That New York Minute. Abby Gaines

That New York Minute - Abby  Gaines


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stared down at her, her high heels making no impression against his height. “Maybe you’re right.”

      Before she could encourage him further, Tony and Clive joined them. Garrett pressed the remote unlock on his key chain.

      Rachel clambered into the back of the M5, her shorter stature demanding that she cede the more spacious front seat to Clive.

      “Nice car,” Tony said as he settled in next to her.

      “So, Garrett,” Rachel said, as he reversed out of his space, “if this car was a fruit, what fruit would it be?”

      His gaze met hers in the rearview mirror. “A banana, of course.”

      “Useful insight,” she said. “Thanks.”

      His dark eyes gleamed.

      “You do that fruit thing, too?” Tony asked. “What the hell is that about?”

      No one does the fruit thing. It’s Garrett’s idea of a joke. “I used to do it,” she said. “It’s a bit passé.”

      A snort from the driver as he turned out of the parking lot onto Brunswick Pike.

      “Guys, I want to give you some feedback on today’s meeting,” Tony said.

      He was certainly taking this reality TV–style evaluation to extremes.

      “Rachel, Clive, you were both great.”

      “Thanks, Tony,” she murmured. I guess that means Garrett goes home.

      “Garrett, you engaged well with the client. I admit, I don’t get the fruit thing, but it certainly snagged Van de Kamp’s interest. If you can deliver on that stuff, I’m all in favor.”

      “I’ll deliver,” Garrett said.

      Huh? Shouldn’t he be quitting right about now? What happened to Maybe you’re right? Rachel tried to catch his glance in the mirror, but he wasn’t looking.

      “But you were late arriving,” Tony said, “which made us all late for the meeting. And your comment about Rachel’s appearance was out of line.”

      “It was a joke, Tony,” Garrett said. “Rachel knew that.”

      It wasn’t a joke, it was a sabotage attempt mixed up with Garrett’s professional suicide.

      “Did you take it as a joke, Rachel?” Tony asked.

      Industry old-timers like Tony were known to suffer the odd lapse in judgment themselves; Rachel figured he was following up more because he had responsibilities under the New York City Human Rights Law than out of genuine disapproval.

      She opened her mouth to say, Of course, no problem. Because she was a team player, and this wasn’t about her, and anyway, she knew Garrett was playing some game of his own.

      But what game was that, exactly? She needed him to quit.

      Inspiration struck, inspiration she could only credit to the presence of the man who’d accused her of being unable to seize the moment.

      “Actually, Tony, I was uncomfortable,” she said. She stifled a twinge of guilt at the lie. Garrett was the guy who’d told Piers she was trading sex for no breakup, who’d lied about his mother’s death for competitive advantage. If he needed a push to leave, she was happy to help. Who said she couldn’t think on her feet! Feet that happened to be attached to “damn good” legs.

      “What the hell?” Garrett’s outraged expression showed in the mirror.

      Even Tony looked taken aback. It wasn’t as if she was a powerless junior; he knew she relished fighting her own battles.

      “I’m not saying I feel sexually harassed,” Rachel assured her boss. “Not exactly.”

      “Good, good,” Tony sputtered. “Not that I’m trying to discourage you from making a complaint if that’s what you want,” he added, in a confused but valiant attempt at political correctness.

      “For Pete’s sake!” Garrett wrenched the steering wheel to the right as he twisted to glare at Rachel. Clive murmured a protest. Garrett cursed and returned his focus to the road.

      “Oh, no, definitely not,” Rachel assured her boss. “I think it’s just that Garrett has trouble relating to women. Part of his team skills problem.”

      “I don’t have trouble with women,” Garrett said ominously.

      “Just last week Natasha was in the washroom in tears after Garrett told her off.” Rachel didn’t mention Natasha had stuck her mascara wand in her eye at the same time as she mentioned her run-in with Garrett. She was pleasantly surprised how easy it was to be devious when you had the right inspiration.

      Garrett said, “Natasha left the office to check on her boyfriend’s broken foot—”

      “Torn Achilles tendon,” Rachel interrupted.

      “—and completely forgot about the Sheraton pitch,” Garrett growled.

      “On Friday, after our breakfast, Garrett touched Julie on the shoulder,” she reported to Tony. “I could see she was confused about what it meant.”

      “You’re evil,” Garrett said conversationally.

      Rachel picked up on the underlying anger and felt almost sorry for him. But she’d done that once before, in the elevator, and look how he’d played her. And the catch-phrase of his … Do it on your terms … No way would he consent to what she was about to suggest. He’d be out the door, voluntarily, before she could say chicken.

      She smiled beatifically at Tony. “So I’m offering to educate Garrett.”

      “You what?” Garrett snarled.

      “I’m willing to make time to get involved with Garrett’s team,” she said. “To monitor his interactions, particularly with female staff, and advise him how to handle situations better.”

      “She’s kidding,” Garrett said.

      Rachel rather liked that edge of desperation. She knew Garrett would hasten his inevitable departure, rather than have her overseeing him. She’d observed his natural abhorrence for authority. Quit, Garrett, quit.

      “You’ll recall I scored a clean-sweep perfect ten in my team’s appraisals of my management skills,” she reminded Tony.

      “So you did,” he said. “First time anyone’s done that. You’re a good girl, Rachel. Uh, I mean, a smart woman. But do you have time to help Garrett?”

      “Tony!” Garrett near shouted.

      “I’ll make time,” she said generously. “Not for my sake, but for women everywhere.” For a moment, she worried she’d overdone it; in the front seat, Clive’s enormous shoulders shook.

      But Tony appeared to be in the thrall of an image of multiple harassment suits being filed against KBC.

      “Thanks, Rachel,” he said. “That’d be great. You should start right away.”

      “My pleasure,” she said, and meant it.

      Quit, you ill-mannered, manipulative, motherless Shark!

       CHAPTER SIX

      GARRETT TOOK THE STAIRS to his condo two at a time, powered by frustration and a buzz of adrenaline that caught him by surprise.

      Rachel.

      The woman he knew to be as predictable as yesterday’s weather had picked up on his intention to quit KBC, then gone all out to push him into action because it was what she wanted.

      He hadn’t known she had it in her.

      Garrett rounded the second-floor landing and kept going. Sure, it had


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