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Instructing an Heiress

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by Judy Teel




  by

  Judy Teel

  This book is dedicated to my wonderful husband, Kelly. Thank you for all the support you give me and for believing in my dream.

  A special thanks to Joyce and Jennifer for critiquing and for their excellent insights. Also, a big thank you to Cynthia for being my beta reader and to Jan for her amazing typo-finding mojo. All of you ladies rock!

  Find Jan Carol in Amazon books.

  Find Cynthia Woolf in Amazon books.

  Published by Golden Angel Press LLC

  Copyright © April 2012 by Judy P. Mills

  All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including xerography, photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, is forbidden without the written permission of the author, Judy P. Mills

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual business establishments, inventions, items, locales or persons, living or dead is entirely coincidental.

  Find Judy Teel on the web!

  http://judyteel.com/

  http://www.twitter.com/judyteelbooks

  https://www.facebook.com/judy.teel.10

  Cover design by Streetlight Graphics

  Cinderella Heiresses Series:

  Seducing an Heiress

  Instructing an Heiress

  Deceiving an Heiress

  CHAPTER ONE

  Reality was not all it was cracked up to be, CK concluded as she climbed with bleary determination toward wakefulness. For one thing, she'd fallen asleep on her desk, again. For another, her invaluable but pesky assistant, Farley Blake, stood next to her radiating disapproval.

  Early morning light slanted in through the large picture window that comprised most of her left-hand wall. Where the sunbeams touched, the wood paneling and rich, warm furniture of her office glowed with disgusting cheer. She screwed up her face and groaned.

  "You did it again, didn't you?" Farley stated in her flat, no-nonsense tone. She frowned down at CK, looking chic and perky in a turquoise sheath dress.

  CK sat up, rubbing her hand over her face while she attempted to regain consciousness. A bright pink post-it fluttered down and landed on top of the contract she'd used as a pillow. "Everything has to be perfect. Nothing can go wrong with this merger."

  The pretty brunette gave an unsophisticated snort, dropped a white bakery bag into the middle of CK's antique mahogany desk and stuck a cup of coffee under her nose. The bitter, sweet scent of the almighty brew caused a few key areas of CK's brain to fire up.

  "Thanks," she said, taking a grateful sip. "Are the Waylands still scheduled for one o'clock today?"

  "You can't go on like this, boss." Farley moved around the desk to perch on the corner next to her. "You do nothing but work. You have no friends and no social life."

  "I have you." CK focused her attention on extracting the heavenly sausage biscuit from inside the white bag. And joy, of joys, Farley had gotten a cheese Danish, too. "We've been friends for nearly five years, that ought to count for something. And what about Ryan?"

  Farley quirked a dark, perfectly shaped brow. "He's certainly yummy if you have a taste for blondes who could pass as Greek gods, which I do, but guy friends don't count. I'm talking romance. Dating. Boyfriends. What are you saving yourself for? Old age?"

  CK schooled her features into a neutral mask. Some secrets were best kept to one's self even from close friends. Most particularly from close friends.

  "I have a company to run," she said, instead. "Those things have to wait until after this merger. With the resources of Wayland and Son at Kazners' disposal, we'll be able to launch that European line I've been designing."

  "Put some designing effort into yourself, for a change. You have a great figure. Don't hide it behind too big, black, shapeless suits."

  "This is Italian, I'll have you know. Silk. Very pricey."

  "And very unflattering. Let that curly auburn hair of yours down now and then. Maybe try a little lipstick. Men would be eating out of your hand."

  "I'll pass, thanks. I like being taken seriously."

  "You are so living in the last century, girl." Farley leaned forward and plucked the cheese Danish from the bag.

  "Hey!"

  Breaking it down the middle, she put the larger half back in. "Workman's comp," she said, taking a bite.

  "Comp for what?"

  "For helping you with your social life."

  "All you're doing is pointing out the obvious. That isn't helping."

  Farley leaned forward. "Steve Wayland's pleasant looking, in a brooding, European kind of way," she said, her voice low and dramatic.

  "Slender and brunette, you mean?"

  "Hmmm. The point being, he's got a thing for you. Even in that jacket." She popped the last bite of pastry into her mouth. "How's that for help?"

  A small tremor of alarm pressed into her stomach. CK lowered her hand, the biscuit forgotten. "He does not. We've been working long hours together, that's all...." She narrowed her eyes at Farley. "What did he say?"

  Her friend dusted off her hands. "It's not what he says, my dear. It's what he does."

  "I don't understand."

  "Exactly my point."

  CK handed her the other half of the Danish. "Spill."

  "He follows you with his eyes."

  "So?"

  "With that speculative look men get when they think a woman might be wife material."

  A chill skipped across the back of her neck. She did not need this kind of emotional complication, especially with the Waylands. "You're crazy," she said, doing her best to sound convinced.

  "Have you noticed how he'll reach across the table to pick up a pen or get a piece of paper and 'accidentally' brush the edge of your sleeve with his arm?" She bit into the pastry. "Classic."

