1
Olivia Shore gazed out through the darkened window of the limousine toward the private jet parked on the tarmac. This was what her life had come to. Flying around the country with a brainless, overpaid jock and too many bad memoriesâall to hawk a luxury watch.
It was going to be the longest four weeks of her life.
* * *
Thaddeus Walker Bowman Owens leaned closer to the jetâs window and peered out at the limousine that had stopped by the plane. Exactly thirty-eight minutes late. A driver emerged and pulled a suitcase from the back, then another, then a third. A garment bag appeared next, followed by a fourth suitcase. He drew his head away from the window. âWhat in the hell have I got myself into?â
Cooper Graham peered around him to see what he was looking at, and then gave Thadâs tailor-made virgin wool pants and cashmere silk sweater a semi-smirk. âLooks like you might have a little competition for the best dressed list.â
Thad scowled at the man who was both his best friend and a perpetual thorn under his skin. âI like good clothes.â
âHalf the time, you look like a damn peacock.â
Thad shot a meaningful look at Coopâs jeans and hoodie. âOnly in comparison to you.â He crossed his legs, resting one of his feet, clad in an Italian dress boot with a glove-soft interior, on the opposite knee. âStill, it was nice of you to come see me off.â
âThe least I could do.â
Thad leaned into the leather seat. âYou were afraid I wouldnât show up, werenât you?â
âIt might have crossed my mind.â
âTell me how you did it.â
âHow I did what?â
âHow you managed to convince Marchand Watchesâexcuse me, Marchand Timepiecesâthat having me as a brand ambassador was just as good as having the legendary Cooper Graham.â
âYouâre not exactly a nobody,â Graham said mildly.
âDamn straight. And Iâve got the Heisman to prove it. The one trophy even you donât have stowed away on your shelves.â
Graham grinned and clapped him on the shoulder. âYour lack of personal jealousy is what I most admire about you.â
âSince Marchand is the official watch of the Stars, and they couldnât have you, they wanted Clint Garrett, didnât they?â
âHis name might have been mentioned.â
Thad gave a snort of disgust. Clint Garrett was the brilliantly talented, egotistical young asshole quarterback the Chicago Stars had signed last year to replace the void they hadnât been able to fill when Coop had retired. The same Clint Garrett who Thad was supposed to make a better player andâoh, yeahâsubstitute for if the idiot kid got injured.
When Thad had come out of college sixteen years ago holding that Heisman, heâd seen himself as another Coop Graham or Tom Brady, not as a guy whoâd end up spending most of his NFL career as a backup for the starting quarterbacks on four different pro teams. But thatâs the way things had turned out. He was recognized as a brilliant strategist, an inspiring leader, but there was that almost trivial weakness in his peripheral vision that stood between him and greatness. Always a bridesmaid, never a bride.
A stir at the front of the plane drew their attention to The Diva who had finally graced them with her presence. She wore a belted tan trench coat over black pants, along with royal-blue stilettos that added five inches to her already impressive height. A few trails of dark hair emerged from the sides of a printed scarf wrapped around her head like in old photos Thad had seen of Jackie Kennedy. Along with the scarf, the pair of big-ass sunglasses perched on her long nose made her look like a jet-setter right out of the 1960s or maybe an Italian movie star. She tossed down a designer tote bag big enough to hold a golden retriever and took a seat near the front without acknowledging either of the men.
As the faint scent of luxury perfume, high culture, and undiluted arrogance wafted its way to the back of the plane, Coop unfurled from the seat. âTime for me to get out of here.â
âLucky bastard,â Thad muttered.
Coop knew Thad well enough to know that The Diva wasnât entirely responsible for Thadâs bad mood. âYouâre what that kid needs,â he said. âClint Garrett has the talent to go all the way, but not without the old man getting him there.â
Thad was thirty-six. Only in football years was that old.
Coop headed for the front of the plane. He stopped as he approached The Diva and nodded. âMs. Shore.â
She inclined her head, barely acknowledging the man whoâd been one of the greatest quarterbacks in the NFL. Thad had the God-given right to throw all the shade he wanted at Coop, but that highbrow opera singer didnât.
Graham tossed Thad an amused glance and left the plane, a rat fleeing a sinking ship. Thad doubted Coop had thought twice about turning down Marchandâs lucrative offer to serve as brand ambassador for their new Victory780 menâs watch. The ex-quarterback didnât like being away from his family, and he definitely didnât need the money. As for Clint Garrett . . . Young Clint was too busy chasing women and driving fast cars to waste his time representing a prestige company like Marchand, official watch of both the Chicago Stars and the Chicago Municipal Opera.
Despite what heâd said to Coop, Thad wasnât entirely surprised Marchand Timepieces had come after him to promote their Victory780 watch. They needed a Stars player, and Thad gave good interviews. Also, that old Heisman had garnered him plenty of publicity over the years. Still, anybody with eyeballs knew it wasnât Thadâs throwing arm or glib rejoinders that had sealed the deal with Marchand. It was his pretty face.
âYouâre even better looking than The Boo.â Coop had tweaked him the first time theyâd met, referring to the great Stars quarterback Dean Robillard.
Thadâs looks were a curse.
