Billionaire Retreat Page 43
Down the hallway, the elevator dinged, and April craned to look.
“That may be Mr. Bryan. I should go check.”
“Oh, God.” Dave settled back in his chair with a sneer. “I suppose you have to, don’t you?”
“Yes, I do.” And before she could stop herself, April added, “Behave yourself.”
She froze, but Dave held his hands up in mock surrender.
“As you command, my Lady.” He managed a cheeky smile. “I wouldn’t want to offend the woman who runs Houston & Co. from the shadows.”
April laughed and headed down the corridor, grimacing at her blouse. It was going to be ruined, Dave was entirely correct, and she hadn’t exactly hoped to meet Nathaniel Bryan with coffee all down her front.
“Mr. Bryan?” she asked, peering at the blonde man who was looking into one of the conference rooms.
“Ah. Are you April Thornton?” He turned and stuck out his hand. “How are you today?”
And April found that she had no words at all. For the second time this day, she was standing within inches of a man who made her knees go weak. With the muscles of a professional athlete and the blonde good looks of a J. Crew model, Nathaniel Bryan might just rival Dave Hines for the most gorgeous man April had ever met.
Her week had just got a lot more interesting.
Chapter 2
“So?”
“So what?” April looked up to see Jane poking her head around the office door.
Mindful of where she was, Jane peeked into Mr. Jeffries’s office, looked around the room, and then crept in to take a seat by April’s desk.
“So, how was it?”
“Oh, with them? Mostly fine.” April, who had just managed to stop thinking about blue eyes and dimpled chins and well-muscled arms, gave a sigh. “It was, uh…”
“What are they like? I’ve met Mr. Bryan, of course—he very nice when he’s not talking about Mr. Hines. And quite attractive, don’t you think?” Jane’s eyes gleamed.
“Quite attractive,” April agreed, shoving down a flare of jealousy—Jane would be just the sort of woman Nathaniel liked, she was sure. “Mr. Hines is…uh, also very attractive.”
“He is? Oh, my.” Jane bit her lip on a grin, but she sobered. “They didn’t walk all over you, did they?”
“No, I…” April fought the urge to sink her head into her hands. “I may or may not have told them to behave themselves.”
“You didn’t!” But Jane clapped her hands delightedly.
“I know, I know…”
“No, I think it’s wonderful.” For the first time that April had known her, Jane looked self-assured. “They think they can just come in here and turn everything upside down because they don’t like each other? It’s rude.”
“Hello? April?” Nathaniel’s voice echoed in the main room, and both women froze.
“In here,” April called.
As Jane edged out with carefully concealed curiosity in her eyes, Nathaniel came around the door with a ready grin. He widened his eyes at April’s outfit.
“What?” April looked down at her dress, a red confection with a peplum waist, set off by gold bangles and an amazing pair of black heels. She was beginning to feel foolish about the full hour she had spent getting ready this morning. “I didn’t spill coffee on myself again, did I?”
“Not at all. You look stunning.” His blue-grey eyes quirked as she bit her lip. “Come get coffee with me?”
“What?” April nearly overset her mug, and swore internally. When she had made sure that all of the documents were safe, she looked up at Nathaniel again. “I’m sorry. What?”
“Come get coffee with me,” Nathaniel repeated.
“I…have coffee.” Stupid, stupid. But really, it was better if she didn’t flirt winningly, wasn’t it? Especially since this must just be a game for him.
“Not good coffee,” he said with surety. He leaned to look into Mr. Jeffries’s office, then jerked his head. “You like coffee? Good. I’ll show you my favorite place.”
“I work around here, you know,” April told him. But her body seemed to be moving on its own, standing and putting on her cardigan and following him into the lobby. “Also, you’re up early.”
“I admit it was by design.” He strolled along beside her, elegantly matching what she suspected was a natural quickness with her high-heeled gait.
“How do you mean?” April pressed the button for the lobby and stood aside as a flood of black-suited employees emerged, all of them engrossed in their morning papers or smartphones. If they replaced the entire office staff with zombies, she wasn’t sure anyone would notice.
“Dave got all the time with you yesterday.” Nathaniel smiled over at her, his blond hair shining in the dim light. “And it’s certainly not fair that he should get all of your time just because his jet landed first.”
“Right. You both have jets.” April looked resolutely at the door. Rich men went for svelte blondes. She needed to remember this.
“What? You don’t like jets?” His grin was infectious, dammit. “They’re very nice, I assure you. The food’s better and the drinks are free.”
“I think that’s included in the price of the jet.”
“Oh, don’t use facts. It’s too early in the morning for that.”
She laughed, and blushed when she caught him watching her. They strolled across the plaza in front of the building, and April tried to think of something to say. She just knew the correct thing wasn’t to ask Nathaniel how he managed to meld the boyish good looks of an Abercrombie model with the gravitas of a board member. That sounded like…what was it…?
Oh, right. A ridiculous teenager. Still, it was a good question. How could a man look like he raced yachts in his spare time and still manage to convey complete competence?
“You look like you have questions,” he murmured, one eyebrow raised.
Damn.
