Read KAGE (KAGE Trilogy #1) Online
Authors: Maris Black
“Wow,”
she texted back.
“When did my little boy get so fancy?”
“Today,”
I replied.
“How is the job?”
she asked.
“Don’t know yet. Just got here, Ma.”
“Oh, yeah. Well, keep me posted. Love you. P.S. Are those rocks on your counter?”
I laughed out loud and decided not to reply. Let her wonder. It made things more exciting.
The first night passed quietly. I opted not to go out. No reason to go anywhere when I had a great place, room service, and a seventy-inch wall-mounted LCD. I could even see the TV from the bed, which was a plus when porn time rolled around. I rented
Huge Pom-Poms 2
, and after I fast-forwarded over the credits and the intro scene, the next twelve minutes were absolutely fascinating. Then I went to sleep with a smile on my face.
5
T
HE NEXT morning, I felt fresher than I had in a long time. Possibly ever. There were no birds singing outside my Vegas window, but a lot can be said for waking up in what is essentially a palace. All I needed were some harem girls, a hookah, and a couple of servants to complete the fantasy.
After a hot shower, during which I giggled to myself about bathing with rocks, I dressed for success. My heather-gray skinny dress pants cuffed at the ankle, showing a strip of argyle socks above black dress shoes. I opted for a black button-up shirt with a white t-shirt underneath. I smoothed the wrinkles out with the hotel iron and admired myself in the full-length mirror near the bed, unhitching a couple of buttons at the top— just enough to show the collar of my undershirt. I bent to temptation and tied my Claddagh necklace around my throat. It may not have been the most professional piece of jewelry, but how could I leave it off? Over the years, it had become almost a part of my body. I felt naked without it.
My hair was uncooperative, sticking out in a couple of spots in such a way that I resembled a horny little devil, and I attempted to tame it with a dollop of hair gel. After ten minutes of fighting, I had the fly-aways tamed, the ducktail in place, and my bangs curtaining one eye just the way I liked it.
“Hello, stud,” I said to my reflection. Then I flipped my phone out and took a selfie to send to my mom. I captioned it
First Day on the Job
, then hit send.
“
Good luck, baby!
” My mom texted back. “
You look beautiful as always.
”
I wondered why I was being so overly-concerned about how I was dressed, anyway. It wasn’t like this was a real job. It was an internship— a test run. People expected interns to be slightly unkempt and a bit surly, right? At least that’s how it always was in the movies. The intern comes in, with a progressive attitude and a healthy disdain for authority cultivated through years of college classes and keggers, and breathes new life into the stodgy work atmosphere. After a couple of weeks, everyone is loosening their ties and taking longer lunch breaks. The girls are bringing their babies to work, everyone is openly embracing diversity, and the men are bonding over beers and darts at some cutting-edge club in the hipster district. Creativity has a renaissance.
Yeah, nice fantasy, dude.
The reality was that this was Vegas, and everyone in the office of the Alcazar was at least as progressive as me— even the granny answering the telephones. She wore tortoise-shell Catwoman glasses with a black chain, a pink cashmere sweater, and a matching pink streak in her platinum hair.
“Can I help you?” she asked in a smooth, professional tone. Her work voice. I was willing to bet her regular speaking voice was several steps lower and a lot less refined.
“I’m Jamie Atwood,” I said. “The new intern.”
“Intern?” She cocked her head to the side, as if she didn’t have the foggiest clue what I was talking about but was reluctant to admit it.
“We’ve got an intern?” A man poked his head around the half wall at Catwoman’s back, but when he saw me, his face fell. “Oh, a male intern. It figures. I was about to be going all Bill Clinton up in here. So what are you going to be doing for us, male intern?”
“Uh… publicist?” I was becoming increasingly less sure of myself. In fact, I was beginning to question whether I’d even come to the right hotel. Everyone seemed surprised— and less than thrilled— to see me. “Did you guys not know I was starting today? The name’s Jamie Atwood. Maybe there’s a memo or something?”
The man rounded the receptionist’s desk and shook my hand. “Mark Gladstone,” he said, slipping his hands easily into the pockets of his expensive dress pants. His dark hair was perfectly tousled, his shirt starched to perfection. “I’m afraid you’ve caught us a little off guard. We weren’t told we were getting an intern. Never had one before, so…” He hesitated, rubbing the back of his neck, looking toward the receptionist as if for ideas. “What do you think, Cathy? Should we put him back there next to Alicia? Bet she’d love that. She really goes for those pretty boy types.”
Cathy scoffed. “Don’t do that to the poor boy. He wouldn’t get a lick of work done, and neither would she.”
Mark gave me a conspiratorial look and dropped his voice a notch. “Alicia is very… outgoing. If you catch my meaning.” He raised his eyebrows, and Cathy snorted.
“Outgoing, my ass. That girl is a slut, plain and simple.” She shook a finger at me. “You stay away from her if you know what’s good for you. There are plenty of nice girls in Vegas if you know where to look. Across town, though. Not around here.”
I nodded. “Thanks for the advice. I’m here to work, though. Not looking for a girlfriend.”
Mark huffed like he was personally affronted. “Who said anything about a girlfriend? You’re way too young to settle down. Hell, I’m too young to settle down, and I’ve got at least five years on you. How old are you?”
“I’ll be twenty-one in three weeks and a day. The twenty-ninth.”
The door opened behind me, and a cool draft hit my back. Cathy looked up, surprised, then started shuffling papers like she was trying to look busy.
Mark clapped me on the back. “Hey, we’ll have to take you out after work on your birthday and buy you some drinks. It’s not every day a guy becomes legal in Sin City! Don’t plan anything for the night of the twenty-ninth. I’ll handle everything.”
