Running From the Storm

Running From the Storm Read Free

Book: Running From the Storm Read Free
Author: Lee Wilkinson
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would prefer to wait and talk to one of the senior partners?’
    ‘I understood from your secretary that there is no one else available before Monday.’
    ‘I’m afraid there isn’t,’ she confirmed shortly.
    He studied her heart-shaped face. She was quite lovely, he thought, with flawless skin, a short, straight nose, generous mouth, dark silky hair taken up into a neat coil, and almond eyes beneath winged brows the deep, purple-blue of pansies.
    Eyes that at the moment were sparkling with anger.
    It had been his intention to leave—his company’s new lawyer would be taking up her post in ten days’ time, and at a pinch his business could wait—but all at once he changed his mind.
    This woman interested and intrigued him. As well as beauty, she had brains, character and spirit.
    She also had a temper.
    Deciding to test that temper a little more, he said, ‘I see.’ Glancing at her from beneath long, gold-tipped lashes, he added, ‘Well, if you think you can cope …?’
    Forcing back an angry response, she said, ‘I can cope.’
    ‘Then the answer to your question is, no.’
    She took a deep, steadying breath, before saying coolly, ‘Well, if you intend to stay, Mr Devereux, perhaps you’d like to sit down?’
    Ignoring the chair, he came and sat on the edge of the desk, turning slightly to face her.
    Suddenly he was much too close and instinctively she flinched away.
    It was only the slightest movement, but he noticed it and looked amused.
    This time she kept her cool, but her hand itched to throw something at him.
    And he knew it, damn him. In fact the gleam in his eye gave her the distinct impression that he was enjoying needling her.
    Before she could make any attempt to regain the initiative, he asked with smooth effrontery, ‘So after only a year, and young as you are, you’ve been offered a partnership? You must be exceptionally clever and talented.’
    A flush rising in her cheeks, she said tightly, ‘I don’t claim to be either of those, Mr Devereux. But I graduated from one of the top English law schools with honours, and while I’ve been with the firm I’ve kept studying and learning.’
    Her voice as dispassionate as she could make it, she went on, ‘If you knew my father and my uncle at all well, you would know that they have no time for nepotism. Any advancement in this firm has to be earned by hard work and competence.’
    Yes, she certainly had a temper, but she knew how to control it, he thought admiringly.
    Deciding to change tactics, he slid off the desk and turned to face her in one fluid movement.
    When green eyes met deep blue, he said simply, ‘I apologize. While I believe I have every right to be angry, I shouldn’t have vented it on you.’
    She wanted to say, no you shouldn’t. Instead, the wind taken out of her sails, she said inanely, ‘That’s all right.’
    ‘Forgive me?’
    ‘Of course.’
    He gave her a smile that lit his eyes, put creases beside his mouth and sent his already powerful sex appeal soaring. ‘And you’re not still angry with me?’
    That smile robbed her of breath and, unable to speak, she shook her head.
    ‘Positive?’
    ‘Yes, I’m positive,’ she managed.
    His gaze dropped to her hands which were long and slim with neat oval nails, mercifully free from the dark-coloured varnishes he so disliked.
    Pleased that she appeared to be neither married nor engaged, he asked, ‘Are you doing anything tonight?’
    Taken by surprise, she echoed, ‘Doing anything?’
    ‘I mean do you have a date with a boyfriend, or a live-in lover waiting impatiently at home for you?’
    ‘Neither.’
    ‘Why not? A beautiful woman like you.’
    ‘For the last five years I’ve been working so hard I’ve had no time for boyfriends or live-in lovers,’ she told him pointedly.
    Suddenly human and likeable, he pulled a droll face. ‘I suppose I asked for that.’
    ‘You did, rather.’
    ‘Well, now you’ve cut me down to size, how about having dinner with me

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