Calculated Risk (Blackbridge Security #5) - Marie James Page 0,4

if she can’t stay.”

He doesn’t say another word as we both stand and make our way out of the room.

I didn’t want to be here in the first place, but I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t upset to be called out like we were.

“We can just sign up together for the next class,” Parker says as she loops her arm through mine as we leave the building. “Let’s go grab dinner.”

That’s Parker for you—quick to make new plans when others fall through.

“I’m not going to a bar to eat dinner,” I say as we make our way across the parking lot.

Hairs on the back of my neck stand up, but I blame the setting sun and the cool evening breeze.

“It’s called a pub, not a bar.”

“And I’d prefer a restaurant that’s not crowded.”

She huffs but quickly agrees. She knows I can just as easily go home and cook and be happier than going out and being around other people.

“Fine,” she says. “But I want sushi.”

Chapter 3

Quinten

“You can suck it!”

“I’m not arguing with you about this,” Wren grumbles as I walk into his office.

“Stupid fucking cat!” Puff Daddy screeches.

I’d say he’s in rare form, throwing a fit while pacing back and forth along one of his perches, but this is just classic behavior for the verbally aggressive bird.

“What’s the problem now?” I ask, not one hundred percent sure I even want to know.

“He’s still pissed about the cat,” Wren mutters, his attention still mostly on the information he’s compiling on his computer.

“You left me here last night!” Puff wails before making a realistic crying noise.

“Because you said you didn’t want to go home,” Wren argues, his voice flat yet irritated.

“The Hilton has free breakfast!”

I laugh at the stupid bird.

“And I have a perfectly good condo. I’m not staying in a hotel because you can’t get along with your brother.”

“Stepbrother!” the bird corrects. “He’s Satan’s best friend!”

“So fucking glad I live alone,” I mutter as I plop down the stack of papers in front of him.

“He’s fine with Whitney, but he hates the cat.”

“Look at my ass!” The bird turns around, waving his little feathery butt in our direction. “It’s flat. Chicks love a full ass.”

“Those grow back?” I ask, pointing to the lack of red tail feathers.

“Takes six to eight weeks,” Wren explains. “He’s just impatient.”

“I’ve been violated!”

“And why doesn’t he just stay away from the fucking cat?”

Wren turns to face me, a wide grin on his face. “That cat is surprisingly agile, and his ability to climb the curtains is uncanny. There are only thirteen here. You’re missing one.”

Wren taps the edge of the paperwork I just handed him on his desk to straighten it.

“One woman showed up with a friend.”

“So, there should be fifteen,” he says in a tone that tells me he’s making fun of my math skills.

“They left.” He frowns. “I told the friend she wasn’t registered, so she had to leave. The other woman left, too.”

I don’t go into detail that it’s probably a good thing because that friend had a glint in her eye that only spelled trouble. She was there for the very reason so many other women completed the form. I’m still in a position to blame that stupid trending hashtag for this entire mess. Which also reminds me to smack Flynn in the back of the head the next time I see him for ending up on the front cover of those stupid gossip magazines with his woman.

Wren shuffles through the paperwork once again. “Hayden Prescott?”

“I guess,” I tell him with a shrug, but it’s fake indifference.

I spent a little too long last night watching her stand from the table, gather her things, and walk out of the room. I knew why she was there, and it had everything to do with her size and nothing to do with knowing any detail about what’s going on in her life to have been flagged by Wren’s online bots leading to her selection for the class.

She’s fucking tiny, a little wisp of a woman who probably wouldn’t even come up to the bottom of my beard if she were standing on her tiptoes. Hell, she’s so slight an attacker would probably still laugh at her if she were pointing a gun in his face. If I saw her from behind, I’d mistake her for a child.

But I didn’t see her from behind. I got a full front view of the woman, and there’s nothing childlike about her. Not the curve of her