âIs that what you think? That youâre a number in a little black book?â
He had his hands on her forearms and she couldnât move, but she raised her head defiantly, looking him full in the face.
âActually, yes.â And she made sure he knew she meant it. She waited for his temper to rise, but he considered her dryly, his head to one side.
âSome girls wouldnât mind that,â he said softly. âBeing wined and dined with no strings attached is what plenty of career women call for these days. No messy complications or irritating ties.â
She didnât know quite how to answer that. âYou have an answer for everything, donât you?â she muttered crossly. Her voice wasnât as acidic as she would have liked, mainly because with the palms of her hands pressed against his chest so hard she could feel the beat of his heart, and with the smell and feel of him all around her, her head was beginning to spin.
Getting to know him in the boardroomâand the bedroom!
A secret romance, a forbidden affair, a thrilling attractionâ¦
What happens when two people work together and simply canât help falling in loveâno matter how hard they try to resist?
Find out in our ongoing series of stories set in the world of work.
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âMISS MILBURN? Mr Ward is here for his ten oâclock appointment.â Rosalieâs secretaryâs disembodied voice from the intercom was not as calm and businesslike as usual, and Rosalie knew why, having met the said Mr Ward at a dinner party a few weeks earlier.
She glanced at her neat gold wrist-watch. Eight minutes to ten; he was early. She forced herself to breathe deeply before saying, âAsk Mr Ward to wait a few moments, please, Jenny.â
âYes, Miss Milburn.â
The intercom clicked goodbye and Rosalie sank back in the big leather chair, her heart racing. This was stupid; this was so, so stupid. What on earth was the matter with her? She had been like a cat on a hot tin roof since Kingsley Ward had made the appointment a week agoâor rather his secretary had liaised with her secretary, to be exact.
Of course she could have insisted he see one of the other three partners in the firm of chartered quantity surveyors she was part of, after her polite messageâagain via the two secretariesâthat she was terribly busy but had arranged for Mr Ward to see a colleague had been turned down flat.
Mr Ward was quite happy to wait until she was available, his secretary had told Jenny, and there was no question of seeing someone else. Miss Milburn had been personally recommended, and Mr Ward always went on personal recommendation.
And now he was here. Rosalie glanced nervously round the big, light-filled office that tended to be her home from home with the long hours she worked. She even slept on the couch that occupied one corner when the occasion warranted it. Kingsley Ward was here and it was only at this precise moment that she acknowledged the meeting had been weighing on her spirit like a ton of bricks. It wasnât even as if they had got on that evening at Jamieâs houseâjust the opposite, in fact.
Rosalie stood, walking across to the massive plate-glass window that overlooked half of Kensington. She stared into the street below without really seeing any of the little ant-type figures scurrying about, a frown wrinkling the pure line of her brow.
She could remember the exact moment she had walked into Jamieâs large and very plush drawing room in Richmond and glanced across the assembled couples, only to find her gaze held and transfixed by a pair of piercingly blue eyes, which had narrowed to twin points of light on her face. She had been aware of David at the side of her saying something, but for the life of her she had been unable to move or speak. And then the cerulean gaze, its deep blue as clear as a summerâs sky, had released her, the man in question turning his head in answer to something the woman on his arm had said. She had taken a deep and very necessary gasp of air, deep enough for David to say anxiously, âAre you all right, Lee? Whatâs the matter?â
âThe matter? Nothing,â She forced a smile, before adding, âHow are you feeling? Thatâs more to the point.â David was an old and very dear university friend who had just been through a painful and acrimonious divorce, which had caused him to totter on the edge of a nervous breakdown for months. The evening was his first venture into the social scene since his wife had left him, taking their two children to live with her new lover, and he had been visibly shaking in the taxi earlier. Only the fact that they were as comfortable together as a pair of old shoes had persuaded him to leave his recently acquired bachelor flat when she had called for him.
âIâm okay.â His smile was more of a grimace and Rosalie felt for him. âItâs just that Iâve never been much good at this sort of thing, dinner parties and such. Ann was always the one who was the life and soul of the party.â