I swiped my hair back. "I warned you about the bigger brand names. They have tricky contracts that can drop you for any little thing. Like getting kicked out of your hotel suite," I said.
"Well, let's just say I like their approach better so far," Fenton said. "No mix-ups or mixed messages."
"Is that what you think?"
Fenton gave me a deeper look, but the two women joined us and pulled his attention away. "We heard you like tequila, Mr. Morris, so we took the liberty of ordering a bottle. The good stuff, no need for body shots unless that's what you're in the mood for," Bethany said.
"Hello, Kya. I almost didn't recognize you out of linen button-ups and off the tennis court. Must feel kind of strange," Alice said.
"What's strange is a company that makes basketball shoes looking for an MMA fighter to endorse their product," I countered.
"We make shoes for everyone. Everyone needs shoes," Bethany said. "Not everyone needs vitamin supplements, do they Mr. Morris? Do you take vitamins?" She squeezed his bicep and batted her eyelashes.
"Speaking of shoes," Alice continued. "Our company made a pair especially for you. Completely original, custom designed. Come try them on."
They led Fenton to a V.I.P. booth. Waiters cleared away the small table so they could make a big scene of revealing his custom shoes. Alice knelt to help slip them on, her generous cleavage attracting more attention. Bethany poured him a glass of tequila and held it to his lips.
I waited until he stood up and roped his arms over the two women. They started off on a lap around the bar to try out his new shoes. I deliberately crossed their path and pretended not to realize I was in the way. When Fenton cleared his throat I made sure to hold eye contact as long as I could.
"Not really your style," I said.
He glanced down at the shoes and then back up at me. "Who cares?" Both he and my rival agents laughed.
Fenton finally broke away from the other agents and mingled with fans. I endured the awkward attentions of a young Mixed Martial Arts fan as he waited for an autograph.
"I love how he just does what he wants. That's like me, you know?" the ruddy young man said.
"I can imagine," I said.
He launched into a story about standing up to his manager at the restaurant where he worked. I nodded and kept him jostling closer to Fenton. When it was almost my young hopeful's turn, a rotund man jumped in front of him. We were both surprised by the man's grace.
"Ling Pho Lounge, tonight," he said to Fenton.
Fenton nodded. He signed my young friend's cocktail napkin and turned away without even looking at me. I had to recapture Fenton's attention. He circled back through the bar and settled into the booth with Bethany and Alice again.
If I could not get Fenton to look at me, at least I could get him to notice who I was with. I scanned the bar for the man most likely to make Fenton jealous. At the bar stood a tall man in black pants and a tight black t-shirt. He was passable handsome with short, cropped brown hair and a semi-vacant look. He nodded at whatever his friend in the suit was saying. I decided to introduce myself.
"Excuse me, do you mind if I squeeze in here? I've been trying to get a drink, but it’s so crowded," I said. I smiled up at the man in the black t-shirt.
The man in the suit looked me up and down with narrowed eyes and a slow smile. "Buy her a drink or I will."
"No, please, I don't want to interrupt," I said.
"I'd like to," the tall man said. He sounded as if he did not talk much. "He's always going on about work."
The man in the suit flicked a quick look at the bartender and my drink appeared in seconds. The man in the black t-shirt scooped it up for me. I realized he had nice brown eyes, sort of sad, too soft for the hard muscles and sharp angles of the rest of him.
"Thanks," I said and meant it.
His smile never had a chance to appear. Fenton was in his face the moment we stepped away from the bar together. Though he was taller and just as hard-bodied, the man in black took one small step back.
"She's with me," Fenton said.
"Didn't seem like it to me," my companion argued.
"Or me, either," I said.
"Kya, I need you to come with me now," Fenton said. He reached out a hand without taking his eyes off the taller man.