Royal Seductions: Secrets: The Duke's Boardroom Affair. Michelle Celmer

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Название Royal Seductions: Secrets: The Duke's Boardroom Affair
Автор произведения Michelle Celmer
Жанр Современные любовные романы
Серия
Издательство Современные любовные романы
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781472044921



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who knew? She might even have fun.

      Victoria unlocked her flat door at exactly seven-thirty the following evening. Early by her standards, yet it had felt like the longest day of her life.

      Since she’d kissed Charles the other night, then accepted his offer to join him at his parents, the teasing and sexual innuendo hadn’t ceased. When they were alone, anyway. When anyone else was around he was nothing but professional. He treated her more like a peer than a subordinate. It was his way of showing that he did indeed respect her.

      And maybe the teasing wasn’t as bad as it had been at first. Not so immoral. Not that she would allow it to progress to anything more than that.

      She dropped her purse and keys on the hall table and headed straight for the wine rack, draping her suit jacket on the back of the couch along the way. She opened a bottle of cabernet, her favorite wine, poured herself a generous glass, kicked off her pumps, and collapsed on the couch.

      Charles left work at the same time, making sure to let her know, in the elevator on the way down to the parking structure, that he had a dinner date. As if she cared one way or the other how or with whom he chose to spend his free time. Although she couldn’t help wondering who the unlucky girl could be. Amber from the club, perhaps? Or maybe Zoey from the fund-raiser last Friday? Or a dozen others who had called him in the past few days. Or maybe someone new.

      Whoever she was, Victoria was just glad it wasn’t her.

      Are you really? an impish little voice in her head asked. Aren’t you even a little curious to know what the big deal is? Why so many women fall at his feet? They can’t all be after his money and title.

      It had to be the wine. It was going straight to her head. Probably because she’d skipped lunch. Again.

      You’ll waste away to nothing, her father used to warn her, in regard to her spotty eating habits. And it would certainly explain her peculiar lack of energy. Not to mention the noisy rumble in her stomach. She sipped her wine and made a mental list of what was in her refrigerator.

      Leftover Thai from three days ago that was probably spoiled by now. A few cups of fat-free yogurt, sour skim milk and a slightly shriveled, partial head of romaine lettuce. The contents of the freezer weren’t much more promising. A few frozen dinners long past their expiration date and a bag of desiccated, ice-encrusted peas.

      She was weeks past due for a trip to the market, but lately there never seemed to be time. Besides, she’d never been much of a cook. There had never been time to learn. On late nights at the Houghton she ate dinner in her office, or their housekeeper doubled as a cook when the need arose. In fact, in her entire life Victoria had never cooked an entire meal by herself. She wasn’t even sure if she knew how.

      Nor did she have the inclination to learn.

      She sat up and grabbed the pile of carryout menus on the coffee table. The sushi place around the corner was right on top.

      That would work.

      She grabbed the cordless phone and was preparing to dial when the bell chimed for the door. Who could that be? She hoped it wasn’t her father. She hadn’t returned any of his calls, and he was probably getting impatient.

      Maybe if she didn’t answer, whoever it was would go away.

      She waited a moment, holding her breath, then the bell chimed again.

      With a groan she set the phone and her nearly empty glass on the coffee table and dragged herself up from the couch, a touch dizzy from the wine, and picked her way to the door. She peered through the peephole, surprised to find not her father but Charles standing there.

      What in heaven’s name did he want?

      She considered not opening the door, but he’d probably seen her car parked out front and knew she was home. She just couldn’t force herself to be rude.

      She unlatched the chain, pulled the door open and asked, “What do you want?”

      Despite her sharp tone, he smiled. He was still wearing his work clothes. Well put together, but with just a hint of the end-of-the-day rumples. And he looked absolutely delicious.

       Bite your tongue, Vic.

      “I realized I still owe you dinner,” he said. In his hand he held a carryout bag from the very restaurant she had just been about to phone. As though he had somehow read her mind.

      That was just too weird.

      “I hope you like sushi,” he said, shouldering his way past her into her flat. Uninvited yet again.

      So why wasn’t she doing anything to stop him?

      “And if I don’t like sushi?” she asked, following him to the kitchen.

      “Then you wouldn’t have a menu for a sushi restaurant conveniently by the phone.” He set the bag on the counter. “Would you?”

      How did he…?

      He must have seen it there that morning. The first time he barged in uninvited. “I thought you had a date.”

      The idea that someone stood him up was satisfying somehow, although, what it really meant was she was his second choice. The veritable booby prize.

      “I do.” He set the bag on the countertop and grinned. “With you.”

      What was it she just felt? Relieved? Flattered?

      Highly doubtful.

      She folded her arms across her chest. “I don’t think it can be considered a date when the other party knows nothing about it.”

      He pasted an innocent look on his face. “Did I forget to tell you?”

      He took off his jacket and handed it to her. Like an idiot, she took it. And came this close to lifting it to her nose to breathe in his scent, rubbing her cheek against the fabric. She caught herself at the last second and folded it over her arm instead.

       Stop it, Vic.

      He wasn’t paying attention, anyway. He was busy emptying the bag, opening the carryout containers.

      The aroma of the sushi wafted her way, making her mouth water. And if she didn’t eat something soon, the wine was going to give her a doozy of a headache.

      “I’ll have dinner with you,” she said, then added, “just this once.”

      He shrugged, as though her refusing his company had never even crossed his mind. Could he be more arrogant? Or more cute?

      No, no, no! He is not cute.

      It took only a few disastrous office romances to make her vow never to get involved with a coworker again. Not to mention the other laundry list of reasons she would never get involved with a man like him.

      This was just dinner.

      “I wasn’t sure what you liked, so I got a variety,” he said.

      “I guess.” There was enough there to feed half a dozen people. She would have some left over for lunch and dinner tomorrow. And since he went through all this trouble, the least she could do is offer him a drink. “I just opened a bottle of cabernet.”

      “I thought you would never ask,” he said with a grin, then gestured to the cupboards. “You have plates?”

      “To the left of the sink.” She draped his jacket neatly over the back of the couch over her own and poured him a glass of wine, then refilled her own glass. She really should slow down, wait to drink until she’d eaten something, but the warm glow of inebriation felt good just then. And it wasn’t as if she was completely sloshed or anything. Just pleasantly buzzed.

      The dining table was topped with half-unpacked boxes, so she carried their glasses to the coffee table instead. It was that or eat standing up in the kitchen, and she honestly didn’t think her legs would hold her up for long. She considered going back into the kitchen to help him, but the