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Authors: Cathy Yardley

One Night Standards (9 page)

BOOK: One Night Standards
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“Mark?” she whispered.

He pulled himself away enough to look at her. Her eyes were luminous, her face placid. “You okay?” he whispered back, pushing a stray curl out of her face.

She smiled back, full of invitation and happiness and desire, shocking him. His body, which he felt had surely shorted out after such an intense experience, started the first stirrings of desire.
So soon?

“This,” she murmured, kissing him as if to punctuate her point, “is why I said yes.”

He nodded. “And that's why I wanted you to,” he responded.

“Mark…in case we never do this again,” she said, and the very words caused a pang in his chest, “we'd better make tonight worth it.”

He rolled off her, but refused to release her, stroking at her sweat-moistened skin with his fingers.

“I'll do my best,” he promised, and then proceeded to do exactly that.

4

“Y
OU
'
D BETTER LET ME DO ALL
the talking,” Carol reminded Mark for the fortieth time.

Mark sat in a large conference room at a hotel in Vegas, getting ready for the first big Marion presentation. Carol, when not reminding him that she was the one in charge of the presentation or letting him know “how particularly important this meeting is,” was muttering over her slides, practicing as if she were some kind of Shakespearean actress. Despite his best efforts, she'd managed to veto most of his suggestions and had what was possibly the world's most boring presentation. She'd only made the barest of mentions as to what sort of products they'd be designing for Marion & Co., focusing more on showing Marion & Co. that Trimera traditionally sold well for them.

Which wasn't the point at all.

She was allowing him there to keep her promise to Roger and Simone, which irritated the hell out of him. Still, he'd prepared as diligently as he could. He'd even developed a short bullet-point presentation of his own in case he somehow got the opportunity to speak.
Say, if someone decided to drop a house on Carol.

He grinned. It was unkind to think, but after all her dismissive remarks, he didn't really care too much.

Carol and he were early at arrive to the conference room. The huge cosmetics convention was being held at the Monte Carlo, a posh hotel on the strip in Las Vegas. The room was elegantly appointed, and they were still setting up. He saw Mrs. Marion's assistant—Lily, if he recalled correctly—placing easels on either side of the room, one labeled Trimera and the other labeled Diva Nation.

Stupidly, his pulse picked up.

Maybe it's just as well I'm not speaking today.

He had promised Sophie that their last encounter would not affect the competition between their two businesses whatsoever. He was intent on keeping that promise. What he hadn't known then was how much he'd be thinking of her when they weren't together…. And how distracting thinking of her could be. The slightest thing would set him off into a fugue of fantasy. The midnight-blue shade of one of their skin-care boxes reminded him of her lingerie. The slight waft of sandalwood and rose from a candle in a store left him reeling with the memory of the scent of her hair. He'd itched to call her, even though he'd promised that they would have no more contact until after the competition was over. He'd only been thinking to comfort and reassure her.

He'd had no idea what sort of impact their night together would have on
him.

“Can I get you two anything?” Lily, Mrs. Marion's second in command, asked both him and Carol, interrupting his thoughts. “We're bringing in refreshments, but if you want water or a soda or anything, I'll be happy to get them. Oh, and will you be needing help with your laptop, hooking it up to the projector?”

“No,” Carol said irritably, and to Mark's chagrin, she actually waved Lily away with her hand in a dismissive motion. He noticed Lily's eyes narrow for a second before pasting her smile back in place.

“Thanks, Lily,” he said quickly, but she was already gone.

“You're going to have to watch it,” Mark cautioned Carol, causing her to shoot him a look of annoyance. “Lily Hunter isn't some nobody secretary you can dismiss. She's important.” In fact, that small sign of disrespect might cost them dearly. He'd need to make it up to Lily later, he reminded himself.

Carol shrugged, completely unapologetic. “I'm trying to concentrate….”

“They won't care,” Mark said bluntly. “All the stuff about how well our products have sold in their stores? They're not going to give a damn, so don't sweat those numbers. We've got bigger issues here.”

