: Chapter 14
The Invitation
Our lunch meeting had turned into a party. Robyn, the host of the show, invited her co-host and a segment producer, the head buyer was bringing someone along, and Jack had also decided to grace us with his presence. With so many people, and Stella wanting to bring sample boxes for everyone, I drove to make it easier. My car was parked at a garage a few blocks away from the office, so I left early and told Stella to meet me downstairs in fifteen minutes.
She was waiting in front of the building when I pulled up to the light at the corner. It gave me a chance to watch her without her knowing. Two large flowerpots sat on either side of the main entrance to the office. They were old wine barrels, and Iâd never given them much thought, though I passed them every day, other than to notice that building maintenance changed the flowers out every so often. I watched from a distance as Stella looked around, almost as if to see if anyone was paying attention, and then leaned over. Iâd thought she was going to smell the flowers, but she bent lower and brought her nose to the barrel beneath. Did she just smell the pot?
I chuckled to myself at how nutty she was. Anytime I thought I knew what she was going to say or do, I quickly found my assumption wrong. It was oddly refreshing. Within five minutes of meeting most women, I could guess the salad they were going to order, or that yoga or tennis was their hobby of choice. But not Stellaâthere was nothing cookie-cutter about her.
She stepped over to the flowerpot on the other side of the doorway and again checked to see if the coast was clear before going in for a sniff. Only this time, she didnât bend at the knees. She bent in half at the waist. Which gave me an unobstructed view of her assâher phenomenal freaking ass.
Great. Just great.
I nailed the gas as soon as the light changed and pulled up in front of the building. Iâd brought the boxes downstairs to the lobby before I went to the parking garage, so I got out and headed inside.
âWhy donât you get in since Iâm double parked, and Iâll grab the stuff from security?â I told her as I passed.
âOhâ¦okay.â
After I finished loading the trunk, I slammed it shut and waited for traffic to slow enough so I could open the driverâs side door and get in without being clipped.
âThank you for taking care of that,â Stella said.
âOf course.â
I buckled. âWe have an hour before we have to be at the restaurant, but itâll probably take us almost that long with this traffic.â Looking over my shoulder, it took a while before there was a gap in the cars big enough to pull away from the curb.
Stella sniffed a few times. âIs this brand new?â
My car was actually three years old, but it looked new since I didnât drive very much.
âItâs a few years old.â
âIt still has that new-car smell.â
âOh yeah? Do you like that smell better than the flowerpots outside the office?â
Stella sighed. âYou caught that, huh?â
âI did indeed.â
âI was curious if they were actually aged barrels once used for wine.â
âWere they?â
âIâm not sure. All I could smell was dirt.â
I smirked. âLarge quantities of soil tend to smell that way.â
âWhat kind of a car is this? The interior is so pretty.â
âItâs a Maybach S 650.â
âIs that an impressive car?â
âI donât know. You tell me. Are you impressed?â
She smiled. âNot really. I donât drive, so I donât know too much about cars.â
âYou mean you donât have a car because you live here in the City?â
âNo, I mean I donât have a driverâs license. I had a permit once, and my ex tried to teach me years ago, but I hit a fire hydrant rounding a corner and, well, that was the end of that.â
We inched our way uptown slowly. At one point, a car came out of nowhere and cut me off, so I had to slam on my brakes. Stella and I both had our seatbelts on, so we were fine, but her purse flew off the seat and dumped onto the floor. It landed upside down, and when she went to pick it up, the contents spilled all over the place.
âSorry about that,â I said.
When she leaned forward to collect her belongings, I noticed the box with the diary from yesterday.
