Lucy merely stood her ground.
His very sharp jaw pulsed as if heâd just clenched his teeth, but he adopted a more businesslike attitude. âPlease take a seat while I make a phone call, Ms. Lowry, and Iâll be with you as soon as possible.â
That was more like it.
âIâd be happy to,â she informed him, turning on her heels to sit on one of the six overstuffed chairs that lined the walls beneath paintings she recognized as originals of high-quality artists.
When he found what he was looking for on the computerâapparently a phone numberâhe sat in the desk chair and picked up the phone.
Lucy had to admit as she was forced to overhear the conciliatory call, though, that he handled it with aplomb. He put minimal blame on the temp, acceptedthe responsibility for having heaped too many things on her at once, and he did it all without playing the sycophant, which someone else in a position of having needlessly inconvenienced an important client might have.
Lucy was impressed.
She also had the chance to take a good long look at him as he made dinner plans with the man on the other end of the line.
Sheâd realized how tall he was when heâd stormed into the waiting roomâan intimidating six feet two inches of well-muscled, broad-shouldered self-possession. Along with his striking blue eyes and chiseled jawline, he had dark hair the color of espresso without cream, full eyebrows, an aquiline nose and intriguing lipsâthe upper one much thinner than the lower.
Her aunt had not been exaggerating when sheâd said he was handsome. Handsome didnât begin to describe the whole package of incredible good looks, exquisitely honed physique and a presence that filled the room. Packaged in a gray Armani suit, a paler gray shirt as crisp as the moment it had come off the dry cleanerâs press, and a silk tie that no doubt cost as much as Lucyâs entire outfit, he was something to behold.
But only in a purely observational, objective way, Lucy was quick to assure herself. After all, it wasnât as if she were interested in the man himself. No matter how incredible-looking he was. Number one, she hadput romance on hold in her life to raise her son and had no intention of changing that for anyone. And number two, even if she hadnât, she knew better than to get anywhere near a personal relationship with a man like Rand Colton.
But the scenery was most assuredly fine. Her aunt hadnât been wrong about that.
Lucy just wasnât sure if it would be fine enough to compensate for his bad behavior if she were ever on the receiving end of his tirade.
His phone call finally ended, and without a word to her, he made another for dinner reservations at a restaurant Lucy had seen on the news just the night before. It had been touted as the finest D.C. had to offer, but according to the report, people were waiting up to six months to get in. It only took the mention of his name to get him a table for four at eight.
Then he hung up for the second time, lunged out of the chair and rounded the desk to perch a hip on its corner and focus his total attention on her just that quick.
âSo youâre Sadieâs niece. I didnât know before I talked to her yesterday that she had one.â
âLucy Lowry,â she repeated, unsure if heâd remembered her name. âAnd since I just heard you on the phone, I know now that youâre Rand Colton.â
âSorry for not introducing myself. Yes, I am.â
That seemed to stall the conversation as he studied her so intently she wanted to squirm. But she didnât. She wouldnât give him that advantage.
Then he said, âSadie tells me youâve been an executive secretary and done some legal research in the past, that legal research is what you want to do exclusively now but that you might be able to spare some time to straighten things up around here and keep me going until I can find someone