Breaching His Defenses by Allyson Lindt (read aloud books .TXT) đ
- Author: Allyson Lindt
- Performer: -
Book online «Breaching His Defenses by Allyson Lindt (read aloud books .TXT) đ». Author Allyson Lindt
The first time it had happened, almost six months ago, it had been a fluke. Sometimes they lost sales. It wasnât a big deal. Heâd personally dug into the rumors. Scoured every inch of the network himself to make sure they were unfounded, and moved on. Reluctantly, but heâd done enough investigation to put his mind at ease.
The second time, two months ago, at least theyâd been ready to answer the concerns about their own internal security. But their responses hadnât been enough, and since they werenât accustomed to clients giving such specific reasons for going with another company, he had been suspicious.
Heâd dived back into the rumors. Even going so far as to spend an entire week personally checking every password and the security settings for every employee.
Money? Sure, sometimes someone balked at their pricing. But that usually happened early on in the process. Personality clash? Again, it came up. Just not often.
But to be minutes away from signing a contract and be told, âWe heard a rumor you donât even have it together internally,â and for it to have happened three times nowâŠ
It didnât feel right to Jared. Especially since it had never been an issue before.
The flaws werenât in his network, he was certain of that, which meant he needed answers. Since theyâd lost to NSS each time, he could only think of one place to look. Even if he couldnât leverage a new contract to make him look better for promotion, if he could tie a tourniquet around the issue before it got worse, that would still work in his favor. He made his way through the convention center crowds, cutting a straight line for the exhibit hall.
His determined footsteps slowed as he neared his destination. Mikki was at the edge of the NSS booth, back to him, tugging her messenger bag over her head. Each movement elongated her curves, and his chest tightened. He drew in a shallow breath, unable to drag his gaze away. Sheâd be the perfect way to get rid of some of this tension.
Too bad it wasnât an option. Heâd been right to put an end to things before they started. She whirled toward him, and as her gaze met hers, joy dancing in her dark eyes, he realized he was still staring.
He let his smile grow and failed to completely suppress images of pinning her to the wall and trailing his lips along her collarbone. You have work to do, remember? âIs Hayden around?â
The corner of her mouth drooped, a half-frown flitting in. She nodded behind her. âRight there, canât miss him.â
Jared might argue he could miss a lot when he was enthralled with someone else. Except missing details was counter-intuitive to everything he believed. His mind balked at the fact heâd missed one as obvious as the full-grown man just a few feet away. He still couldnât tear his gaze from Mikki. Professionalism warred with lust. Right. Promotion and reputation on the line. âThanks. See you around?â
The only word he could think of for her expression was impish. âIâm hoping.â
It took the last of his restraint to end the conversation there, but he still couldnât help watching her walk away.
After she was absorbed by the crowds, he forced his attention back to the task at hand. He caught Haydenâs eye long enough to let the other man know he was waiting, and then meandered around the booth. NSS had a more diverse product line than Skriddie. They also built websites and point of sale software, so they had a bit more to show off.
âStealing company secrets?â Hayden asked with a laugh.
Jared tried to make his chuckle sound genuine, but was pretty sure he failed when the stilted laugh choked from his throat. He hated this game. If tossing passive aggressive insults were his thing, heâd considering firing back a, âLearning from the best.â Heâd rather not dive into that kind of pettiness. He didnât have to rein in his thoughts, either. This wasnât a prospective client. âWe both know you donât keep the important stuff on display.â
âSo true. Speaking of, I donât suppose youâre working with anyone new.â
Jared gritted his teeth. He should have expected the questionâHayden was eternally looking for one of them to drop names about prospectsâbut today it carried a new cloud of irritation. âYou know I wonât tell you that.â
âHad to try.â Hayden winked. âWhat can I do for you?â
âCongratulations on your newest security client.â Jared kept his posture casual and his attention on Haydenâs face. He was surprised when the other man looked away and rested his hands in his pockets.
âThanks.â Hayden finally met his gaze again. âI need to get going.â
Jared had expectedâŠwell, he wasnât sure what. Gloating, at least. Not whatever this was. Especially since he hadnât asked the hard question yet. âSure. I was hoping you could tell me one thing first.â
âAs long as itâs quick.â Hayden took a step back.
So odd. If Tate were here, the conversation would probably go much differently. There would be deflection, and niceties, and a slow, subtle lead-in to the actual topic. Still, Jared had expected at least a little smugness about the lost client before he launched into the direct question. âThey asked some things that seemed to come straight out of left field. Do you know anything about that?â
Hayden waved a hand. âDonât know how I could. But Iâll tell you this, if the infamous Jared Tippins canât fix all his internal security leaks, I donât know how we could hope to if we had a problem.â
Jared couldnât keep his shock from his face. He hadnât even mentioned what cost them the deal.
âI really need to jet.â Hayden was already turning away. âWeâll catch up soon.â
Jared didnât need to stop him. The conversation had been enlightening enough as it was. Haydenâs behavior was too off-the-charts guilty, especially for a man who smooth talked his way through almost everything.