“Uh…tell me about your career.”
“Easily the least interesting part of my life, but if you insist.” He considered. “To make a very long story short, I was studying a hospital bill and noticed that those little dropper thingies they use—you know, the mini turkey baster things—were ridiculously expensive. I’d seen them. They were just two pieces of plastic melted together at the edges. So I started a company to make them for a fraction of the price and now I have millions of dollars.”
“Droppers,” April said, nodded. He hadn’t been lying about how uninteresting it was, apparently. “So do I get to ask why you were in the hospital?” When he looked away, she crowed with laughter. “I knew I saw something in your face! Oh, come on.”
“I got cut by some barbed wire,” he said, with great dignity.
“Oh, I see. And how, exactly, did that happen?”
“I was running very fast. In the dark.”
“Mm-hmm.” April looked over at him. “And?”
“And I ran into the barbed wire,” he said innocently.
“And why were you running in the dark?” April asked him, grinning.
“Because there was a cow chasing us.”
April had to stop to giggle. When she looked up at him, his expression of wounded pride only made it worse.
“I’m sorry. I’m sorry. Now, why…”
“Because we had tipped over its friend.”
“We?”
“Surely you know the calculations. It takes more than one person to tip a cow.”
“I didn’t actually know those calculations, no. And aren’t cows fairly…oh, placid? I think that’s the word I’m looking for.”
“Fairly. Except when you’ve tipped one of them over. Then it’s nighttime and they’re staring at you in the dark with their eyes gleaming, dozens of them like something out of a horror movie, and then they all start to make these angry noises and…turns out, they can run pretty fast.”
“And lucky for you that they can,” April said. “Otherwise, you wouldn’t be a billionaire right now.”
“You ma
ke a very good point. Maybe I should put that in the brochures.” He stopped by an unassuming little door in the neighboring tower. “Here we are.”
“This is a coffee shop?”
“And a good one.”
“Do they make good mochas?”
“Coffee. Only coffee. But Ms. Thornton, I tell you—it is divine.”
“I look forward to it,” April said, unexpectedly charmed. He actually seemed serious.
“So tell me about your career,” he said after they had ordered. He had insisted on paying—“I’m a billionaire, my dear”—and was now leaning against the back wall of the tiny shop.
“My career? You’re sweet to call it that.”
“I’ve known Jeffries since I was twelve. I say this with all respect due to a business genius, but he must be practically impossible to get from place to place.”
April stifled a laugh.
“You’re not wrong.”
“Ms. Thornton, a secretary is to a CEO what a butler was to a regency household—absolutely indispensable. How the company runs depends in large part on how well a secretary can manage the CEO’s image. Therefore, whether or not the world sees it, a secretary can make or break a company—and you seem to be making it.” He raised his eyebrows. “Ah, good, our coffee. Cream? Sugar?”
“Brown sugar?” April peered at the pot.
“It’s delicious.” He paused with the spoon over her cup. “Try some?”
“Okay.” He passed it to her and April took a sip of the concoction, reveling as much in the gesture as she did the taste. How long had it been since someone had gotten her a cup of coffee? She rather liked it. “That is wonderful.”
“And now you know where to get the best coffee…and disappear for a while.” He led her back out onto the plaza and strolled at her side. “Ms. Thornton, I must thank you.”
“For what?”
“I was dreading this trip. To be honest, I was sure that Hines was only here to mess with my trip. I anticipated three days of fighting. But you have gotten us both—yes, I admit it, both of us—to lay down our weapons. That’s no mean feat.”
“Well, now that you know how much more pleasant it is,” April suggested tartly, “you can doubtless continue without my help.”
“Oh, but I don’t want to.” His smile was suddenly, shockingly intimate. And just as April felt herself begin to blush, the moment was interrupted, the sound of a quiet greeting making them both whirl.
“Good morning,” Dave Hines said. His eyes flicked between them with the mildest expression April had ever seen. He didn’t seem angry in the least.
But she noticed he managed to stand between them on the elevator ride up.
Chapter 3
“So what are you going to do?” Jane asked. She munched contemplatively on a French fry as she watched.
“What about?” I dipped a piece of sushi in soy sauce and chewed. Sometimes I missed the green openness of upstate New York, where I’d grown up, but easy access to sushi and good coffee more than made up for that.
“About them.”
“Well…not much. I mean, there isn’t much I need to do.” I mentally plotted out the next day and a half. “I’ve worked it out so they’ll only be in the same place at the same time for about two hours, and they really have been behaving themselves.”
“Not about that,” Jane said, around a mouthful of sandwich. She swallowed and looked at me curiously. “Wait, do you actually not see it?”
“See what?” Alarm bells went off in my head. I looked around. “What did they do?” My head was filled with images of the two men throwing printer paper and expletives at each other.
“They’re both interested in you,” Jane said slowly, as if speaking to the very stupid. “And you’re interested in both of them.”
“What? No.”
“Okay, I’ve worked with you for two years. I remember when you were going out with Mark and you thought he was The One and you were going to end up in the suburbs together, and I remember James, too, and how the two of you couldn’t keep your hands off each other.”
