The night I met Drew Jagger, he’d just broken into my new Park Avenue office. I dialed 9-1-1 before proceeding to attack him with my fancy new Krav Maga skills. He quickly restrained me, then chuckled, finding my attempted assault amusing.
Of course, my intruder had to be arrogant. Only, turned out, he wasn’t an intruder at all.
Drew was the rightful occupant of my new office. He’d been on vacation while his posh space was renovated. Which was how a scammer got away with leasing me office space that wasn’t really available for rent. I was swindled out of ten grand.
The next day, after hours at the police station, Drew took pity on me and made me an offer I couldn’t refuse. In exchange for answering his phones while his secretary was out, he’d let me stay until I found a new place. I probably should have acted grateful and kept my mouth shut when I overheard the advice he was spewing to his clients. But I couldn’t help giving him a piece of my mind. I never expected my body to react every time we argued. Especially when that was all we seemed to be able to do.
The two of us were complete opposites. Drew was a bitter, angry, gorgeous-as-all-hell, destroyer of relationships. And my job was to help people save their marriages. The only thing the two of us had in common was the space we were sharing. And an attraction that was getting harder to deny by the day.
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Sometimes what you’re looking for comes when you’re not looking at all.
-Unknown
DREW
I
hate New Year’s Eve.
Two
hours in traffic to make it not even the nine miles home from
LaGuardia. It was after ten o’clock at night. Why weren’t all
these people at a party by now? Whatever tension two weeks in Hawaii
had relieved was already back to coiling tighter and tighter inside
me as the town car inched its way uptown.
I
tried not to think about all the work I was coming back to—the
endless string of other people’s problems to compound my own:
She
cheated.
He
cheated.
Get
me full custody of the kids.
She
can’t have the house in Vail.
All
she wants is my money.
She
hasn’t given me a blowjob in three years. Listen, asshole,
you’re fifty, bald, pompous, and shaped like an egg. She’s
twenty-three, hot, and has tits so young they almost reach up to her
chin. You want to fix this marriage? Come home with ten Gs in fresh,
crisp bills, and tell her to get on her knees. You’ll get your
blowjob. She’ll get her spending money. Let’s not pretend it was
ever more than it really was. That doesn’t work for you? Unlike
your soon-to-be ex-wife, I’ll take a check. Make that out to Drew
M. Jagger, Attorney at Law.
I
rubbed the back of my neck, feeling slightly claustrophobic in the
back of the Uber, and looked out the window. An old lady with a
walker passed us.
“I’ll
get out here,” I barked at the driver.
“But
you have luggage?”
I
was already exiting the back of the car. “Pop the trunk. It’s not
like we’re moving anyway.”
Traffic
was at a dead stop, and it was only two blocks to my building.
Tossing a hundred-dollar tip at the driver, I grabbed my suitcase
from the trunk and took in a deep breath of Manhattan.
I
loved this city as much as I hated it.
575
Park Avenue was a restored pre-war on the southeast corner of
Sixty-Third Street—it was an address that gave people preconceived
notions about you. Someone with my last name had occupied the
building since before the place was converted into overpriced co-ops.
Which is why my office was allowed to remain on the ground floor when
other commercial tenants were tossed out years ago. I also lived on
the top floor.
“Welcome
back, Mr. Jagger.” The uniformed doorman greeted me as he swung
open the lobby door.
“Thanks,
Ed. I miss anything while I was gone?”
“Nah.
Same old, same old. Peeked in on your construction the other day,
though. Looking good.”
“They
use the service entrance down Sixty-Third like they were supposed
to?”
Ed
nodded. “Sure did. Barely heard them the last few days.”
I
dropped my luggage inside my apartment, then headed back downstairs
in the elevator to check things out. For the last two weeks, while I
was screwing off in Honolulu, my office space had been getting a
total renovation. Cracks in the high, plastered ceilings were to be
patched and painted, and new floors installed to replace the old,
worn parquet.
