355 500 произведений, 25 200 авторов.

Электронная библиотека книг » Olivia R. Keane » Push » Текст книги (страница 1)
Push
  • Текст добавлен: 6 октября 2016, 04:04

Текст книги "Push"


Автор книги: Olivia R. Keane



сообщить о нарушении

Текущая страница: 1 (всего у книги 15 страниц)



This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The author makes no claims to, but instead acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of the word marks mentioned in this work of fiction.

Copyright © 2015 by Olivia R. Keane

PUSH by Olivia R. Keane

All rights reserved. Published in the United States of America by Swoon Romance. Swoon Romance and its related logo are registered trademarks of Georgia McBride Media Group, LLC.

No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

Published by Swoon Romance

Cover designed by Deranged Doctor Designs

Cover copyright © 2015 by Swoon Romance



To Mr. K. -

Thank you for always being the leather to my lace.




Chapter One

Charlotte Flynn, better known as Charlie, pulled up to the house at ten minutes to midnight, rested her head briefly on the steering wheel, and sighed. The date with Denny tonight had been a disaster. What in God’s name was I thinking? She cursed under her breath. What made her think a thirty-year-old, balding accountant who drove a beat up Ford Escort would be a match? It was that blasted ‘unique’ dessert course at dinner the other night. Her older sister, always one to follow trends, decided ordinary fortune cookies wouldn’t be good enough for her dinner party celebrating her engagement, so she hired a fortune cookie maker whose specialty was psychic fortune cookies. Instead of those little scraps of paper with prophetic statements and winning lottery numbers, the clairvoyant cookie person asked for guests’ names and then conjured a personal prophecy and tucked it into the homemade cookie.

Charlie thought the cookie was delectable. It was the shockingly on the money observations and silly prediction for her future that left an unpleasant taste in her mouth. The psychic’s handwritten message had her pinned correctly, but the part about falling for a man whose initials were DRP was not as easy to swallow. She crumpled her future in her hands and tossed it at Michaela, laughing at the preposterous idea.

Yesterday, the idea seemed less comical and more like fate when she collided with one Dennis Richard Petersen’s shopping cart at the grocery store. What could the chances be? Denny seemed sweet and charming, and when he asked her for a dinner date, Charlie found herself saying yes to his invitation and giving into fate or perhaps well-timed desserts.

However, the cookie clairvoyant’s newfound credibility vanished ten minutes into her evening with Denny. His nose began to drip when the server brought their plate of nachos as an appetizer. Charlie politely offered a tissue from her handbag, but Denny declined, insisting it was just a sniffle. A sniffle? What kind of grown man refers to postnasal drip as a sniffle? The kind of man who still lives at home with his mother. To make matters worse, Denny’s nose kept dripping. Perhaps his initials were “DRIP,” she mused. It would have suited him better.

When Denny wanted to extend the date a bit longer by going bowling, Charlie made a polite excuse feigning the need for rest because she had an early day at the office tomorrow. Denny looked at her quizzically. She stuck to her story, ignoring the fact that Friday night was blurring into Saturday, and she did not work weekends. Charlie tried to exorcise Denny’s nasal accent from her brain, but he just kept talking.

“Sooo … Charlie, when can I see you again? Tonight … damn. It was pretty great, am I right?” He had winked and Charlie’s skin crawled.

“No. No, Denny. And hell no.” Charlie had blurted, bile rising in her throat as Denny had wiped his nose with his wrist.

“Oh, come on, bae. Let me rock your world,” he had cooed in between sniffles.

Denny had leaned in, and Charlie could smell the sausage from the pizza he had recently. “Denny you should know I’m about to puke all over you, so I’d back away if I were you.”

He had blanched and stepped back.

“And for the record, I’d rather staple my head to the tablecloth than have you rock my world. Not going to happen. Not ever.” She had said through clenched teeth as she stalked out of the restaurant.

Now that Charlie was home, all she wanted to do was cry. Freaking drippy Denny. Freaking liar fortune cookie. Even fate couldn’t turnout right for Charlie.

Opening the door of the house she shared with her sister, Charlie yawned and stretched like a cat that had slept in one spot too long. The exhaustion she felt was more than physical. Treading water in the dating pool brought on emotional fatigue as well. After Griffin her studies became her priority. She may have sacrificed a decent social life to late night study sessions in the University library, but for Charlie graduating with honors in both History and English was a fair tradeoff. Her dating life might be a mediocre mess, but she was happy to land a job with the prestigious Pearse Publishing House, no small feat in this difficult economy and without any connections.

