Manwhore: Chapter 13
Manwhore (The Manwhore Book 1)
Come with me to the Interface inaugural tonight
M.S.
You mean as press?
Rachel
We can discuss when you arriveâOtis will pick you up at 8 p.m.
M.S.
Iâd love to go as press. Thank you for the news opportunity.
Rachel
âSilver is the bomb on you,â Gina says approvingly as I twirl around to get her verdict. She keeps nodding and nodding, obviously pleased. âStunning, Rachel. He doesnât stand a chance.â
âIâm not sure about this dress of Wynnâs, itâs so sexy.â I take in the long, silky curves of my body in the full-length closet mirror. âIf he doesnât stand a chance, neither do I.â I laugh, then fall sober and feel my cheeks go hot.
I remember the way we both couldnât stop kissing the last time we were together, and wonder what heâll do when he sees me in this. The material is sleek, shiny, and cool. Fit for a mermaid, and the fabric clings to my every curve like a manâs lips would, and his hands could.
âWhat do you mean?â counters Gina. âHeâs a playboy. Hello? You donât like that sort of guy. You and I are the smart girls, remember?â
Following the urge to inspect my feet, I then search for my clutch, tucking it under my arm. âI gotta go.â
âRachel!â Gina calls. âJust think of the story. Youâre flesh and bone, but try to leave the flesh and bone, the heart and the woman, home. Take your brain with you, thatâs all.â
I bite my lip and nod, wishing I felt more confident. I need a Malcolm Saint vaccine, for immunity, and I need it now. âWhat are you doing tonight?â I ask Gina.
âIâm going with Wynn and Emmett to watch some movie premiere.â
âOkay, have fun.â
The night is cool and a little rainy as I slip into the Rolls-Royce, the driver shielding me with an umbrella, and my heart flutters when the scent of the carâs leather interior, which I associate with Saint, reaches my nostrils again. Iâve got butterflies in my stomach, my chest, everywhere. I wish I could leave the flutters home.
As the Rolls pulls into traffic, I mentally caution myself against overthinking tonight. Iâm obviously going to pretend we didnât kiss. Definitely that I didnât ask him to. Then I realize Iâve never really had the courage to speak to his driver, so this time I clear my throat and start with, âHowâs your day, sir?â
âGood, Miss Livingston.â
âIt occurs to me we havenât been formally introduced.â
âOtis.â
âNice to meet you, Otis. How long have you been working with Mr. Saint?â I ask, trying to get back into investigative mode.
âIâm sorry, miss, but Iâm not free to say.â
âOh, come on.â I laugh a little, but he doesnât say more.
âDo you transport all his dates around town?â
A shake of his head.
âGive me one, at least,â I insist.
âAll right. No,â he says.
âOnly his businessmen?â
âThat would be Claude.â
I roll my eyes. âHe has several drivers, of course.â
He nods.
âWho do you drive around?â
âUsually? Saint.â
âWhy are you driving me?â
âSaint,â he answers.
âAnd who drove Saint to the event if you didnât drive him?â
âSaint.â
Amusement curls my lips. âHave you known him long?â
He hesitates.
âAll right, so I know I said one. Just give me one more. Your boss is so elusive.â
âIâve known him since he was fourteenâand Mr. Noel hired me to keep him out of trouble.â
Iâm surprised into silence by this.
âOh, I know itâs coming. Fine job I did?â he asks.
âI didnât say that. Everyone knows your boss has a mind of his own. I donât think anyone couldâve controlled him.â
âThe more they tried, the less controllable he became.â He shakes his head. âIâve spoken too much.â He looks up at me in the rearview mirror. âBut he trusts you . . . and I trust his judgment.â
âWhat makes you say he trusts me?â
âHunch.â He shrugs. âComes from knowing him over a decade. First of his girls I get to drive around.â
I blush. âOh, Iâm not one of his girls.â And Iâll never be.
He smiles knowingly and helps me out of the car, and one sumptuous lobby later, I step into the lap of absolute and complete luxury. Water fountain. Glowing crystal chandeliers.
Getting a little more nervous with each step I take, I walk down a long hall outside the ballroom and straight to the press entrance, where I wait my turn to give my name to one of the ladies in charge.
