Callie Endicott

Moonlight Over Seattle


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Nicole. “I don’t suppose you’d consider hiring me as your office manager.”

      “You’re looking for a job?”

      “I worked out my notice on my last position and haven’t started looking, but I’m getting my résumé together.”

      “You don’t live here.”

      “On the flight up I was thinking it might be a good idea to move away from Los Angeles. I’ve really liked Seattle whenever I visited Jordan.” Her face fell. “But...but I guess you wouldn’t want to hire me. I mean because he’s writing the articles and the way our moms... I mean, I’d never say anything to Jordan about anything here at the agency, but it wasn’t fair to ask.”

      Nicole couldn’t deny that privacy was a concern. On the other hand, she had nothing to hide. She wouldn’t hire Jordan’s little sister just to prove that, but it would be a side benefit should Chelsea prove to be suitable.

      “What sort of work experience do you have?” she asked, playing for time to think.

      “At the company where I used to work I started out as an office manager, though I’ve been in HR for the last three years.”

      Chelsea had experience a talent agency could use, yet the last thing they needed was a scared rabbit in the office. Nicole hesitated, but Moonlight Ventures was supposed to be about encouraging people to become their best. Why couldn’t that apply to an office manager, as well as other clients?

      She took an application from a file drawer. “Fill this out if you’re really interested.”

      Chelsea’s expression brightened. “I’ll do it right now.”

      “One of my business partners should do the official interview. He’s just here until the end of the week, so he’ll probably want to see you this afternoon.”

      “So soon? I don’t, that is, I...” Chelsea looked alarmed and gestured nervously toward her face.

      “Don’t worry, it’s fine. We’ve all been there in one way or another.”

      Still looking apprehensive, Chelsea sat down to work on the application. The fact that she didn’t cut and run seemed a point in her favor.

      Nicole walked down the hallway and, with a brief knock, slipped into Adam’s office. He was intently watching a video. Prospective clients had begun inundating them with portfolios and DVDs of amateur performances. Reviewing them was at least half of how he’d spent his time since arriving.

      He glanced at her. “This one is painfully awful. It’s from the stage mama of all stage mamas. She’s in the video more than her child.”

      Nicole had already known that parents who pushed their kids unbearably would be one of the less palatable aspects of working as an agent. Over the years she’d come to the conclusion that parents were often trying to fulfill their own dreams through their children.

      “I have someone interested in the office manager’s position. She’s filling out the application right now and I wondered if you had time to interview her.”

      “That’s fine,” Adam said. “Beats watching this and we have to get somebody hired. You can’t do everything alone and I won’t be here full-time for another two months, give or take. Not that you haven’t been doing a terrific job. Agency revenues are already higher than when Kevin owned Moonlight Ventures.”

      Nicole was glad she didn’t need to explain the circumstances, just let Chelsea make her own impression. Hopefully, letting her interview was the right thing to do.

       Chapter Three

      JORDAN STARED AT his sister in stunned surprise. “You did what?”

      “I got a job. When I went looking for you at Nicole’s agency, it turned out they needed an office manager. So I applied and interviewed with Adam Wilding, who’s even more delicious in person than in his pictures. I start tomorrow.”

      Her words were fast and nervous, her hands twisting together. Jordan hated seeing her that way. For a while she’d come out of the shell she’d forged to protect herself from the constant tension in the house between their battling parents, then a string of cheating boyfriends had damaged her newfound confidence. The latest, Ron, hadn’t been physically abusive, but he’d done his best to convince her that she was lucky to have him, and any issues between them were all her imagination.

      Jordan sighed. His sister’s new job would complicate doing the articles for PostModern. He’d need to have a discussion with Nicole about her motives in hiring a relative of the journalist writing about her and the agency.

      “Congratulations,” he said. “Shall we look for an apartment over the weekend, or would you rather stay at my condo while you get the lay of the land first?”

      “I don’t need to do either, at least not right away. Nicole has a guesthouse over her garage, and she says I can rent it while I get used to the Seattle area and figure out where I want to live permanently. Your place only has one bedroom, so this is much better than sleeping on the couch and crowding you. I know Terri usually stays on your boat when she’s here, but this, uh...is best for me, I think.”

      Jordan wasn’t sure whether to be annoyed or grateful. For months he and Terri had been encouraging their baby sister to break things off with Ron. Chelsea had struggled with the idea—hardly a surprise with the less-than-blissful example of domestic life in which they’d been raised. She probably believed that was how relationships worked. Now, after one visit to Nicole George’s talent agency, she had a job that was twelve hundred miles from Ron Swanson.

      Jordan decided it was something to celebrate, no matter how it had come about, or how many complications might ensue.

      “Could we, um...go over to Nicole’s right now?” Chelsea asked. “That way you could see the guesthouse with me.”

      “Sounds like a plan.”

      In his small two-seater sports car, he noticed Chelsea gulping and turning pale.

      “Are you all right?” he asked. “Does being in a car make you nervous because of the accident?”

      “Not exactly.” She frowned at the dashboard. “I feel guilty, I guess. I’d just told Ron I wanted to split up. He got angry, and the next thing I knew we were broadsided.” She pushed a hand through her hair. “I don’t remember getting hit, just Ron swearing a blue streak afterward about the damage to his SUV.”

      “The police told Terri that the other vehicle ran a stoplight. It had nothing to do with you or Ron’s driving.”

      “I know, it’s just hard not to keep thinking about it.”

      Jordan winked at her, the way he’d done when they were kids. “Come on, Cheesy, you aren’t to blame. The accident had nothing to do with you.”

      She grinned at the old nickname. “I guess not. Anyway, getting the job up here feels right.”

      It was harder for him to be certain of the same thing, but at least she was making decisions about her life.

      * * *

      CHELSEA HOPED SHE didn’t look too anxious. She’d never lived anywhere except the Los Angeles area and the thought of moving to a different city in another state was scary, though her brother lived there, too. But this was the time to do it, while she was between jobs. She was even excited to think Seattle could be a whole new start.

      She had quietly given notice for her old position two weeks earlier, asking her boss to keep it confidential. Since Ron worked for the same company, she’d figured it was best to cut all ties. The day before yesterday, she had finished working out her notice so it had seemed the right moment to break up with him. As soon as she’d told him they were over, she had felt a huge conviction that she’d done the right thing, but then the accident had happened