In the past six months, Charlie had developed a decent rapport with the editorial staff. The Pearse brothers ran their family-owned publishing empire using a hands-on approach. Middle brother Kellan, who ran the Pittsburgh office, relished his role as editor-in-chief. Charlie often emailed him her thoughts on manuscripts that caught her eye. Kellan recognized her potential right away. He had flagged certain manuscripts, encouraging her to read them and provide not only research-based feedback, but also give her editorial impressions.

Charlie had a meeting with Kellan last week, and he discussed the prospect of her moving up into another position.

“It’s time to move you to a new position, Charlie,” Kellan had told her. “Let’s get Human Resources started on the paperwork next week.”

The possibility of gaining more responsibility at work was the silver lining in her otherwise lackluster life. As she climbed into bed that night, she found herself praying for the three-day weekend to pass quickly.

***

Tuesday morning after Labor Day arrived as both a blessing and a curse. Charlie sat in the parking lot of Pearse Publishing arguing with her sister.

“What do you mean you set me up on another date?” Charlie shrieked into her cell phone.

Please? Aaron planned it before I knew I would have to go out of town on business. You were supposed to double with Aaron’s friend and Aaron and I. Aaron thought you two would be the perfect match,” Mikki, short for Michaela, begged her younger sister.

“Mikki, every time you set me up on a date it is always a disaster! In fact, all of my dates lately are disasters. I think I am just going to give up and become a nun!”

Mikki’s laughter rang in Charlie’s ear. “Sister Mary Charlotte? You couldn’t possibly become a nun. You own entirely too many killer shoes to become a nun!”

Charlie couldn’t help but laugh. Her sister always knew how to break her foul mood. “Fine, but if this one is anything like that guy that ‘accidentally’ bumped into me at the grocery store, I will get back at you. Remember what I did to you the last time you screwed me over?” Charlie entertained thoughts of secretly replacing her sister’s non-fat creamer with the full fat, sugar-laden version and watching her sister stress out over the unexplained weight gain at her wedding dress fitting.

She rummaged through the glove box, found a notepad, and quickly scrawled down the restaurant name and address. Before she could get the name of her blind date, Mikki ended the call.

***

Charlie’s Tuesday had a case of the Mondays and not in a Charlie sort of way. She lived her life in a series of predictable motions. Charlie always arrived at work a half-hour.early. She always worked through lunch. She always started her day with a coffee from Starbucks. The barista wagged her order out the drive-through before she voiced it into the speaker. Her routine was the same day in and day out. Just not today. Charlie slipped into her cubicle twenty-eight minutes later than usual. She sipped her now lukewarm Skinny Cinnamon Dolce Latte as she waded frantically through the morning emails.

Charlie stumbled across one flagged as urgent. It was for the entire office. Reading it, her dreams of moving out of the Research Department died a quick, painful death. Are you kidding me? After losing a contact lens, dropping my earrings in the garbage disposal, and arguing with Mikki over another forced fix up, the last thing I need is a career-killing email like this! Her boss, Kellan Pearse, the man who saw her potential and promised her a new position, transferred to the London office.

Pearse Pittsburgh Staff:

Pearse Publishing is restructuring the way each office does business effective immediately. We have expedited the change in direction of this office, and as a result, Kellan Pearse will now be serving Pearse Publishing in our London offices. His replacement will work closely with each of the Pittsburgh departments to ensure as smooth a transition as possible …

She skimmed the rest of the email, bristling at the idea that Kellan’s younger brother would replace him in this office. In addition, all office promotions were on hold until further notice. Charlie, you’re an asset to our operations he said. Promotion is just around the corner he said.

Loud shouting snapped Charlie out of her whine and cheese party. Peering over the top of her cubicle, she spotted a looming figure of a man storming his way through their Research Department. He was wildly waving a sheaf of papers above his head in his right hand. The glow of the florescent lighting reflected off the large gold signet ring he sported on his right hand.

“Who did the research on Susan Ainsworth’s Daughters of Rome?” His voice was rough and angry around the edges. Charlie cringed and sank back down into her chair. Her name was on the research he held in that stack of papers, but she certainly wasn’t going to help him out by fessing up to being the unlucky researcher about to get an earful.

