A Very Paranormal Holiday
Page 28
"I see," one of Parke's eyebrows lifted. "What about the secretary pool?"
"Efficient for the most part."
"Good. You'll let me know if that changes?"
"Of course, Mr. Worth."
"No, call me Parke."
"Of course, Parke."
"Better, but don't sound like a parrot. All right?"
"Of cour—right. Parke it is."
He laughed and walked down the hall toward Annabelle's office.
* * *
"Is that brief done?" There was never a hello from Geoffrey; he either ogled or demanded. There was no in between with him.
"Yes, Mr. Gruber. It's on your desk."
"I'll look at it tonight and hand corrections to you tomorrow. Have you started a file on the Griffin case?"
"Of course, Mr. Gruber. I sent an e-mail to you and the information for a cease and desist to the secretary pool. You should have it first thing tomorrow morning." He walked past my desk, giving me a lewd once-over before heading to his corner office.
The moment he walked inside, I heard a crash and ran, skidding to a halt in Geoffrey's doorway.
There Geoffrey was, breathing hard and staring at Parke Worth, who now sat in his chair. Geoffrey had just knocked his award from the Civic Improvement Club off a bookcase; he'd swung his leather valise around to fend off a potential attack from the intruder.
"Surprised to see me?" Parke swung his feet off Geoffrey's desk and dropped them to the floor.
"Why, no—er, I mean yes. Yes, I expected you tomorrow. That's what the e-mail said," Geoffrey sputtered.
"Surprise," Parke flung out his hands and wiggled his fingers. I wanted to giggle at that point but managed to stifle the urge. Geoffrey would make my life a much larger, hotter hell than it already was if I laughed.
"Have you," Geoffrey began with a huff.
"I've spoken with Annabelle and fired her assistant. Jeremy insisted on calling me Mr. Parker and lied on his application, stating he had a paralegal certificate."
I wanted to tell Parke that Annabelle had added that tiny fabrication, but didn't. I had a feeling Parke already guessed it. The people at the D.C. law firm were likely sorry to see him go—that's how efficient he was.
"What do you want?" Geoffrey sputtered. His flushed face and near-stutter told me how flustered he still was.
"I want a meeting tomorrow at two," Parke said. "To discuss all the cases currently being handled by the firm. If there are any of my father's old cases that haven't gone to trial yet, I'll take them back. Don't worry," Parke held up a hand, "I'll give anyone who did any work on those cases an amicable split when they settle."
"You act like they're already settled," Geoffrey huffed.
"They will be."
Parke didn't sound as if he were kidding. "I also intend to ask the Seattle PD to look into my father's death. I don't believe it was accidental, like everyone thinks."
"Wh-what?" Geoffrey was definitely stuttering, now.
"What I said," Parke stood and stretched. "Tomorrow. Two. Meeting." He stalked out of Geoffrey's office, brushing past me as he walked through the door.
Had I imagined the wink as he did so? Shaking my head, I eventually followed him out of Geoffrey's office.
* * *
Unable to decide whether it was a good thing or a bad one that I'd arrived early for work the following morning, I dealt with six of Geoffrey's tantrums before nine. The copier wouldn't work. The coffee was too hot. The dry cleaner lost two shirts. The judge on the case the day before was an asshole. At least I'd worn two-inch heels; they were better suited for running after Geoffrey the pig.
Annabelle had a meltdown, too, when she couldn't convince HR to alter their hiring practices just for her. I understood that to mean she wanted another Jeremy. Why she thought she could slide that past Parke was a question I couldn't answer.
The question that intrigued me most was this; why had Harmon Worth allowed Geoffrey and Annabelle to buy into the firm to begin with? Their win-loss ratio wasn't stellar by anyone's standards. Resigning myself to the fact that I'd probably never know the answer, I went back to reviewing the cease and desist before placing it on Geoffrey's desk for his signature.
"Cassie?" Parke's voice interrupted my proofing session.
"Yes, Mr. Wor—Parke?"
"I want you to clean out your desk."
I froze. "But," I began. I was ready to beg for my job. I needed it. Had taken far too much of Geoffrey's excrement to just let it go.
"No, bring your things to my office. You're working for me, now. I already notified HR; they're looking for Geoffrey's replacement."
My shoulders sagged and I wanted to weep—whether from relief or happiness, I couldn't decide. "Does he know?"
"I sent a text."
That made me freeze again. Geoffrey hated texts. If I knew him at all, he'd find a way (the more devious the better), to make me pay for my defection. Now, I didn't care. Working for Parke had to be a hundred times better than working for Geoffrey.
"I'll be there in half an hour," I said, offering Parke the most professional nod I could.
"Perfect. Will you arrange for lunch to be delivered to my office? I have a pile of cases to go through."
"What would you like?"
"Roast beef sandwich?"
"I'll find one for you."
* * *
I didn't hear the explosive complaints Geoffrey and Annabelle exchanged that afternoon; I was far away in my new office with a door, and actually had a lunch hour on my own outside the firm (at Parke's insistence) while he ate a roast-beef au-jus with fries at his desk.
Want Starbucks? I sent a text to Parke on my way back to Gruber, Taylor and Worth.
