âThereâs something about you that makes it hard to look away,â Allan said.
âYou must have an iron will because you donât have any problems doing it.â
He leaned forward, his arms resting on his knees and his face more sincere than Jessi had seen in a while. âThatâs because Iâm not a sap. I know better than to let you think there is anything between us. Youâd use it to get whatever you wanted.â
She shruggedâit would be nice to believe she had that kind of power over him. âGood thing I stopped believing in fairy tales a long time ago.â
âSometimes I donât know whether to arm wrestle you or kiss you.â
âKiss me? That didnât really get us anywhere the last time,â she said.
âI was hesitant because of business complications, but now there is nothing stopping me from taking what I want.â
âExcept me,â she said softly.
She looked over at him to gauge his reaction and it was clear that he took it as a challenge.
* * *
Bound by a Child is part of the Baby Business trilogy: One hostile takeover, two feuding families, three special babies
Huge thanks to all of the readers who chat with me on my Facebook page, especially Danny Bruggemann, Jean Gordon, Barbara Padlo, Angie Floris Thompson and Amelia Hernanadez, who suggested names for the hurricane in this book. I ended up choosing Pandora since it sort of fitted my story. :-)
Plus a shout-out to my UK writing buddies Celia Anderson and Lucy Felthouse. Thanks for talking books, hotties and UK phrases with me. Writing is a hard, lonely job and I have to thank my darling husband and kiddos for their support. And as always thanks to my editor, Charles, for his insight.
One
Allan McKinney might look like a Hollywood hottie with his lean, made-for-sin body, neatly styled dark brown hair and piercing silver eyes that could make a woman forget to think. But Jessi Chandler knew he was the devil in disguise.
He was the bad guy and always had been. More tempting than sin itself as he rode in at the last minute to ruin everything. Knowing him the way she did, she couldnât imagine he had come to her table in the corner of Little Bar here in the Wilshire/La Brea area of Los Angeles for any other reason than to crow about his latest victory.
It had been only three weeks since he and his vengeful cousins at Playtone Games had taken over her familyâs company, Infinity Games, bringing their longtime rivalry to a vicious climax.
Sheâd just come from a meeting at Playtone Games where sheâd made a proposal to try to save her job. The most humiliating thing about this merger was having to grovel in front of Allan. She was a damned fine director of marketing, but instead of being able to continue in her role and just get on with the work that needed to be done, she had to trek into the city from Malibu once a week and prove to the Montrose cousins that she was earning her paycheck.
He slid into the booth across from her, his long legs brushing against hers. He acted as if he owned this place and the world. There was something about his arrogance that had always made her want to take him down a notch or two.
It was 5:00 p.m., and the bar was just beginning to get busy with the after-work crowd. She was anonymous here and could just let her guard down for a minute, but now that Allan was sitting across from her, messing with her mojo, that wasnât going to happen.
âAre you here to rub it in?â she asked at last. It fit with the man she believed him to be and with the little competition theyâd had going since the moment theyâd met. âSeems like a Montrose-McKinney thing to do.â
Her father had been adamant about staying away from Thomas Montroseâs grandsons due to the bad blood between their families. She got that, but even before the takeover, sheâd had no choice but to deal with Allan when her best friend, Patti, had fallen in love with and married his best friend.
âNot quite. Iâm here to make you an offer,â he said, signaling the waitress and ordering a Glenlivet neat.
âThanks, but I donât need your kind of help,â she said. Sheâd probably find herself out of a job quicker with him on her side.
He ran his hand over the top of his short hair, narrowed his eyes and looked at her in a way that made her sit up straighter in her chair. âDo you get off on pushing me to the edge?â
âSort of,â she said. She did take a certain joy in sparring with him. And she kept score of who won and who lost.
âWhy?â he asked, pulling out his iPhone and setting it on the table next to him. He glanced down at the screen and then brought his electric gaze back to her.