by Jill Shalvis
With his current salary several times over what he needed, he was able to do pretty much whatever he wanted. Since he wasn’t a frivolous man or one who needed luxuries, this mostly involved extreme sports or spoiling his family when they let him—buying his parents a house, sending them on vacations they’d never dreamed they’d be able to take, getting his brother through college—
A blur of creamy skin, blond hair and an unforgettable fuchsia skirt passed his opened office door. He glanced at his watch. Ten o’clock.
What the hell?
Standing, he rounded his desk to peek out, but yep, it was indeed Kenna Mallory’s very fine backside wriggling its way down the hallway, her bare feet in those strappy little sandals that seemed suicidal to him.
“So you’re not just a nightmare,” he called out, half hoping she’d vanish.
Slowly she stopped, then pivoted to face him, her arms full of a variety of bags, all of which were overflowing with what looked like…stuff. Even as he watched, the blow dryer she’d slung over her shoulder started to slip. “It’s not late enough for nightmares.”
“What are you doing here?”
“Maybe you missed the Mallory part of the San Diego Mallory.”
“I meant,” he said dryly, “what are you doing in the offices this late?”
“I wanted to grab some nighttime reading material before checking in—” She broke off to growl in frustration as things started tumbling from her arms.
Wes scooped up the bag, but not in time to keep it from spilling out a magazine, a lipstick case, a styling comb, a compact mirror, a tube of mascara and two tampons.
Hunkering down to help, he deliberately avoided touching the tampons and scooped up the magazine instead. Outside. This city girl read an adventure magazine? “I wouldn’t have pegged you for an Outside kind of girl.”
“You couldn’t peg me for anything—” she snatched it back “—as you don’t know the first thing about me. And there happens to be a great article this month on relaxing beach vacations,” she relented. “If that matters to you.”
Unfortunately just about everything relating to her was going to matter to him, since they were likely going to be joined at the hip for a while, until some other more appealing job came along and she fluttered off.
On her knees, she started gathering things, tossing them back into the bag. “And anyway, at least until we establish some sort of routine…one that’ll keep us from killing each other—” she pointed at him with the article in her hand, a tampon “—just get used to seeing me around.” She stopped and stared at the tampon, then glared at him as if it was his fault she was using it like a pointer.
“What makes you think we’re going to kill each other?” he asked curiously.
She laughed. “Are you saying you’re welcoming me with open arms?”
“I plan on welcoming you as I would any employee.”
“Well, isn’t that a politically correct answer.”
“Look, Ms. Mallory—”
“Kenna. My name is Kenna.”
“Kenna.” He picked up some of her loose change and handed it to her. “I think we can do this in a friendly manner.”
“What? Vie for the next rung on the ladder?”
Okay, he probably deserved that. Maybe he’d been a bit stiff earlier. “I’m just saying we’re stuck in this position together, and—”
“I’m not stuck. I’m never stuck. I do as I please, when I please, and working here pleases me.”
“For the moment.”
She froze in the act of stretching for a rogue pen, her skirt rising incredibly high on a tanned, toned thigh, reminding him that she didn’t favor stockings. And being the weak male that he was, he wondered if her panties were as bright as the rest of her clothes. Like he needed to know that information.
“Look,” she said. “I’m taking this job seriously. So do me a favor and take me seriously. Oh, and by the way, I’m…moving in.”
When the words sank in, he raised his gaze to meet her unhappy one. “What?”
“I’m going to be staying here. At the hotel.”
Wes didn’t often find himself rendered speechless, but somehow he wasn’t surprised to find Kenna the woman to do it. “Why?”
“Because that also pleases me.” She paused then muttered under her breath, “and it’s the lesser of two evils.”
“Your father said you had to, right?”
“Of course not.”
“What did he do, threaten to cut off your credit card?”
If he’d been any closer, her look would have fried him on the spot. “I don’t care about his money.”
“What do you care about?” he asked.
“Not his money,” she repeated. “I earn my own. As for what I do care about…I care about my life. Living it how I want to, which until now has been very different than this structured, cutthroat business atmosphere. How about you, Mr. Roth?”
“Wes.”
“Wes,” she said with an acknowledging bow of her head. “What is it you care about?”
“This structured, cutthroat business, for one.”
She actually laughed and reached for the last item on the floor, a lipstick, and put it back into the bag. “Well, that’s going to make us quite the interesting pair.”
“Yes. Yes, it is.” His gaze met hers, and…held. Humor still swam in her eyes, humor and intelligence and an easy love of life.
Damn if that wasn’t suddenly, startlingly, abruptly attractive. He stood. Backed way up, giving her room.
Giving himself room.
“I can do this job,” she said softly. “I’m good at fiscal planning. Marketing strategies. Structuring business goals. Budgeting, including the remaining renovations, growth…all of it. The one thing I’m not good at is dealing with people who make assumptions about the outer package…” She tossed her blond hair and straightened her stripper’s body. “Don’t mistake the outer package, Wes.”
“How about I won’t if you won’t?”
“What?”
He pushed up his glasses. “Are you going to deny you took one look at me and lumped me in with every other suit in the building, which, apparently, leaves a bad taste in your mouth?”
