Just the Sexiest Man Alive
Page 52
Jason bristled at the question. “No, you tell me—does the reason you’re so pissed about this alleged fight have anything to do with the fact that you’re allegedly trying to land Scott Casey as a client?” He paused for a moment to let this sit. “I know everyone, too, Marty.”
Marty fell quiet for a moment. Jason wasn’t sure if he had lost the connection or if his publicist was simply taking a moment to decide what spin to put on his answer.
Marty finally answered.
It had been the latter.
“Jason, Jason . . .” he oozed soothingly. “You know you are my number one priority. You always have been my number one priority, and you always will be—until the day you either run off to some private island in the Pacific, build a compound, and have fifteen babies with your native housekeeper, or kill me with a heart attack from all the shit you’ll still be getting into when you’re eighty f**king years old.”
Hearing Jason’s silence, Marty took a breath before continuing.
“And since you are my number one priority, I would be remiss in my obligations as your publicist if I didn’t speak to you when I sense something at odds with your image. Tremors in the force that is Jason Andrews, if you will.”
Jason repeated this to himself. Tremors in the force that is Jason Andrews. Classic.
“Dumping supermodels in London is you,” Marty went on. “Getting into petty fights at some Hollywood nightclub? That is not you. Dating international actresses, like Naomi Cross for example—that is you. Dating some lawyer from Chicago? Not you. Do you see what I’m getting at?”
“We’re not dating, Marty,” Jason said. “For the record, Taylor and I aren’t sleeping together, having an affair, or anything. We’re . . . I don’t know. Something else.”
Marty snorted at this.
“No offense, Jason, but having been your publicist for the last thirteen years, I think I know. You don’t do ‘something else.’ ”
THAT EVENING, JASON knocked decisively on Taylor’s front door. Marty’s words had plagued him all day and he needed to do something about it. Now.
Taylor opened the door, surprised to see him.
“Hey—I thought we were meeting later this week,” she said.
Standing on her doorstep, Jason knew the way he handled this next moment would determine everything.
“Come with me to the Pacific Design Center.” Shit—he hadn’t meant for that to come out sounding like a command.
Taylor looked at him strangely. “Why?”
Jason stared awkwardly at the ground. He definitely should’ve done a run-through of this in the Aston Martin on the way over.
“Because I need help picking out a new couch,” he said, peering up at her uncertainly. “Isn’t that what friends do?”
He watched, trying to gauge Taylor’s reaction. Seemingly unsure at first, she studied him as if debating, looking him over with those bold green eyes of hers.
Finally, she nodded. “Okay.”
Jason’s face broke into a relieved smile. “Okay.” He exhaled, glad that was over. “Should we go?”
Taylor went back inside her apartment and grabbed her keys. As she followed Jason out to his car, she tapped him on the shoulder. “Hey—can I drive the Aston Martin?”
“No.”
“But isn’t that what friends do?”
“No.”
Jason opened the passenger door for her and walked around to the driver’s side. As he got in the car, Taylor glanced over.
“My, my, you’re awfully grumpy today . . . Is something wrong?”
Jason looked at her, sitting by his side. Actually, it was the best he had felt in the last two days.
True, it was not exactly the way he had envisioned things going with Taylor. But at least it was something.
So he grinned as he fired up the Aston Martin.
“Buckle up, sweetheart,” he told her. “This ain’t no PT Cruiser.”
And with that, he gunned the car to life and they drove off into the sunset.
Twenty
TAYLOR WATCHED AS Scott expertly chopped up some asparagus and tossed it into the sauté pan simmering on the stove. He added a dash of olive oil.
“You know, when you invited me to dinner, I didn’t know you were planning to cook it,” she said. She sat across from Scott on the other side of the chef’s counter, sipping the martini he had poured when she first arrived.
“Your rules about not being seen in public don’t leave room for much else,” he grinned teasingly. Taylor noticed that a stray lock of blond hair had fallen across his forehead, nearly into his eyes, as he worked. There was something inherently sexy about a man who knew his way around a kitchen.
“Thanks for being understanding about that,” she told him. “I’m trying to keep a low profile for my trial.”
Scott shrugged this off. “No problem. This isn’t yet the best moment for me to be spotted with the famous Mystery Woman anyway.”
Taylor straightened a little in her chair. That was kind of an odd thing to say. “What do you mean?”
Scott glanced up from his cooking and saw the expression on her face. He smiled reassuringly. “Oh, I just meant you’d probably be hounded even more if the press saw us together.”
Taylor’s nodded, softening. “Oh. Of course.”
Stop being so suspicious, she told herself. Trying to relax, she glanced around what she could see of his house. The kitchen, foyer, and living room suggested that Scott (or his decorator) had ultramodern taste. With stark white walls, metal staircases, slate countertops, and stainless steel cabinets, Taylor found the decor a little . . . cold. In her opinion, the best feature of the house was the deck outside that opened to a spectacular view of downtown Los Angeles.
