‘You’re right, we do need to talk.’
She twisted a strand of hair around her finger, a habit she’d long conquered, before belatedly releasing it. What was it about this guy that obliterated the last ten years as if they’d never happened and thrust her back to a time she’d rather forget?
‘I have an answer to your proposal.’
‘And?’
He propped against the bike, looking every bit the bad boy rebel he’d once been: dark, devastating, delicious.
She swallowed, her throat clenching with how much she still wanted him after all this time.
He might’ve proposed a marriage for business purposes but deep down she knew there wasn’t a chance in hell she’d be able to keep her hands off him. And considering he’d kissed her, twice, she had an inkling the feeling was mutual.
So where did that leave them? What would the boundaries of their marriage be? Monogamous? Casual?
He straightened, stepped closer to her.
‘Stop over-analysing this. Give me your answer and we’ll go from there.’
With her heart pounding and heat from his proximity prickling her skin, she wrenched her gaze from his chest within tantalising touching distance and slowly raised it until wavering blue locked with questioning brown.
Her voice barely above a whisper, she nodded.
‘My answer is yes.’
NICK snuck in the side entrance of the conference room, not wanting to intrude but driven by curiosity.
Since Britt had agreed to his proposal, she’d morphed into a businesswoman dervish, throwing herself into work at a speed that made him, a confirmed workaholic, seem like a snail.
She’d commandeered the business centre of the hotel, had turned this room into a hive of activity.
In less than a day.
He shook his head, beyond impressed at her work ethic. He’d never seen her like this: focused, determined, driven, issuing orders and delegating to the team she’d assembled in record time.
Watching her in a power suit the colour of ripe plums, her hair twisted in a fancy topknot and her brow creased in concentration while she tapped on a keyboard with one hand and shuffled documents with the other, he understood why she’d said yes to his proposal.
Her job meant everything to her and, while he empathised with her ambition, he couldn’t help but wish some of her agreement stemmed from the sexual tension strumming between them.
A surge of heat at the memory of kissing her had him sliding a finger between his neck and suddenly too tight collar.
Their marriage might be motivated by business, but who said they couldn’t have a real honeymoon?
Her head snapped up and their gazes locked, as if he’d inadvertently telepathised his thoughts and he grinned, sent her a half-salute, not surprised when she frowned and gestured towards the stack of paperwork in front of her.
She didn’t want him here.
His cue to saunter across the room and drop into the vacant chair next to her.
‘How’s it going?’
Frowning, she barely glanced at him. ‘Busy.’
‘So I see.’
‘Don’t you have work of your own to do?’
Leaning back, he linked his fingers and stretched. ‘I’m taking a break.’
He smothered an outright laugh as she glared. ‘Anything I can do to help?’
‘No, all under control.’
Her laptop screen flickered and she swore, making a mockery of her previous statement.
‘I’ve got the latest technology in my office if you need it.’
‘I said I was fine,’ she snapped, rubbing the bridge of her nose before mustering an apologetic smile. ‘Sorry. I’m used to having my team around me in London. It’s harder trying to get a cohesive unit together so quickly here.’
‘Why the rush?’
He knew she’d see right through his innocuous question, knew she’d understand what he was really asking was ‘how long are you sticking around?’
With her gaze firmly fixed on her laptop screen, she said, ‘Deadlines. I’m sure you understand.’
Placing a hand on her arm, he leaned across to murmur in her ear. ‘How long, Red?’
She stared at his hand as if it were a tiger snake before finally raising her eyes to his.
‘I don’t know. This pitch is big. Huge. The MD didn’t set an exact timeline but he knows I’m a fast worker. As long as I deliver, it’s up to me.’
He wanted to push the issue, wanted to discuss how long they’d have to make this marriage as real as it could get, but now wasn’t the time or place.
Squeezing her arm, he released her and glanced at his watch. ‘I do have an appointment, but we should get together later to discuss our other business.’
Her eyes widened as the pen in her right hand started rapping a frenetic rhythm against the Manila folder in front of her.
Amazing how the mention of their pending marriage could change her from uber-cool career-woman to nervous Nelly.
‘I’m not sure how long I’ll be here. I have loads to do, then I need to head out to the farm—’
‘Perfect. We can discuss our plans over dinner.’
She opened her mouth to refuse and he raised an eyebrow, daring her to disagree.
‘Not having second thoughts, are you? Because if you are, I might have to expedite the sale of the farm and—’
‘Fine, I’ll see you there.’
The coolness in her tone belied the angry flush creeping up her neck as he marvelled again at how damn important this promotion must be for her to go through with this.
Marrying for convenience occurred a fair bit in the business world, but never in his wildest dreams had he thought he’d do it, let alone to the only woman he would’ve ever contemplated walking down the aisle with once upon a time.
‘Glad that’s settled.’
He stood, looked down at her elaborate hairdo, his fingers itching to tug the pins out and send the whole thing tumbling around her shoulders.
As if sensing his thoughts again, she tilted back on the chair, glared at him. ‘Was there anything else, because you’re hovering?’
With a smile designed to provoke a response, he ducked down to murmur in her ear. ‘I’ll cook, but I hope you remember how much I love dessert.’
As the pen picked up tempo again he chuckled, snatched a hairpin and laid it on the stack of paperwork in front of her, before heading for the door.
‘I brought dessert.’
Brittany held out the store-bought lemon meringue pie, wishing Nick would take the damn thing before it tumbled from her shaking hands.
This dinner was supposed to set her mind at rest, a pre-wedding get-together to discuss plans and take the edge off her nerves.
So far, it wasn’t working.
‘Thanks,