“Not a bad taste necessarily.”
“Then a bad attitude.”
She laughed again, and it was an amazing laugh, a contagious one. “Okay, you got me. I lumped you in with all the dark conservative suits. Just tell me this…what’s wrong with color, Wes? Why don’t any of you wear any color for God’s sake?”
He looked down at his black basketball shorts, black basketball shoes and black T-shirt.
She laughed again. “You never even noticed that’s the only color around here, did you?”
“No,” he said truthfully, and had to shake his head. “I swear I own a few things that aren’t black.”
“Yeah? Prove it. Shock me tomorrow. And tightie whities don’t count.”
He blinked.
“Underwear,” she explained. “Plain white Jockey shorts don’t count as color.”
“I don’t wear plain white Jockey shorts.”
He wore plain white knit boxers, because a guy had to have room.
“Whatever you say.”
She was most definitely baiting him, but he absolutely was not going to get into a discussion about underwear. Not at ten o’clock at night, on an empty floor, with no one around save this laughing, sharp-tongued and shockingly attractive woman staring at him.
No way.
She stood up. “So…how about this? I overlook the fact that you look like a Mallory clone, and you overlook the fact that I might appear better suited for wet T-shirt contests than board-room discussions.”
He thought about that. First the wet T-shirt—he couldn’t help that—then her proposal.
She waited for a moment, then said, “Come on. I think that’s an excellent second compromise, if I do say so myself.”
He felt his mouth curve in a smile, hi
s first genuine smile when it came to Kenna. “Deal.”
“Deal,” she repeated and, gathering her things, walked away. “’Night,” she called over her shoulder. “Sleep tight.”
Sleep tight. He had a feeling he wouldn’t be sleeping tight at all, not for a long time to come.
CHAPTER 6
THAT NIGHT, Kenna stayed up late, working in her fancy hotel room. From her little foray into the records department, she’d discovered something interesting. The projected analysis on the renovations, salaries, expenses, everything, had been carefully filled out, and yet there’d been no follow-up since adding this hotel to the Mallory fleet. Because of that, no one could see at a glance how things had gone.
Had they overspent on the renovations done so far? Underspent? What? No way to tell.
Employee contracts were up for renewal, but how could management go into negotiations without seeing how the last contracts had benefited them and not benefited them?
So she spent the next two hours burning the midnight oil, working on her little laptop that kept freezing up—the poor thing was so old it could scarcely handle the spreadsheets and reports—working until she came up with articulate and concise thoughts on the matter.
Only then did she get into bed, satisfied that for one day at least, she’d earned her keep.
But one thing Kenna had never been able to do was turn off her brain. She lay there in her frou-frou room with the antique Queen Anne bed, staring at the ornately decorated ceiling painted in elegant cream and thought about what she’d done.
Committed to six months in this place.
Sure, the numbers and accounting would be fun, and so would torturing Serena with her presence, and maybe even a little torture thrown Wes’s way as well, but no doubt, being here would also take its toll.
Although Wes had actually, genuinely made her laugh tonight. Shocking. She’d always had a thing for a guy who could make her laugh, and she had a sinking feeling that beneath Weston Roth’s fancy dark suits beat the heart of a sharp cynic.
Call her sick, but she liked that, too.
Okay, forget sleep. It just wasn’t going to happen. Tossing aside her covers, she looked around, wondering how to amuse herself. For the first time in recent memory she actually had luxury at her fingertips and she was just lying around. What a complete waste of her time.
She drew herself a bubble bath in the decadent bathtub. Sinking into the hot water was heaven, and she lay back, wondering what tomorrow would bring, if people would appreciate her report…
And if Wes was going to wear a color tomorrow.
When she finally tried sleep again, slightly more relaxed now, she fell quickly. Unfortunately, somewhere near dawn, or what felt like it, the phone rang.
“Okay, listen up, cousin,” Serena said when Kenna managed to get the phone to her ear. “We have a few things to discuss.”
She blinked at the clock. Eight. In the morning. “Oh God.” She leapt out of bed. “I’m late.”
“Well, duh.”
“I didn’t want to be late.” She grabbed up the clock radio, which indeed had been set for the proper time, and had indeed gone off, and was at this very moment spilling out soft-rock music.
Too soft-rock, apparently, as it hadn’t come close to waking her. She tossed the thing down and looked around. Clothes. She needed clothes.
“Look, cuz, stay on page with me now. This call is about moi. Okay? So listen up. Stay away from him, he’s mine.”
Kenna eyed a skirt hanging off the back of a chair that probably had seen the eighteenth century. “Stay away from who?”
“Don’t be coy. Wes has the best ass ever. He’s a catch and I already have the catcher’s glove on.”
“Weston Roth?”
“Wake up, would you? Slap yourself, pinch yourself, something.”
“I am awake.” Now, anyway. What to go with the skirt? “You make him sound like a piece of meat.”
“Do I?”
Kenna stopped in the act of stripping. “You’re serious. You’re going after him because he’s got a great ass.”
“Why else?”
Um, because he was smart. Because he had a job.
