Excerpt
from: Mistress
Under Contract
UK Feb 2008; Oz/NZ Apr
2008
He’s
her boss – and she’ll be his mistress…
When
high-flying Daniel Graydon hires Lucy Delaney as a temporary bar
manager, he doesn’t expect much from her. Lucy is the complete
opposite of him - flighty, carefree and fun-loving. He certainly
can’t work out why on earth he’s so attracted to her!
The
only thing Lucy and Daniel have in common is their reluctance to have
a committed relationship. When one steamy night together is no way
enough, Lucy is given a short-term contract in Daniel’s bed…only
for Lucy to find she’s falling for the one man she can’t have…
CHAPTER
ONE
You
always pre-plan your activities You
find putting things in order satisfying You
think that rational analysis is the best approach in all situations You
constantly monitor progress It's
essential for you to try things with your own hands Objective
feedback is always helpful You
enjoy an active and fast-paced environment You
have good control over your desires and temptations You
find it difficult to switch off from your job You
believe justice is more important than mercy 8 You enjoy the challenge
of competition You
rely on reason rather than intuition You
make your decisions spontaneously You
like to have the last word Intense
emotions strongly influence you You
find it difficult to talk about your feelings
Lucy stared at the list of statements and wondered what it would say about
her if she answered ‘yes’ to all of them. Maybe she should
alternate yes and no. Or maybe she should do some pretty mathematical
pattern. Good grief. She was applying to be a hospitality temp. Why
did she have to do a damn personality type test? Like there weren’t
enough forms to fill in? All the health and safety caveats, background
checks, proof of qualifications... You’d think she was applying for
a job with MI5. Not some tin pot agency that supplied catering staff
at short notice.
It
was money she was short of. Damn short. And this was her third
agency of the day. She’d have gotten through more if there weren’t
so many bloody forms to fill in. Now it was 4:30 and she’d be pushed
to get all the paperwork done in time to complete an interview before
closing.
She
fidgeted with the clipboard and pen and the receptionist gave her a
sharp glance. Lucy offered her a conspiratory smile but froze it as
she hit the woman’s frigid response. “I know the forms take a
while to fill in. I’ll be doing some filing out back. Ring the bell
when you’re done and one of the consultants will come to interview
you.” No smile, instead a look of condescension fluttered across the
dragon’s features as she walked out of the room.
Lucy
nodded and quelled the urge to poke her tongue out after her. She
looked back at the list and decided to try to get herself identified
as a Type A personality –those aggressively ambitious, achieving,
arrogant and frankly anal people who ran their lives according to
deadline and tangible barometers of success. Lucy lived in a category
of her own - Type F – for fun, flippancy, frivolity and freedom -
not to mention occasional foolishness. She hummed softly as she
started ticking various yes and no boxes, her smile returning full
force as she worked through. It was so much fun pretending.
She
heard a soft cough and looked up to see Mr Type A incarnate standing
in front of her. She hadn’t heard the door. Tall, dark suit, white
shirt. Neatly trimmed brown hair. Cold eyes, staring at her, frown
firmly fixed on the crisp cut angles of his face.
Shame.
Looks like that shouldn’t be marred by bad temper. Her hackles rose.
And it wasn’t just because of the golden eyes sending her that
dagger-like look. His aura stamped his impression on his surroundings
and on her – height and breadth of a champion. This was a man who
knew what he wanted and was used to getting it. He had the
unmistakable air of ‘Authority’.
The
bane of Lucy’s life.
Eyes
narrowing she stared right back at him. Defiant as ever in the face of
someone so obviously establishment. But that didn’t stop the kick of
attraction roaring into life. She refused to allow anyone to have
control over her, but for a split second she thought about what he’d
be like in the driver’s seat – just for an hour, just her body. He
looked like he’d know what to do.
She
couldn’t stop her little smirk.
His
brows lifted and the look he was drilling into her underwent a subtle
change. No less intense, still not friendly – but the sparks had a
different quality. He looked again at the empty seat at reception and
back at her. What he expected her to fill him in?
She
bet he could do some filling. Good grief, was she really looking at a
guy in a suit like he was some hot dish? She swallowed and dragged her
mind back to the situation. She’d never have picked him to be job
hunting. He didn’t look like any bartender or waiter she knew and
she knew a few.
She
finally felt compelled to answer his unspoken question. “The
receptionist is filing out back but the forms are there on the desk.
They take ages to fill in.”
