And then he messaged Cecelia.
We need to talk.
His message came up on her computer and Cecelia tensed, because though they had spoken about work both online and on the phone on many occasions, this sounded rather personal.
She replied quickly.
I’m about to call someone in for an interview.
So?
Of course he didn’t mean that they needed to speak about what had taken place between them, Cecelia scolded herself for her less-than-professional reply. If Luka Kargas wanted to speak to his PA it didn’t matter if she’d been about to call someone in.
‘I have to speak with Mr Kargas,’ Cecelia said to the interviewee. ‘I’ll be back when I can.’
Cecelia didn’t apologise for keeping Sabine waiting, for the potential PA might as well get a glimpse of what she would be in for.
A moment later his face appeared on her screen and Cecelia got more than a glimpse.
His chest was naked and her view was of a dark mahogany nipple surrounded by a swirl of black hair. But then he angled the screen better and she saw that his hair was wet and he was squinting from the bright sun.
‘What can I do for you?’ Cecelia asked.
Her voice was cool, her demeanour brisk and she was determined that they were back to business.
‘What are you doing?’ he asked.
‘Working.’ She frowned. ‘Marco has a few things he needs to run by you but apart from that things are ticking along.’
She was wearing a grey dress with a sheer grey silky cardigan, because perish the thought that she might show too much skin. Her hair was neat and pulled back and yet now he knew another side to her he couldn’t help but see her buttoned-up appearance for what it was. A defence strategy.
‘I want you to fly here,’ Luka said. ‘I want you here tonight.’
Cecelia stared back at him. ‘For work?’
‘No.’
She liked it that he was direct.
In fact, Cecelia liked it that he had basically asked her to get on a plane for sex. But what happened when he got bored? She reminded herself of all the reasons she had refused his original offer.
He would wake up one morning and instead of kisses she would sense his restlessness.
His slight disdain.
Oh, she had seen it on too many occasions not to know what was in store for her.
At least here in London she was but a taxi ride away from salvaging her pride when he told her they were through.
But in Xanero?
Did she book her own flight home?
Or would they suffer it through until she left his employ less than three weeks from now?
‘If it isn’t for work, then I shan’t be joining you.’
‘Fine,’ Luka snapped. ‘In that case, I need you to go and view some apartments for me.’
‘Sure.’
‘And I want you to interview some private nurses. Make sure they speak Greek.’
Cecelia took down the details.
It was now all very businesslike. Surly, but businesslike. Yet she ached to know more about his mother, though she resisted asking for details that were not with the remit of a professional relationship.
They had spent one night together, and she knew from his reputation that that didn’t give her the keys to his private life.
‘How are the interviews for your replacement going?’ Luka asked.
‘I’m getting there,’ Cecelia said. ‘I’m on the second round, so I should have a shortlist of three for you to choose from.’
‘Any stand-outs?’
Cecelia hesitated.
Luka was a demanding boss but she almost had to shake the stars from potential employees’ eyes to ensure they understood what the job entailed.
But one had stood out.
Sabine.
She had an incredible work history and was bright and engaging. The only trouble was that Cecelia didn’t like her.
‘There’s one,’ Cecelia said. ‘Sabine. I’m just about to interview her again and give her a tour but...’
‘But what?’
‘I don’t know,’ Cecelia admitted.
‘Try telling me.’
‘I don’t like her.’ Cecelia shrugged. ‘But, then, she’s not for me to like. I’ll see how this interview goes. She speaks Greek, which might be a help with your mother, and...’
‘My mother will be coming to London for treatment, not for little get-togethers with my PA.’
He turned off the computer and closed it up.
Luka really did not want her to leave.
And yet it was perhaps for the best because despite strong words about PAs not getting involved with his family, he had told Cecelia some things he had never told anyone. And he had her interviewing nurses and looking for apartments.
He trusted her, and Luka was more comfortable trusting no one.
* * *
With that awkward conversation over, Cecelia got on with the second-round interviews.
Cecelia was self-aware enough to know that it was probably for private reasons that she couldn’t take to Sabine. The young woman was gorgeous, with piercing blue eyes and straight black hair cut in a jagged, edgy style. She made Cecelia feel terribly drab.
‘Luka will probably call you Sab, or Sabby...’ Cecelia said in an offhand comment as she showed her around. ‘It drives me crazy.’
‘He can call me what he likes as long as he pays me.’
Cecelia held in a breath.
Sabine was arrogant and overly confident perhaps, but she really was the perfect match for Luka.
She could almost hear the banter between them.
‘This is his suite,’ Cecelia explained as she opened the door. ‘It’s serviced daily but I tend to check it as it sometimes needs an extra service. Not currently, though, he’s still in Greece.’
‘So I read!’ Sabine said.
Cecelia had been doing her level best not to read about him, but once the interviews were wrapped up she found that she could not resist.
The headlines were all in the same vein: Xanero Magnate Returns.
It would seem that the weekend had been spent out on his yacht and she knew full well what went on on board.
She clicked on the article and there were the glossy beauties that always surrounded him and the sun hanging low in a fiery sky.
Luka didn’t even wait for nightfall to get a party started.
It wasn’t just the resumption of his sex life that concerned her, though—oh, but it did, desperately it did—but also what had happened that morning between them.
Cecelia could not believe she’d had unprotected sex. Though she kept willing herself calm, yesterday she had caved and made an appointment with her GP.
At the conclusion of the interview today Cecelia was heading there.
‘Well,