Authors: Kate Hardy,Cathy Williams,Barbara Hannay
âAttacking me isn't going to solve your financial crisis.'
Rose didn't care for the word crisis. It was a little too evocative for comfort. âYou have to go. I need to phone my bank manager.'
âOn a Saturday?'
âI don't know why I didn't think of that before. Of course, I can call my bank manager and take out a loan.'
âWhich will have to be repaid.'
âBut at least I'll be able to afford the repair work,' Rose pointed out wearily. âAnd if you're going to sit there and state the obvious then you can finish that cup of tea and go.'
âAnd in the meantime, where do you intend to live?'
âHere, of course.'
âDust everywhere? Hidden dangers under the floorboards? And what about when you get the men in to clear the asbestos? What then? Hang around in a mask?'
Rose felt tears of frustration and anger prick the backs of her eyes. âOh, just leave me alone.'
âSo you can wallow in self-pity?'
âI do not wallow in self-pity,' she flung back at him through gritted teeth, shaken out of her despondency by the force of rage. âI've got my solution and as soon as the banks open on Monday, I'll be there.'
âYou can't live here.'
âOh, you're right,' she sniped with dripping sarcasm. âI'll just get my butler to book me in at the Savoy until everything's sorted out.'
Nick stifled a grin. âBetter idea. You need money and I have it.' âForget it, Nick. You might do favours for my sister, but I don't need anything from you.' She gave him a mutinous look, which he chose to ignore.
Was there any woman as stubborn as this one? He felt a sudden desire to be the one who controlled the reins and melted the fortresses she had erected everywhere around herself.
âYou're letting your emotions talk and emotions never solved anything. If you run to the bank for a loan, you'll spend the next few years paying it back along with the crippling interest accrued.'
âSo instead I take the money from you? And in return you get what?'
A vivid image of her lying naked in his bed presented itself and he blinked it away.
âYou can't hide a problem of this magnitude from your sister. You might want to protect her from everything harsh that life can throw at her, but she deserves to know the truth about what's happening over here. Give her enough credit not to be a complete fool and come hurtling back to England when she knows that it wouldn't solve anything. If she finds out that you've been keeping this from her, she'll feel betrayed.'
âDon't pretend you know my sister better than I do,' Rose retorted, but his words set up a chain of thoughts that began to gnaw away at her composure. She had always been the one looking out for Lily, but where did concern end and smothering begin?
Uncertainty shadowed her face and Nick, spotting it, jumped in. âI'm not pretending anything, but you have to tell her. Course she'd want to fly over, make sure you were okay, but she might not ifâ¦'
âIf what?'
âIf she knew that I was looking out for you.' Since when had he ever looked out for any woman? The rules of his game had always been simple. No dependency, no strings attached. Rose ignited some other feeling in him. She didn't conform to his ideas of physical feminine beauty so, whatever weird stirrings he had occasionally felt in her presence, he was certain it wasn't lust. But whatever it was, it was certainly novel and to his jaded palate the thought of something new was strangely alluring.
âOh, please.'
âI am trying to help you out here,' Nick told her irritably. âWhy can't you just accept it?'
âI don't see you as the kind of guy who helps damsels in distress,' Rose pointed out, omitting to mention the fine print, which was unless they looked like Lily or unless he wanted something from them. âYou think you ought to offer assistance because you feel guilty. By some weird coincidence, you happen to show up when all thisâ¦' she gestured vaguely around her ââ¦is going on and you think you ought to do something because you have a relationship with Lily. You feel sorry for the plain, ungainly sister left behind trying to cope.'
âI'm not suggesting I hand over the money and walk away. You seem to forget I'm a businessman.'
âWell, what are you offering, then? Not that there's any chance I'm going to take you up on your offer.'
âBecause you're a stubborn fool.'
âBecause I don't like the thought of being indebted to anyone.'
âExcept the bank.'
âThat's different.' Rose flushed, feeling boxed in by his clever use of words.
Novelty value was fast turning into challenge and it was invigorating. âTake a couple of months off workâ¦'
âTake a couple of months off work?' Was the man a complete lunatic? âHave you been listening to a word I've been saying?' She shook her head in disgust and snatched up the mugs, carrying them off to the sink. Nick swivelled round so that he was looking at her and, while he was staring, she spun around and leant against the kitchen sink, arms folded. âYou know what's happening here, the financial strain I'm suddenly under, and your breezy solution is for me to have time off work? That activity that pays the bills?'
âHow much do they pay you a month?'
Rose went pink. Wasn't discussing of salary the final taboo? Not that this man would skirt round a taboo if his life depended on it.
âWell? No need to be shy.'
âWhat I earn is none of your concern.' She should have asked for a pay rise months ago. She was damned good at her job and worked a lot longer hours than all of her colleagues. If only she had had a crystal ball foretelling her huge household bills were on the horizon she might have been more assertive during her appraisal. She reluctantly told him, knowing that he would just carry on sitting there until she did. He didn't laugh, as she had expected him to. Instead he looked at her for a few seconds, as though weighing up something in his head.
âI'm branching out,' he told her, âgoing into the leisure business. Corporate investment and the money markets pay the bills but I've conquered that challenge. Now, I'm investing some of my own reserves in building up a boutique hotel portfolio.'
Rose thought of the reserves she was investing inâmaking sure she didn't wake up with the ceiling on her pillow.
âWhat's a boutique hotel?'
