Blake

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Blake Page 19

by Diana Palmer


  “It isn’t my fault,” Ivory pointed out. “I have some designs, new and original, that Miss Raines won’t even consider.”

  Dee recognized the hurt in the younger woman’s voice and smiled reassuringly. “Cream always rises to the top,” she said. “Don’t give up.”

  “She says it will take years,” Ivory groaned.

  “If she has her way, it will. She knows talent when she sees it. She’s afraid of you, so she’ll hold you back if she can. Go over her head,” Dee advised. “Take your sketches to Kells himself.”

  Ivory’s eyes widened. “She’d fire me.”

  “Not if he likes your work.”

  “All or nothing, huh?” Ivory murmured.

  Dee nodded. “No great risk, no great reward, and something about ‘daring greatly.’” She frowned. “Who said that? I can’t remember.”

  “Helen Keller and Teddy Roosevelt, I think, but not at the same time.”

  “Well?”

  Ivory sat down. “I’m not brave enough yet,” she said with a rueful smile. “I have a job and an apartment and Christmas is next month.”

  Dee laughed. “Okay. How about in the spring?”

  “Good enough. The homeless shelter should be pretty warm by then.”

  “You idiot. A woman of your talents won’t have to go on the streets.”

  “I can name you three people who felt that way, and they ended up there,” Ivory said solemnly. “You ought to remember, too, because you introduced them to me at the shelter. Two of them had five-figure salaries and the third worked in real estate. They went from Lincolns to park benches in a few weeks.”

  Dee shuddered. “It’s scary.”

  “Scary, indeed,” came the reply. “What does Mr. Kells look like, do you know?” she asked Dee curiously.

  “I caught only a glimpse of him. He’s tall and visually challenged. I’ll ask around, if you’re really curious.”

  Visually challenged. Did Dee mean that he wore glasses? Probably. “I just wondered if he was old and set in his ways or young enough to entertain new ideas,” she replied.

  Dee fingered her collar. “He took over the company months ago, just before you came, and he hasn’t fired Miss Raines yet,” she said firmly. “What does that tell you?”

  “That he admires loyalty to the company and that he doesn’t like change, even though he would like to see some originality.”

  “Bingo.”

  “Then why did you suggest that I take him my designs?”

  “Because you’re talented. And I think any man brave enough to take on a failing design firm is brave enough to stick out his neck for something different.” Dee added a remark about a two-man team of Italian designers who’d just burst onto the fashion scene with some romantic Spanish-inspired designs that were selling like hotcakes. “Who’d have backed them last year when women’s suits looked like those communist Chinese uniforms?”

  “They did not!” Ivory protested.

  “Plain straight-skirted suits with scooped-neck blouses of various colors, and no trim. Yuck! I wouldn’t be caught dead in one!”

  “Beats miniskirts.”

  Dee reluctantly agreed. “Especially with my legs…”

  “Miss Grier!” a strident voice called. “You are not paid to converse with other employees!”

  “Yes ma’am, Miss Raines, I was just asking Miss Keene if she wanted to have lunch with me at the new Japanese sushi place.” She smiled sweetly. “You could come, too, if you like.”

  “I never eat fish, especially raw fish. God alone knows what pollutants are in the water where they’re caught.” She kept walking, her back like a poker.

  Dee’s face reddened as she tried not to laugh. She looked at Ivory, and it was fatal. Mirth burst the restraints, to be quickly disguised as coughing.

  Ivory watched her retreat and turned back to her own work before Miss Raines had time to notice that she wasn’t doing what she’d been told. Would it be worth a trip to Mr. Kells’s office to show him those designs? Or would she lose her job? If only she weren’t so afraid of being out of work.

  But she was. A homeless shelter was a poor accommodation in November, when snow flurries had already come calling, along with subfreezing temperatures. No, she decided. It might be better to wait just a little longer before she risked everything on such a gamble. Besides, Dee’s description of Mr. Kells as visually challenged niggled at the back of her mind. What if she meant that he only had one eye? It would be just her luck to walk into his office and discover that he was the same ill-tempered, despondent man who’d mistaken her for a beggar and handed her a five-dollar bill for a meal!

  Don’t miss

  ALL THAT GLITTERS

  by New York Times bestselling author

  Diana Palmer,

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  Copyright © 1995 by Diana Palmer

  ISBN-13: 9781488096198

  Long, Tall Texans: Blake

  First published as Boss Man by Silhouette Romance in 2005

  Copyright © 2005 by Diana Palmer.

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  All characters in this book have no existence outside the imagination of the author and have no relation whatsoever to anyone bearing the same name or names. They are not even distantly inspired by any individual known or unknown to the author, and all incidents are pure invention.

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