âHi, Rachel Livingston from Edge, please.â
âGood evening, Rachel, let me find you here on my clipboard list. . . . Hmmm. Well . . . letâs see. . . . You donât seem to be under the L. Any middle name under which I can check too?â
When I shake my head, she goes over to one of her coworkers. They whisper for a bit, comparing clipboard pages, until finally, illumination seems to strike the woman I was talking to. Her expression changes from a worried frown to a beaming smile as she scrambles back to me. âOh, well, mystery solved! Youâre with Saint himselfâthis is quite the development!â she whispers excitedly, pointing to the guest entrance. God, really? More flutters.
Pasting a false smile on my face as if Iâm happy about thisâwell, am I?âI walk down a long hall and follow the sound of the music past soaring columns and below vaulted ceilings. I venture deep into the crowd, walking amid his eclectic group of friends and employees. I become aware of the women and how they instantly size me up as competition for Saintâs attention. The men stare too, their gazes appreciative. Iâve got great hair and long legs, and interesting eyes . . . maybe Iâm not a buxom blonde, but Iâve got a great ass. Oh god, look at him. I almost stumble when I spot him at the far end, near a chocolate fountain.
His backside is to meâso impressive, my mouth dries. I can see the definition of his back and arms in the jacket he wears, his black slacks hugging the best male body Iâve ever seen.
Callan points Saint in my direction, and I spur myself forward again as he turns around. His eyes catch mine, and the whole time I approach with uneasy steps, they stay trained on me. His chest goes wide as if heâs pulling in a sharp breath, and I canât breathe.
Heâs in black tie and a devilish suit, his hands at his side. Heâs unsmiling, his jaw tightening when he notices the other men looking at me.
I see the women flanking him, and Iâm hit by a wave of jealousy so deep I tremble.
We kissedâthatâs all. I donât care what he does. Iâm not interested in him in an intimate way, I keep reminding myself. Not in a womanâs way, just a reporterâs.
Heâs just a manâa playboy, womanizer, hell, a manwhoreâand I just need to store all this information and then write an exposé so people can experience what Iâm experiencing.
It doesnât matter that he stands with two women. Theyâre not touching him, but oh, yes, I can tell from their glum expressions that they have before. Heâs used them. And they have used him. But it doesnât matter if people use him, or if people even understand or know the real him, because all I care about is getting this exposé right. Right?
This isnât about me, itâs about a story about the man.
Still, my stomach aches with unfamiliar possessiveness as I stop before him. He looks at me, straight into my eyes, and I look straight into his.
âDid you think you would get away with using the press entrance?â he asks me, lips quirking. Hmm. Heâs got me pegged, hasnât he?
âDid you enjoy not writing my name on the list and making everyone scramble to nearly kick me off the premises before they realized you wrote my name down next to your name?â I tease back, one eyebrow rising.
He laughs in true enjoyment. âExcuse us,â he tells the group, earning me a couple of venomous stares from the women as he takes my arm and slips it into the crook of his and draws me away.
âThatâs quite a dress,â he whispers with a twinkle in his eye, his dark head ducked so he can say it in my ear.
âWhat does that mean?â
He smiles as he leads me to the table where Callan and Tahoe sit, each with a drop-dead-gorgeous girl. Saint pulls my chair out, then sits next to me as the room continues filling up.
âAre all the new Interface employees invited?â I ask him, looking around.
He nods, looking at me intently. âThere are several connecting rooms to fit everyone. This room is mostly for directors and members of the board.â When I only smile, he spreads his arm out on the back of my chair and leans forward so that his voice is all I can hear, not the classical music in the background or the conversation. Just a voice in my ear. âWhy do you insist on labeling yourself press?â
âI am press. I canât delay writing the Interface story anymore, my magazine needs me to turn it in.â
âYou donât need a press badge to catch my attention. Nor do you need a badge to interview me.â
âDo you even lift anymore, Carmichael? Didnât think so,â Tahoe baits Callan at the table. Because Iâm so unnerved and unused to having a manâs attention like Saintâs attention is on me, I try to divert myself with their antics.
âI lift,â he argues.
âHavenât seen that since I last fed my unicorn,â Tahoe drawls.
âItâs true, bro,â he answers.
âSaint, do you mind a suggestion for later?â Tahoe asks as Saint shifts in his seat to face him, the move bringing him closer to me. I instantly sit up straighter.
Saint sips his drink lazily, lips curling. âIâm down for whatever.â
âGood. Because you know what we should do . . .â Tahoe begins.
Saint: âThat always precedes a terrible idea. So naturally, Iâm game.â
âLetâs hit the pool on the top level.â
He chuckles and then looks at me only, his attention drawing my own helplessly back to him. âI like your friends so much better than you,â I say softly, so that only he hears.
