Home > Unwrap Me (Stark Trilogy #3.9)(13)

Unwrap Me (Stark Trilogy #3.9)(13)
Author: J. Kenner

My door bursts open. “I’m totally out of deodorant,” Jamie says. “Do you have an— Oh, shit. Oh, fuck. Nicholas!”

I toss the blade onto the ground and whip the bedspread over me the instant she barges in. But it doesn’t matter. She sees it all.

“What the hell?” Jamie’s voice is soft, but fierce, and she kneels in front of me, her hands on my knees, her expression earnest as she looks into my eyes. “How long, Nikki? How long have you been doing this?”

I can barely see her, and I realize that I’m crying. “I haven’t. I swear. But today—” I wipe my eyes violently.

“Because everything is off-kilter? Like you were just saying?”

I nod.

“Oh, man. Oh, Nik.” She climbs up onto the bed beside me and pulls me close. “Don’t do that. You scared the crap out of me. You don’t need that. You’re better now. You’ve been better. Just talk to me. Okay?” She pulls away and looks into my eyes and the fear I see there is enough to make me agree to anything. “Okay?”

I nod. “I’m sorry. I don’t know what’s wrong with me today.”

Her shoulders sag. “It’s the holidays. Everyone goes nuts over the holidays.”

I nod. Maybe she’s right. Maybe that’s it.

“Don’t tell Ollie,” I beg. I don’t want him to worry that this is because of him.

“Cross my heart. But, damn, Nik, if you do it again—”

“I won’t. I swear I won’t. Take it. Just take it the hell away.”

She does. Right then and there she drops to the floor to get the knife, then puts the case back together and holds on tight to it. That’s how I know just how much I’ve freaked her out. And I really am sorry—so damn sorry—but that doesn’t change the fact that I’d needed it.

“We really are going to be late if I don’t go shower,” I say as I stand up. “Deodorant’s on the rack inside the closet,” I add, then hurry out of the room. Because, honestly, I can’t get out of there fast enough.


“It’s a great opportunity if you can swing it,” Lisa Reynolds says as she digs into her waffle. We’ve met at Du-par’s in Studio City, just down the street from the office condo that she’s suggesting I buy. “And we already know you like the place.”

“I love it,” I agree. I’d met Lisa over a year ago when I’d lost my job at C-Squared and decided to try and make my own web and app design business a reality. I’d answered an ad for office space, and met Lisa, a business consultant who was trying to sublet a property for a client. She’s about as native as Angelenos get, having moved from China when her parents adopted her at the age of three. She’s funny and energetic and even though I couldn’t afford the space, she and I and Jamie became friends, and we’ve been doing regular Wednesday happy hours for months now.

“But you know I can’t afford it,” I remind her.

“I have a thought about that, too,” she says. “I think we should pitch your web-based note taking app to Stark Applied Technology.”

I gape at her. “Seriously?”

Lisa’s fiancé, Preston Rhodes, is the head of acquisition at the lucrative company, a division of Stark International, which is one of the most profitable corporate conglomerates in the world, headed by one of the wealthiest men in the world, Damien Stark.

I’m not a follower of high finance, but since I haven’t lived in a cave my entire life, I know who Stark is—a man who made a fortune as a professional tennis player, then parlayed his winnings and his talent into business. He’s exceptionally easy on the eyes and has a reputation as both a brilliant businessman and something of a bad boy, with the tabloids often doing Stark-watch, a pictorial account of whatever woman happens to be on his arm that particular week.

I’d actually considered applying for a job at Stark Applied Technology after I’d gotten laid off. But I’d talked myself out of it, deciding to give working for myself a try instead. I’m glad I did, too. I like the freedom and the challenge. And even though I’m not exactly raking in the big bucks, I’m doing well enough.

Not, however, well enough to buy an office condo.

“Do you really think Preston would go for it?”

“Why wouldn’t he? It’s brilliant. And it’s the kind of thing the company could really use. Hell, you could license it to all of the Stark companies. That kind of a deal would give you enough income to get the condo.”

“You think?”

Lisa slides a piece of paper toward me, and my eyes go wide. “You drew up a spec licensing agreement? And a P&L?”

“Which is mostly on the P-for-profit side,” she says, “since you’ve already got the product and your overhead is fixed.”

I glance at Jamie, who gives me a tiny, excited nod. “Okay, then,” I say. “What have I got to lose?”

“Not a thing,” Lisa says. “And, actually, I didn’t really tell you everything.”

I was about to take another bite of my omelet, but now I lean back in the booth. “Oh?”

She clears her throat. “As your business advisor, I sometimes have to strike when the iron is hot, and with the condo on the market now I figured there was no time to waste, and so—well, I already pitched it to Preston.”

“Lisa!”

“And he loves it.”

“Seriously?” I’m not sure if I should be thrilled by the news or irritated that she went behind my back. Since I’m ultimately pragmatic—and since pragmatic small business owners do not scoff at possible licensing agreements with major international companies—I settle on thrilled. “He really likes it?”

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