The Gardens was quiet possibly the worst location for this charity event, but there was nothing to be said or done. Drew picked me up in his limo, probably to show off, and most of the night was about as boring as watching a documentary on the hatching of moth larvae. I kept the drinks coming and a smile plastered to my face.
"You seem to be in a good mood tonight." Drew's hand rode in the center of my back everywhere I went, making me simultaneously cringe and swoon.
Everyone grows up, but thirty-something Drew had something college Drew didn't have--spice. A lot of it. If I hadn't known his personality, I'd have been all over him all night. He was the epitome of class and charm. Dark hair and crystal blue eyes, he commanded attention. I didn't know if it was the suit or the fact that his face was on thirty billboards around NYC along with commercials on every major broadcast network. "Dating" the city's wealthiest investment banker was huge for my career.
"Don't mistake the smile for a good mood. I know how to work a crowd as well as anyone else." I set my empty champagne flute on a passing waiter's tray and nodded at Tifany Andrews--who made it known on more than one occasion how she thought I was too young to do the job I was lucky enough to have scored. Three years my senior, she felt it should be hers, and I had just enough brass to put her in her place as tactfully as I could.
"Well, at least you're a good actress. You're going to need that." His thumb rubbed up and down my backbone sending shivers of arousal into my groin. He had no clue what he was doing to me and I was glad. He'd only get a big head and make me feel childish for the things my body felt that my mind hated.
I spotted my boss and gestured to Drew. "I want you to meet my boss. It will have some positive impact on my standing with him." I didn't even feel bad tapping into Drew's public image at all. His PR guys made sure he was center stage with a giant spotlight on his life. Everyone knew who he was. I'd known before even moving back from Ohio. His reach to other states amazed me. Not in a "I'm watching him because I think he's hot" sort of way. More of a "Look what Drew's up to now" sort of way.
Part of me was jealous and I'd admit that. He scored a few huge clients right out of college and took Beck along for the ride. If not for Beck I'd never have had the drive to do what I was doing now. I'd have settled for a mid-level marketing career. No, seeing both of them succeed motivated me to dream big. But it wasn't until Kyle shat on my heart that I got the drive to be better than any competition. And I had.
"Ah, so it really is quid pro quo?" Drew sounded surprised, as if he were shocked that I meant what I had said at my welcome home party last week.
"Yeah. Did you think I was going to let you use me and not take advantage of some of the perks? You're literally the poster child for Mr. Right. You're the man every woman wants to take home to Mommy and Daddy." We weaved through the crowd. If I could impress Mr. York, I'd be a shoo-in for any future promotion. I just had to get my name into the back of his mind, then make waves. I had no problem with the "making waves" part. I knew what I was capable of--which is why I graduated Magna Cum Laude as the salutatorian with highest honors and scored that two-year internship at Cox in Columbus.
"I see." His curt answer didn't surprise me. He wanted to be in the spotlight. It was the way he'd always been. But he had his name out there, and I was still building my reputation.