In the warm lights, his gaze gleams like something liquid. His voice is quiet. âDo you really?â
âYes. Really.â
Silence. My heart beats fast. He lifts his hand and brushes my hair behind my ear, and my earlobe burns when we hear a woman say from nearby, âSaint, I left my shoes at your place the other day. Can I still tell you about the charity I was hoping youâdâ?â
âMonday at M4,â he says without inflection, his attention fixed on me.
The woman shoots me a look of pure hate, then is gone. I wonder if heâs sleeping with these women. I wonderâ
âAt least I know what they want. My bed or my wallet. Or both,â he says, as if reading my thoughts. His lips twisted adorably at the corners, he studies me. What do you want from me? those eyes ask.
âYou should work out with Saint sometime. Heâd kick your ass, probably. Itâd be fun for you two,â Tahoe tells Callan from a distance.
As Sin looks down at me, I feel his hand slip under the table in search of mine. Thereâs the barest brush of his thumb when he finds my fingers, and then we hear the voice of an elderly man up on the podium.
âLadies and gentlemen, thank you all for coming todayâweâre very excited about the inaugural dinner for the one and only Interface. I know youâre all as excited as I am to be part of this innovative family. And here with us is the genius behind it all, a man known for his edge, wit, and incredible zest for life. I give you, Malcolm Kyle Preston Logan SAINT!â
âIâll be right back,â he whispers, his breath hot in my ear.
Iâm blushing bright red from the touch of his hand, imprinted on my back as he stands and caresses me under the fall of my hair. As he heads for the podium, I canât take the stares coming my way and the way I feel hot under my dress, moist between my legs, so completely affected I decide I canât be with him tonight. I canât sit here and pretend to be his date. Itâs too wrong and itâs too much work for me.
I stand quietly as I hear him greet the crowd in that authoritative voice of his. âGood evening, and thanks for that, Roger.â
As I slip out the entrance and head to where the tables for press badges are set, I spot his assistant Cathy.
âCathy, hi, do you remember me? I met you atââ
âMiss Livingston, of course.â She motions toward the ballroom. âEverything okay with your table?â
âOh, itâs the best table, which is why I really canât sit there. Iâm here as press, you see. Itâs such a misunderstanding, and Mr. Saint is so busy . . .â
Iâm surprised by the way her face basically blooms when I mention him. âI understand,â she says quietly. âI did worry a good girl like you might be concerned about his reputation.â
âNo, I mean . . . well, yes, thatâs exactly why I need my badge. I donât want anyone to get the wrong impression.â
âEspecially him?â She looks at me, and I blush. âI can give you a thousand badges, Miss Livingston, but if he wants you, heâs going to come after you. He does have the patience of a saint when it comes to getting what he wants.â
And youâre in love with him, I think, but say nothing because, thankfully, sheâs printing my badge. âYouâre happy working for him?â I ask.
âI wasnât working at all until I began working for him. He was the only one who would give me a chance.â She smiles and hands me the badge.
Quietly, I head back into the room, and when I hear his voice in the microphone, rushes of electricity crackle down my spine. A wave of applause sweeps the room as everyone claps in excitement.
Standing in the back, Iâm turning my badge over in search of the clip when I realize dozens of heads are swiveling in my direction. Thereâs no more Saint up on the podium.
Because heâs wending his way through the crowd, his wide torso carving a path as he comes straight for me.
âAre you done?â He doesnât sound angry or impatient but . . . almost.
âI . . . yes.â Quickly, I lift the badge and try to attach it to my dress.
He takes my hand in his. âI do love those ears of yours, but they donât seem to hear very well,â he murmurs in amusement. âYou wonât be needing this.â He plucks the badge from my fingers.
âWhat? Why?â
âSaint!â a voice nearby calls. Itâs a member of the media, asking for a shot, which Saint denies with a hand signal.
He then tucks my badge into his jacket pocket and takes my hand back into the crook of his arm. âCome,â he whispers in my ear, already leading me to the side of the room, to the doors that lead out onto a terrace overlooking a golf course. He steps out onto the terrace with me, and only then do I manage to pull my hand from the warm crook of his arm.
âI donât think we should be here. Everybody saw that.â
âSo?â He lifts his eyebrows, and I stand there, at a loss. His eyes gleam in the moonlight, and he looks succulent. Edible. Not just his lips, every part of him.
Slowly, his gaze slides downward. He radiates a vitality that draws me like a magnet. It unnerves me, but something in his voice soothes me. âDo you blame me for wanting you to myself for a few minutes, Rachel?â he asks, his voice husky.
