Sugarlips (Beefcakes Book 2) Katana Collins (win 10 ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Katana Collins
Book online «Sugarlips (Beefcakes Book 2) Katana Collins (win 10 ebook reader TXT) đ». Author Katana Collins
âYou helped make those?â Neil asked, and his brows shot up higher.
âHelped being a ârelativeâ term,â I clarified, rubbing the back of my neck before glancing back at Chloe, still dangling off my shoulders.
âWhy didnât you tell him I helped!â Chloe cried.
âNeil and I, uh, didnât really talk much that night,â I told her.
Understatement of the year. I arrived at his cabin, handed him the box of donuts. He gave me a beer, and we watched the game in silence until I went home. So much for Chloeâs brilliant plan for breakup donuts being therapeutic.
âCome on, Neil. I am jobless, fiancĂ©-lessââ
âAnd donut-less.â He crossed his arms, and I rolled my eyes. God, he was such a hard ass.
âDude, go home. Itâs Friday and I know you and Jude have a call scheduled toâŠâ I glanced at Chloe, unsure how much she knew about the gig that Neil was taking out of the country. âDiscuss details.â Neil had taken a job as a stunt coordinator on Jude Fisherâs latest film⊠happening in Budapest. He had worked in Hollywood as Judeâs stuntman for years before moving back here to help us with the bakery when Mom was diagnosed with cancer. Though I wasnât sure, I had my suspicions that the freelance gig on a different continent likely contributed to his and Elainaâs breakup. âIâll handle closing up tonight.â
âYou sure?â
I shrugged. âAs long as you come in tomorrow in a better mood and donât care where the unsold items go today.â
Neil rolled his eyes and tugged the apron off his bare chest, shoving his head and arms into a t-shirt behind the counter. âSee ya,â he said, heading toward the door.
âWell, heâs a joy.â Chloe stuck her tongue out at him from behind the closed door.
âHeâs having a bad week,â I said and finished closing out the register.
âYeah? Well, so am I! At least his breakup resulted in winning half a million dollars. My breakup, on the other hand, left me without a job. And the stupid jobs Iâm interviewing for are boring and lame and stupid.â
âYou said stupid twice.â
She threw her hands in the air. âWell, thatâs how stupid they are!â
I set the napkin with the donut and Pop-Tart on the table, and she plopped back down in her chair, breaking off a corner of the pastry.
âI take it the interviews didnât go well?â
She sighed. âOne was ⊠fine. Until they asked me why I was passionate about real estate marketing. And I said⊠Uh, um, I guess because I own a house.â
I winced. âNot exactly the answer they were looking for?â
âShockingly, no. Owning a house with your cheating ex-fiancĂ© is not reason enough to passionately want to sign on as the marketing manager for a real estate company.â She shook her head, dipping her finger into the chocolate frosting and licking it off. âThing is⊠I did my research. I had all these adorable ideas to grow their client base. I was going to set them up to partner with a bakeryââ she paused, gesturing to me. âLike yours. And mail cookies in these little boxes shaped like homes to people interested in selling or buying property. I had this idea to turn their open houses into elegant gatherings to bring higher income clients. Offer champagne and cheese to people coming in. Hire a violinist to play in the house for mood music while potential buyers walk around.â She sighed, slumping into her seat. âBut when they asked me about passion, I deflated right in front of them.â
I reached over, breaking off a piece of the sugar-free Pop-Tart I made. âWhich is weird⊠because it does sound like youâre passionate about it,â I said, gauging her expression as I spoke. Her whole face lit up when she talked about those ideas.
âI am! Thatâs the thing! I really had fun coming up with those ideas. But when I think about only working on real estate⊠only coming up with marketing ideas for one type of company⊠ugh. I get a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach. Maybe itâs for the best I didnât tell them my plans for the company. Thereâre really no intellectual property rights on ideas like that. They could steal them and hire someone else to implement them entirely and Iâd have no recourse for that. Itâs a catch-22 when you work in creative fields.â
âSo⊠now what?â
âI need to look online again. Scour the web for job openings and hope thereâs one within a commutable distance.â
âAnd if there are no jobs around here?â
She shrugged. âI guess Iâll have to move. Or take a job I really hate.â
âWhy not make your own consulting company here?â
Chloe snorted and flipped her silky blond hair over her shoulder. âMy sister said the same thing. But who in Maple Grove would hire me to market for them? I mean, really.â
There were tons of businesses in Maple Grove that needed her marketing brainâBeefcakes included. We were already in over our head, and now that Neilâs reality show had ended, we could potentially see a drop off in business if we werenât careful.
I cleared my throat and leaned back in my seat, folding my arms. âOut of curiosity, what would you do for a business like ours?â
âFor Beefcakes?â Her gaze narrowed at me for a moment. âWell, you already have a huge fan baseânot only because of the reality show, but because of that viral video with him and Elaina.â She caught her bottom lip between her teeth, deep in thought as her gaze roamed the inside of our bakery. Her eyes slid slowly back to mine, narrowed to slits. âAre you sure you want to hear this?â
âI wouldnât have asked if I didnât.â
âWell, Iâd start with the easy stuff⊠your social media.â
My brows dipped. âI thought I was doing pretty damn well with our social media.â
She snorted, a scoffing sound. âYouâre doing Facebook well. But thereâs a whole land outside of the book of faces to market on. Your target audience is bachelorettesâyounger
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