Why, yes. Triple capp, please, lots of foam.
It's yours, I texted back.
Ten minutes later, I set the cup down on the only bare patch I could find on his desk, which was covered by case files.
"You've been sitting too long," I ventured to say.
"What?" He blinked at me. "Yeah. You're right. I think I'll go to the boardroom and drink this while looking at the view."
"It has a great view," I agreed. "Your father had such good taste, choosing this building." It did have a wonderful view—of Elliott Bay. You could see the ferry traveling across the bay to Bainbridge Island and back on clear days.
"I miss the old man. Mom does, too." Parke stood and stretched before lifting his cappuccino. "Will you call Daniel Frank for me? Ask him to give me a call the moment he can. Cell-phone number only."
"Of course, Parke."
I watched him walk out of his office, heading for the opposite side of the building where the boardroom (and the view) was located.
Chapter 2
Parke
What the hell is she doing here?
That question plagued me. She'd apparently moved to Seattle between the time Dad died and before I came back. Otherwise, she should have checked in.
Unless…
"Parke here," I answered my cell on Daniel Frank's second ring.
"You have another job for me?" Daniel never wasted time.
"Yeah. I need a background check on Cassie Randall," I said.
"Who is she?"
"My new personal assistant. Check her paralegal certificate and anything else you can get. I'll text her address and social as soon as I'm off the phone. All correspondence through my cell, please. Have you got anything on Dad's death?"
"Looking into it. You're right, it does look fishy, and not in the usual sense."
"Dad would never have drowned, that's bullshit," I agreed. "He went fishing all the time and the waters weren't rough that day."
"Are they asking you to step into the Chancellor's shoes?"
"Hinting at it. It's mine for the taking—you know the succession runs in the family unless the position is refused, and then it's a conclave or a war to determine who gets it."
"Why haven't you taken it before now?"
"I had thing
s to tie up in D.C. and I'd like to get these mysteries solved, first."
"Your dad and this Cassie girl?"
"Daniel, she's Demon. I know it by looking at her. She's got a shield up so strong a bullet couldn't crack it, and that tells me she's hiding something."
"Takes one to know one," Daniel mumbled.
"Yeah. You wouldn't read this one, Dan. I think I may be the only one who can."
"Because you're Harmon Worth's son."
"Yeah."
* * *
Cassie
Stopping by the post office after work to collect my mail, I found only bills there. Those I didn't mind so much. At least I could pay them on my current salary, although sometimes it was a stretch. Living in Seattle wasn't cheap, but anything was better than Mobile, Alabama.
My tiny, efficiency apartment waited when I got home, where I still hadn't changed the last tenant's name on the mailbox downstairs. Brian Erving was so much better than Cassie Randall—that way, nobody knew for sure who occupied the small, cheaper condo with no view.
Fog rolled in while I ate dinner and cleaned up the excuse I had for a kitchen. Sure, I'd had better not that long ago. The strings and conditions that came with better weren't worth it.
Parke had hinted to Geoffrey that his father's death hadn't been an accident. It made me curious, so I powered up my laptop and went looking for information on Harmon Worth's accident.
That's when I learned that Harmon hadn't invited Geoffrey and Annabelle into the firm—he'd had a partner six years earlier who'd died, leaving his third of the business to the family, who, without consulting Harmon first, sold that third to the first takers they could find who had ready cash—Geoffrey and Annabelle.
Harmon Worth, Dead in Fishing Accident, the next article's headline read. After reading the article, which claimed that a gust of wind capsized Harmon's boat, leaving him in cold water to drown before being nibbled on by fish in the bay, I went looking for last year's calendar.
With a sigh, I shook my head. I was beginning to think Parke was correct about his father's death, but there wasn't any way I could tell him what I thought I knew—he'd know something about me, then, and that would start a chain of events I wanted to avoid at all costs.
* * *
"I proofread the letter to Rachel Johnson, but you may want to read through it before signing," I handed a folder to Parke when he arrived at work the next morning.
"I was just going to ask for that," Parke smiled and took the folder. "If she agrees to these terms, then the companies can merge happily."
"And fun will be had by all," I said. "I guess that's what happens when two toy companies get together."
"You'd think so, anyway," Parke nodded. "Have you heard from Geoffrey or Annabelle this morning?"
"No. Were you expecting a call? I was here early and haven't left my desk."
"Yes. I offered to buy out their share. It's no surprise they don't want to give it up, but I need their answer anyway."
I couldn't help thinking that buying out Geoffrey and Annabelle would be the best possible thing to happen to the firm, but didn't voice it aloud. "I'll be on the phone for the next hour or so—will you see I'm not disturbed?" Parke asked.
"Of course."
"Will you check the status of the Hillman case, too? Geoffrey is supposed to be handling it, but I can't find any updates in the last six months."
"I will."
"Thanks." I was waved out of Parke's office, so I left, closing the door behind me. I knew the Hillman case and had asked Geoffrey regularly whether he'd called Frank Hillman about it. Hillman wanted to sue another company for infringement on some of his software designs, but Geoffrey was dragging his heels.