I have a thousand pictures of him, but none like this. The face I see right now isnât for any camera; itâs for nobody to see. Not even me. There is pure, organic, unfiltered emotion etched across his features, roiling in his eyes.
He squeezes my hand to keep me from backing away from him, and then he reels me closer to him, his lips pulling into a smile because I resist a little.
âCome here,â he coaxes, finally managing to make my body loosen up enough for me to go where he wants me. Close to him.
Heâs so magnetic, so beautiful as he looks down at me and brings me close enough to smell him. I imagine reaching out to touch his hard jaw, running my tongue up his tan chest to that laughing mouth.
Iâd give anything to know what heâs thinking. Why heâs smiling like that. There are smiles that just make you want to smile back, but this smile makes you want to kiss it so hard.
Heâs the first to move instead, his hand lifting only a fraction to rest on my face. âYou look gorgeous,â he murmurs, and he brushes my lips with the pad of his thumb. I shiver involuntarily. âI could feast on your mouth . . . even longer than last time.â
âNo, no kissing,â I breathe, but for a second, I let myself absorb the feeling of being close to someone whoâs so much bigger and harder.
He runs his hand through my hair, and the sensation is so sweet and so intoxicating, I stay there. We stay like that.
He obviously knows he affects me. But he looks affected too, his body stonelike and buzzing with tension. Weâre both affected. He brushes the tips of his fingers along the bare back of my dress, the warmth of his hand sending shivers through my body. Weâre in an alcove, and thereâs this intense you-and-me vibe.
Intense you-and-me vibe . . .
âI never do this.â I try to unwind his arms from around me. âGive me back my badge, please.â
âWhat for?â he murmurs, scowling softly.
âI need my badge. Iâm . . . this isnât . . .â
âNo,â he says softly.
âI feel naked without my badge.â
He grins. âItâs still no.â
I groan and turn away, and when I glance at him, heâs looking at me with perfect amusement.
âCan I ask you some questions?â I say, reaching out a fast hand, catching him off guard and pulling my badge out of his jacket.
He laughs when I quickly step back so he canât recover it; then he falls sober and recovers the distance he lost, his steps slow and measured. âDo you want to talk about Interface?â
I feel like Do you want to talk about Interface? has become code for something else.
âYes,â I say primly, clipping the badge to my dress.
He looks at me. âAsk.â He seems pretty content to be interviewed, so I breathe a sigh of relief at last.
âWhat are your goals for Interface?â
He tucks a loose hair behind my ear. My ear burns when he eases back his hand. âTo be number one in the market, leave the competition behind.â
I see him, hear him, his ambition, his determination, and their effects only grow stronger in me.
âDo you . . .â I trail off when he lifts his hand, caressing my cheek with the knuckles of one hand.
âYou never stop working, do you?â he interrupts, scowling a little. âIn that sense, youâre like me.â
I scowl too. âYouâre answering with a question.â
âYouâre not asking the right questions.â
âGod, Saint! Why do you like to tease me so much?â
Laughing, he leans closer, until his face is level with mine and I can smell the soap on his skin. He holds me by the chin with the pad of his thumb and forefinger. âWhy do you blush every time I do?â
âMy skin is white, itâs almost translucent. I blush easily.â
âI only see you blush with me.â
His eyes are both comforting and disturbing, hot and cold, closed off at the same time they seem to be stripping me. âDo you think about me, Rachel?â
âAt work, yes. I think about you in the office. Is that what you wanted to hear?â
âPartly, yes. I think about you in the office too, but I also think about you in bed.â
âSaint, the commissioner would like to speak with you. Miss Livingston, Iâm Dean.â
Iâm so hot right now, Iâm mortified I get to meet Saintâs PR person like this, but I shake his hand nonetheless and try to act calm and collected, not in the least Saint-affected. âDean, oh yes, so nice to meet you.â
Malcolm extracts the badge from my grip. âPress time is over,â he informs me. All the cold has fled his eyes; they look beyond warm, blazing like fireballs as he looks at me. âTake care of her, Dean.â
âI will.â
He goes inside.
Dean and I soon follow.
I ask Dean how long heâs worked at M4, how the hiring process was. Weâre talking about his job, and how impressed I am with Interface, when I spot a familiar face across the room. I stiffen when the hawklike, tiny pointy nose and the long dark hair register in my brain. Victoria?
Her eyes widen from across the room, and she points at me, to my complete and utter horror. She starts charging over.
âRachel?â she calls.
