CHAPTER FOUR
STARR stared at the rumpled business card clutched in her hand and reread the address twice, before hoisting her backpack higher on her shoulder and pushing through the wrought-iron gate—the side gate, which would have been imposing in itself if it hadn’t been positioned next to the hugest pair of intricately carved black iron gates she’d ever seen.
Some place, she thought, straining for a glimpse of the house as she strolled up the hedged garden path.
Sydney Harbour was lined with posh suburbs, with mega-million mansions vying for the best views and highest position, but from what she’d seen of the swanky Melbourne suburb of Toorak, it had its fair share of ritzy manors too.
She’d once dreamed of living in a place like this—around the time she’d scored the coveted lead dancer role at Bossa Nova. Ironic that now she might be working in one.
With her résumé and reputation she should have waltzed into a top dancing role in Melbourne. But Sergio’s vengeance knew no bounds, and the few doors she’d tentatively knocked on had been well and truly slammed in her face.
He’d been at fault, unable to keep his tights hiked up while getting it on with a fellow dancer, and she’d gladly left him—yet she was the bad guy in all of this?
Prima donna. She should have left him a long time ago—had chastised herself countless times since for sticking around so long for the convenience of having a great apartment within walking distance of work, a partner who understood the demands of being a dancer, and a guy she felt comfortable around.
Waste of time and money, considering she’d ended up paying the rent while he invested in a new dance company for them.
He’d promised her stardom and she’d let her ego get the better of her—had ended up almost broke when she’d walked out on the jerk.
No home, no money and no dance prospects explained why she was here.
Now all she had to do was go through with it.
Battling a surge of bitterness, she picked up her pace, rounded a corner and caught her first glimpse of the mansion.
Absolutely breathtaking.
She’d devoured Jane Austen novels as a kid, and standing in the shade of towering hedges, staring at the grandeur, she could have sworn she’d stepped into the pages of Pride and Prejudice.
The house—though how anything this size could remotely be called a house—sprawled across a halfacre, its polished windows glittering in the morning sun, its pristine cream walls were blinding. Balconies dotted the upstairs rooms—elaborate twisted iron that accentuated the simplicity of the façade.
Classic, elegant, a grand old dame you couldn’t help but admire. If the house was a dance, it would be an elegant waltz, gliding into the present from a bygone era, demanding recognition, admiration.
I could work here, she thought, wriggling her backpack into position before continuing down the path, hoping this interview went well.
She might not want this job but she needed it—desperately.
Admiring the shining marble of the front steps, she traipsed up to the front door, stabbed at the intercom button. A crackly voice filtered through the speaker, ‘Around the back.’
Great. He wanted to make sure she knew her place right from the start. With a resigned huff, she followed the sandstone paved path to the rear.
If the front of the house had left her gob-smacked, the rear came a close second as she spied an Olympic-sized in-ground pool, a tennis court, a gazebo, and a terrace twice the size of the stage at the Sydney Opera House.
A lone figure sat a table on the terrace, phone glued to one ear, free hand hovering over a laptop keyboard.
He didn’t glance up as she dumped her backpack and tripped up the steps. She waited for him to finish his call, forcing her feet to settle as she realised she was en pointe, a nervous reaction she’d had since she’d first started ballet at five years of age.
When he flung the mobile on the table and didn’t glance up she cleared her throat, took several steps forward, hating how her knees wobbled a tad.
‘Thanks for seeing me.’
Callum stood, turned towards her, his lips thin, compressed, at odds with her memory of how warm and soft and sensual they’d felt against hers.
‘Good to see you again, Starr.’
His low, modulated tone reeked of formality, without a hint of what they’d shared.
‘Though I must say I’m surprised you called.’
‘Why? You gave me your business card, offered me a job.’
‘One you scoffed at, if I recall.’
Hating his coolness, she squared her shoulders. ‘Circumstances change. I’m interested in the position.’
His mouth quirked. ‘Oh, really?’
Heck, she had stepped into a Jane Austen novel, complete with her very own Mr Darcy: pompous, arrogant, and way too gorgeous despite the urge to slap him upside the head.
‘Is the job still available?’
‘Very available.’
There it was—the first hint of something more than a job interview, a subtle reminder of what they’d shared laced through his smoother-than-caramel voice.
And in that instant it all came flooding back. Every magical moment of their night together. Every cataclysmic, erotic detail.
How he’d stroked her to orgasm with his fingers, his tongue.
How he’d made her feel wanton and wicked and alive for the first time in for ever.
How he’d made love to her standing and sitting and in front of the bathroom mirror.
How she hadn’t slept over the last week, replaying every moment of that life-altering night.
Technically, that wasn’t right. Needing a job so badly she was now willing to work with the man she’d had an unforgettable one-night stand with rated right up there with life-altering.
Pressing her fingers to her eyes, she squeezed them shut in an attempt to block him out, blot out the enormity of all this. Spots danced and shimmered before them, and when she finally opened them, peeked between her fingers, her heart sank lower than the splits.
It was impossible to stand here and pretend to only view him as a prospective boss when she’d seen him naked.
‘Shall we start the interview?’
His mouth kicked up into a semi-smile—a simple action that slammed straight into her, its impact just as brutal as she remembered.
‘Yes, right. The interview.’
Inwardly cringing at her awkward response, she dropped her hands to her side, flexed her fingers, shook them out, mustered her best stage face.
‘What do you want to know? My typing speed? PC skills? Microsoft literate? Multi-tasker?’
Heck, she was babbling, sounding more moronic by the second, while his expression remained impassive. His gaze focussed on her with frightening clarity, and she suddenly knew she’d been a fool to mistake this man for anything other than an imperturbable, composed businessman who’d let nothing stand in his way of getting what he wanted.
‘I need you.’
‘You need me?’
She laughed—a harsh, humourless cackle that startled a nearby magpie, which squawked in protest.
‘By the looks of this place you don’t need anybody. You’re doing