Marty fell quiet for a moment. Jason wasn’t sure if he had lost the connection or if his publicist was simply taking a moment to decide what spin to put on his answer.
Marty finally answered.
It had been the latter.
“Jason, Jason . . .” he oozed soothingly. “You know you are my number one priority. You always have been my number one priority, and you always will be—until the day you either run off to some private island in the Pacific, build a compound, and have fifteen babies with your native housekeeper, or kill me with a heart attack from all the shit you’ll still be getting into when you’re eighty f**king years old.”
Hearing Jason’s silence, Marty took a breath before continuing.
“And since you are my number one priority, I would be remiss in my obligations as your publicist if I didn’t speak to you when I sense something at odds with your image. Tremors in the force that is Jason Andrews, if you will.”
Jason repeated this to himself. Tremors in the force that is Jason Andrews. Classic.
“Dumping supermodels in London is you,” Marty went on. “Getting into petty fights at some Hollywood nightclub? That is not you. Dating international actresses, like Naomi Cross for example—that is you. Dating some lawyer from Chicago? Not you. Do you see what I’m getting at?”
“We’re not dating, Marty,” Jason said. “For the record, Taylor and I aren’t sleeping together, having an affair, or anything. We’re . . . I don’t know. Something else.”
Marty snorted at this.
“No offense, Jason, but having been your publicist for the last thirteen years, I think I know. You don’t do ‘something else.’ ”
THAT EVENING, JASON knocked decisively on Taylor’s front door. Marty’s words had plagued him all day and he needed to do something about it. Now.
Taylor opened the door, surprised to see him.
“Hey—I thought we were meeting later this week,” she said.
Standing on her doorstep, Jason knew the way he handled this next moment would determine everything.
“Come with me to the Pacific Design Center.” Shit—he hadn’t meant for that to come out sounding like a command.
Taylor looked at him strangely. “Why?”
Jason stared awkwardly at the ground. He definitely should’ve done a run-through of this in the Aston Martin on the way over.
“Because I need help picking out a new couch,” he said, peering up at her uncertainly. “Isn’t that what friends do?”
He watched, trying to gauge Taylor’s reaction. Seemingly unsure at first, she studied him as if debating, looking him over with those bold green eyes of hers.
Finally, she nodded. “Okay.”
Jason’s face broke into a relieved smile. “Okay.” He exhaled, glad that was over. “Should we go?”
Taylor went back inside her apartment and grabbed her keys. As she followed Jason out to his car, she tapped him on the shoulder. “Hey—can I drive the Aston Martin?”
“No.”
“But isn’t that what friends do?”
“No.”
Jason opened the passenger door for her and walked around to the driver’s side. As he got in the car, Taylor glanced over.
“My, my, you’re awfully grumpy today . . . Is something wrong?”
Jason looked at her, sitting by his side. Actually, it was the best he had felt in the last two days.
True, it was not exactly the way he had envisioned things going with Taylor. But at least it was something.
So he grinned as he fired up the Aston Martin.
“Buckle up, sweetheart,” he told her. “This ain’t no PT Cruiser.”
And with that, he gunned the car to life and they drove off into the sunset.
Twenty
TAYLOR WATCHED AS Scott expertly chopped up some asparagus and tossed it into the sauté pan simmering on the stove. He added a dash of olive oil.
“You know, when you invited me to dinner, I didn’t know you were planning to cook it,” she said. She sat across from Scott on the other side of the chef’s counter, sipping the martini he had poured when she first arrived.
“Your rules about not being seen in public don’t leave room for much else,” he grinned teasingly. Taylor noticed that a stray lock of blond hair had fallen across his forehead, nearly into his eyes, as he worked. There was something inherently sexy about a man who knew his way around a kitchen.
“Thanks for being understanding about that,” she told him. “I’m trying to keep a low profile for my trial.”
Scott shrugged this off. “No problem. This isn’t yet the best moment for me to be spotted with the famous Mystery Woman anyway.”
Taylor straightened a little in her chair. That was kind of an odd thing to say. “What do you mean?”
Scott glanced up from his cooking and saw the expression on her face. He smiled reassuringly. “Oh, I just meant you’d probably be hounded even more if the press saw us together.”
Taylor’s nodded, softening. “Oh. Of course.”
Stop being so suspicious, she told herself. Trying to relax, she glanced around what she could see of his house. The kitchen, foyer, and living room suggested that Scott (or his decorator) had ultramodern taste. With stark white walls, metal staircases, slate countertops, and stainless steel cabinets, Taylor found the decor a little . . . cold. In her opinion, the best feature of the house was the deck outside that opened to a spectacular view of downtown Los Angeles.