Wyatt was on his way to his penthouse apartment late in the day when he turned a corner and nearly ran over Alex. She’d been walking while looking at a map and she bumped up against him, the map crumpling and tearing.
Instantly he caught her, stopping her forward momentum, heat branding him as his palms closed around the bare skin of her upper arms. Fragrant skin. Smooth skin.
Stop it, he ordered himself, glancing down. She was looking a bit dazed.
“I’m so sorry,” she said. “I wasn’t even looking where I was going.” For two seconds they stood there, connected, as Wyatt tried to ignore how she felt…and how she looked, with those big, startled blue eyes.
Then reality kicked in and she took a step backward, gathering the crumpled, crinkling paper and trying to smooth it into something resembling a map again as he released her.
Walk away, he told himself. Treat this situation the way you would with any other employee.
But Alex wasn’t like any other employee he’d ever hired. There was something about her that was difficult to ignore. Which was unfortunate. Ignoring people, not letting them get to him, was what enabled him to be who he was. It was how he had managed to survive a brutal childhood.
“Do you need directions?” he asked, ignoring his own good advice.
She smiled, that brilliant, room-brightening smile that his customers seemed to warm to. “I’m just having a little trouble figuring out where to start.”
“Start?”
“Memorizing the city. I realized that if I’m going to be effective I need to know Las Vegas almost as well as I know San Diego. I have to be able to envision a place when someone asks me a question, so I’m trying to experience as much of the city as I can. Last night was easy. A cabdriver took me past a few of the popular restaurants for a survey of what’s available. But what I really want is to totally lose myself in the whole Las Vegas scene. I thought I’d walk this time and surround myself with the city, but I’m having trouble deciding where to begin.”
“Alexandra, you don’t have to put in extra hours.” He expected loyalty from his employees, but not servitude. He was the last man who would ever ask for that.
She frowned. “I’m not asking you to pay me for this. It’s something I need to do for me. Tomorrow will be my third day on the job, and I’m determined to close the gaps in my knowledge.”
“You’re doing a good job.”
She tilted her head. “Thank you. I’m not doubting myself. The past two days have been good. I’m starting to feel more settled. I just want to push myself a little harder, learn more. I have goals. By the end of this week I intend to be a winner at the ‘totally invisible concierge’ game.” She gave him a dazzling conspiratorial smile that made his pulse leap.
Wyatt didn’t have the heart to tell her that she was never going to be invisible. She was too darned electric, attractive, alive. But he knew what she meant. She didn’t want anyone to be able to notice that she was still learning her job, so here she was with her map and her determination. And, yes, her good idea. Well, almost a good idea.
“I applaud your dedication,” he said, “but wandering the streets alone with your head buried in a map? I don’t think so.”
Her chin lifted slightly. “I’m fully capable of taking care of myself. I know self-defense, and I have hairspray, a lighter and sharp keys in my purse.”
“And if you’re distracted, you’ll never even get to them. You’re not doing this.”
Ah, the pretty sky eyes could flash angry sparks. Wyatt knew he shouldn’t allow himself to be intrigued by her mercurial spirit, but what man wouldn’t be? The woman was like an erratic fire, burning low and warm one minute, then leaping to an eager flame when something entranced or challenged her.
“Let me rephrase that in a less condescending way,” he said. “You’re off the clock now, and that means you’re not answerable to me, but if my presence won’t be unwelcome, I’ll show you Las Vegas up close.”
Alex hesitated. Then she raised one brow. “Do you really expect me to tell my boss that his presence would be unwelcome?”
He fought the urge to smile…and then he lost the battle. “Actually, yes, I do. As I mentioned, you’re on Alexandra time now. You call the shots.”
She studied him. “You don’t have to be my bodyguard.”
Bad choice of words. It made him far too aware of how attracted he was to her curves and her pretty long legs. None of that changed the fact that sending Alex out with nothing but a map, a smile, innocent blue eyes and a can of hairspray buried in her purse would be an invitation to men with the wrong things on their minds. Men like him…except he was not going to touch her. And that’s an order, McKendrick.
“If I’m asking you to point out the sights of my city, then it’s only right that I should show you that city.”
She opened her mouth, no doubt to give him another out.
“Alexandra,” he said, “let’s go.”
“Is that an order from my boss?”
He frowned. “That’s a request from an impatient…”
Man, he’d been going to say. “Tour guide,” he finished a bit lamely. He could not begin to think of them as man and woman.
“Well, then,” she said with a wide smile. “Lead on, tour guide. And make it good.”
Wyatt wanted to groan. He glared down at her fiercely.
Immediately she looked contrite. “Too much? Out of line?”
He slowly shook his head. “It’s your night.”
She nodded. “I’ll make it up to you tomorrow.”
He couldn’t help himself. He arched an eyebrow.
A pretty trace of rose suffused her cheekbones. “I meant that since I’ll be more comfortable in my job tomorrow, it will pay off with the customers.”
“You’ve been…uncomfortable?”
“Just a little—and only because I’m still getting my bearings and learning both the city and the hotel. I know you said that you’d handle any difficulties, but I need to handle things myself, you know?”
A loner like him? He understood the drive to be self-sufficient all too well.
“All right. We’ll take care of that.”
She smiled, and they left the building. He had his car brought around. “We’ll walk part of the way later,” he promised, handing her inside.
For several minutes they rode in silence.
“This awards situation,” Alex suddenly said. “Now that I’ve been on the job a couple of days I’m curious. You played it down the other day, but obviously McKendrick’s means a great deal to you. Do you really not care if you win or not?”
Her question caught him off guard. He thought back to all the times when he’d been told that he was less than nothing and that he would never be worth anything.
“I want to win,” he admitted.
“A lot?”
He didn’t want to think how much he needed to win. Thinking about it made him think of times he didn’t want to remember.
“Wyatt?”
“A lot. Too much. It’s just a meaningless award.” But it was more than that to him.
“Okay. We’ll win,” she said.
“You say that as