  CK resisted the urge to squirm. She liked Steve, she really did. But not like that. "You're giving him too much credit. Have you ever talked with him for more than a sentence or two? He's completely focused on his work."

  "Maybe he's not consciously aware of it," her friend capitulated, "but that doesn't mean it isn't there. You should go out with him."

  "He hasn't asked me." Thank, goodness.

  CK finished her coffee and tossed the cup into the trashcan beside her desk. "Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to get ready for the day. Is Ryan in, yet? I want him to go over the contract before the meeting."

  "Has the day off, remember? Won't be in before this afternoon."

  Slowly the caffeine from her coffee penetrated her brain cells. "Right. I forgot." Now that was certainly inconvenient. Oh, well, she couldn't begrudge him some time off. He certainly worked hard enough for it.

  "His old friends from college are visiting, right?" CK asked, brushing crumbs from her rumpled white blouse.

  Farley leveraged off the desk. "Not so old and very hot from what I hear. Single, too."

  "Down, girl." CK headed toward her private bathroom. "I'll be freshening up, so hold my calls. Business review meeting still at nine?"

  "I moved it to tomorrow."

  Something in the tone of Farley's voice made CK's stomach clench. She stopped and turned toward her. "He called, didn't he?" she stated, dread knotting into a hard lump in her gut.

  Farley gave her a sympathetic nod. "He wants to see you. Demanded you go out to the house right away."

  "He's gotten wind of the merger." CK's mind churned through ideas for accomplishing damage control. She could not let the Captain's antiquated ideas about what constitu
ted a 'family business' keep her from solidifying the best thing that had happened to Kazners in fifty years.

  She took a deep breath and tried to scare up some courage. "How did he sound?"

  "Robust."

  CK winced. "I'll need the limo."

  "It'll be here in ten."

  "Ryan will have to come."

  "He's not answering his phone."

  Going alone was certainly out of the question. Much too intimidating. "He knows the details inside and out. I need him there," she said, firmly. Besides, she told herself, Ryan had managed to avoid meeting the head of the Kazner empire for two years. Time he suffered with the rest of them.

  Her friend grabbed the empty bakery bag off the desk in one hand and scooped the contract up with the other. "He's not going to like you dragging him along."

  CK clenched her teeth and turned back toward the bathroom. "This is an emergency, Farley. What he likes is completely irrelevant."

  * * *

  Ryan left the woman sleeping in his bed and gingerly made his way through the passed-out guests cluttering his living room. Tossing his damp towel in the general direction of the angled, modern, soulless couch, he trudged toward the kitchen, raking his fingers through his damp hair as he went.

  His cellphone started buzzing its way across the white counter, but his head hurt too much for him to give a damn. He'd put in for this vacation months ago and was in no mood to go in to work. He'd made enough of a concession agreeing to go over the contract with the Waylands that afternoon.

  The phone stopped gyrating as he started measuring out coffee into the coffee maker. Whoever it was had finally gotten the hint. No sooner had the thought flashed through his brain fog, than the phone started dancing across the counter, again. Persistent little bugger.

  Curiosity got the better of him and he glanced at the caller ID.

  CK

  Annoyance prickled between his shoulder blades. She usually respected his space better than this, especially when she knew he had company. CK was dependable like that.

  She'd always accepted him exactly as he was, unlike most women, which was one of the reasons their friendship had lasted so long. That, and the fact that he'd always thought of her like the sister he'd never had.

  Two years ago when she'd contacted him to ask if he'd help her take Kazners to the top, there was no way he would have said 'no.' Even though it meant postponing his own dreams for a while.

  A nagging guilt prowled around his conscience, making him tense. He couldn't ignore her, now, either. Whatever she was calling about, it must be important.

  Releasing a long, resigned breath, Ryan hit the talk button. "Hey."

  "I'm two blocks away in the limo. I'm turning into your neighborhood."

  He gently massaged his temple where his blazing headache burned. "What, not even a 'Hi, hope I didn't wake you?'"

  "You sound hungover."

  "Sadly, yes." He glanced longingly at the coffee pot. It stared serenely back at him, quiet as a church.

  "I'll make a detour to that corner coffee shop," she said, as if reading his mind.

  "You're the best. Now what can't wait 'til this afternoon?"

  "There's an emergency."

  "As bad as my headache?"

  "It could jeopardize the merger."

  Which would delay his plans. Again. Frustration itched down his back. He was getting tired of delays. Even for CK's sake.

  "Don't make me drag you out of there, Anderson," she teased, when he didn't say anything. "I'll step over bodies to do it, if I have to."

  Ryan surveyed his living room. One of his friends, Ajax, staggered to his feet and stumbled his skinny butt toward the bathroom. The sound of him getting sick echoed through his apartment.

  "I'll meet you at the curb." Ryan disconnected and reached for the bottle of ibuprofen beside the sink.

  He had a bad feeling that today's pain was only just getting warmed up.

  * * *

  Wayland covertly watched his grown son, Steve, daintily apply margarine to his bran muffin and tried not to feel depressed. He loved his son. He did. Even though he'd raised the boy since he was five when his mother left them, he sure didn't understand him. Probably never would.