“Mmm.” I smiled dreamily. James and I hadn’t been very compatible, but he’d been the perfect rebound guy from staid, stuffy, manipulative Mark, who wanted me to lose weight but not, apparently, to be sexy so that other people noticed. James and I, at least, had ended on good terms—and every once in a while when we weren’t seeing anyone, we met up for drinks. “Wait, what’s your point, though?”
“My point is, I’ve seen you when you were picturing the future with someone, and I’ve seen you when you had chemistry with someone, and these guys? Have both things going for them.”
“Which guy?”
“That’s what I’m telling you: both of them.” She raised her eyebrows. “So what’re you going to do?”
“Okay, first of all…” I pointed a chopstick at her. “You are way off. I don’t feel that way about them.”
“Uh-huh.” She took a big bite of her sandwich and gave me a look that said she didn’t believe me in the slightest.
“I don’t!”
“Sure, okay. Well, you haven’t had a date in two months anyway. Isn’t that reason enough to go out for a fun time? I mean, you’re laughing and joking with them, it’s not like you’d have a bad time.”
“That’s the other thing. They’re not interested in me.”
“You’re wrong.” Jane picked the tomato out of her sandwich and took another bite.
“No, I’m not. Rich guys don’t go for women like me.”
“What does that even mean?”
“Jane, look at me.”
“What?” Jane complied. Then she put down her sandwich and took a deep breath. “April, please don’t tell me people are getting to you.”
“No one’s getting to me. I’m perfectly happy with how I look.” I stabbed at another piece of sushi moodily. “I’m just being realistic.”
“No, you aren’t.” She reached out to touch my hand lightly. “Before I met you, do you know what kind of underwear I wore?”
“What does that have to do with anything?”
“Just listen.” Jane wiped her hands on her napkin and looked away. “I bought in, April. All of my underwear was this cheap ugly stuff that I hated. And I bought it because I hated me. I got up and looked in the mirror and all I could see was that extra pound here, that extra pound there. I was buying in, I didn’t think I had any worth unless I could be someone else’s idea of perfect. And now I know you. April, you’re one of the strongest, most self-assured, wonderful, gorgeous women I know. You taught me that it was okay to wear pretty clothes and fancy underwear because I wanted to and it made me happy. And it really hurts to see that you’re doubting yourself now, because you’re the one who taught me that it’s not about that. You can tell me it’s just realistic, but the fact is, until you think you can get what you actually want, you’re still letting the rest of those jerks get to you.”
I stared at her, dumbfounded. This was about the most words I had ever heard Jane say at one time. When had it all turned out, and she’d become the wise one and I’d become the timid one? I grimaced down at the table.
“You want them, don’t you?” Jane asked.
“Yeah,” I said morosely.
“And they both like you. I’m telling you, it’s true. So you can fall back on some tired old stereotype that no one’s ever going to love you for you, or you can accept what you’re seeing and go for what will make you happy.” She bit her lip and gave me a smile that was just the tiniest bit wicked. “I mean, come on, you’re choosing between two gorgeous billionaires. Live the fantasy, April. Take it while it’s here.”
I laughed.
“I don’t want to choose, though.”
“What?” her eyes widened.
What had I meant by that? It just came out. I shrugged.
“Messy conversations, blah blah blah.”
“Okay, so go on dates with both of them. They don’t have to know.”
&n
bsp; “How many beers have you had?”
“Just the one.”
I laughed, and heard my phone buzz. This dinner had been just what I needed after the past couple of days. Pulling my phone out, I raised my eyebrows.
“What?” Jane asked me.
“It’s not a big deal, there’s just that meeting tomorrow and Dave wants the documents for it. I need to go run them over.”
“And have a date while you’re there,” Jane said, pointing a fry at me. “Go on, I’ll get this.” She pulled out her checkbook and grinned.
“It’s not a date,” I said severely. “And thank you.”
“Anytime. Remember, I want details!”
“I’ll be sure to tell you just how his face looked when I handed over the profit estimates.” I grinned and headed out, slinging my bag over my shoulder.
Could Jane possibly be right? I could see men—and a few women—looking admiringly at my dress and my heels. And me. Had I really come so far, gotten so comfortable with myself, only to deny myself the one thing I really, truly wanted? I was freaking gorgeous, and I told myself that I believed that.
But what if I didn’t?
That seemed like a question to ponder with a bottle of wine and a bubble bath later. I filed that away and checked to make sure I had all the documents, then texted Dave.
In the lobby.
The reply came back at once: Room 2536.
I punched the button and waited as the elevator ascended, making my ears pop. I should have expected that Dave would be working this late. He was the young prodigy, after all. Maybe that was part of why Nathaniel hated him so much—carefree Dave who openly admitted that he liked hang gliding and expensive dinners more than work. Something to consider. I knocked on the door to Dave’s room…
…and felt my mouth fall open as I looked inside.
It was absolutely filled with candles, glittering softly in the dim light. I could see roses in vases all around, and their smell was intoxicating. A bottle of champagne was on ice, and Dave’s smile, as he looked at me, was bright with unexpected mischief.