Chapter 7

Chapter

Seven

Emily

“Hi, Mr. Lane, I’m Emily…” I barely got the words out before I gasped, my mouth dropping open in surprise.

The last person I expected to see sitting behind the large mahogany desk was the man I’d already seen twice.

Well, I suppose I’d only seen the man once, though I’d met him twice, since I didn’t actually see his face this morning when he caught me from falling.

But I knew it was the same person from the elevator since he’d said something about catching me twice. It had to have been the same person.

I narrowed my eyes and snapped my mouth closed.

I didn’t know what to say. Did he already know who I was those times, or was I as much of a surprise to him right now as he was to me?

I didn’t know if he was playing a game with me or if he really didn’t know who I was, but I didn’t like the feeling of being made a fool of.

Before I could open my mouth to demand answers, I remembered that I needed this job if I ever wanted to get out of my crappy apartment. I couldn’t take any chances of losing my new job already, not on day one.

“Mr. Lane. My name is Emily Fontaine,” I repeated. “I’m your new personal assistant. For the record,” I muttered under my breath, “I don’t need a keeper.”

Apparently, it wasn’t as quiet as I thought it was, because that man immediately broke into a brilliant smile.

And my brain pretty much short circuited.

He was already too beautiful for words, too handsome to be human.

If I were too fanciful, I would say that he was something other than human, like a fae or vampire or something paranormal from a romance novel.

But seeing him smile, that should be illegal.

His blue eyes crinkled in the corners charmingly, and I decided I didn’t like it one single bit.

“Is that so?” he asked.

I tried to put a scowl on my face, but it didn’t really work. “Yes,” I nodded firmly.

“Hmm…” he rumbled in his throat as he studied me with something else in those gorgeous blue eyes other than just the humor, something that made me want to squirm in my seat.

“Did you bring a pad of paper and a pen for taking notes?” he queried.

I glanced down at my hands as if one would magically appear, which of course it didn’t.

“It appears that you might need a keeper after all.”

I looked up to see him still smiling at me, this smile a little more on the smug side, as he slid a pad of paper over to me across the wide expanse of his large desk.

With a very unprofessional huff that made the man chuckle, I lifted my chin and walked over to the chair in front of his desk.

I took a seat, and had to admit silently that the chair was very comfortable.

I’d never say that out loud to the man grinning wickedly at me, tapping a long, well manicured masculine finger against the yellow legal pad.

With a glare, I leaned forward to grab the paper pad off the desk, then stared stupidly down at it before glancing back up at him to see him waving a pen in the air.

“Would you like a pen?” he asked, his blue eyes sparkling with amusement.

I smiled sweetly, putting as much sugar as I could into my response.

“Yes, Sir. Thank you. I would appreciate that very much.” His grin morphed into a full-blown smile that nearly took my breath away.

My sweet smile faltered as I leaned forward and reached for the gold pen he was holding.

As I grabbed for it, our fingers brushed, and sparks of electricity erupted, shooting from my fingers and up my arm.

All the small hairs on my body stood on end at the mere touch of his skin against mine.

It took every ounce of effort not to fan myself, and I hoped my face didn’t look as hot as it felt.

I was going to be in major trouble working for this man.

I would be amazed if I lasted a week. The tension was just too strong between the two of us.

Maybe I should’ve asked Mrs. Gunter for a transfer to a different department.

It would probably be a pay cut, but surely any job in this building would still be a good paycheck that would be so much better than the job I just left.

But I didn’t know if I could keep working for this man and keep my sanity.

“Are you ready to take notes, Ms. Fontaine?”

I nodded my head and stared down at the yellow paper, thinking that it was a much safer option than continuing to look at the man. “Yes, Mr. Lane. I’m ready.”

“That’s my good girl.”

The words, said in the velvety, rich honey voice, sent shivers down my spine, and butterflies erupted in my belly, and I knew I was in trouble.

I didn’t know what I liked more, the crass way he threatened to tie me up and told me I needed a keeper, or the seductive way he called me his good girl with that husky tone.

I just realized I liked both sides of him, and that scared me.

“What do you want for lunch?”

I was getting better at writing faster. Apparently, there was a way to write shorthand notes, but when I tried to look up the technique on the internet, it looked like utter gibberish to me.

It didn’t take long to know I’d never be able to figure out what I’d written.

What would be the point if I couldn’t translate the notes later?

“Emily?”

“Hmmm?” I was writing the word lunch from his last sentence when I blinked as I looked down at it and realized what I had written. “Oh.” I grinned and looked up. “Sorry. I was concentrating.”

“You know I can get you a transcriber for now until you get quicker at taking notes.” It was something he’d offered at least three times a day for the last three days, ever since I started. It was painfully obvious that I was hopelessly slow.

I scowled. “No.”

“Emily,” he sighed, “it’s just software to help you until you get better. It won’t be taking your job.”

I crossed my arms over my chest and lifted my chin in the air. I was stubborn, I knew it. But I also had my pride. I could scribble down some damn notes. He chuckled.

“Okay, be a good girl then, and tell me what you want for lunch.” He passed a menu over to me, and I saw it was my favorite Thai restaurant and bounced in my seat excitedly.

Honestly, I’d only had it a couple of times in my life.

Still, I’d had good memories of it, so when he’d mentioned it as an option for lunch the first day, I had gotten excited.

After eating it, I remembered why I liked it so much.

“Next week we’ll get you to try something new. ”

I looked up from the menu at his words and squinted. “Why change anything when you already know what you like?” I asked before looking back down at the options, then decided I was right and tapped the same thing I had last time. I enjoyed it. Why not get it again?

“You might miss out on something you could really love if you don’t give it a chance,” he said as he took the menu back and frowned down at it.

I shrugged. “Maybe,” I conceded. “But I wouldn’t know one way or another, so would it matter?”

I watched as Mr. Lane picked up the desk phone and made the call for our lunch before hanging up again. He then stood up and walked around the desk to stand over me. From the new position, it was like staring up at a towering redwood tree from the forest floor.

He reached over and traced a featherlight fingertip over my cheekbone, then across to my bottom lip, where he drew a line so softly I wasn’t sure if he was even touching me or if I was simply imagining the heat of him there.

“My good girl likes to play it safe,” he murmured to himself.

“Taking chances is dangerous,” I whispered.

His eyes darted from where they were tracing my lips up to meet my eyes. “Are they? Why is that, pretty girl?”

I swallowed and blinked. I wanted to enjoy the new nickname, but memories assaulted me, memories of the last time I saw my family.

The knock on the door.

The police officer telling me how sorry he was.

The funerals my grandparents helped me plan.

At some point during my drift into the past, Mr. Lane must have picked me up and carried me over to the small couch on the other side of his office.

I was sitting across his lap while he held me cradled against his chest as I cried in a way I hadn’t in the five years since the day my entire family died.

I reached up and clutched my boss’s shirt in both fists and cried harder.

“Shhh. I’ve got you, sweetness. It’s okay. I’ve got you, and I’m never letting you go.”

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.