âShall we cast a wager?â
Eleanore turned. âI beg your pardon?â
âA wager. On who will kiss whom first.â
âYouâre mad.â
âIs that a yes?â
Lukas could hear the words coming out of his mouth, but he couldnât quite believe them. Sheâd aggravated him with the way she so easily froze him out. And the more she tried to mind her ps and qs with him, the more he wanted to run roughshod all over them.
âHow about if I kiss you first you can have Harringtonâs name above the door of the hotel?â
Eleanore stilled. âAre you serious?â
âWhy not?â
She couldnât believe he would wager that. âAnd what happens if I kiss you first?â
âWorried about your self-control, moya krasavitsa?â
She hated not knowing what he was calling her, but she wouldnât lower herself to ask. Let him have his fun. Men and their egos.
With two university degrees and a variety of false career starts under her belt, MICHELLE CONDER decided to satisfy her lifelong desire to write and finally found her dream job. She currently lives in Melbourne, Australia, with one super-indulgent husband, three self-indulgent (but exquisite) children, a menagerie of over-indulged pets and the intention of doing some form of exercise daily. She loves to hear from her readers at www.michelleconder.com.
âYOUâRE BREAKING UP, PETRA. Who did you say quit?â Lukas Kuznetskov pressed his mobile phone closer to his ear, straining to hear as his PA explained the latest issue to befall the supposedly creative genius who had been hired to build his ice hotel. Apparently the man had stormed out after Lukas had questioned his latest set of drawings, complaining that Lukas was too controlling and stifled his creativity.
Creativity?
Lukas swore under his breath.
So far he had come up with the overall concept of the hotel himself while the architectural wizard heâd hired had done little more than fill in the technical details and organise the preliminary build. With only a month left until the most anticipated project in Russia was due to open it was fair to say Lukas was a little agitated. âPlease tell me he at least redesigned the interior of the guest bedrooms like I asked,â he growled, grinding his teeth when Petra confirmed that no, he had not.
Useless, lazy, good for nothing ⦠Lukas sucked in a sharp breath as he strove for calm and told Petra heâd handle it. As if he wasnât busy enough.
âTrouble?â
Having momentarily forgotten his Italian ship engineer was in the room Lukas turned away from the splendour of Italyâs Adriatic coastline and glanced at the plans laid out on a scored wooden table. They had just finished going over Tomasoâs design for a supertanker that could carry twice as much cargo as any other on the market and go at twice the speed. If they could pull it off it would be another feather in Lukasâs already well-plumed cap.
Tomaso Coraletti was as close to a friend as Lukas had ever allowed himself to have and the older man stroked his neat beard as Lukas updated him on his pet project.
âBiscotti, Lukas?â
Turning, Lukas replaced his scowl with a smile when he saw Tomasoâs sweet wife, Maria, standing before him with a silver tray of freshly made biscotti in her hands. Tomaso reached across and took a piece before Lukas could respond and got his hand swatted for his efforts. âBah!â she scolded. âLukas is a growing boy. He needs it more than you.â
Tomaso scoffed and Lukas chuckled. Heâd stopped growing a long time ago and they both knew it. âGrazie mille, Maria.â He took a slice of the treat even though he didnât want it and pocketed his phone.
âIt is the best biscotti in the whole of Italy,â Tomaso boasted. âMaybe one day you will be lucky enough to enjoy biscotti like this. If youâre good.â
Lukas chuckled at Tomasoâs pointed comment. Heâd known Tomaso ever since heâd joined his first container ship as a deck boy. In fact, it had been Tomaso who had gotten him the job. He had been the shipâs engineer and had convinced his brother, the captain, to give Lukas a trial. Lukas had been sixteen years old and living off the putrid streets of St Petersburg at the time but unlike the other street kidsâhis fellow troublemakersâheâd had ambition. Something the older man had recognised when Lukas intervened while a group of young thugs tried to fleece Tomaso of his pocket change. And maybe even his life.