One of his favorite ex-girlfriends had told him: âYouâve got Liam Hemsworthâs nose, Michael B. Jordanâs cheekbones, and Zac Efronâs hair. As for those green eyes . . . Taylor Swift for sure. Itâs like all the good-looking celebs in the world threw up on your face.â
He missed Lindy, but sheâd gotten fed up with his noncommittal crap. After sheâd broken up with him, heâd sent her a new laptop so sheâd know there were no hard feelings.
Over the years, heâd done everything he could to roughen up his appearance. Heâd grown a beard a couple of times, but then people started telling him he looked like the dude in Fifty Shades. Heâd tried a porn-star mustache only to have women say he looked distinguished. Heâd even gone for irony and sported one of those asinine man buns for a while. Unfortunately, it looked good on him.
In high school, everybody got pimples but him. Heâd never needed braces or gone through an awkward phase. He hadnât broken his nose or gotten one of the chin scars every other player in the League had. His hair wasnât thinning. He didnât have a paunch.
He blamed his parents.
But the one positive thing about his looks, along with his lean, six-foot-three body, was the extra cash it earned him. And he did like making money. Over the years, heâd lent his face to a menâs cologne, his butt to designer underwear, and his hair to some overpriced grooming products heâd never bothered to use. And now this.
Four weeks on the road to promote Marchandâs new Victory780. Some photo shoots and interviews, along with a guest appearance at their big Chicago Municipal Opera gala as a finale. No sweat. Except for one snag. He wasnât Marchandâs only brand ambassador. While he was promoting the Victory780, opera superstar Olivia Shore would be touting their ladiesâ watch, the Cavatina3.
âBonjour! Bonjour!â Henri Marchand appeared at the front of the plane, arms outstretched, his French accent oozing from him like Nutella from a warm crĂȘpe. The long brown hair slicked back from his face fell over the top of his collar. Even without a beret perched on top of his head, he brought the air of the Continent with him. He was thin, maybe five nine, with a narrow face and sharp features. His impeccably tailored, charcoal wool suit had the European cut brawnier American-born men couldnât pull off, although Thad had a similar striped neck scarf he sometimes wore in the European way becauseâwhy not?
Marchand advanced on The Diva. âOlivia, ma chĂ©rie.â
She extended her hand. He kissed it like she was fricking Queen Victoria, even though Thad happened to know sheâd grown up in Pittsburgh, the only child of two deceased music teachers. Thad had done his homework.
Henri gazed toward the back of the plane, once again extending his arms. âAnd Thaddeus, mon ami!â
Thad gave him a bro-wave and contemplated stealing the name of his tailor.
âWe will have such an adventure together.â More arm waving. âFirst stop, Phoenix, where you, madame, sang a breathtaking DulcinĂ©e in Don Quichotte. And you, my friend Thad, threw a seventy-yard touchdown pass against the Arizona Cardinals. Glory days, yes? And the glory still shines brightly.â
For The Diva, maybe, but not for Thad.
Henri turned to the young woman whoâd followed him on board. âThis, mes amis, is my assistant Paisley Rhodes.â Was it Thadâs imagination or did Henriâs overly bright smile dim?
Paisley looked ready to head across campus for her Psych 101 class: a long swath of straight blond hair, too-perfect nose, slim figure dressed in a short skirt, blouse with a French tuck, and ankle boots. She also looked bored, as if stepping on a private jet took major effort.
âPaisley will be assisting us throughout our tour. If you need anythingâanything at allâplease let her know.â
Thad half expected a âwhatevâ to come out of her mouth because Paisley couldnât have looked less interested in assisting anyone. He suspected a favor had been called in to get her hired.
The girlâs eyes settled on him, and he saw her first flicker of interest. Ignoring The Diva, she headed back to take the seat right next to him. âIâm Paisley.â
He nodded.
âMy dad is, like, this huge football fan.â
Thad made his standard response. âGlad to hear it.â
As the plane took off, she proceeded to tell him her abbreviatedâbut not abbreviated enoughâlife story. Recent graduate of a Southern California college with a degree in communications. Just broke up with her boyfriend. She was an old soul in a young bodyâher assessment, not his. Her life goal: to become a personal assistant to a bigâany bigâcelebrity. Andâwait for itâher grandfather was a good friend of Lucien Marchand, which explained how she got the job.
She examined the watch on her wrist, one of Marchandâs basic models. âI never wear a watch.â She tapped her phone. âI mean, whatâs the point, right? But theyâre, like, making me wear a Marchand for the tour.â
âBastards,â he said, with an absolutely straight face.
âI know. But my grampy says I have to start somewhere.â
âGood olâ grampy.â
âI guess.â
To her credit, she left him alone in favor of her phone after the plane took off. He tilted back in his seat, closed his eyes, and indulged in his favorite fantasy, one where Clint Garrett threw three interceptions, broke his tibia, and was out for the season, leaving Thad to pick up the pieces. Clint, the poor bastard, ended up stuck on the bench watching Thad lead the Stars to the Super Bowl.
Henri Marchandâs silky French accent disturbed his fantasy. âI trust youâve had time to read through the materials I sent about the Victory780.â
Thad reluctantly opened his eyes. He had a good memory, and he had no trouble recalling the details about the watch heâd been hired to promote. Henri Marchand, however, wasnât taking any chances. âWeâve been developing the Victory780 fo...