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Authors: C.C. Gibbs

Tags: #Romance, #Erotica, #Fiction, #General

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BOOK: Knight's Game
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He brushed her arm in a light downward drift of his hand. ‘We don’t have to do anything. We could go see a movie or something.’

‘I feel really dumb,’ she whispered.

‘I could kick his ass for you.’

That brought a small smile to her face; she turned back to him. ‘I might take you up on that.’

‘Anytime.’

Meg was right. There was no lack of testosterone in Montana. ‘I’ll let you know.’ She came to her feet. ‘And thanks. Really.’ Then she left the bedroom, walked to the bathroom, locked herself in and quietly cried.

Ben followed her, talked to her through the door. Still polite. A real gentleman.

‘Maybe next time,’ he said. ‘Call me.’ And he walked away.

What was wrong with her?

Did only arrogant pricks turn her on?

*

The day of Dominic’s rescheduled meeting finally arrived. Max, along with the other attendees, met in the sumptuous conference room of the Paris office with Dominic lounging at the head of a long Empire table that had once graced Malmaison. Coffee, tea and pastries were available, the cups set before each man Sèvres porcelain contemporary with the table. Small flower arrangements offered scent and colour without blocking any sight lines. Dominic’s office staff was efficient.

As the investors found their seats Dominic dispensed with a greeting. ‘This shouldn’t take long,’ he said curtly. ‘Everyone’s familiar with the prospectus?’ It wasn’t really a question.

The fact that Miss Hart was not in attendance was noted by the industrialists as they settled back in their chairs, all of them mindful of the last aborted meeting. Very soon, the attendees also took note of Dominic’s poisonous mood.
Related? No, not with Dominic,
they all individually concurred.
Women are just a necessary convenience for him.
But he was conspicuously less accommodating, more prickly, quick to reject any quibbles about money. And in the end, he essentially offered them a take-it-or-leave-it proposition.

With Dominic’s track record they all took it, but they grumbled after he got up, brusquely said, ‘You gentlemen
will be much richer after today,’ and walked out of the room without so much as a thank you. A little courtesy wouldn’t have been out of place when they were investing billions.

Max was left to smooth outraged egos.

Sometime later, Max walked into Dominic’s office, bit back his comment about the half-empty bottle on Dominic’s desk and forced himself to speak in a measured tone. ‘You could have been more polite, Nick. It’s going to take them a while to cool off.’

Dominic drained his drink before looking up, his half-lidded gaze indifferent. ‘I gave them the full extent of my charm in Hong Kong. I didn’t feel like kissing ass again. If they want to make money, buy in. If they don’t’ – Dominic shrugged – ‘I don’t give a shit. I’ll cover it myself.’ Coolly, he met Max’s gaze. ‘Is there anything else?’

‘You’re drinking a lot and you’re drinking alone.’ Max decided someone had to say it. Dominic had never been a solitary drinker.

‘So?’ He refilled his glass.

‘So you’re becoming a real pain in the ass.’

‘Point noted. Is there more of this lecture? I hope not because I’m already bored. And not that it’s any of your business, but I only drink at night.’ He glanced at the clock and a muscle twitched along his jaw. 3.50 p.m. ‘Today’s an exception,’ he muttered. Seeing the same men again had brought back the horror of their last meeting when Katherine had seen the disastrous email and everything had
gone into the tank. ‘As for drinking alone,’ he said with biting sarcasm, ‘it’s never too late to learn.’

Max sighed softly. ‘The lecture’s over. How you choose to go to hell is your own business. But try not to use that snarky tone with Lillibet. She’s new, she’s an excellent analyst and I wouldn’t want to lose her because you’re an asshole.’

Dominic lifted his glass to Max. ‘Consider me warned. Lillibet will be treated with extreme deference. Is she some politician’s daughter? Just asking.’

‘No.’

‘Thank God. Politicians can be demanding.’ He smiled tightly. ‘Now, if you’ll excuse me.’ He drained his glass, reached for the bottle and shot a look at Max who hadn’t moved. ‘Do you mind? I’m busy.’ Unscrewing the bottle, Dominic poured himself another drink, leaned back in his chair and put the glass to his mouth. He didn’t hear the door shut because he was calculating how much liquor it would take tonight to erase the memory of Katherine’s tears when she’d looked up from his laptop that day in Hong Kong.

He was still there after the office had gone dark, another opened bottle in his hand. The wall of muted TV screens opposite his desk was the only illumination in the room, his eyes half shut against the glare, wretched memories of losing Katherine agitating his thoughts.

