if I donât want her.
âVastly superior.â My voice sounds husky. âWere I to have total control.â Gently, I close my fingers over hers and unwrap them from the phone. She seems mesmerized by my movements. Her breath hitches.
I slip it into my front pocket and slide my finger along her jawline. I can practically see the shivers sparking along her skin.
I press my knuckle under her chin, tip her face up to mine. Her gaze is incandescent, her breath shallow, like a caught animal.
The kiss lingers in the air between us.
I lower my face and take her lips in mine. I devour her sweet, hot mouth. I donât know anything anymore. Warning bells are clanging and I couldnât give a shit.
âHenry,â she breathes into the kiss. âOh my god,â she breathes. She makes it all one husky, hot-as-hell word. Omigod. The word heats my lips. She hates that she wants me. I hate that I want her.
I pull back and cup her cheeks, ribbon smooth. âYou want to walk away?â I kiss her vulnerable neck, keeping her bared to me.
She gasps as I kiss her again. I nip the edge of her mouth where her tongue sometimes appears.
My IQ has taken a high-speed elevator to the lower level parking garage where cavemen chisel away at their square wheels.
âYou want to walk away?â I repeat. âYou do it now.â I kiss the little bump on her jawline just below her ear. I press my lips to the pulse below her jawline.
I taste the flutter of her heartbeat, taste the power of me reflected in her body.
She curls her hands around my waist.
Dimly I remember this whole thing was supposed to be about ensuring her compliance. Her good behavior.
I donât give a crap about her compliance. I donât want her good behavior. I want her bad behavior. I want her.
I grab her ponytail, holding tight. I can almost pretend to myself that this is me making her comply. Iâll tilt and adjust her head whatever way I want.
I kiss her top lip and then her bottom lip. I take her mouth full-on, every kiss newer and wilder than the last. âVicky,â I whisper against her soft lips.
She pulls away, eyes all fire and challenge. âYou see me walking away?â
In a flash I have her pressed to the brick wall between arched windows, hands sliding over her hips.
Her fingers are like claws, working my shirt out of the back of my pants.
My tongue presses at the seam of her lips. She lets me in with a soft moan.
Finally I get hold of her tongue, that little pink tongue tip. I give it a soft suck.
She groans lightly, pelvis pressing into mine as though her tongue and her pussy need to stay on the same vertical plane. The more I suck, the more she grinds into me.
Sheâs lewd and delicious, and she makes a soft little sound.
I break the kiss and start undoing her buttons, pearly little buttons, one, two, three, enjoying her gaze on my hands, the shudder of her breath.
âSo superior,â she breathes.
Her eyes glitter. âWhen given complete control.â
Our pull toward each other is wrong and strong.
I slow. I donât know when I started thinking our. Or us. Weâre not an our or an us.
The only us for me is Locke Worldwide.
I grew up with the Locke Worldwide logo toy cranes the way other kids grow up with Barbie or Superman. From the cradle I was told stories of the fair play and partnership that the firm was founded on.
And sheâs the biggest threat to the company. A scammer.
I pause. Shake myself out of my lust-filled haze. This is good. Iâm supposed to be seducing her. Wrapping her around my little finger. It just canât be the other way around.
And it wonât be.
Stay in control. Never operate out of a place of need.
I kiss her again.
I give her a smile.