About That Night.... Scarlet Wilson
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He nodded slowly. This wasn’t exactly where he thought this conversation would go.
“Of course I’m not ashamed of my brother. I love him dearly. But he’s had issues. He needed time. He needed space. Ever heard of the expression ‘If you love someone let them go’? That’s Sawyer. The past six years have been hard.” Her pale green eyes looked off to the side and she nodded slowly. “But I think he’s on his way back.”
Wow. Nothing like getting to the heart of the matter. But he didn’t have time to think about what she’d said because she wasn’t finished.
“But I don’t know where you fit into this picture.”
“What do you mean?” Her conversation seemed to jump all over the place. What was going on in her mind? Was this lack of sleep?
She folded her arms across her chest and straightened herself in the chair.
“I know you had issues with my brother but I don’t know what they were. Sawyer never told me. Will you?”
Now, there was a question. The words hung in the air. Could he really put into words the complexity of what had happened between him and Sawyer and how he felt? He almost didn’t know where to start. And did he really want to have this conversation with a woman he would spend the next three months with? The answer was easy.
“Probably not.”
She sucked in a deep breath. “Well, where does that leave us?”
“What do you mean?”
“Does your irrational hatred of my brother extend to me too?”
He swallowed, not really sure how to answer. The truth of the matter was that it did change how he perceived her. His bias against Sawyer was already affecting how he felt about her. Would she exhibit the same traits as her brother? Would she walk out on a mission when it was at its most vital stage?
He set his lips in a firm line but he couldn’t look at her and his voice was low. “You know I don’t hate you, Violet.” His brain was painting pictures. Pictures of Violet in that red dress she’d been wearing a few days ago with a thick black belt cinching her waist. He was sure she’d worn it to distract him from the fact she hadn’t produced the report. And she had been right to, because it had worked.
Her eyes drifted off to one side. “I thought I was going to get fired.”
He nodded slowly. “Me too.”
Her green eyes met his. “I don’t want to get fired,” she said steadily. “I love my job.”
“I don’t want to get fired either. My job’s the best thing in my life right now.”
Why had he said that?
That was far too personal. And Evan tried not to mix his personal life and with his working life. Or, at least, not usually.
“So I guess we both have to make the best of the situation.”
She didn’t acknowledge his words. Instead, she pulled out a flower-covered notebook and started scribbling.
“What are you doing?”
“I need to make plans. I need to make arrangements for my apartment. The electricity, the rent, the mail …” Her voice tailed off.
The enormity of the upheaval started to hit him too. He’d need to make similar plans—all in the space of a week. To say nothing of the handover he’d have to give to Donovan about running the team here. The next week would be a nightmare.
Violet was scribbling again. It was almost as if he wasn’t there. He watched her as her hand flew over the page. Her hair was falling over her face. His fingers itched to reach out and tuck it behind her ear. Why on earth did he think like this around her?
“Any chance of a copy of your list? It will save me doing mine.”
She raised her head and the sides of her mouth turned up. “Not a hope.” She stood up and walked toward the door. “I’m going to start going over my files, see what work I need to hand over to someone else.”
“Violet?”
She stopped, her hand on the doorhandle. “What?”
He couldn’t help it. He had to ask. Did she have the same kind of traits that he’d seen in her brother? He needed to know. The next three months were going to be a strain. Ever since that kiss he’d spent the past few months avoiding being in close proximity to her.
They’d never spoken about it. Never mentioned it. A drunken fumble on a work night out that no one knew about.
He had no idea how she felt about it.
More importantly, he’d no idea how he felt about it.
He’d woken up the next morning with the strangest feeling in his stomach. Part dread, part excitement. He was her boss. He should never have gone near her. It compromised their working relationship.
And now it seemed as if she was prepared to hold it over his head. That made Violet dangerous. That made Violet a threat.
“When the director interrupted us you were saying something about me being unprofessional. You were implying that because of the kiss. You thought you were about to be fired. Were you going to try and get me fired too? Would you do that, Violet?”
Her eyes met his and he saw a little flash of fire. She didn’t hesitate for a second. “In a heartbeat.”
She pushed open the door and walked out, leaving Evan wondering what he’d got himself into.
CHAPTER TWO
THE HEAT HIT her as soon as they stepped off the plane. It was like stepping into a fan-heated oven.
How on earth could she function in this for the next three months? Would she ever get used to it?
The sweat was already starting to run in rivulets down her back and catch in her bra strap. She rummaged in her bag and pulled out a travel-sized antiperspirant spray. “I’m heading to the ladies’ room. Can you watch for my bag? It’s lime-green.”
Evan nodded and dropped his rucksack onto the floor beside the luggage carousel. Great. A twelve-hour flight from Atlanta to Lagos, Nigeria, and he still wasn’t speaking to her.
Not that she cared. But it was unnerving to sit next to someone for that long without exchanging a single word.
She splashed some water on her face and pulled a ponytail band from her bag, sweeping her sticky hair from the back of her neck. She pulled off her white top and sprayed liberally before swapping it for a purple one in her rucksack. It was a little crumpled but it would have to do.
Was Evan planning on speaking to her any time soon? And what did he have to be so mad about, anyway? She’d only told him the truth. And if he couldn’t handle the truth …
She heard the squeak of luggage being wheeled past the doorway. People were obviously leaving so the baggage must have arrived.
She picked up her bag and headed back outside, just in time to see Evan drag her lime-green suitcase from the carousel.
It landed with a thump at her feet. “What on earth have you got in here? Did you pack the entire contents of your apartment? I’ve never seen a suitcase that size in my life. As for the weight, how on earth did you get it down your stairs?”
She watched as he pulled another suitcase—this time with one hand—from the carousel. It was a medium-sized navy blue case. She couldn’t help the smile that flickered across her lips.
She tilted her head up at him. “Oh, so now you’re talking to me, are you?” She pulled the handle up on the side of her case and tilted it onto its wheels. The initial tug was tough but once the case picked up a little momentum, it sailed along behind her.
“Do