âMy ex-wife used to write in one of those every once in a while. Iâd find her writing in it after we argued. Pretty sure all she did was bitch. Isnât that mostly what people use that for? To vent?â
âSometimes theyâre like that,â Stella said. She straightened the book in its box and put the top back on. âIâve gotten a few of those. The seller usually posts some screenshots of pages to give you a sample. That helps me rule out a lot, but occasionally you canât tell from just a short excerpt.â
âHave you started reading Nicoâs secrets?â
âItâs Marco, and yes, I did.â
âWellâ¦how was it?â
Stella sighed. âI read almost half the diary in one night.â
I laughed. âThat good, huh?â
She held her hand to her chest. âHeâs in love with an older woman. Amalia is nineteen years his senior and the librarian for the small village they live in. Heâs a grape farmer. She thinks itâs just infatuation and will pass, but he sounds like heâs head over heels for her. Heâs thinking about bringing another woman around, hoping to spark some jealousy to make her admit she has feelings for him, too. But Iâm worried itâs going to backfire and push her further away.â
âI think Amelia, or whatever her name is, is probably right. Marco is just a horny kid. Itâll pass. Every young guyâs fantasized about a hot librarian at some point. Heâs not in love with her. Heâs in lust.â
âYou didnât even read the diary. How can you know how he feels?â
I shrugged. âMost relationships end up in the same place anyway.â
âSomeoneâs extremely cynicalâ¦â
âIâm not cynical; Iâm a realist. Even if they get together, what do you think the chances are that a guy at forty isnât going to be looking elsewhere when his librarian bride is sixty?â
âNot when he loves her as much as Marco loves Amalia.â
I scoffed. âIt all starts out as fun and gamesâ¦â
âWhatever.â
âYou said your ex was sleeping with someone else. And yet you still believe in fairytales?â
âJust because Iâve been burned doesnât mean I donât believe in love. I was devastated when Aiden and I broke up. It took me a long time to move on and find happiness again. Heck, Iâm still working on finding my happiness. But one of the things that keeps my spirits up is to believe weâre all meant to have a happily ever after. Mine just wasnât supposed to be with Aiden.â
My eyes flashed to hers and then back to the road. âWhatever you sayâ¦â
âIf youâre so bitter about relationships, why did you ask me out?â
âDo I have to stay celibate just because I donât think everything ends in hearts and roses?â
âOh.â She rolled her eyes. âSo you just wanted to get laid. Iâm glad we cleared that up. I actually prefer to get to know someone and spend time with him, in addition to physical intimacy.â
âDonât put words in my mouth. I enjoy spending time with a woman, too. Sometimes we just have different expectations of where things will end up.â
Stella shook her head. âYou know what you need? To try my happiness system.â
âYour happiness system?â
Stella nodded. âI knowâit needs a better name.â
I grumbled. âI can think of a few.â
âI heard that, but Iâm choosing to ignore it. Anyway, when I was struggling and feeling grumpy all the time, I made a list of things that make me happy. Small thingsânot things that were out of my reach and difficult to accomplish. For example, I try to give someone a compliment every day. That might not seem like much, but it causes you to find something good in at least one person each day. After a while, it helps change your mindset. Another thing I do is set aside ten minutes to meditate each morning. I also watch the sunrise or sunset at least once a week. And I try to do something Iâve never done before every single weekend.â
I smirked. âIf you need help doing someone youâve never done this weekend, just let me know.â
She rolled her eyes. âSomething, not someone.â
I chuckled. âOur happiness systems must work a little differently.â
Traffic had lightened up, and we were already halfway to the restaurant. âAs riveting as this conversation is, why donât I fill you in on the network before we get to lunch? Weâre going to be at the restaurant soon.â
âI already read up.â
âOkay, then. Tell me what you know.â
Stella proceeded to rattle off facts about the ownership of the network, statistics on the types of products they sold, which were their best- and worst-performing items, and the qualities they looked for in partners. Then she detailed personal and professional information on both the host and co-host. Sheâd done more homework than I had.
âYouâre thorough,â I said.
âThank you.â
We stopped at a red light, and Stella shifted in her seat. She uncrossed her legs and re-crossed them in the opposite direction. It had been innocent enough, likely done in an effort to get more comfortable since weâd been sitting in the car for a while now, but the way my eyes ogled her bit of exposed thigh was anything but innocent.