Charlie assessed the current situation as hopeless and murmured a quick prayer to Saint Jude, but he must have been out to lunch because soon the man, whom she could only guess was her new boss, hovered near her desk. He was close enough she could smell the scent of his spiced cologne. Moments seemed to pass as she sat transfixed by his angry, yet handsome, countenance.

The rumors about him being attractive were spot on. He was tall, gorgeous, and apparently entirely evil. At this moment, the youngest Mr. Pearse was the most self-important, pompous man she’d ever encountered. Charlie’s mind wandered momentarily as she thought of the gossip that circled him. She shook those inappropriate thoughts from her head and regained her composure.

Suddenly, as his gaze met hers, and his eyes grew dark, a jolt of bravery sent Charlie bolting up out of her chair. Smoothing out her pencil skirt as she rose, she spoke to him. “Mr. Pearse, instead of barreling through this department and causing a scene, you should have looked to the last page of the research for a name and saved your full wrath for that person.” Pearse glared at her, making any bit of bravado Charlie had crumble. Shakily, she offered, “I’m Charlie Flynn. I did the research on Ms. Ainsworth’s novel.” Her voice trailed off as her new boss moved in closer.

Charlie glanced up. He was glaring at her all because she was doing extra work. She looked away, deliberately not staring at the way his charcoal suit coat fit across his broad shoulders. She tried not to notice that incredible hair. What did the women in the break room call it this morning? Fuckable hair. According to their tales, it had earned its title. The image of him tangled in hotel sheets flickered briefly through her mind.

Of course, he had to go ahead and ruin it by opening his mouth.

Pearse scoffed. “Ms. Flynn is it? You can’t be serious. You’re just a research assistant. You dared to call some of the author’s information into question?” His voice echoed loudly through the ghost town that was the Research Department. Like prairie dogs on the Great Plains, her coworkers had popped back down into their cubicles at the first sign of danger.

Charlie tried to phrase her response carefully. “If the author had bothered to consult Google—at the very least—as her point of reference, she would have found a more logical history of Rome than what she offered.”

“And what about these notes, Ms. Flynn?” He waved a piece of paper in front of her face.

His gesture only served to embolden her. It was as though he was waving a red flag in front of an angry bull. Charlie straightened her back and set her shoulders. “It is a list of suggested reading. Ms. Ainsworth clearly needs some assistance with her research on ancient Rome before revising and resubmitting the manuscript.” Softening her tone she said, “I thought she might like to rework the story. The plot was engaging even though the research was lacking.” Charlie gazed into a pair of piercing blue eyes.

The youngest Pearse brother’s face contorted into something resembling a cross between a sneer and a smirk. “Oh, I see. So you’re an editor now, is that it?” Several eavesdropping coworkers gasped.

Charlie lowered her gaze, unable to meet his any longer, and whispered, “No, certainly not. I was just trying to help her after trashing her research.”

“Let me see if I am getting this correct. You read the complete manuscript of what you need to research and yet were still able to submit your analysis on time?” His voice was glacial like his eyes.

Pearse watched intently as she finally conceded the upper hand in the conversation.

“I am sorry,” Charlie said with a hint of bite. “I was just trying to do my job properly. Kellan always asked I read the full manuscript to get a better understanding of the story. I also find Ms. Ainsworth’s book enthralling, and I don’t want to be responsible for a rejection letter.”

Pearse considered her then, tilting his head. “So even though you ripped Ms. Ainsworth’s research to shreds, you agree with the editor who sent their recommendation to my desk?”

Charlie mustered her confidence and looked back up at Mr. Pearse. “Oh yes. It was absorbing. I found myself not being able to put it down. If you didn’t know much about history or the region where the story takes place, you could easily enjoy the novel.” Charlie winced, wishing she could edit her last words. Surely those comments wouldn’t sit well with the youngest Mr. Pearse.

He raised an eyebrow and laughed uproariously, winking at Charlie. Charlie’s eyes widened as she watched him turn away and out of the Research Department. She loved immersing herself completely in a manuscript. It helped her get a feel of the reasons behind why an author used a specific reference. She knew she probably overstepped her bounds with her new boss. He wasn’t anything like his brother. She would have to curb her enthusiasm for getting into the manuscripts so deeply.

