Boss’s Christmas Baby Acquisition (The Sauveterre Siblings #5)
Chapter One
Siobhan Upton hit the call button for the elevator then tapped to check her phone.
Ugh. Her sister was asking about Christmas. Again.
Siobhan was the youngest of four girls. Both her middle sisters had invited her to stay in America for Thanksgiving, a holiday they’d both adopted since moving here from London. Their mother was flying to Miami to stay with them and swore she wasn’t leaving until winter was over back home.
Meanwhile, Siobhan’s eldest sister, Cinnia, was pressuring her to spend Christmas with her and her family in Spain.
Cinnia was hosting all her in-laws for the first time in years.
Siobhan knew them well and genuinely loved them, especially the children, but she hadn’t been able to enjoy Christmas since her bat guano of an ex-boyfriend had ruined that time of year for her five years ago.
She was dodging all of it by claiming to be focused on finding a job and a place to live. Which was true. She had these interviews in San Francisco then needed to get back to Sydney to pack up her flat, not sure where she would end up—
Wait.
She gasped with excitement as she saw the email from the placement agency.
Pleased to inform you… Employment contract will be forwarded… Expect you in Madrid on Monday December first…
“Yes!” That was only ten days away, but Siobhan punched the air and nearly leaped out of her borrowed Jimmy Choo heels.
“Are you going up?” The deep male voice held a hint of a Spanish accent.
She glanced up to see a man inside the elevator, holding the door for her.
Her heart took a swerve. Wow. He was really hot.
“Yes.” She swallowed. “Thanks.”
She stepped in beside him, blood fizzing for another reason.
She tried not to stare, but he was kind of dazzling.
He was thirty-ish and had an aura of dark sexiness with his thick black hair swept back from his forehead, and irises that were such a dark brown they seemed black.
His cheeks were long and clean-shaven, his jaw well-defined.
His nose was blade-sharp and his upper lip distinctly peaked.
As a uni student, Siobhan had fallen into wearing off-the-rack hoodies and other casual wear that helped her blend in, but she’d been around enough haute couture to recognize that navy suit was bespoke.
It sat perfectly against his upper body, accentuating his broad shoulders and extremely fit physique.
Was he an actor? This was San Francisco, not LA, but he could be here on movie business. He certainly looked as though he financed blockbuster productions. Or starred in steamy thrillers as a morally gray character.
One thick black brow quirked, polite but patronizing. “Floor?”
“Oh, um…” Good grief, she was behaving like an idiot. As she tried to open the app, she watched him use his phone on the reader, then touch P. “That works for me. Thanks. I got the job I wanted.” She wiggled her own phone as the doors closed. “I’m not usually such a scatterbrain.”
“Congratulations.”
“On not being a scatterbrain? Thanks.”
The corner of his mouth twitched. “Australian?” he guessed.
“English. But I’ve been in Sydney long enough to adopt their accent.” The better to blend in and not have her past follow her.
He was looking at her as though trying to make up his mind about something.
She warmed under his study, wondering when she’d last felt this level of instant attraction. Had she ever?
The doors opened to the foyer of the elite level. In front of her was a frosted door labeled Concierge. A fountain trickled a soothing rhythm next to a courtesy bench.
“Have a nice evening.” Siobhan flashed a smile. She felt awkward as she turned away, as though she’d forgotten how to walk.
“Are you going to celebrate?” he asked behind her.
“I should, shouldn’t I?” She experienced a rush of relief and pivoted to face him, then tilted her head as she considered it.
“I have another interview tomorrow, but now that I’ve got the job I want, that’s just for practice.
Maybe I’ll order champagne. My sister’s paying for the room. Why not?” she added with a cheeky grin.
“No one to celebrate with? I’ll buy you a drink.” He nodded toward the private lounge reserved for guests on this floor.
Her inner defenses reflexively ran through her mental house, bolting and locking all the doors and windows. It was a PTSD response, not because she feared men. She was more than capable of taking care of herself on a physical level, but she didn’t want to be used and betrayed again.
Even if he knew who she was, he didn’t look like someone who needed her connections, though. Did he know who she was?
“You’re not single?” He misinterpreted her hesitation. The hint of warmth in his expression turned to cool dismissal. “Perhaps another time.”
“No, I am. I just…” Never hook up.
Not that she was thinking about that. She barely dated or even went out with friends.
Her mates at school had been her age, but infinitely less mature and jaded.
