The stakes are high, but the prize is worth it!
Ask Alice Ford to shine in the boardroom and itâs a done deal. Ask her to go on a first date, however, and sheâs a quivering mess! So, when she discovers that sheâs the target of an office betâto get her into bedâitâs her professional nightmare!
Office legend Harry Stephens is her unlikely savior. He even volunteers to teach her just how to avoid a heartbreaker. After all, it takes one to know oneâ¦.
But what is Harry really after? And when his kisses throw a curveball into the situation, is Alice ready to gamble everything for love?
ALL BETS ARE ON
âIf youâre thinking about dating again, maybe youâd like to go for a drink,â he said.
âWith you?â
The question exploded from her lips in the form of a laugh. Because it was laughable, wasnât it? That after her past experiences she would look twice at someone like him?
âYour amusement could be construed as an insult, you know,â he said mildly.
âI canât,â she said. âSorry.â
In Harry Stephensâs world, of course, no meant maybe. He realized it was a simple matter of finding the right approach. Start small. And, most important of all, offer some kind of incentive. Make her think he could be part of the solution instead of part of the problem.
âJust hear me out,â he said. âIâve got a proposition for you.â
âWhat kind of proposition?â
The upset tone had slipped from her voice. He could almost hear the ticking over of her mind. Her attention had been raised because heâd given his question a detached work-style tone.
âIâm exactly what you need,â he said. âTo help you get back out there.â
Dear Reader,
In my former life, I worked in a number of offices and I was always intrigued by the melting pot of personalities you get in that environment. People with different backgrounds and lives, who are thrown together and have to find a way to get along. The idea of writing an office romance really appealed to me, and I thought hard about the types of people Iâd encountered at work over the years. I had a boss like Alice once. She was completely absorbed and focused on work to the exclusion of everything else, she had no social life and kept everyone at a professional distance. I found myself wondering what could have happened to drive someone to take refuge in their work like that.
Ten years ago a dodgy photo in unscrupulous hands might have been flashed around a table in a bar or shown to a few mates. In the world of social media that we live in now, dodgy photos have the potential to go viral at the click of a button and, once out there, can be impossible to get back. Tearing up a photo is no longer an end to it. What might have been a short-lived joke ten years ago can be a massive betrayal now.
What would it be like to find yourself âout thereâ on the internet, your privacy compromised by someone you trusted? Under those circumstances, it might make perfect sense to throw yourself into work, an area of your life where you are responsible for your own success or failure and where you can easily keep people at armâs length.
Then imagine what might happen if someone irresistible came along and challenged that safety?
From these thoughts, Alice and Harryâs story grew.
I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it.
Charlotte
ABOUT CHARLOTTE PHILLIPS
Charlotte Phillips has been reading romantic fiction since her teens, and she adores upbeat stories with happy endings. Writing them for Harlequin® is her dream job.
She combines writing with looking after her fabulous husband, two teenagers, a four-year-old and a dachshund. When something has to give, itâs usually housework.
She lives in Wiltshire.
This and other titles by Charlotte Phillips are available in ebook formatâcheck out www.millsandboon.co.uk.
This book is for Libby, gorgeous daughter,
lovely friend and expert brainstormer. With all my love.
ONE
Alice Ford opened the top drawer of the spare desk in the office, searched for a pen and found a bombshell.
With her temper tested because her entire team was late back from lunch, she was relegated to answering the telephone when she should at this very moment be leading a meeting on how to move forward with the biggest account Innova Brand Management had yet won.
Add to that the absence of her own work station with its colour-coordinated filing system, pen pot, To-Do list and diary managing every moment of her day. This desk was a paper-strewn, disorganised mess from hell, used as a dumping ground for filing by everyone else in the place. Not a pen in sight, hence the need to claw through goodness knew what in the rubbish-filled drawers just so she could note down a phone message. There were crumbs under her fingernails. Bleurgh. And then exasperation spilled over as she looked in disbelief at the crumpled sheet of paper in her hands.