Carol frowned at him. “You may be director of sales, but I've been in marketing and growth for twice as long as you've been with the company,” she said, and he knew what Lily must feel like. Carol was an equal-opportunity insulter. “I think I know what I'm doing.”

“I know Marion & Co.,” he countered. “This is relationship selling at its toughest. You can't just—”

“I've got it handled, Mark,” she said, and then turned back to her laptop.

Mark squinted. At least she'd momentarily distracted him from thoughts of Sophie—but he was starting to get a sinking feeling of despair, and while it was different from mind-bending infatuation or soul-grinding lust, it wasn't a great replacement. “Don't say I didn't warn you,” he said grimly.

She glared at him.

“Is this where the…oh, of course, it must be. Okay, Sophie, here's the room.”

On hearing Sophie's name, Mark's head snapped toward the doorway, every nerve standing at attention. He forced himself to breathe deeply, trying to make sure his unruly body stayed in line. He stood when three women entered the room—Sophie trailing behind with her laptop case. With her hair pulled back in a loose braid, wearing a slate-blue dress suit, she looked downright edible.

He felt his heart rate—and other things—start to rise, and quickly shifted his attention elsewhere before things got embarrassing.

He forced himself to examine the other two. One was a younger woman, slightly taller than Sophie, with the same gently curling hair, only a dark honey-blond instead of the toffee-brown he was used to. Her face was less intense, as well…softer. That would have to be the sister. The third woman was obviously Sophie's mother Olivia, the chemist and product developer. She was intense, like Sophie, and obviously older, her hair cut short, almost the same blond shade as the sister's. She looked immaculately made up, but her face and her body language communicated tension, almost to the point of brittleness. She kept whispering sharply to Sophie, who kept whispering back in reassuring tones.

Sophie didn't look his way, he noticed as the Diva Nation party settled into their side of the conference table. She seemed more intent on setting up her laptop than checking out her competition. He should probably do the same, he thought, but like a moth to a candle, he couldn't seem to pull away.

Mrs. Marion came in, looking like a queen, or at the very least a duchess. She was wearing a St. John knit suit—Mark could remember the models who'd worn that sort of thing, from when he worked the runway. It was impossible not to look regal when wearing one, and she was going for very classy intimidation.

This is going to get ugly.

“I'm so excited to see what you both have come up with,” she said, her voice rounded and cultured, even as her eyes sparkled with avaricious delight. “I know it's a bit unorthodox to have you both here at the same time, but I think it's better when everyone knows what they're up against. Competition only brings out the best, it's what makes our country work.”

Mark struggled not to roll his eyes. He glanced at Sophie, who had a similar look on her face. Of course, she chose that moment to look over at him. They shared a millisecond of mutual amusement, and then both quickly looked away, before anything more heated could be exchanged. Mrs. Marion continued talking.

“Trimera, you appear to be already set up,” she said, “so I'll forgo the coin toss, and have you start. Is that all right?”

“Splendid,” Carol purred, standing. She quickly distributed the hard copy of her presentation—a sheaf of papers, housed in its own binder.

“All this?” Mrs. Marion said in condescending amusement.

Carol blanched. “I think it will answer the most important questions you might have, Mrs. Marion. We pride ourselves on being thorough.”

“Obviously,” Mrs. Marion observed wryly. “Very well. You'll have twenty minutes.”

Carol went pale. Rather, she went paler. “I didn't think it would be so closely timed,” she said, hastily shuffling through her presentation.

“I didn't realize you were presenting a doctoral thesis,” Mrs. Marion responded.

For a split second, Mark almost felt sorry for Carol. Almost.

“All right,” Carol said. “Trimera has been in business for the past fifty years….”

It was going poorly. Mark could tell that in the first five minutes. What was more, he could tell that Sophie knew. Her sister and mother might not get it, but there was a ghost of a smile haunting the corners of her lips (
those lips, don't think about those lips,
he counseled himself). She was amused, and her eyes were bright and shrewd.

