I couldn't help it. I sat staring at the curves of the woman wearing the red pencil dress. Her backside had my body geared up and ready to go. It didn't hurt that her long dark hair teased me with a glimpse of her skin, the sleeveless number looking like it was painted onto her perfect body. And the stilettos she wore made her legs look toned--maybe they actually were, I couldn't decide. I hadn't seen her face yet but I would have confidently said I'd take her home, sight unseen.
"What are you staring at?" Beck sat down next to me on the sofa. His loft was the perfect place to host a gathering like this for his younger sister.
"Nothing." I shook my head, forcing the lustful thoughts of the woman in red out of my head. I turned away from the sight, though it was difficult to do. "When is Cici going to get here anyway? It's been a while since I played any pranks on someone." I chuckled and Beck rolled his eyes at me. We were hellions to her back in the day.
"She's here somewhere." He waved his hand as to dismiss my question and picked up his champagne. "I didn't invite you to talk about her. Grandma insisted we host the gathering here. Cici's place is under renovation and they live too far upstate to call all her friends from the city out for a party."
"Makes sense..." I took another sip and scanned the crowd. The woman was gone. "Well then I guess we don't' have to stick to strictly personal discussions."
"Not really the business type of atmosphere," Beck said, raising his glass.
"Well this isn't really strictly business either." I paid attention to Beck but my eyes still roamed the crowd for the sight of that red dress.
"Shoot." Beck was a no-nonsense type of guy. I liked that.
"Well, I have this client I'm trying to hook. Hotel chain owner. Huge money. Anyway, he wants me to sign a trial contract. The problem is, he's pretty pushy. His daughter is young and single and apparently can't keep a man. The guy thinks we'd be perfect together and I have zero interest in her."
"So what's the problem? You're Drooly Drew." Beck's use of my high-school nickname had me rolling my eyes. No one called me that since graduation. "Just date her until the deal is sealed then cut her loose. Sort of your MO."
It wasn't that I hadn't thought of that. I just didn't think it would work with this guy. He was a shark. His daughter would see right through the play and go running to Daddy. "Won't work this time." I emptied my flute, eyes still searching for the red that evaded me.