Happiness system. A little leg worked for me. Why did women always have to overcomplicate shit?
Who was the woman Iâd sat next to at lunch?
The same woman whoâd spent fifteen minutes telling me all the details of a garage sale she went to at age twelve when all Iâd asked was how sheâd gotten into reading used diaries, the same woman whoâd been sniffing barrels just a few hours ago, had morphed into an astute businesswoman. Rather than ramble on with stories, she listenedâreally listenedâand quickly found the hot button for each of the key players at lunch. Then she subtly steered the conversation to those areas when she spoke. Sheâd had the network bigwigs eating out of the palm of her hand. Robyn Quinn even invited her to a womanâs leadership luncheon to talk about how she took an idea and made it into an innovative business.
The valet brought my car around first, so I shook hands with the group. Stella got hugs from the women. Once we were back on the road, she looked over at me.
âSoâ¦go ahead. Tell me what I did wrong.â
I glanced at her and back to the traffic ahead of me. âWrong? What makes you think you did something wrong?â
âYouâre quiet.â
âSo?â
âYou usually get all quiet and do this staring-at-me thing before you say something snarky. But youâre driving, so your eyes are stuck on the road.â
âActually, I was thinking about how well lunch went. You did a great job. I mightâve made the introduction, but you sealed the deal.â
From my peripheral vision, I saw Stella blink a few times.
âWas thatâ¦a compliment? Are you giving my happiness system a test run?â
We stopped at a light, so I looked over at her. âDefinitely not. Though I am capable of giving them when due.â
Her lips curved to an adorable smile. âI was good, wasnât I?â
âI already gave you one compliment, letâs not go fishing for another so soon.â
She laughed. âAlright. I guess Iâll take what I can get.â
Three days later, my assistant buzzed in to my office. âJack Sullivan is on the line for you.â
âThanks, Helena.â
I leaned back in my chair and picked up the phone. âI know I still owe you a beer, but itâs only eight in the morning.â
Jack laughed. âLike we havenât had beer for breakfast before.â
I smiled. âThat was a lot of years ago.â
âSpeak for yourself. You didnât go to Frankâs bachelor party a few months ago.â
I chuckled. âWhatâs going on?â
âI have some news that should get you big points with your little girlfriend.â
I knew exactly who he was referring to, yet I said, âThereâs no woman in my life at the moment. Plus, if there was, I wouldnât need your sorry ass to help me earn points with her.â
âSo you must not want to hear the news thenâ¦â
âSpit it out, Sullivan. Whatâs up?â
âThereâs good news and bad news. The good news is, the new Steamer-Beamerâsome sort of contraption that lets you get the wrinkles out of your clothes while wearing themâcaused second-degree burns on one of our producers.â
âSomeone you work with got burned? Thatâs the good news? I hate to hear the bad news.â
âObviously itâs bad news for that dude. But itâs good news for you. The Home Shopping Channel had to yank the Steamer-Beamer from its scheduled spot, and that means they have an opening for a product with some immediate air time.â
âOh yeah? Think Signature Scent might have a shot?â
âBetter than a shot. Spotâs yours if you can be ready faster than you originally planned.â
The launch was set for nine weeks from now, but we could definitely speed things up a bit if needed. âNo problem. When would we need to be ready?â
âThatâs the bad news. Youâd have to be ready next week.â
âNext week?â I shook my head. âThatâs impossible.â
âWell, the show would film then. It would air the following weekend. But they quote two to four weeks for shipping. So youâd have some time to get the goods out the door.â
I blew out a deep breath. âI donât know if we can move things up that much.â
âHave I mentioned the volume theyâre forecasting?â
âNo, what are we talking?â
It took a lot to make my jaw drop, but the number that came out of Jackâs mouth left me catching flies.
âJesus. Thatâs more than we anticipated selling the entire first year.â
âWomen eat up the products they hawk on that channel. Robyn needs an answer within an hour. If you canât do it, she has a list of anxious people with products who can. So you better figure that shit out.â