He grimaced. This was a nightmare. For the first time, it occurred to him that the promotion he'd been bucking for was in jeopardy. He'd promised Sophie that her business would not be affected if they slept together.

What he hadn't realized was
his
business would be affected. He should have been more on top of this account, and not so intent on sexually pursuing his competitor.

Not just your competitor.
Sophie.
There is a difference.

But different or not, he wouldn't be able to keep Sophie, she'd made that clear. And if he didn't get the promotion—if they kept thinking of him as merely a pretty-faced deal-closer…

Aw, hell.

“You're not really answering my questions. In fact, I can't imagine what questions you are answering,” Mrs. Marion finally cut in impatiently, after seeing the thirtieth slide. “What, exactly, is Trimera coming up with for our house brand? What's the ruling concept?”

Carol stammered. “The point is, Trimera products have already done historically well at Marion & Co.,” she said, sounding less and less sure of herself. “With our product designers and graphic designers, we can come up with whatever you'd like and make it highly profitable.” She quickly switched to a slide of three mock-ups of cosmetics. They were unimpressive. One even said House Brand on it. Mark felt acutely embarrassed and glared at Carol.

“I see,” Mrs. Marion mused. “So, what you're saying is…you'll develop whatever we come up with? Whatever possible concept we could imagine?”

“Exactly,” Carol said with obvious relief. She even shot Mark a smug grin.

“So why, exactly, would we be paying you when we're doing the hard part?”

Carol blinked, blindsided. “I'm sorry?”

“I don't need a manufacturer, and I don't need a brand name,” Mrs. Marion responded sharply. “I need a specially designed product line. This is not what I had in mind. Do you have any suggestions at all?”

Carol was now officially aghast…and to his surprise, she turned to Mark. “Uh…”

He stood up. “Marion & Co. has a long history in quality, high-end retail. If you're offering a line of cosmetics, we would suggest something that reflects not only quality, but classic beauty, with overtones of pampering. What we'd suggest is a luxury line of cosmetics—nothing trendy or over-the-top. Indulgences, aimed for the high-end cosmetics client. I would even recommend calling it Indulgences,” he added, spur of the moment.

Mrs. Marion smiled again. “I see. And you don't think that would be boring?”

Mark smiled back, his very best persuasive smile. “Nothing's more beautiful than classic elegance, Mrs. Marion.”

To his delight, she actually beamed back at him. He figured that would resonate, considering how she dressed, how she acted—how she obviously pictured herself, the ultimate Marion & Co. client.

“Well, that's one way to go,” Carol said, seemingly more confident. “Beyond that, if you'll look at the proposal, you'll see that—”

“I'll look over the details of your proposal in this very comprehensive pack tonight,” Mrs. Marion promised. “At my leisure.”

And just like that, Trimera's portion of the program was done. Carol looked a bit shell shocked as she shut off her projector and sat down next to Mark. She glanced at him briefly, her expression clear:
What the hell happened here?

She couldn't say he didn't warn her, Mark thought. Still, it was a bad start. He wondered how Sophie would do.

Sophie quickly distributed a very neat, very small-looking portfolio to Mrs. Marion's hands. She smiled at Carol and him, quietly confident. It was sexier than hell.

When isn't the woman sexy?

“I agree with Trimera,” Sophie said, surprising him. “There's nothing more beautiful than classic elegance. And it certainly doesn't have to be boring, because beauty is more than surface details. We at Diva Nation feel that beauty is an attitude…something that we feel we've captured in the concept for Marion & Co.”

Smart girl,
Mark thought admiringly. Using Trimera's last and possibly only useful concept, and twisting it to fit what they had.

She was, he realized, about to kick his ass.

She clicked on her presentation, and there was a fully developed, sharp-looking product line, full of bold colors and whimsical yet elegant packaging. “We call it the Screen Goddess line,” Sophie said.

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