His
brows went another notch higher as he picked up an enrolment pack like
the one Lucy was balancing on her knee.
“Start
with the personality test. It’s a doozy.”
He
sat in the chair across from hers and flicked through the papers. The
frown was back. His silence irked her. What happened to solidarity
amongst temporary workers? Banter between bartenders was part of the
deal. He skimmed over the list of yes/no statements that comprised the
personality type form. And then he did speak. Sharp, quick, cutting.
“Let
me guess. You’d be a ‘yes’ for ‘you are inclined to rely
more on improvisation than on careful planning’.
And a ‘no’ for ‘it is in your nature to assume
responsibility’.”
He waited for her response, his eyes issuing a hard challenge.
Her
hackles were up again instantly. “And I’m betting that you’re a
‘yes’ for ‘your desk is usually neat and orderly’.”
His
tight smile flared to a grin. She fancied she’d scored a hit but
then he sent the curveball. “Maybe I should have made it clear that
I’m not looking for work. I’m looking for a temp to work for
me.”
“Oh,”
Of course. What an idiot. Temps did not dress in made to measure suits
and walk around with the assured confidence of a bona fide Greek God.
But she rallied immediately. Spot the opportunity. Strike before they
know what’s hit them. “What do you need?”
“Bar
manager. Indefinitely.” His eyes narrowed.
“Look
no further.”
“You
know the perfect candidate?”
“I
am the perfect candidate.”
She
saw his attention slide over her ancient jeans and skimpy singlet top
and was fully aware that she was hardly looking perfect. And that he
was thinking the same thing.
“You
don’t even know what the job is.” He mocked her.
“You
just told me. Bar manager. I can manage a bar”
A
wolfish smile appeared. “You can manage a strip club?”
Her
jaw dropped. Now that she hadn’t anticipated. He looked way
too square for anything remotely grey - more your black and white kind
of guy. Right, wrong, official, unofficial, permissible, forbidden.
His world would be one of order – totally opposite to her
freewheeling one of complete chaos.
He
leant forward. “No. Not a strip club. I’m looking for someone with
experience. Someone who can handle responsibility.”
“I
can handle responsibility.”
“You
just said you were a ‘no’ to responsibility.”
“No
you said that. I neither confirmed nor denied.”
Their
eyes met. Squaring off like a couple of cowboys in a spaghetti
western.
“Give
me your CV.”
“Give
me details of the job.”
Ok
so he held all the cards, but she could bluff. Better than anyone.
The
silence was steady as they waited each other out. She lifted her chin
a little, saw him focus on her mouth as she did so.
She
couldn’t stop the tiny curve to her lips as his parted. He’d speak
first. She’d known his politeness would win out – he was that
type. Cool. In control. Icily well-mannered.
“Principesa.
It’s a small bar but popular. I don’t want it to start failing.”
She’d
heard of the club. A new one – opened on the scene during the year
she’d been away. Like he
said small, but definitely had potential.
“What’s
your interest? You own it?” Her incredulity was doing her no favours
but she really couldn’t see him in the centre of such a scene.
Principesa was for night owls – party people. He had white-collar
workaholic stamped all over him.
“My
cousin owns it. Lara Graydon.”
She
knew of Lara. Six foot something, looked like a Nordic goddess. Had
been a diva in the Wellington
social set for several years.
“She’s
gone to the States for a couple of weeks on a personal matter.” His
grimace indicated his displeasure. “Leaving me to oversee the
manager.” The last two words were ground out through a rigid jaw.
“And
the manager?”
“Was
found rotten drunk slumped behind the bar this morning by council
authorities who were called when the club failed to shut down at the
required hour. Music was blaring and then I discovered discrepancies
in the till.”
“And
this -”
“Adds
up to one sacked bar manager.”
Lucy
had the feeling that far more minor transgressions would also the
wrath of this man. He was not the kind of guy to settle for anything
less than the best. “So you need someone as soon as possible.”
He
nodded. “It’s Wednesday today. I can get away with keeping the
club shut for a night or two but it must be open again on Friday. I
want someone in there right away to clean up the mess its been left
in. There isn’t enough stock to last half a night. I want someone
who can walk in and take over.”
“Why
can’t you do it?”
He
rolled his eyes. “Dressed like this?” So he could do irony.
He elaborated. “I have a day job - one that keeps me busy
enough. That’s why I need someone responsible to take over so I can
forget about it until Lara gets back.”
“When’s
that?”
“Wouldn’t
we all like to know?” He shrugged. “Shouldn’t be more than a
couple of weeks.”