Mark, who looked the part of the quintessential office stud, sounded altogether too excited about introducing me to the debauchery of Vegas. Like he would take great personal pleasure in escorting me through the gates of Hell. My mind conjured up an image of me snorting mounds of cocaine off of a roulette table as Mark Gladstone cackled maniacally, surrounded by mobsters, carnies, and hookers… and one really awkward-looking donkey.
“Sounds nice,” I told him, pushing the disturbing image out of my head.
“You’ll have to get in line, Mark,” said a voice from behind me— a voice smooth and deep like dark chocolate. It was surprising that I recognized the voice without turning around. Except for the noisy video on my phone, I hadn’t heard Michael Kage speak since the night we met. But now he sounded familiar, as if we’d only paused for a moment in conversation.
I whirled around, feeling the smile take over my face. He was dressed in running shorts and sneakers. Sweat had seeped through almost every inch of his t-shirt, causing it to cling to the curves of his muscles. Muscles that were only hinted at in the suit he’d worn the night of the event but were now on audacious display here in this professional setting. Somehow the incongruity of his style of dress and the locale made it almost obscene— like a shirtless guy in a restaurant.
Kage ran a hand through his unruly dark hair, pushing sweaty tendrils away from his face. A few strands still clung to his temples. “I think it’s only right that I should be the one to take Jamie out on his birthday, since he belongs to me.” Both Cathy and Mark seemed to do subtle double-takes at his comment. “I hired him as my publicist, so he’s working for me.”
“Ahhh…” Cathy breathed. “That explains it. We were trying to figure out where the little whippersnapper belonged. Now we know.” She glanced pointedly at Mark. “You got here just in the nick of time. I’m afraid Mr. Gladstone was about to change his sexual affiliation just so he could pull a Bill Clinton.”
“Uh-huh.” Kage narrowed his eyes at Mark. “Get your own intern. This one’s mine.”
Mark waved his hand in the air dismissively. “I want a girl intern, not a boy one. Could you put in a good word with your uncle for me?”
“Sure. Why don’t we get you a private secretary who’s fresh out of massage therapy school? Put you in an office upstairs, with a bed in it? Fully stocked with flavored condoms and a box of latex toys.”
Mark positively beamed. “Now you’re talking.”
“Yeah,” Kage said. “I’ll get right on it.”
He turned his attention to me. “So how is it going, Jamie? Did you get settled into your room okay?”
“Oh, yeah. That place is phenomenal. Love the rock soaps.”
Cathy wrinkled her nose at Kage. “Looks like someone else could use some soap right now.”
Kage smiled almost shyly and grabbed the tail of his t-shirt, pulling it up and using it to wipe his sweaty forehead. I caught a glimpse of his glistening washboard abs before he dropped it back into place.
“You wanna grab some lunch?” he asked.
“Me?” I snapped my gaping mouth shut and looked around to confirm he was talking to me. “Sure. Uh, now?”
“No, not now.” His tone suggested I might be a little soft in the head. “It’s only ten after eight. I meant at noon.”
“Of course.” I blushed so hard I was positive my hair turned red.
“Mr. Santori,” Cathy interrupted, speaking to Kage. “Where should we put your intern?”
“My uncle didn’t make arrangements for him to have an office?”
Cathy shook her head slowly.
“Well, give him an office then. A nice one.”
“Really?” Mark gaped. “I’ve been here two years, and I’m still in a cubicle.”
“Not my problem, brown-nose. You’ve been kissing up to the wrong Santori.” Kage banded his strong fingers around my arm just above my elbow and pulled me down a wide walkway flanked by cubicles. All of the employees, which appeared to comprise two men and four women, had their noses stuck out of their cubicles, watching us.
One girl, about my age with dark blond hair, smiled as we passed. If she was supposed to be the office slut, she hid it well beneath her conservative clothing and wholesome face. “Hi, Kage,” she said under her breath.
“Alicia,” Kage said flatly, and I couldn’t help wondering if there was a story there.
When we got to the back of the office, I asked the question that was currently driving me crazy. “Why do some people call you Kage, and you introduce yourself as Michael Kage, but Cathy just called you Mr. Santori?”
He shrugged. “Michael Kage Santori is my legal name. But I don’t like Santori, so I dropped it.”
“That makes sense.”
“Does it?”
The brusqueness of his tone made it feel like he was putting me in my place for something, though for what I had no idea. Still, I wasn’t stupid. I didn’t bring up the name thing again.
When we got to the back of the office area, I noted three empty cubicles, one of which I assumed belonged to Mark Gladstone. There were several doors back there, too. “Any of these offices empty?” Kage asked loudly to no one in particular.
Alicia came up beside us. “They’re all taken, Kage. Management, you know.”
I had the sudden fear that Kage was going to start busting down doors and tossing managers out on their asses. Alienating an entire office full of people and establishing myself as the pet of the boss’s spoiled nephew was not what I had in mind for my first day of work.
“It’s fine, Kage.” I leaned closer, so that only he could hear what I was saying. Well, he and possibly the blond girl Alicia, who was standing much too close for comfort. “I can work in a cubicle, I don’t mind.”
“Well, I do mind,” he said. “You’re working for me, and I don’t want any of these fuckers knowing my business.”
“Ahhh.” I was beginning to see his dilemma now. He wasn’t playing favorites; he was protecting his interests. I felt a little ashamed for misinterpreting his motives, and for thinking he was spoiled.
“Yeah, you sit out here in a cubicle, and whoever is nearby can hear every word you’re saying.” He speared Alicia with a hard glare, and she finally had enough sense to walk away. “I don’t mean to be rude. I’m just a little pissed because my uncle was supposed to get you an office. I asked him to. Maybe you could just use a cubicle for a while until I can arrange something different. Do you have a laptop?”