If something wasn't done within four days, the statute of limitations would kick in. Hillman would be furious and unable to file another lawsuit. I knew exactly where the file was, too—in my desk. I'd planned to ask Geoffrey about it (again) when Parke pulled me away to work for him.
I wrote up everything that needed to be done on the Hillman case while Parke had his hour on the phone. When he buzzed to tell me he was done with his telephone conversations, I took the file and the information I'd gathered into his office.
"I tried to remind Geoffrey several times about this," I explained nervously when I handed the file to Parke.
"I understand." Parke opened the file and quickly read all my notes. "We'll have to hurry to get all this done before the deadline," he said, looking up at me. "Will you get Hillman on the phone? I'll handle what I can if you'll get the ball rolling with the court clerk."
"Right away," I said.
As long as the case was filed before the deadline, it would go forward. Geoffrey seemed content to let it die. I had suspicions about that—the software company Hillman wanted to sue had money behind their name. It probably wouldn't be the first time that something like this had happened.
By the end of the day, we had a case filed with the court clerk and notice would be given to all parties involved. Hillman, after Parke spoke to him, was more than happy to get something done on the case. Feeling like a load of bricks had been lifted from my shoulders, I left the office at six-thirty—at Parke's insistence.
* * *
Parke
"What have you found, Daniel?" I asked. The call was on the hands-free in my car while I waited at a stoplight.
"That's not her name. No idea who she was before, but I'm working on it. Her paper trail is good, too—somebody with experience managed that. To my knowledge, there are only three who might accomplish that—the Feds, Gray Barker or Lance Thorne."
"I doubt it was the Feds. Put some pressure on the other two—tell them they won't appreciate a visit from the Chancellor's office."
"You thinkin'?"
"Yeah. It may be the only way. I'll have plenty of enemies once I make the move, but the spot's there if I want it."
"When?"
"First of next week."
"Anybody else know?"
"Mom. Louise. That's all. They've been begging me to do it. Maybe it's time."
"Your mother and your sister won't sell you out, I know that much," Daniel agreed. "Look, I'll contact Gray and Lance. If they know anything, I'll promise to keep it quiet."
"I'd prefer that," I said. "Until we have all the facts, I don't want to make any moves."
"I want to meet her. I want to check this shield that she has."
"Be careful. I don't want to spook her."
"I can be discreet."
"I know that. You haven't seen her yet, that's all I'm saying."
"Looker?"
"You know it."
"I'll check out her place this weekend."
"You do that. Don't scare her or I'll see you in the gym."
"I'll be discretion itself."
"Good."
* * *
Cassie
Friday. FridayFridayFriday. I felt like singing the word on my way to the office that morning. While Parke was a breath of fresh air after working for Geoffrey, the week had still been stressful. It didn't help that Geoffrey glared every time he saw me—even from a distance.
Saturday and Sunday would be my chance to relax and breathe. I could do laundry and cook something besides a hurried breakfast or dinner. Maybe I could read a book or two, or watch a movie.
Any or all those things would take my mind off being alone. Sure, I had friends. They'd helped me get away. Contacting them would place their lives in jeopardy. I wasn't about to do that.
For now, they were safe. I just wished a few people thought I was dead or gone forever. It wasn't their habit to forgive, if they ever caught up with me again. At least they hadn't found me—likely because Seattle was the last place they'd look.
* * *
Parke
"What are you doing? Working?" Louise looked ready to sail, wearing a crew-neck sweater, wool slacks and boots. I sat, shirtless and wearing pajama bottoms, at the desk in my father's office.
"I can fri
tter my time later, sissy," I told her. "If I take the Chancellor's seat, I have to catch up on everything."
"Including the squabble between the shifters and the werewolves?"
"Look, you can't go around eating the deer shifters. It's just not done. Find real deer, not were-deer for Pete's sake," I said, offering my sister a grin.
"Or moose or elk," she nodded before giggling.
"Finals done?" I asked.
"Turned in the last paper yesterday. Now, we can do Christmas and I don't have to go back till January."
"I remember those days," I sighed.
"Bridgett called Mom yesterday," Louise said.
"You had to ruin the mood, didn't you?"
"Why don't you tell her she doesn't have a chance in hell and to go marry somebody else?"
"I did. She thinks I was joking. She believes everybody wants her, including me. Anybody who says otherwise is just teasing or playing hard to get. Her ego is like a black hole, sucking everything into it."
Bridgett was a sore spot with all of us. Why she thought I was her personal property when we'd never gone out and had nothing in common still mystified me.
"Mom says it wouldn't be terrible to have a Water Demon in the family," Louise pointed out.
"Over my dead body will it be that particular Water Demon."
"That's what I wanted to hear," Louise snickered. "I can't stand her."
"Daniel may be in the area this weekend," I said.
"You're dangling that carrot in front of me?" Louise became defensive.
"I know how you look at him."
"He's—he's," Louise tossed up a hand as she floundered for a word.
"Cool?" I asked. "Rugged, maybe? What are those other terms that make women swoon?"
"He's a grump," Louise snapped. "One hundred percent. Nasty and snarky, too."
"I don't recall those things," I flipped open another file folder of complaints against rogue werewolves.