There
was a silence. She eyed him calmly while her brain worked furiously.
She tried to ignore the fact that he was incredibly arresting and that
his cool determination was intoxicating. He was bright, blunt and to
the point and frankly, he turned her on. Under that suit lurked a
sense of humour. What else was hidden under that remote veneer? But a
suit? Come on. She’d never been attracted to a straight A type
before and now wasn’t the time to experiment. She was flat broke and
needed work - to start immediately. Manager would pay more, even if it
was only a week or two. She could puff up the experience for her next
job.
She
quickly opened her rag-eared satchel and took out a copy of her CV,
wishing the other fifteen copies weren’t quite so obvious. She
masked her unexpected nervousness by pulling her shoulders back and
handing the paper over with an assertive flourish.
He
took the CV, not looking at it until he’d held her gaze in a
challenging stare for so long that she was finally forced to break it.
Looking down and away she instructed her lungs to inflate. For some
reason they didn’t seem to be working on auto anymore. It was like
he knew exactly what he was going to find on the page. And he didn’t
think much of it. Like he knew she could do better.
Rebellion
burned.
There
was a long silence as he read it through. His face gave nothing away
but she knew he was less than impressed. Well who wouldn’t be. Even
she could admit it wasn’t great reading.
Finally
he spoke. “Well, we have one thing in common.”
“What’s
that?”
“You’re
not big on commitment either.”
She
blinked.
He
looked back at the paper, obviously biting back a smile. He’d
shocked her. He knew it. And he thought it was funny. She gritted her
teeth to hold back her sarcastic response. She needed this opportunity
and she wasn’t going to lose it by mouthing off at him. She inhaled
deeply before inquiring in a voice that screamed frigid politeness.
“What makes you say that?”
“You’ve
not held a job longer than three months.”
“I’ve
been at university until the end of last year. Student jobs, summer
jobs. They never last long.”
“And
this year?”
“I’ve
been travelling about.”
He
nodded. More to himself than to her. As if she’d just confirmed his
worst suspicions.
“Why
did you leave your last job?”
Why
did she leave any of them? That boredom, that restlessness, that
niggling feeling that she wasn’t quite right for it. She tried,
genuinely tried and was your average, dependable worker – with a
short expiry date.
“You
phone any of my old employers and ask for a reference. I’ve never
taken a sick day, I’m happy to work double shifts. I guarantee they
will all say nothing but good.”
“You’ve
a strong sense of your own worth then?”
Well,
there was the biggest bluff in history. She was good but not great.
More mediocre than marvellous. She’d never really shone, but she’d
never really tried to. What was the point? She’d been pigeon-holed
years before as someone who wasn’t ever going to excel. The only
prize she’d ever deserved was for biggest idiot. A blip in her
personal history that had given rise to feelings of humiliation,
inadequacy and fear – feelings that haunted her still, that coloured
each world she tried to build for herself. Which was why she kept
starting over. Ultimately she feared to try her best because she
suspected it still wouldn’t be good enough.
She
leant forward, abandoning dignity in her desperation for dollars.
“Look, I can do this. I’ve been working in bars and restaurants
for years. I know the suppliers. I know what works and what doesn’t.
Give me the job and I promise you won’t regret it.”
She
glanced at the clock. It wasn’t far off five. She hoped like crazy
the receptionist wouldn’t walk back in. Hoped her luck would hold to
grant her this one chance. “I’ve been working clubs and pubs for
years. I know the drill from the cleaning to stock management to
handling stroppy customers. Been there done that. And I can deal with
staff.” She looked at him firmly. “Bar staff work hard. I know
exactly how hard and I know how to give them the respect and
motivation they need to keep working that way.”
She
didn’t know if her argument was working but she did know he hadn’t
taken his eyes off her. She’d seen his gaze flicker over her a
couple of times but for the most part he held her own. She found it
incredibly difficult not to be distracted by his intensity. And by the
colour of his eyes. She debated whether they were truly pure gold or
brown with gold flecks. Either way they were unusual. And mesmerising.
She blinked. Not going to go there. Not going to be distracted.
“If
you want someone to run your club. Then you want me.”
From
the book Mistress Under Contract by Natalie
Anderson
Harlequin Mills & Boon Modern Heat
Publication Date: February 2008
Copyright © 2008 by Natalie Anderson
® and ™ are trademarks of the publisher.
The edition published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
For more romance information surf to: http://www.eHarlequin.com
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