Okay, because he had a great ass.
But a good ass did not a good man make. Kenna required far more. Her cousin could have him. “How does he feel about this?”
“Oh, please.” Serena scoffed. “If you’d thought of it first, you’d use him, too.”
“I have no desire to use him. Or anyone.”
“God, you are so sanctimonious, you know that? I know damn well—hell, the entire family knows damn well—you have this little secret fantasy of fitting in, of being like the rest of us. Now that chance is being dangled out in front of you like a carrot with this job, so don’t pretend you don’t care. You want Uncle Kenneth to see you, to see the real you, and be proud of that woman. And if Wes turns out to be able to help you with that, you’ll use him in a heartbeat. So. I’m telling you now. Back off.”
“You’re insane.”
“Fine. You don’t want to back off. Then may the best woman win.”
“I’m not going to play that game with you, Serena.”
“Whatever you say. But he’s going to be mine. Good luck today, cuz. Ta-ta.”
When the dial tone rang in her ear, Kenna hung up and shook her head. Good luck? She was going to need it, but not for the reasons Serena thought. Yes, Wes was way too into Mallory Enterprises and all it entailed, but he was entitled to be the man he wanted to be, just as she was entitled to be herself.
This wasn’t personal. She wouldn’t use him, not to fit in, not to do her job, not for anything.
She was going to do this on her own.
Hence the need for good luck.
Hopping around, she shoved her legs one at a time into her skirt, imagining Wes checking his fancy watch. Well, at least she didn’t have to take the time to make her bed, she actually had maid service for that. Her heels were lower today, but not by much, as exceptional height gave her confidence. Her skirt was longer, too, but tighter, making long strides difficult if not a detriment to her health. The blouse, however, she prided herself on. It wasn’t exactly business-like with its sheerness, but the camisole beneath was a definite antique, and soft and creamy against her skin. In the ensemble she felt pretty and sexy, and when she was pretty and sexy she knew she could take on the world.
So world, here she came.
She left her room and got on the elevator, where she watched the glowing numbers descend, until she stepped off on the corporate floor, which opened into a large, fancy reception area decorated as the rest of the hotel was—sophisticated and refined.
The air buzzed with activity. Everywhere she looked, well-dressed, darkly dressed employees went about their day doing…actually, she still wasn’t clear on that part because she hadn’t studied the organizational charts and job descriptions yet. But she would be.
Her cousin Serena, looking extremely Mallory in her perfectly fitted navy-blue business suit, stood next to one of the front desks. It was occupied by a man in his early twenties whipping his fingers across a keyboard.
“So what, you’re swamped,” Serena said to him, practically hanging over his shoulder. “This is your job, Josh, and my uncle—”
“Yeah, yeah, we all know who the uncle is.” He shot her an annoyed look. “Now, if you’d quit downloading porn from the Internet, maybe you’ll stop freezing your computer up.”
“It’s not porn. All I wanted was that firefighter calendar.”
“How can you tell they’re firefighters?” Josh clicked a few keys and a full body shot of an almost-naked hunk filled the screen. “The only equipment he’s got is his—”
“Just fix it, computer boy.”
“Right.” Josh’s tie was loose, his sleeves shoved past his elbows. With his lean body, hunching shoulders and frowning features, he looked quite tense but then Serena tended to do that to a person.
“What is it
with firefighters anyway?” he muttered. “I could look that good in suspenders, no shirt and a fire hat, too. Want to see it?”
“Not in this lifetime,” Serena said, then she caught sight of Kenna and affixed a superior smile to her mouth. “Well, look who decided to show up for work. Uncle Kenneth told me to make you right at home in a special office, so I picked one out, just for you.” The smile she sent Kenna put her on full alert. “Last one on the left. You’ve got meetings all day, starting…” She checked her diamond-studded watch. “Oops. Ten minutes ago. The first one is a meet-and-greet in Conference Room A. Come on, I’d better take you.”
“I can find it.”
“Probably, but it’ll be far more fun to watch you muddle your way through your first real job.”
“You’re so incredibly sweet first thing in the morning,” Kenna said. “It’s touching.” They moved down yet another fancy hall with marble floors that made her wonder how her father kept from being sued right and left with broken ankles incurred by walking on the high-gloss surfaces.
Serena opened a set of floor-to-ceiling double doors with an extremely smug expression on her face. The room had a table larger than the apartment Kenna had left in Santa Barbara, and the chairs surrounding it were filled.
Wes came toward her with a smile on his face that didn’t meet his eyes behind his glasses. She wondered if he’d forgotten to eat his Cheerios for breakfast but didn’t have time to ask him before he started introducing her to staff—marketing director, sales director, customer service director—you name it, she met them.
“So, tell us, Kenna.” Serena gave her a sweet smile after the intros. “How do you intend to make your mark here?”
Kenna looked around in surprise. Everyone looked at her right back.
Including Wes, who raised a challenging brow that made her want to smack him. She lifted the reports she’d worked on in the middle of the night. “Well, I plan on taking an interest in how our projected budgets line up with the finished projects outcome. I noticed that on the renovations, for instance, we’ve gone way over—”