Charlie found it difficult to concentrate on the current manuscript on her desktop as she replayed her first run-in with her new boss. He would be the perfect man if only he kept his mouth shut. She rifled through the back of her desk, certain she had some duct tape stashed there that she could put to good use. Anticipating the fallout from her skirmish with Mr. Tall, Dark, and Domineering would be grave, but she was shocked to discover an email from him awaiting her.

It taunted her as she toyed with the roll of duct tape. She swallowed hard, dreading the inevitable. Certain she had put the last nail in the coffin of her brief career in publishing, she muttered, “Oh God, what have I done?”

Clicking the email open, she discovered not a chastisement, but directions on what he wished her to work on next. She had to read it twice to make sure it wasn’t a joke.

Ms. Flynn:

Since you are so industrious and seem eager to prove yourself, I am going against my better judgment and following Kellan’s advice where you are concerned. I would like to see the full research reports for the Clarke, Jacobsen, and O’Hare manuscripts on my desk by five today.

I also want you to prepare a detailed presentation for me on the inconsistencies in Ms. Ainsworth’s research that I can show the acquisitions department. I expect you in the conference room at 8 AM Wednesday morning ready to present it.

If you want take on more responsibility, you need to prove to me you can handle the workload.

Pearse

***

As everyone filtered out for lunch, Charlie remained chained to her desk. A second cup of coffee and a few leftover fortune cookies she swiped from her pantry this morning would have to suffice. Normally, she would heat up leftovers or go out with a few other Research Department people to grab a quick bite, but time wasn’t on her side today. She glanced briefly at her watch, noting she only had five hours to complete her tasks.

Her cell phone danced across her desk as she broke open the last of the cookies. It was Mikki.

“Hey, Sis, so are you ready for tonight?” she asked.

“Ready for tonight? No, I think I am going to have to cancel. This is the day from hell,” Charlie apologized.

Mikki quizzed her. “Day from hell or boss from hell? Aaron mentioned that your new boss man might be a tad bit demanding.”

“Oh, my God, Mikki, you’ve no idea. I am under a tight deadline, and if I hope to get out of this research dungeon, I need to prove myself. I’ll be pushing it to get out of here on time, but I’ll try. After today, a night to unwind might be just the thing I need,” Charlie explained.

“It will be great, Charlie. He will be great. I pinky promise.”

Fidgeting in her chair, the phone slipped from her hands. She bent down to pick it up and noticed a run in her stockings. “And on top of everything else, I’ve managed to snag my new stockings. Now I will have to go back home and change before I endure episode two of ‘“Yes, this is your pathetic love life.” There was no response from the phone. “Hello? Mikki, are you there?”

Charlie glanced up to find Mr. Pearse standing at the entrance to her cubicle. Her cheeks flushed, and she pulled her skirt down to hide the offending run.

“I’m sorry, Mr. Pearse, I was—”

“Ms. Flynn, since you have plenty of free time to carry on a conversation with yourself about problematic lingerie, in addition to putting the Ainsworth presentation together, I need you to head down to the Copy Edit Department and see what is taking them so long with the Curry woman’s galley.” Pearse straightened his tie. “Do you think you can manage to do that?”

Do I look like an office assistant? Charlie looked up to meet Pearse’s gaze. “I’ll be happy to ask Natalie if she —”

He cut her off. “Ms. Flynn, I wasn’t making a suggestion. I would like you to pick them up. I will see you this evening.” He held her gaze for a moment, jaw clenched, before turning on his heel and storming off.

***

Six hours later, Charlie made her way to Pearse’s office, manuscripts in hand. His secretary was nowhere in sight, so she knocked on his office door. No answer. She slid the reports through the mail slot and hoped they scattered across the floor so he would have to pick them up and sort through them himself. It would serve him right. Her presentation on Daughters of Rome was mostly in order, and she found herself laughing hysterically at how fantastically dreadful her day had been.


Chapter Two

Peeling off her clothes, she left a trail to the shower. Under the scalding spray found herself plotting a drawn out and bloody end for the intern in the copy edit room. It was a simple job. All he had to do was make a copy of the Curry galley and bind it. What should have taken minutes took well over an hour. Now she had little time to get ready for her date. Despite her attempts to wriggle out of the arranged dinner, her sister had sweet-talked her into going out with one of Aaron’s friends.