âSomething very small and exquisite and strictly for people
who don't want to be surrounded by hundreds of people every time they step out of their bedroom.'
âDon't tell meâ¦strictly for the very rich because privacy costs.'
âOf course. Like I said, I'm a businessman. I'm starting with one in Borneo.'
âBorneo,' she echoed sceptically.
âTrust meâ¦the next must-go-to destination. It'll be small, eco friendly and built to the highest standards. And here's where you come inâ¦' Nick paused. âYou spend the next two months running the show. You set up the computer system for all the accounting et cetera, you liaise with the architectsâ'
âI don't know the first thing aboutâ¦hotels. I can't even think when the last time I stayed in one was.'
âWhich I'll make sure to put right,' Nick murmured. âThink about it, Rose. You won't be able to live here while work's being doneâ¦I'm offering to relieve you of the stress of living out of an overnight bag on a friend's floor. I'll put you up in three separate hotels in London over the next two months so that you can have firsthand experience of what makes a good one work, and in addition I'll pay you double what you would have been earning. In return, you can try your hand at something other than sitting in front of a terminal all day long.'
Nick, who donated vast sums to charity on an annual basis, had only ever had nodding acquaintance with altruism on a personal level and he was finding that it felt good to be at the giving end of largesse. In truth, he could increase her salary multiple times and not notice the difference to his bank balance, but he was shrewd enough to know that there was a thin line between a reasonable proposition and a contemptuous act of charity for which he would probably find his hand roundly bitten off.
Because this woman snapped and snarled and yapped and bit and he was looking forward to taming her. He decided to look on it as his pet project. All work and no playâ¦well, he knew the saying well enough and, as he wasn't playing at the moment, he would devote all of his formidable attention to digging underneath that prickly exterior to the woman inside. And doing her a good turn in the bargain by fishing her out of a pretty nasty hole.
âDon't you have people who could do the job for you?'
âDon't you have any ability to just say thank you and go away to count your blessings?'
âWhy do I get the feeling that there's an ulterior motive to your offer?' Rose asked. She felt driven to find holes in his proposal even though the rational side of her was already calculating the benefits of what he was offering. She had worked long enough for the company to know that they would not have a problem in giving her unpaid leave while she sorted out her domestic situation and the thought of something different was appealing. Stepping out of her comfort zone was appealing. Appealing and frightening at the same time.
âBecause you're inherently suspicious.' Nick shrugged and stood up. âIf you're not interested, then I'll leave you to get on with the messy business of sorting your house out with the help of your friendly bank manager.'
âWait!'
She raced behind him as he headed for the front door, glancing sideways as she did so, where the shimmer of dust in the air reminded her of the generosity of his offer.
âWhat if I fail? I have no experienceâ¦'
âHave faith in yourself. You won't fail. I take it that that's a yes?'
âI shall have to clear it with my boss.'
âAnd if you do take up this opportunityâ¦' Nick lazily appraised her, from her worn bedroom slippers to the shapeless dungarees, which, he now thought, should only ever be worn by labourers on a building site ââ¦you'll have to do something about your wardrobe.'
Rose went bright red. It occurred to her that actually working with the man might just prove to be more stressful than sorting out her situation without his help.
âI don't go to work in these clothes,' she said coolly. âI put them on because anything else would have been stupid.' Lily would have managed to look fabulous in faded, old clothes but she had to stop comparing herself to Lily. âIf you don't think that I'm decorative enough to work with you, then you might as well tell me now because I don't intend to buy a brand-new wardrobe for a two-month stint. And alsoâ¦' she drew herself up and stared him straight in the eyes ââ¦if I do happen to work for you, then I don't want you to think that I'm doing it because I actually like you.'
âVery tactful.'
âI'm just being honest.'
âAnd, believe me, I find that very refreshing, especially in a woman.' He was so accustomed to women using their bodies and their wiles to get what they wanted that the metaphorical bucket of water Rose kept tipping over him was doing him no end of good. He even contemplated the possibility of taking a little time out to show her the ropes.
âThere might be some travel involved,' he continued. âDo you have a passport?'
Rose nodded as the parameters broadened around her.
âAnd because you'll be working for me directly, I will set you up with an office inside my place.'
âWhoa. Stop right there. I don't think that's a good idea at all.'
âWhy not?'
âBecauseâ¦because it would be a lot more professional for me toâ¦ahâ¦work in an office environment.' She envisaged somewhere imbued with his masculine scent, with the open door to his bedroom within throwing distance. She shied away from the image with an inward yelp of dismay.
âYou'll be there on your own,' Nick said, amused at her discomfiture. âAnd, face it, this is my private project. I can hardly bring you into the office, sit you down and not expect you to become an object of curiosity.'
âWell, you could explainâ¦'
âDangerous curiosityâ¦' Nick expanded silkily, waiting in telling silence as her eyes widened. âPeople would naturally assume that because I had brought you in to work on my personal project, we were an item.'
âAn item?'
âInvolved with one another. Going out. Lovers. Now, I don't much give a damn what other people think of me, but I don't bring my private life to work.'
âBut youâ¦weâ¦we don't have a private life,' Rose protested, going bright red.
âImmaterial. Tongues will wag and I can't have my power diminished. Does that answer your objection?'
âOf course, I can see your point of view, butâ¦you have to see mine as wellâ¦'
âAnd that isâ¦?' He leaned against the door and stuck his hands into his pockets.