They had partied as often as they studied while Siobhan had focused on keeping a low profile and finally completing her degree.
Her social life was mostly confined to family and conducted out of the public eye. Her trust in strangers was very low.
This particular stranger was exceedingly compelling, however. And she didn’t want to drink her champagne in a hotel room while talking to her mother over the tablet. She wanted a few more minutes with him.
“I was just surprised,” she said with a smile that felt unsteady.
“That a man offered to buy you a drink?” His black brows lifted in skepticism.
“No.” A man at LaGuardia had offered to buy her a drink and there’d been a whole convention of men at the hotel in Miami trying to hit on her. “That I want to accept.”
“Ah.” His eyes narrowed slightly. She suspected that was as close as he got to a smile.
He was ringless, but she cocked her head to ask, “Are you single?”
“Sí. Joaquin.” He offered his hand.
“Siobhan.” She shook his hand and felt the tingle all the way up her arm.
Breathless, she walked into the empty lounge and excused herself to the powder room where she washed her hands and touched up her makeup, smoothing her brunette hair back into its chignon.
When she returned, Joaquin was at a table by the windows. He rose to help her with her chair. “The wind might break up the clouds and give us a sunset.”
“It’s a nice view either way.” It was overcast and spitting rain, but the Golden Gate Bridge stood reddish-orange against the mist.
“Have you been here before?” he asked.
“No. And I leave after my interview in the morning so I won’t have time to explore.” She was looking for a menu, but the server arrived with an ice bucket and showed Joaquin a bottle of Cristal. He nodded for it to be opened.
“You’re spoiling me,” Siobhan said. “I would have ordered a split of the California bubbly.”
“My family has vineyards. I’m a snob.”
“Is that what brings you here? Are they here?”
“No, I had meetings. I’m in tech, heading to Asia tomorrow.”
She suspected that was a deliberate detail to let her know this was a very casual encounter, barely a date, not the beginning of anything serious.
“Where do you live?” she asked curiously.
“These days? On my plane,” he said ironically.
The cork popped. Joaquin smelled and tasted, then nodded his approval.
The server poured into a crystal flute rimmed in gold and offered it to her.
The pale amber sparkled with fine bubbles. Siobhan lifted it and closed her eyes as she inhaled the aroma of sea air and lime zest.
When the server walked away away, Joaquin said, “Salud,” and offered his glass.
“Cheers. And thank you.” She touched her glass to his, then sipped. The delicate effervescence coated her tongue with a silky mousse-like texture. Buttery flavors of crushed nuts and yeasty sourdough melted in her mouth, followed by saline and citrus and a lengthy floral finish.
“You’re also a snob,” he accused lightly.
She opened her eyes to realize he’d watched her savor her first taste. Her heart hiccupped and her gaze got all tangled up in his intense stare. She licked her lips and his attention dropped to her mouth, making her pulse swerve again.
“I’m lucky enough to have been around the finer things in life.” She lifted the glass. “I make the most of it when I can.”
His brows went up in a prompt for more information.
“I’m not an escort,” she blurted, suddenly fearing that was why he’d offered to buy her this drink.
“I didn’t think you were.” He was definitely laughing at her behind that impassive expression. “Tell me about your new job.”
“I would, but then I’d have to kill you.”
His dark gaze flickered to her shoulders and the slender wrist holding the delicate glass. “You could try.”
“Don’t be fooled. I’ve taken self-defense. I’m actually very dangerous.”
“That, I believe.” His expression was relaxed and she had his full attention. It was heady. A glow of enjoyment spread through her chest.
“I’m trying to sound more exciting than I am,” she admitted. “The truth is I recently finished my BBA. I want to go into contract law, so I’m gaining experience in that field.”
“How old does that make you?” His brows lowered into a frown.
“Relax. I’m twenty-four. Old enough to drink.” And do other things. She bit back a smirk.
He made a noise of contemplation, and his gaze traveled over her short jacket and the dark hair gathered into the roll at her nape. “I couldn’t tell. You look young, but you seem very self-possessed.”
“Mature for my age?” she asked drily. “I’ve been told that all my life. Forty at fourteen.”
“Are you still speaking to the people who said that?”
“Ha. Yes. Because they weren’t wrong.” She shrugged. “I was in such a hurry to grow up, I finished my A levels at sixteen by home study. Regular school was too slow and boring.” And she had been helping Cinnia with her twins.
“Then what? You moved to Australia? Took a gap year?” His brows came together in calculation. “Or three?”