The Dare Collection September 2019. Stefanie London. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Stefanie London
Издательство: HarperCollins
Серия: Mills & Boon Series Collections
Жанр произведения: Короткие любовные романы
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781474097024
Скачать книгу
As if the word was foreign to him and he didn’t know its power, but had said it anyway.

      And because he’d needed something from me and it had been far too long since someone had needed anything from me.

      Still, I couldn’t help but feel a little bit of trepidation.

      Being his girlfriend would probably involve some...physical closeness. And I wasn’t sure I was ready for that.

      Watching him talk about his fights, knowing the reasons for his scars, seeing the ferocity in his face as he’d mentioned how he’d won...

      The man had a chip on his shoulder the size of a redwood and I don’t know why that fury fascinated me so much, but it did. Like a moth drawn to a burning bonfire, I was compelled towards him.

      He was so fierce and passionate. So unlike the reserved, laconic men I’d been brought up with and worked with at Australis.

      Sex might not be part of the girlfriend deal but there was a part of me that hoped it would be.

      A few days after the shopping trip, my bags packed and ready, I was in the weird position of being the one picked up for a change.

      Mr Evans insisted that we go to the airport together—and since we were supposed to be a couple, he had a point.

      He drove his own car this time, a massive Land Rover that seemed appropriate given he was a property developer and into construction.

      Automatically and by instinct, I headed towards the driver’s side only to have him give me a narrow look. ‘I’m driving, remember?’ he reminded me. ‘It’s my car.’

      ‘Oh, right. Sure.’ I gave him a sheepish grin.

      It felt strange not having the wheel in front of me and I didn’t know what to do with my hands. So I gripped onto my seat belt as he took us to London City Airport, where we’d catch his company’s jet to Dubai.

      He drove with the kind of aggressive confidence I’d expected of him, talking via speakerphone the whole time, dealing with site issues, property concerns, something legal to do with a contract and then some kind of staffing problem. He dealt with it all with authority and a bluntness that probably added to his fearsome reputation, yet I found myself admiring it.

      No wonder people didn’t know how to deal with him in the UK. He wasn’t polite and he didn’t play by the normal rules, and I found that incredibly attractive. That he didn’t care what other people thought of him was also apparent, and, as someone who did care, I found the fact that he didn’t fascinating.

      Dad would have been appalled.

      We got to the airport, boarded the jet, and were in the air within a couple of hours and even then Mr Evans was still dealing with calls.

      He paced impatiently around the cabin, filling the space with his own particular brand of vibrant electricity, and even though I sat in one of the plush leather seats, ostensibly looking through a magazine, I couldn’t help but watch him instead.

      That energy was anger. I knew that now.

      Given how he’d been totally shafted by his half-brother and how responsible he felt for the loss of his mother’s money, I understood how driven he was.

      I was curious, though, as to why she was still living in the council estate, not to mention why he was still feuding with his half-brother, when all of that had happened so many years ago. Also, the few times he’d spoken of his father it was with nothing but contempt, and I wondered what the story was there.

      Being curious about him was probably a bad thing, but I was all the same.

      It was a good half hour into the flight before Mr Evans finally finished up his calls and threw himself down into the leather seat opposite mine, his blue gaze like a slap of ice water across my hot skin.

      He stared at me for a full minute at least, then said, ‘So, tell me how Australis got into trouble.’

      Every muscle in my body gathered tight. ‘Wh-what?’

      ‘I’ve been looking over the financials and it does seem as though there are some issues.’ His stare became sharper. ‘Which is odd because it seemed like a good bet when we made our initial investment. You want to tell me what the problem is?’

      I should have expected him to ask, especially considering it was his money he’d invested, but that didn’t change the sudden and intense need to change the subject. Because I really did not want to have to explain to him about how my mismanagement of the Mark incident had turned what should have been a minor problem into a giant mistake.

      ‘There was a...staff issue,’ I said, deliberately vague. ‘We lost one of our best designers.’

      ‘And why was that?’

      ‘He had to be let go for...certain reasons.’ My hands had crept into my lap, my fists clenched.

      Mr Evans frowned. ‘What reasons?’

      It was stupid to feel so tense about confessing the truth to him. So I’d made a mistake in my handling of it. So what? Anyway, I didn’t have to say it was me, did I?

      I swallowed. ‘He harassed a staff member. There was a fuss so Dad paid him to keep quiet and go away. It was a lot of money.’ Too much money. But Dad hadn’t wanted it to become public. He’d met Mark’s demands without protest and hadn’t said a word to me about it. But I knew he was angry at how I’d handled it. If I hadn’t gone and hurt Mark, it wouldn’t have been such an issue.

      Mr Evans’s gaze had got very narrow, sapphire glinting from beneath his thick black lashes. ‘And Australis struggled after that?’

      ‘We couldn’t get another designer that good. I tried to fill in, but...’ I trailed off. No need to tell him that Dad had never been satisfied with my work after that, no matter how hard I’d tried.

      A silence fell and it wasn’t a comfortable one, not with Mr Evans’s gaze on me, concentrated as an X-ray.

      ‘It was you,’ he said suddenly. ‘You were the person who got harassed.’

      Of course he’d guess. He wasn’t a stupid man by any stretch.

       Who cares that he knows? You shouldn’t. It was nothing, remember? Nothing at all.

      I forced myself to look at him. Forced myself to smile. ‘Yeah, but it was no big deal.’

      Mr Evans didn’t smile. He went very still instead, a feral light glowing in his eyes. ‘Did he hurt you?’

      But I didn’t want to go into it. ‘It wasn’t a drama, honestly.’

      ‘Did. He. Hurt. You?’ Each word was bitten off, a rough thread of anger running through his voice.

      I wanted to ask him why he cared so much, but I was afraid of the answer for some reason, so I didn’t. ‘Not physically.’

      ‘And your father paid him off? Why? He didn’t defend you? Get the police involved?’

      ‘No,’ I snapped, feeling defensive. ‘Dad didn’t want any fusses made. And I’d made it into this big deal already.’

      Mr Evans’s expression settled into forbidding lines. ‘And how exactly did you make it a big deal?’

      ‘Mark grabbed me, so I... I kind of...kneed him in the balls.’

      An electric-blue flame leapt in Mr Evans’s eyes and it looked suspiciously like approval. ‘Good,’ he said fiercely.

      ‘No, it wasn’t good.’ I tried to ignore the warmth that approval had ignited inside me. ‘I shouldn’t have done anything. I should have just...handled it. But Mark told everyone that I’d assaulted him and Dad didn’t want to deal with it. So he paid Mark to be quiet and leave.’

      ‘He shouldn’t have.’ Mr Evans leaned forward abruptly in his seat, his voice low and savage.