The Price Of Desire: The Price of Success / The Cost of Her Innocence / Not For Sale. JACQUELINE BAIRD

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The Price Of Desire: The Price of Success / The Cost of Her Innocence / Not For Sale - JACQUELINE  BAIRD


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car. I don’t want a second-class driver. I need someone equally talented and charismatic or the sponsors will throw hissy fits.’

      Luke spoke up. ‘There’s also the problem of limited in-season testing. We can’t just throw in a brand-new driver mid-season and expect him to handle the car anywhere near the way Rafael did.’

      Marco glanced down at the list. ‘No. Rafael is irreplaceable. I accept that the Drivers’ Championship is no longer an option, but I want to win the Constructors’ Championship. The team deserves it. All of these drivers would ditch their contract to drive for me, but I’d rather not deal with a messy court battle. Where do we stand on the former champion who retired last year? Have you contacted him?’

      Russell shook his head. ‘Even with the August break he won’t be in good enough shape when the season resumes in September.’

      ‘So my only option is to take on a driver from another team?’

      ‘No, it isn’t.’ Sasha’s voice was low, but intensely powerful, and husky enough to command attention.

      Marco’s eyes slid to her. Her stance remained relaxed, one leg crossed over the other, but in her eyes he saw ferocious purpose.

      ‘You have something to add?’

      Fierce blue eyes snapped at him as she rolled her shoulders. As last time, he couldn’t help but follow the movement. Then his eyes travelled lower, to the breasts covered by her nondescript T-shirt. Again the pull of desire was strong and sharp, unlike anything he’d experienced before. Again he pushed it away and forced his gaze back to her face.

      A faint flush covered her cheeks. ‘You know I do. I know the car inside out. I’ve driven it at every Friday Practice since last season. The way I see it, I’m the only way you can win the Constructors’ Championship. Plus you’d save a lot of money and the unnecessary litigation of trying to tempt away a driver mid-season from another team. In the last few practices my runtimes have nearly equalled Rafael’s.’

      Marco silently admitted the truth of her words. He might not sit on the pit wall for every single minute of a race—the engineer and aerodynamicist in him preferred the hard facts of the telemetry reports—but he knew Sasha’s race times to the last fraction.

      He also knew racing was more than just the right car in the right hands. ‘Yes, but you’re yet to perform under the pressure of a Saturday practice, a pole position shoot-out and a race on Sunday. I’d rather have a driver with actual race experience.’

      Russell fidgeted and cleared his throat. ‘I agree, Marco. I think Alan might be a better option—’

      ‘I’ve consistently surpassed Alan’s track times,’ she said of the team’s second driver. ‘Luke will confirm it.’

      Luke’s half-hearted shrug made Marco frown.

      ‘Is there a problem?’

      The other man cleared his throat. ‘Not a problem, exactly, but I’m not sure how the team will react to … you know …’

      ‘No, I don’t know. If you have something to say, then say it.’

      ‘He means how the team will react to a woman lead driver,’ Sasha stated baldly.

      Recalling her accusation of sexism, he felt a flash of anger swell through him. He knew the views of others when it came to employing women as drivers. The pathetically few women racers attested to the fact that it was a predominantly male sport, but he believed talent was talent, regardless of the gender that wielded it.

      The thought that key members in his team didn’t share his belief riled him.

      He rose. ‘That will be all, gentlemen.’

      Russell’s surprise was clear. ‘Do you need some time to make the decision?’

      His gaze stayed on Sasha. Her chest had risen in a sharp intake of breath. Again he had to force himself not to glance down at her breasts. The effort it took not to look displeased him immensely.

      ‘I’ve requested figures from my lawyers by morning. I’ll let you know my decision.’

      His butler led them out.

      ‘Mr de Cervantes—’ Sasha started.

      He held up a hand. ‘Let me make one thing clear. I didn’t refuse you a drive because of your gender. Merely because of your disruptive influence within my team.’

      Her eyes widened, then she nodded. ‘Okay. But I want to—’

      ‘I need to return to my brother’s bedside. You’ll also find out my decision tomorrow.’ He turned to leave.

      ‘Please. I … need this.’

      The raw, fervent emotion in her voice stopped him from leaving the room. Returning to her side, he stared down at her bent head. Her hands were clenched tighter. A swathe of pure black hair had slipped its knot and half covered her face. His fingers itched to catch it back, smooth it behind her ear so he could see her expression.

      Most of all, he wanted her to look at him.

      ‘Why? Why is this so important to you?’ he asked.

      ‘I … I made a promise.’ Her voice was barely above a whisper.

      Marco frowned. ‘A promise? To whom?’

      She inhaled, and before his eyes she gathered herself in. Her spine straightened, and her shoulders snapped back until her whole body became poised, almost regal. Then her eyes slowly rose to his.

      The steely determination in their depths compelled his attention. His blood heated, rushing through his veins in a way that made his body clench in denial. Yet he couldn’t look away.

      Her gaze dropped. Marco bit back the urge to order her to look at him.

      ‘It doesn’t matter. All you need to know is if you give me a chance I’ll hand you the Constructors’ Championship.’

      Sasha heard the low buzzing and cursed into her pillow. How the blazes had a wasp got into her room?

      And since when did wasps make such a racket?

      Groaning, she rolled over and tried to burrow into a better position. Sleep had been an elusive beast. She’d spent the night alternately pacing the floor and running through various arguments in her head about how she would convince Marco to keep her on the team. In the end exhaustion had won out.

      Now she’d been woken by—

      Her phone! With a yelp, she shoved off the covers and stumbled blindly for the satchel she’d discarded on the floor.

      ‘Huhn?’

      ‘Do I take it by that unladylike grunt that I’ve disturbed your sleep?’ Marco de Cervantes’s voice rumbled down the line.

      ‘Not at all,’ she lied. ‘What time is it?’ She furiously rubbed her eyes. She’d never been a morning person.

      Taut silence, then, ‘It’s nine-thirty.’

      ‘What? Damn.’ She’d slept through her alarm. Again.

      Could anyone blame her, though? Being part of Team Espiritu meant staying in excellent accommodation, but this time management had excelled itself—the two thousand thread-count cotton sheets, handmade robes, the hot tub, lotions and potions, the finest technology and her personal maid on tap were just the beginnings of the absurd luxury that made the crew of Marco’s team the envy of the circuit. But her four-poster bed and its mattress—dear Lord, the made-by-angels mattress—was the reason—

      ‘Do you have somewhere else to be, Miss Fleming?’

      ‘Yes. I have a plane to catch back to London at eleven.’ Thankfully she didn’t have a lot of things to pack, having put her restless energy to good use last night. And the airport was only ten minutes away. Still, she was cutting it fine.

      ‘You


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