Something was going on, and Hayden wasnât going to say anymore. Without solid answers, Jared would just have to cover as many bases as he could. He needed to get his own internal team on things, reaffirm internal operations were solid, and then put a plan in place to tie off the flow of bad press before it got worse.
He already had his phone out as he headed in the direction of the hotel, sending texts to Tate and Vivian to join him as soon as possible, and another back to the office to get the internal investigation started.
Five minute later, heâd secured a large booth in the back corner of a restaurant built to look like an old English pub. The setting hadnât been as important to him as the fact that it was mostly empty.
He flipped his tablet open and started making lists. Writing notes. Getting every thought written down, regardless of how small it seemed.
By the time Tate and Vivian joined him, a plate of cheese fries sat untouched in the middle of the table, and he had a rough plan mocked up. Heâd sifted through everything theyâd already heard from lost clientsâincluding the details of last nightâs callâand had his top person investigating back at the home office.
âWhatâs up?â Vivian grabbed a fry, nibbled, and then grimaced and set it aside. âCold.â
âOrder more.â Jared wasnât eating. He spun his tablet toward his colleagues, pointing to different sections of his notes as he talked. âWe need to stop this before it gets worse. Distribute talking points to anyone whoâs client facing, remind people about internal procedures. Iâll email you both. We need to start this sooner rather than later.â
Tate pulled his attention from the waitress after sending her away with a smile. âIs this overkill?â
Jared frowned. âYou tell me. Do you want another sale like last nightâs?â
Tate exhaled loudly. âThen is this enough?â
That was the problem. The one question Jared couldnât stop asking, regardless of steps on a page. It should be plenty. And Tate was right. Under normal circumstances, it would be overkill. But obviously they were missing something, and they needed to make sure the situation didnât get worse.
****
Mikki crossed her legs at the ankles and kicked them beneath her chair. Fortunately, the drape covering the front of the table she sat at should hide the movement from the room full of people. She sat on a raised stage, along with five other peopleâone a moderator standing at the podium separating the two tables.
Jared was on the other side, and she was doing her best to pretend he was just another person. Her racing pulse and vivid imagination disagreed, but she beat them back with moderate success. She needed full control of her sensibilities for this conversation.
Someone in the crowd asked an opened-ended question, directed at anyone. Mikkiâs answer rose to tip of her tongue but stuck there. She wasnât sure she liked this new internal filter that cared what people thought, even if that person was Jared Tippins. Everyone else was exchanging looks, but no one seemed to want to delve into a response.
Before she could force out her thoughts, Jared leaned forward, and in some of the most measured words sheâd ever heard, handed out a nicely wrapped answer about internet security and industry standardization.
He was sexy, but not very outside the box as far as she could tell. Was this the man sheâd been taught had revolutionized network security? A tiny snort slipped from her throat before she could stop it. Heat flooded her cheeks when several pairs of eyes swiveled in her direction.
Like most the people in the room, Jared locked his gaze on hers. His voice was smooth and confident. âI think Ms. Elford has a different opinion.â
She shook her head. âIâm fine.â It didnât matter if she disagreed with him or not. It wasnât even because she hadnât stopped thinking about him for more than a couple of minutes at a time all day. If she pretended hard enough, it didnât even have to do with what he thought about her. This all centered around how much respect she had for the legend. If he said something was the case, he either knew more than she did about the subject, or would figure it out on his own later.
âPlease.â There was no condescension in his tone. Only confidence and curiosity. âIf youâve got a different opinion, Iâd like to hear it.â
Great. Now heâd backed her into a corner. Either way, sheâd lose. She forced herself to look him in the eye, took a deep breath, and let the words flow. âThatâs the problem with industry standards. They only matter to the people who are using them, and just because youâve standardized something doesnât mean everyone is complying.â
He shifted in his chair, turning more toward her, and rested his arms on the table. âItâs true, but offering standardization up front gives people a certain level of expectation. They know theyâre getting specific services and that they can take that technology elsewhere if they need to expand or add on new components.â
He didnât see it. The surprised realization sparked a new kind of confidence. She recognized the feeling insideâit was the same one sheâd had six months ago when sheâd breached the security on his network. The knowledge that for as much as this individual knew, he wasnât perfect. She felt surer of her response this time. âWhich is great, I agree. Standardization makes business run smoother.â
He smiled, nodded, and turned away.
âExcept.â She spit out the single word and once again felt every head swivel in her direction. Having their attention is a good thing. Remember that. You donât care if they donât like what you have to say, as long as you state your point clearly. She had this right. âWhen it comes to security.â
Jared raised an eyebrow.
She leaned one arm on the table, directing her statements at him. âSome bored chaos hacker stumbles on your website and decides they want to leave a little âI was hereâ note. Or even worse, they want access to your customer database. Theyâre not thinking, âOh, I need to use industry standards to break in.ââ
âBut why are they doing it in the first place?â Jared countered. âWhy are they even there? That scenario doesnât make any sense.â
âChaos hacker. The explanation is in
Comments (0)