Aaron was Mikki’s latest conquest. She usually had dates with more men than Charlie had pairs of shoes, but she seemed to settle into a pattern with Aaron, and they had recently announced their engagement and fast approaching wedding. Aaron worked at Pearse in the Acquisitions Department. Charlie had introduced Mikki to him at the last fundraising event.

Since she played matchmaker for her older sister so successfully, Mikki was hell bent on helping, more like pushing, her sister to find her soul mate. Although she couldn’t confirm it yet, Charlie had been suspicious of the good fortune the cookie foretold the other night. She grew more so when Denny conveniently rammed into her at the store. Bachelor Number Two would confirm her suspicions if she could only find out his name. Mikki refused to tell her, insisting that knowing every little thing about the man before she met him ruined the point of a blind date. Charlie bristled at the possibility of another dud like Denny.

Still, she had promised, and now she was making a half-hearted attempt at looking drop dead gorgeous. Just as she was rifling through her pitiful excuse of a wardrobe, she sent a quick text to Mikki.

Charlie: Mikki can I borrow a dress? XO Charlie.

Moments later, her phone beeped back.

Mikki: Sure thing Sis. You have a date with destiny tonight.:) XO M.

Charlie raised an eyebrow and responded.

Charlie: Oh Mikki what on earth have you done!?

Her phone beeped.

Mikki: DUH! YES! Remember your cookie reading the other night? This guy is perfect, and his name just happens to start with ‘D’. It never hurts to get the fates aligned in your favor, even if you have to give them a little shove.

Charlie laughed off the message, now realizing the whole cookie thing was a set up and quickly sifted through her sister’s extensive clothing collection. Needing a boost in the confidence department after the disaster of a workday, she spotted a low cut, charcoal knit dress that would hug all her curves in just the right places. She held it against her body. Glancing at her reflection in the mirror, Charlie decided to escape her predictable self. She yanked the still-attached price tag off the beautiful dress with her teeth. But her secret confidence weapon was her pretty little things. Charlie had always had a thing for expensive lingerie. Wearing something sexy underneath her clothing was empowering, and the pair she had donned tonight was no exception. She slipped the dress on over her lacy lingerie and paired it with a pair of killer black boots. Tousling her wavy caramel hair, she let it fall naturally past her shoulders, and applied some light makeup. Catching a glimpse of herself in the hallway mirror as she headed out, she dared anyone to mistake her for a nameless research drone tonight.

Settling into her car, Charlie fastened her seat belt and plugged her iPod into the docking station. She pressed shuffle and hummed along to Florence and the Machine’s Howl. Just then, beeping from her phone startled her. A text from an unknown number flashed at her. She gave it a cursory glance and decided it must be from her blind date.

Unknown: Good Evening, Ms. Flynn. Your sister gave me your phone number. I look forward to dining with you this evening. I will see you at the restaurant shortly after eight. – D.

Charlie hesitated for a moment but responded.

Charlie: Great. Looking forward to it.

She cringed as she pushed the send button. He sounded like a stuffed shirt. This time “D” must mean “dud.” You so owe me, Mikki!

She traveled forty minutes into the heart of the north shore of Pittsburgh to Thirteen, a restaurant where she would meet this “D” guy. Charlie loved the city at night. Dusk was darkening into evening, and the office buildings speckled the horizon with lit windows. From the looks of the restaurant, she already knew this date would be a vast improvement over the clumsy affair at the pizzeria with Denny. She stepped inside, grateful for her sister’s expensive taste in clothing. Waiting for the host, Charlie scanned the dining space, and it was elegant but not ostentatious.

Mikki raved about this place all the time. It took months to get a booking, but Aaron knew the chef and had pulled some strings to get a reservation for the originally planned double date. It was one of the most popular spots in the Strip District on the cusp of downtown Pittsburgh. It boasted soaring two-story ceilings. The interior displayed an eclectic mixture of exposed brickwork, polished dark woods, and warm leather furnishings.

The friendly host interrupted the tour her gaze feasted on. He cleared his throat. “Excuse me, Miss. Do you have a reservation this evening?”

Charlie was at a loss; she didn’t even know whose name the reservations were under. What could I possibly be thinking? I don’t even know his last name! God, help me, my life is starting to sound like a country song! Charlie shook her head free of those thoughts. This was no time to channel Carrie Underwood.

Sensing her distress, the host politely inquired, “May I have your name, Miss?”

Charlie nervously offered, “Yes. Sorry. It is Charlotte. Charlotte Flynn. I am here on a blind date.” She bit the inside of her cheek and winced, making a mental note to stop offering up unnecessary details.