The door slowly opened; a beautiful, leggy blonde quietly entered the room, shut the door behind her and leaned back against it. ‘I’m the last one here, Mr Knight,’ she said in a
softly accented English. ‘I was wondering if you needed anything before I leave.’

The innuendo was thick enough to cut with a knife.

Explicit enough to penetrate the layers of Dominic’s despair.

At the familiar tone of voice, he automatically looked up and crooked his finger. ‘What’s your name?’

‘Tatiana,’ she said, moving towards his desk.

‘Surname?’ He’d loosened his tie and collar, his attire otherwise unaltered since the meeting, his white shirt a vivid contrast to his dark suit in the heavily shadowed room.

‘Ismay.’

No politician he knew, nor a family of his acquaintance. That didn’t make it necessarily safe, but safer. ‘How long have you worked here, Tatiana?’ he gently queried, instinctively surveying the lovely young woman. Max had good taste.

‘A year, sir.’

‘Have we met?’

‘Twice, sir.’

‘And what do you do for us?’

‘I’m one of your attorneys.’

‘And you were wondering if I needed anything?’ he murmured.

‘Yes, sir.’

His gaze narrowed at that third
sir
and he wondered if they’d met somewhere other than the office. Or were his vices common knowledge? ‘Why did you think I might need something?’

‘You were all alone in the dark.’ Opaque glass panels framed the door.

‘Drinking.’

‘I see that.’

‘Would you like a drink?’ A gratuitous impulse or perhaps a mechanical prompt in a situation like this.

‘If you wouldn’t mind.’

He shut his eyes, the bittersweet phrase like a punch in the gut: he’d said it to Katherine during their first breakfast together at the Garden House and again in his office after the cocktail party – both occasions lush with memory. ‘Actually, I
would
mind,’ he said, his voice suddenly crisp as he shoved himself upright from his lazy sprawl. ‘I’m sorry, Miss Ismay.’ He smiled politely. ‘I’m too drunk to be good company. Although, I appreciate your concern. It was a pleasure to meet you’ – he dipped his head – ‘again. Have a pleasant evening.’ He grabbed the bottle, unscrewed the cap, and thought about offering an additional apology when she didn’t move. But he stared at her instead until she did move because he had no intention of fucking her. Now or ever.

After a slow five count, she turned away.

Jesus, he thought glumly, watching the door shut on Miss Ismay, he couldn’t even accept a beautiful woman’s offer of sex. He was seriously fucked up. Then a highly unpleasant thought surfaced. There wasn’t a chance in hell Katherine was going without sex – not with her libido. And for a fraction of a second he thought about calling Tatiana back. But he didn’t want her; he only wanted Katherine – who could
never get enough fucking, who was always ready, who was so incredibly responsive he had only to touch her and she was wet for him.

He swore under his breath, then out loud.

Christ, it was like going through withdrawal, his cravings so intense he couldn’t function normally. He was edgy, couldn’t sleep; he was drinking alone when he never did. At least he wasn’t hallucinating yet. Then he swore again, because Katherine was on his mind constantly, her image stamped on his brain, and if that wasn’t hallucinating, it was only a matter of interpretation.

He shoved the bottle away, then the glass.

An addiction could be overcome.

He’d dealt with worse problems in his life.

And it wasn’t as though he didn’t have countless women willing to spread their legs for him. A shame he felt no pleasure at the thought; not necessarily a rare feeling – that lack of pleasure in his life. But it was infinitely worse now after having climbed to the top of the mountain with Katherine and witnessed the great beauty of the world.

He probably shouldn’t have bolted; perhaps a less fucked-up person wouldn’t have.

But she’d left too.

So the riddles of the universe remained.

He absently glanced at the clock as though to confirm his location in time and space in the more prosaic world, then turned to the windows and registered brief surprise. It was completely dark. With a weary sigh, he reached for his
phone, punched in a number and spoke rapidly in French. ‘I’ll be down in ten minutes, Henri. No, I don’t think so. No, I’m not hungry. Just home, and then you’re free for the night.’

Pushing himself to his feet, he switched off the TVs, found his way to the door in the light from the windows facing the Quai d’Orsay, and checked the hallway in the event Miss Ismay hadn’t taken her dismissal to heart. He was grateful to find himself alone.