God, seeing a colleague from Edge, one whom I donât trust and one who knows exactly what I am doing here, I did not expect to feel so small.
I brace myself for a second, then I stand to greet her.
Playing the perfect innocent, she seems absolutely delighted as I perform a quick, perfunctory introduction to Dean.
âDean, wow, and youâre Saintâs PR person?â
âVictoria . . . meet me at the ladiesâ? Dean, will you excuse us?â
I try to appear calm and mermaid-like as I start in the direction of the restrooms, keeping my eyes ahead while Victoria walks smugly next to me.
Even the way she walks is like sheâs having sex with the floor or something.
âSaint is absolutely eating you with his eyes. Why arenât you clinging to him, chatting him up?â Victoria says when weâre finally in the ladiesâ.
I make sure that all the stalls are vacant, then go to the sink and open the water.
âIt isnât like that.â
âWhat? It isnât like what? Like that dress isnât begging to be peeled offââ
âShhh!â I glance around at the stalls, checking a second time that theyâre empty.
She follows and inspects every one of them herself. âDonât worry, Iâm not telling. Helen will kill me if this blows up.â
I rub my temples and sigh. âCan you explain to me what youâre doing here?â
âI called a few of my contacts when I heard you werenât on the press list. I wanted to get the deets.â
âThe deets on what, Victoria? Iâm here. This is my . . . Iâm here. And itâs all under control.â
She eyes me dubiously. âOkay. Well then.â She makes a ceremony out of washing her hands, taking forever to pat them dry. Then she checks her makeup. âI suggest you go out there and use your feminine wiles. Youâre a woman, a pretty one. And in case you havenât noticed, every other woman out there is giving Saint come-hither looks but you.â
She leaves.
I stand there, looking at myself in the mirror. Iâve lost all semblance of color from my face. I feel physically ill. Iâm certain that if I walk out there, Saint will see right through me. Heâll know what I want from him, that I want everything including his secrets, and heâll know why I shouldnât have kissed him the way I did at the Interface building. What we did there felt so intimate to me, so . . . so unprofessional on my part, considering what I have to do.
All my insecurities rising to the surface, I call for a cab with my cell. I wait a few minutes, then slip out of the bathroom and find one of the women from the press-badge table.
âCould you please tell Mr. Saint that the woman whose badge he has in his pocket had to leave, she wasnât feeling well?â I ask her, grateful when she agrees.
Outside, my cab is waiting across the street, and I leap over a few puddles and climb inside, the bottom of the dress completely ruined. I thank the driver when I get home, then I pull off my dress and my shoes, slip into my Northwestern T-shirt, and sit on the bed, motionless, thinking and feeling blank and numb.
I never thought I would ever do anything to hurt somebody. I always thought I was on the good guysâ side, on the side of rightness. Seeing Victoria today while I was both working and not working made me see what I am. What Iâm doing.
Iâm a hypocrite. Iâm . . . a liar.
That little game bullies try to make you play when youâre a little kidâif you were forced to kill one to save the other, your mom or your dad, who would you choose? Sometimes in life you have to make a choice like that, a decision so hard you canât make it, you would rather sacrifice yourself. But that still means Edge goes down.
I peer into Ginaâs room, but sheâs not back yet. I go back to my fetal position on the bed and I turn on a local gossip show on television, trying to distract myself.
âTonight at the Interface inaugural, Malcolm Saint speaking . . .â
A snippet from a while ago appears, and my stomach tumbles as if Iâve just taken a steep drop on a roller coaster. The video cuts back to the news anchor and an image of us, Saint and me, as he took my hand and led me to the terrace.
OHMIGOD!
âA young ladyâs early departure is causing confusion among the press; this is the image taken earlier of Saint with her, arousing much speculation as to whether Saintâs got his eye on her. Early word is that sheâs a member of a small magazine in the area but wasnât on the scene as press. First time ever Saintâs been linked to a reporter. It will be interesting to watch future developments.â
âAgreed,â the coanchor says.
âOhmigod!â I turn off the TV, toss the remote aside, and cover my face in my hands. Iâm breathing in and out, in and out, when my cell phone vibrates. Itâs Helen.
Youâre on the news. Vicky texted. Said he looks absolutely hooked? Iâm impressed
I groan, âIâm going to throw up now.â
Sick with self-loathing over my disgusting duplicity, I grab a pillow and bury my head there. I donât answer Helen. I delete her text instead, then I reach for my lifeline, the only thing that has kept me going when itâs gotten rough:
Love you, Momma