Oliver, as his nametag read, scanned the list and glanced up, smiling at her. “Yes, Ms. Flynn, we have you here. We have specific instructions to seat you and bring you some refreshments. Shall we?”

Oliver led Charlie to the second-story opera box that overlooked the bar area. It was a private dining section that normally looked to seat four people, but it was set for two. Oliver politely led her to a spot facing the scene at the bar unfolding below. Charlie graciously took her seat and watched the entertainment. She smiled and thanked the host, and he left her alone, but not for long.

Soon, a sharp looking waiter appeared with a drink and something that resembled a bite-sized appetizer.

“Here you are, Miss. Our Amuse Bouche for the evening is yellowtail, lemon mignonette, apple, and trout roe. Our chef’s pairing this evening is a glass of Laurent-Perrier champagne.” He set the flute in front of her.

Charlie’s eyes grew wide. She wasn’t much of a drinker, and champagne on an empty stomach might be trouble.

The waiter, sensing her hesitancy explained to her, “Chef Costa’s specialty is food and wine pairings. Each of your courses this evening pairs with a glass that complements and draws out the flavors of the dishes. Your dining partner requested the chef’s tasting menu. This is the first of several courses. Please enjoy.”

Charlie took a small sip and quickly decided it was delicious. It was crisp and fresh but well balanced and served with the yellowtail, it was the perfect combination.

She laughed, pondering whether she could land a job as a food critic penning reviews for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette if she couldn’t cut it in the publishing world. She took another sip, mesmerized by the two-story wine cellar she spotted behind the bar. She loved the location Oliver had placed them tonight; floating above the bar like a fly on the proverbial wall.

Charlie let the atmosphere of the restaurant wash away the stress of the day. She closed her eyes and savored the last morsel of the fish. When she opened them, she found Mr. Pearse parting the curtain to the opera box aside. What in the world? How did he track me down here? How dare he interrupt my night!

Charlie eyed him suspiciously. He didn’t look any different than he did at the office today. In fact, he looked sexier than hell. His ink black hair was its usual perfect mess, as though some woman had buried her hands in and tousled it during a moment of passion. Something in his demeanor had the fine hairs on the back of her neck standing at attention. Tension gripped her body as she became acutely aware of the lace at the edge of her underwear. His eyes seared from across the room almost as if he heard her thoughts. But that was impossible, wasn’t it? He kept staring at her, and Charlie finally had to break the mutual stare. She found it impossible to keep up with the level of intensity coming at her from the opera box entrance.

The urge to flee kicked in first, but Charlie gulped another swallow from her glass. Suddenly the need to escape fizzled away like the champagne bubbles that floated to the surface of her flute, giving way to some semblance of courage. With her newfound bravery, she stood up, lifted her chin, and walked over to confront him. Why did he have to be so damned gorgeous?

“Mr. Pearse, if you are here about work, I slid those reports you requested into your mail slot before I left for the day. Didn’t you find them?”

His sapphire gaze pierced her brave front, but he offered no response.

Charlie started to speak again, her voice wavering. “What are you doing here, Mr.—”

And then it happened. She stopped midsentence; her breath caught in her throat. He walked toward her, grasped her hand in his, and looked into her eyes. “Good evening, Ms. Flynn, I don’t believe we have been properly introduced. My name is Declan Ryan Pearse, and I will be your date this evening.”

“Are you crazy?” Charlie seethed.

“Well, I had this reservation for a not so blind date. And I am fairly certain I am not mentally unstable. Sounds a bit better than crazy, don’t you think?” Declan kept hold of her hand and grinned.

Smart-ass. Charlie decided to play along. “Charlotte Flynn, but most people call me Charlie.”

Declan released her hand. “And now that we have been formally introduced—Charlotte, Declan—” he said, pointing first at Charlie and then to himself, “will you dine with me?” He motioned her to return to the cozy table set for two.

Charlie swallowed hard. “Why should I?”

“Because I promised Aaron that I would show you a good time. Because you look so lovely sipping that champagne, but I know you have had little, if anything to eat today.” His gaze flicked over her. “Because I want to enjoy a wonderful meal with an intelligent, intriguing, and yet infuriating woman. So many reasons, Ms. Flynn.”


    Ваша оценка произведения:

Популярные книги за неделю