Thick
plastic remained taped over all of the interior doorways when I
walked in. The little furniture I hadn’t put in storage was also
still covered with tarps. Shit. They aren’t done yet. The
contractor had assured me there would only be finish work left by the
time I returned. I was right to be skeptical.
Flicking
on the lights, I was happy to find the lobby completely done, though.
Finally, a New Year’s Eve with no horrible surprises for a change.
I took a quick look around, pleased with what I found, and was just
about to leave when I noticed a light streaming from under the door
of a small file room at the end of the hallway.
Thinking
nothing of it, I headed to turn it off.
Now,
I’m six foot two and a half, two hundred and five pounds, and maybe
it was just my frame of mind, my not expecting to see anyone, but
when I opened the door to the file room, finding her there scared the
living crap out of me.
She
screamed.
I
took a step back through the door.
She
got up, stood on the chair, and began yelling at me, waving her cell
phone in the air.
“I’ll
call the police!” Her fingers shook as she dialed nine, then one,
and hovered over the last one. “Get out now, and I won’t call!”
I
could have lunged for her, and the phone would have been out of her
hand before she realized she hadn’t dialed the final digit. But she
looked terrified, so I retreated another step and put my hands up in
surrender.
“I’m
not going to hurt you.” I used my best soothing, calm voice. “You
don’t need to call the police. This is my office.”
“Do
I look stupid to you? You just broke into my office.”
“Your
office? I think you took a wrong turn at the corner of Crazy and
Nutjob.”
She
wobbled atop the chair, holding both arms out to regain her balance,
and then…her skirt fell to her feet.
“Get
out!” She crouched down and grabbed her skirt, tugging it up to her
waist as she turned her back to me.
“Do
you take medication, ma’am?”
“Medication?
Ma’am? Are you joking?”
“You
know what?” I motioned to the phone she was still holding. “Why
don’t you push that last one and get the police over here. They can
drive you back to whatever loony bin you escaped from.”
Her
eyes widened.
For
a crazy person—now that I was really looking—she was pretty damn
cute. Fiery red hair piled on top of her head seemed to match her
firecracker personality. Although from the looks of her blazing blue
eyes, I was glad I’d held off on telling her that.
She
pushed one and proceeded to report the crime of entering one’s own
office. “I’d like to report a robbery.”
“Robbery?”
I arched an eyebrow and looked around. A lone folding chair and
crappy metal folding table were the only furniture in the entire
space. “What exactly am I stealing? Your winning personality?”
She
amended her complaint to the police. “A breaking and entering. I’d
like to report a breaking and entering at 575 Park Avenue.” She
paused and listened. “No, I don’t think he’s armed. But he’s
big. Really big. At least six feet. Maybe bigger.”
I
smirked. “And strong. Don’t forget to tell them I’m strong,
too. Want me to flex for you? And maybe you should tell them I have
green eyes. Wouldn’t want the police to confuse me with all the
other really big thieves hanging out in my office.”
After
she hung up, she stayed standing on the chair, still glaring at me.
“Was
there also a mouse?” I asked.
“A
mouse?”
“Considering
you jumped up on that chair.” I chuckled.
“You
find this funny?”
“Oddly,
I do. And I have no fucking idea why. It should annoy the crap out of
me that I come home from a two-week vacation and find a squatter in
my office.”
“Squatter?
I’m no squatter. This is my office. I moved in a week ago.”
She
bobbled again while standing on her chair.
“Why
don’t you get down? You’re going to fall off that thing and get
hurt.”
“How
do I know you’re not going to hurt me when I get down?”
I
shook my head and contained my laugh. “Sweetheart, look at the size
of me. Look at the size of you. Standing on that chair isn’t doing
jack shit to keep you safe. If I wanted to hurt you, you’d be out
cold on the floor already.”
“I
take Krav Maga classes twice a week.”
“Twice
a week? Really? Thanks for the warning.”
“You
don’t have to ridicule me. Maybe I could hurt you. For an
intruder, you’re really kind of rude, you know.”
“Get
down.”
After
a full minute stare-off, she climbed off the chair.
“See?