  The breeze ruffled his hair and he stared out at the edge of the forest just beyond the pool. He liked eating on the patio. Being outdoors suited him. He was a simple man—old school Texas through and through. Despite being so rich that his net worth increased by the minute, he preferred straight-forward, down-to-earth things like the hearty bacon and egg breakfast in front of him, a cold beer, a loud band, and a good woman.

  That's all he really needed to be happy. Striking it rich and moving to a New Jersey estate so the wife could enjoy her uppity lifestyle hadn't done a thing to add to his joy except give him Steve. And now look at him. Dark hair perfect, shirt and tie matching, not a spot on him.

  Maybe he was gay, Wayland speculated. That would be fine if his son would go and find himself someone to settle down with instead of wasting his time working day and night. With adoption the way it was these days, he'd still get the grandchildren he wanted out of the boy.

  He chewed thoughtfully. Who was he fooling? All Steve thought about was work. That's partly what had forced him and old Josh to drastic measures in the first place—plots and convolutions that had a snowball's chance in hell of working.

  Wayland plunged a big forkful of salty eggs into his mouth. Maybe he could remarry and make a new kid. He shivered. At his age, that was a mighty grim thought.

  He eyed his son, again. "There's something I want to talk to you about."

  Steve glanced up from his blasted girly breakfast. "Of course, Dad."

  "I'm worried about you. For one thing, you work too hard. For another thing—"

  "You know you should not be eating that." His son scrutinized Wayland's plate of food, his expression fluttering between appalled and disgusted. "You might as well put rat poison in your coffee. It would be more efficient."

  Wayland scowled at him. "Better than that cattle fodder you call food."

  "I love you, Dad. I hate to think that some morning, I'll come out here and find you face down in your grease-laden, cholesterol-saturated extravaganza."

  "This was good enough for my Daddy—who lived to be ninety-eight—and it's good enough for me. And for you," he said, pointing his fork at Steve.

  His son dropped his napkin onto his plate and flipped the cover closed on his iPad. "Nevertheless, I can't sit here and watch you slowly kill yourself. I'm going in to work."

  "Look here, youngun', I have something I want to say and I'll dang well say it whether you—"

  But Steve had already walked out the French doors and was on his way through the summer kitchen.

  Sputtering to a stop, Wayland stared after his son. If he didn't know better, he'd say he'd just been outmaneuvered. Fairly neatly, too.

  Wayland shrugged and poured himself another cup of coffee. Didn't matter, anyway. He had nothing but time. He'd wear the boy down, eventually.

  * * *

  CK stabbed at the doorbell of her grandfather's palatial New Jersey mansion and stepped back from the ornate door.

  Ryan rested his shoulders against the stone of the arched portico. "You dragged me away from Melissa for this?"

  "What happened to Carol?"

  "Don't be fresh."

  He sounded put out and CK didn't blame him. She wasn't too happy to be here herself. "If I could have avoided bringing you into this, I would have."

  "Liar."

  "Okay. I wanted backup." She glanced at Ryan who stood quietly, hands loosely at his side—the picture of relaxed confidence, as always. At least to those who didn't know him as well as she did.

  "You're sweating," she observed.

  "It's hot out here."

  "We're in the shade and it's cloudy."

  He watched her steadily, at least she thought he did. Behind those dark sunglasses, he could be asleep for all she knew.
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  "It's normal to be nervous," she finally conceded. "My family's unusual, at best, and weird more often than not. Why do you think I never dated? The first boy I brought home threw up and ran away the minute he heard the Captain bellowing inside the house."

  "Good thing my hangover's better, then."

  "Somehow he's gotten wind of the merger," she said, turning the conversation back to their real problem. "We have to make him understand how good it will be for Kazners."

  "And how much you need me working there?"

  "That's not his decision." Which was a lie. As the owner of Kazners, The Captain could legally do anything he wanted with the company. As the last living member on her grandfather's side of the family, she was safe from getting the boot. But not Ryan.

  The thought of her grandfather firing him sent uneasiness curling around in her stomach like a snake. She pushed the feeling aside. They had to focus on how much he'd improved the company since she'd hired him. Even The Captain could appreciate higher profit margins.

  "You spearheaded the merger and a dozen other improvements," she said as she attacked the doorbell again. "We'll just have to make him understand it's in his best interest to not interfere."

  Ryan took a step back and looked up at the sparkling arched windows and soaring castle-like architecture of the Kazner mansion. "So this is where you grew up, huh? It doesn't look so bad. No trolls lurking on the parapets or anything."

  "All a facade. The Captain lives to keep people off balance. Thinks it gives him the upper hand."

  "The difference between nuts and eccentric is about a million dollars, I hear."

  "Now, you're getting personal."

  He tossed her one of his heart-melting, quirky grins. "My apologies."

  "Keep it up, Anderson, and I'll make you go first."

  CK reached for the enormous brass door knocker. The door swung open and she nearly grabbed the nose of her father's most loyal employee and friend. The aging butler spryly ducked her hand and opened the door wider. CK closed her eyes and did her best to suppress a sigh.

 

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