It would have been a huge effort to be courteous even for as long as it would take to get to the entrance doors downstairs. He wasn’t in the mood for polite conversation or even the most trivial small talk. That he’d managed to be civil to Miss Ismay in his office was a testament to one of his core competences: pleasing women.

CHAPTER 4

In the next few weeks, Max and the entire staff in the Paris office were on guard around Dominic. His moodiness was undiminished, his temper volatile, his patience non-existent.

Max had delayed going home – with his demons back in full force, Dominic needed a babysitter. But Max was finally leaving for Hong Kong and in an effort to safeguard the office staff in his absence, he broached the subject of Dominic’s ill humour. ‘While I’m gone,’ he said, ‘maybe you could ratchet down your temper. No one dares talk back to you except me. So take a break for a week. OK?’

Dominic put down his pen, leaned back in his desk chair and flexed his lips in an unpleasant smile. ‘You sound like my mother. And I don’t like my mother. So back off. Now, have you heard from Ross on that Amalfi Coast hotel?’

‘Not yet.’

A marginal scowl. ‘And why the hell is that?’

‘Maybe you should just go fuck her,’ Max snapped. ‘You’ve become impossible to deal with.’

‘And maybe you should shut your fucking mouth,’ Dominic snapped back, a dangerous gleam in his eyes.

‘Jesus, Nick, lighten up. Not only did you practically tell the investors on the rare earth project to go screw themselves, but everyone in the office has been walking on egg shells every day wondering who you’re going to savage next.’

‘They get paid enough,’ Dominic growled. ‘It goes with the territory.’

‘Look, do you want me to say I was wrong about Katherine because I’d be more than happy to do that if it would put you in a better mood?’

Dominic gave him a venomous look. ‘I don’t want you to say anything about Katherine –
ever
.’

Max shrugged; he was done playing therapist. ‘Fine. Suit yourself. I’ll be back in a week. Do you want anything from Hong Kong?’

‘Bring Leo and Danny back with you.’

‘Because of the Romanian rumours? You think the Balkan mafia threat is real? Are Gora’s in-laws really going to want that twenty million back that they stole from you?’

‘Who knows? Possibly.’ Dominic blew out a breath. ‘And I apologize.’

Max smiled faintly. ‘Apology accepted.’

Dominic ran his fingers through his dark hair and let his hands drop, restlessly flexing his fingers. ‘I was thinking, too,’ he said slowly, ‘with the rumours out there, Katherine should have some security. Would you round up a crew and send them to Singapore?’

‘She’s in Singapore?’

‘So I’ve been told.’

‘By who?’

‘I doubt you know them.’

Max knew everyone Nick knew, including Justin who’d casually asked about Katherine Hart. ‘I see,’ Max said blandly. ‘Have you talked to her?’

Dominic shook his head.

‘Are you going to talk to her?’

‘It’s none of your concern whether I do or not.’

Max sighed. ‘I suppose you can’t get any worse.’

Dominic’s mouth twitched. ‘I’m pleased to have your approval such as it is.’

‘As if you need it. Care to tell me why she’s in Singapore?’

‘No.’

If Dominic hadn’t been involved, he would have said so. ‘Staying at Raffles, is she?’ Max inquired coolly.

‘I believe so.’

‘In the Cathay Suite?’

‘She might be.’

Then Dominic had put her there. It was his favourite. ‘For long?’

A cool blue gaze. ‘That I don’t know.’

‘I’m surprised. It sounds as though you have everything under control.’

Dominic leaned forward, carefully aligned the pen on his desk, then looked up and smiled tightly. ‘There are limits to what I can do.’

Max laughed. ‘That’s exactly why she intrigues you. You didn’t just leave her, she left you, didn’t she?’

‘Is there no privacy in the world?’ Dominic remarked drolly.

‘Not a whole lot. When are you leaving for Singapore?’

‘Tonight.’

CHAPTER 5

Kate was sitting with a male colleague at a table in Raffles Bar and Billiard Room when she saw Dominic walk in.

Or rather walk as far as the doorway where he came to a stop and surveyed the room. He wore a dark polo shirt, dark slacks, and a dun-coloured sports jacket and looked cool and collected and beautiful as sin.

She went still, her heart grabbed at her ribs, hot desire dive-bombed her brain. Left her breathless.

Even at a glance Dominic’s shocking physical beauty, the raw energy spilling from him, the arresting, electric blue of his eyes pushed all her buttons, switched on every playing-with-fire impulse, made her suddenly conscious of all she’d missed.

BOOK: Knight's Game
5.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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