You’re as safe on the ground as you were up there.”
“What
do you want from here?”
“You
didn’t call the police, did you? You almost had me there for a
second.”
“I
didn’t. But I can.”
“Now
why would you go and do that? So they can arrest you for breaking and
entering?”
She
pointed down at her makeshift desk. For the first time, I noticed
papers all over the place. “I told you. This is my office. I’m
working late tonight because the construction crew was so loud today
that I couldn’t get done what I needed to. Why would anyone break
and enter to work at ten-thirty at night on New Year’s Eve?”
Construction
crew? My construction crew? Something was going on here. “You
were here with the construction crew today?”
“Yes.”
I
scratched my chin, half believing her. “What’s the foreman’s
name?”
“Tommy.”
Shit.
She was telling the truth. Well, at least some of it had to be the
truth. “You said you moved in a week ago?”
“That’s
right.”
“And
you rented the space from whom, exactly?”
“John
Cougar.”
Both
my brows shot up this time. “John Cougar? Did he drop the
Mellencamp, by chance?”
“How
should I know?”
This
wasn’t sounding good. “And you paid this John Cougar?”
“Of
course. That’s how renting an office suite works. Two months’
security, first and last month’s rent.”
I
shut my eyes and shook my head. “Shit.”
“What?”
“You
got conned. How much did all of that cost you? Two months’
security, first and last month? Four months in total?”
“Ten
thousand dollars.”
“Please
tell me you didn’t pay cash.”
Something
finally clicked, and the color drained from her pretty face. “He
said his bank was closed in the evening, and he couldn’t give me
the keys until my check cleared. If I gave him cash, I could move in
right away.”
“You
paid John Cougar forty thousand dollars in cash?”
“No!”
“Thank
God.”
“I
paid him ten thousand in cash.”
“I
thought you said you paid four months.”
“I
did. It was twenty-five hundred a month.”
That
did it. Of all the crazy shit I’d heard so far, thinking she could
get space on Park Avenue for twenty-five hundred a month took the
cake. I broke out in a fit of laughter.
“What’s
so funny?”
“You’re
not from New York, are you?”
“No.
I just moved here from Oklahoma. What does that have to do with
anything?”
I
took a step closer. “I hate to break the news to you, Oklahoma, but
you got ripped off. This is my office. I’ve been here for three
years. My father the thirty before that. I was on vacation the last
two weeks and had the office remodeled while I was gone. Someone
named after a singer scammed you into giving him cash to rent
an office he had no right to rent. Doorman’s name is Ed. Walk
through the main building entrance, and he’ll verify everything I
just said.”
“That
can’t be.”
“What
do you do that you need office space?”
“I’m
a psychologist.”
I
held out my hand. “I’m an attorney. Let me see your contract.”
Her
face fell. “He hasn’t brought it by yet. He said the landlord was
in Brazil on vacation, and I could move in, and he would come back on
the first to collect the rent and bring me the contract to sign.”
“You’ve
been scammed.”
“But
I paid him ten thousand dollars!”
“Which
is another thing that should have tipped you off. You couldn’t rent
a closet on Park Avenue for twenty-five hundred a month. Didn’t you
find it strange that you were getting a place like this for next to
nothing?”
“I
thought I was getting a deal.”
I
shook my head. “You got a deal alright. A raw deal.”
She
covered her mouth. “I think I’m going to be sick.”
★★★★
We hope you enjoyed this extended preview!
Vi Keeland is a native New Yorker with three children that occupy most of her free time, which she complains about often, but wouldn't change for the world. She is an attorney and a New York Times, Wall Street Journal, & USA Today Best Selling author. Over the last three years, eleven of her titles have appeared on the USA Today Bestseller lists and four on the New York Times Bestseller lists. In 2013, she released her first romance novel and never looked back. To date, she has thirteen novels released, with PLAYBOY PILOT also releasing in 2016. Her novels have appeared on #1 on Amazon and are currently being translated into German, Polish, Portuguese, Korean, Hebrew, French and Italian.
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