Be Mine: Sizzle / Too Fast to Fall / Alone with You. Victoria Dahl

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Be Mine: Sizzle / Too Fast to Fall / Alone with You - Victoria Dahl


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around behind his back and get things done the way we want. What am I doing confronting this guy?

      She watched him listening to Croswell from Research and Development. He was listening politely and nodding, and she wanted to throw something.

      He patronized me, she thought. He assumed he was right, and he didn’t listen, and he patronized me. He thinks I’m insignificant.

      Boy, is he going to pay for that.

      I don’t care how good-looking he is.

      Without realizing it, she’d let her eyes narrow as she looked at him, so that when he gazed idly around while he listened to Croswell’s drivel, he saw her look of undiluted antagonism. His eyes widened slightly, and then he grinned at her as if he was seeing her for the first time, a real smile that accepted her challenge and recognized her as an equal, sharing the absurdity of the moment and of his own new-kid-on-the-block power play.

      It was a killer smile.

      Emily narrowed her eyes even more. It’s going to take more than a smile, buddy boy. Hit me with another line like “no price too great for Paradise,” and I’ll wipe that smile off your face so fast you won’t know what hit you.

      Jane nudged her and she looked down at the pad. It said, “Why is he smiling?”

      Emily took the pad languidly and wrote, “Because he knows I’m angry, and he thinks it’s amusing.”

      Jane took the pad back and wrote, “Then he’s not as smart as I thought.”

      Emily nodded and turned her attention politely back to the group.

      “Any other questions?” Parker surveyed the table before turning to Emily. “Ms. Tate, you’ve been very quiet. Do you have any questions?”

      “No, I’ve found out all I need to know,” she said calmly.

      “Good. Do you have time to meet with me now?”

      “Now?” Emily raised her eyebrows. “I have a lunch meeting. I could possibly meet with you at two.”

      “Let me check my appointments,” he said. “I’ll have my secretary call yours.” He looked at Jane for the first time and stopped.

      What is she doing? Emily thought, not daring to look. She’s probably blacked out a couple of teeth and is now grinning maniacally at him.

      “Fine.” Emily stood so that she blocked Jane. “Anything else?”

      He stayed seated, watching her. “No. There’s nothing else.”

      “Thank you,” Emily said, and left with Jane clumping in her wake.

      When the door closed behind them, Jane stopped clumping and took off her glasses. “That was dumb,” she said flatly. “We get nothing by antagonizing him. What’s wrong with you?”

      “He’s arrogant,” Emily said, punching the elevator button.

      “Everybody in that room’s arrogant,” Jane said. “The only difference is that he has reason to be.”

      “What? You’ve fallen for that ‘hello, I’m God’ presentation he just did?”

      “He’s right,” Jane said. “We were over budget. We could have done the campaign for less. He could help you here.”

      “Whose side are you on?”

      “Ours,” Jane said. “First, last and always. I’m just not sure he’s not on our side, too.”

      They got on the elevator, and Jane handed the glasses back to Emily. “He likes you.”

      “Please.”

      “He likes you. I saw his eyes. Which are incredible, by the way. He likes watching you. He thought you were cute.”

      “Cute!” Emily exploded. “Cute!”

      “Make it work for you,” Jane said.

      “The hell I will. I’ll give him cute.” Emily stormed off the elevator and down the hall to her office, slamming the door behind her. A minute later, Jane came in with her coat.

      “Your lunch meeting is here,” she said. “You promised me Chinese.”

      * * *

      “YOU’D HAVE TO DO THE new campaign for less, anyway,” Jane said later over potstickers and sizzling rice soup. “The new stuff’s not as expensive as Paradise. Your profit margin’s lower.”

      “Not necessarily.” Emily spooned the hot soup carefully into her mouth. “We’ll sell more—to the younger woman who uses perfume more frequently. We’ll be fine. If I’m not forced to under budget.”

      “Give him a chance,” Jane said. “There’s no point in firing the first shot.”

      “I haven’t,” Emily said. “I’ve just made it clear that I’ll return fire.”

      Jane gave up for the time being. “Garlic chicken?”

      “Not if I’m meeting with Attila the Budget Hun this afternoon. Did Karen call?”

      “Yep. Two o’clock. His office.”

      “Of course.” Emily sighed. “I’d prefer neutral ground. From now on let’s make it the conference room. On our floor, not his.”

      “I’ll try,” Jane said. “Prawns?”

      “Yes,” Emily said. “I’m in the mood to crunch little backbones.”

      “Then we’ll go shopping,” Jane said. “I found this incredible pink lace bra and bikini—” She stopped and looked past Emily.

      “Ladies.”

      It was the Hun with George in tow. George would bring him here, Emily thought. Showing the new boss the best place to eat. I’ll bet he offers to pick up his dry cleaning later. She looked up and smiled tightly. “Mr. Parker. How nice to see you.”

      “George assures me this is an excellent place to have a lunch meeting.” He looked at Jane.

      “It is.” Emily turned her back and began spooning soup again.

      Jane grinned at him. “Lovely meeting you again.”

      “Oh, yes. You’re Ms. Tate’s secretary. Mrs. Frobish, isn’t it? I didn’t recognize you at first.”

      “Well, that’s the lot of the secretary,” Jane said cheerfully. “Unrecognized, unrewarded, underpaid...”

      “Hardly underpaid,” Parker said. “Your salary is part of the budget, you know. It’s very generous.”

      “Actually,” Emily said, staring straight ahead, “she is underpaid. And I shall fight tooth and nail to stop any attempt to reduce her salary or to curtail her future raises.” She raised her eyes to Parker’s,

      and the steel in her voice was also in her eyes.

      “I have no intention of interfering with Mrs. Frobish’s salary,” Parker said, calmly. “A good secretary is worth her weight in gold.”

      “Good idea,” Jane said. “I’ll take that as a basis for my next raise. Let’s have two orders of prawns now that I have a reason to gain weight.”

      Emily thought about stabbing Parker with her fork but decided it would be too overt. Subtlety is the key here, she thought.

      “I’ll see you at two, Ms. Tate,” Parker said, and moved on to the table the waiter was patiently holding for him, George toddling along in his wake.

      “I thought you were going to stab him with your fork,” Jane said. “Bad move, careerwise, although as your friend I would have been touched.”

      “I’ve got to stop hating him.” Emily stabbed an egg roll instead. “I’ve got to work


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