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Fake Marriage Box Set

Page 66

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“The date went well,” I forced myself to say.

“Oh? With Maddie?” She brightened up immediately. “I do love that girl. She’s such a sweetheart.”

I grimaced but didn’t argue. “She’s sweet.”

“And you guys have known each other since you were kids. Well, you were there when she was born, weren’t you? Isn’t it funny how life plays out sometimes?” Mom settled back into bed with a slight smile on her face. “Don’t you mess this up for me, you hear? She’s a catch.”

I nodded, pretending that I agreed with her. I couldn’t tell my mother that Maddie had tried extorting money out of me using her request, it would ruin everything. One glance at her laid back, and stress-free state and I knew exactly what I had to do.

“Things are looking really good with Maddie,” I said. I knew I was going to have to fake marry Maddie and pay that damn woman whatever she wanted.

Chapter Ten

Maddie

My work-out routine had been interrupted by a sudden bout of sickness, and as I leaned over the toilet bowl, I realized the sashimi Nancie had brought home the night before had given me food poisoning in the worst way possible. I spent a solid hour vomiting and had just finished when Martin called, reminding me of our scheduled meeting.

I had managed to take a shower and make myself look presentable within an hour, and arrived at the modeling agency only 10 minutes late. Martin was used to me being late. In fact, he started scheduling our meetings 15 minutes earlier than he wanted to see me, so technically I was still five minutes early.

I met him in his office, a man in his late 30s with an attractive face and kind eyes, and sat across from him. His hair was a dirty blond, shaved on the sides of his head with an inch styled on the top, and he wore plaid button ups with black and white pin-striped trousers. He wasn’t the most marketable agent, Nancie had nearly chewed me out after first meeting him, but he had been the only one who didn’t give me the creeps or attempted to cop a feel. Which was in instant win, in my book.

“Maddie!” He smiled widely and patted my shoulder. “How have you been?”

“Fine,” I said. “Keeping up on my accounts and promotions.”

“Good, good.” He nodded and took a seat. His thick framed glasses covered dark brown eyes, and they sat on a nose slightly too small for his head. “How many new followers?”

“Since two weeks ago?” I counted in my head. “About 1,500.”

I recognized the look of disappointment that crossed his face, but he was quick to disguise it. “That’s a number we can work with. Do you have any ideas on how to double it, though? Any upcoming promotions, or maybe cross-promotions?”

“Tomorrow is my weekly cross-promo with Nancie,” I said. “And there’s a new flavor of energy drink coming out at the end of the week. I’m on the list for one of the first ones.”

“Energy drink,” he said as he copied my words onto his laptop. “That should get you at least another thousand. Good.”

“I was hoping there might be some auditions,” I said. “I haven’t auditioned for anything in over a month.” Which was unusual for me. Normally I would have had at least one audition a week.

“Nothing’s popped up for your profile,” he said after a few clicks. “Of course, you’re always free to audition un-agented. I’m sure there are a few commercials needing brunettes around here.”

I grimaced. Auditioning for anything un-agented was a sure-fire way to be passed by before being given a chance.

“So nothing then?” I leaned back in my seat. Why was I surprised?

“Well, there is something,” he said and showed me his laptop screen. It was an offer for a contract. “There’s a small photoshoot in the area for umbrellas. Pricey ones, actually. It’s on Friday at seven am.”

“That’s something,” I said, hope fluttering in my stomach. “What does it pay?”

“That’s the thing.” He sighed. “It only pays $200, so you’ll take home $180.”

My agent received 20 percent of everything I made, which usually wasn’t so bad when the jobs paid more than $500, but it definitely hurt on anything less.

I had no choice though; it was a job, and it paid.

“I’ll do it,” I said. “Send me the contract, and I’ll forward my signature.”

“Perfect,” Martin nodded and closed his laptop. “Anything else new?”

I considered it for a moment. There was nothing I could tell him, nothing that he would be useful for anyways. I shook my head and stood.



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