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Authors: Paula Altenburg

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“I was working on the Internet café renovations.” The ones Bob seemed to have forgotten he’d volunteered her for, she wanted to remind him. “Nights are the only spare time I have. Most of the time I’m not usually alone, but everyone else had to leave early.” They all had families. And lives.

The fine lines around Bob’s eyes deepened. “They left you alone? Well, it won’t be happening again. I’ll make sure someone stays with you if you need to work nights.”

Matt carefully descended the stairs, favoring his sore leg. “Don’t worry about it. For the next little while, Eve and I can operate as a team. Where she goes, I’ll go.”

Wait just a minute. She had to share her home with him, work with him all day, and now her free time had to be spent with him, too?

No way. Eve had a bad feeling about this. She and Matt spent too much time together as it was, and she wanted more distance. They were crossing that fine line between colleagues and friends, and that line was important. She already liked what she knew of him; she didn’t need to know anything more.

Like the fact that he looked incredibly hot in navy blue boxer briefs.

“Or I could just call if I need you,” she suggested.

Matt’s blue gaze locked with hers.

“Thanks, but I don’t have a death wish,” he said.

Although right now, death held a certain appeal.

Matt’s leg hurt, his mouth was dry from the medication, and he could have used a few more hours of sleep.

He hadn’t liked letting her go off alone to the office earlier, and liked it even less that he hadn’t been in a position to stop her. Now that the drugs had worn off, however, circumstances had changed. Let Eve argue all she wanted. He was in no mood to listen.

He looked her over, reassuring himself she was okay. Her hair was a mess, the bathrobe she wore hadn’t come from any Victoria’s Secret catalog, and the expression on her face warned of storm fronts ahead. She looked rumpled and sexy.

Nothing was going to happen to her.

“You are not following me around,” Eve said. The roses in her arms reflected the fire blossoming on her cheeks.

“Of course not.” He sat gingerly on a bottom step, easing his injured leg out before him. “I won’t have to follow you. We’ll be working together.”

“I work on a number of projects, not just City Hall. You can’t come to all of them.”

“I have a laptop. I’m mobile.” His leg throbbed. Maybe not as mobile as usual, but mobile nonetheless.

“She says she doesn’t want you following her around all day,” Uncle Bob interrupted, his voice mild. “There are anti-stalking laws in this country, you know.”

Those laws didn’t seem to bother Eve’s ex-husband.

“Thank you, Bob,” Eve said, her tone so sweet Matt almost laughed. She sniffed the flowers in her arms. “And thank you for the roses, too. They’re lovely. What’s the occasion?”

“Those aren’t from me. I found them on the doorstep.” Bob plucked an envelope from his suit pocket. “The card says they’re from some guy named Claude.”

A look of revulsion crossed Eve’s face. If there had been any doubt in Matt’s mind how she felt about her ex-husband, there was none now. He made a mental note never to bring her roses, too. Besides, Eve was more of a bird-of-paradise kind of woman, all fire and sunbursts. This Claude guy didn’t know anything.

Except for how to terrorize a woman. Matt’s blood pressure edged up several notches.

Eve handed the flowers back to Bob. “Here. Why don’t you give these to your secretary?”

Uncle Bob scooped up the flowers, opened the door, and set them on the doorstep outside, displaying one of his rare moments of tact. Eve, all soft and wide-eyed and mussy-haired, chewed on her lip and looked like she couldn’t decide whether or not to burst into tears. Matt hoped she chose not to. If she did, he was going to have to hold her, and she wouldn’t like that. Especially in front of his uncle. She tried to seem tough on the surface, but he couldn’t shake the image he had of her crouched alone in the dark with only a nail gun for protection.

“Did you have something you wanted me for?” Matt asked, prodding his uncle’s memory in an effort to change the subject. The sooner Uncle Bob left the better.

“What?” Uncle Bob appeared confused for a moment as he turned his attention from Eve back to Matt. “Oh, yes.” He ran a hand over his thick, silver hair. “Council is putting some pressure on me to find out what the new building is going to look like. How soon do you think you can have a presentation ready? It doesn’t have to be anything fancy, but the demolition is already scheduled, and next week we’ll begin moving records and office space into temporary quarters. Once the site is cleared, we can begin construction.”

Uncle Bob looked happy. Matt wished he could say the same for Eve. Twin vertical furrows appeared above her pixie nose.

“What demolition?” she asked.

“We’ve made arrangements for the old Hall to be imploded,” Uncle Bob told her. “Then we’ll build the new Hall on the same site.”

The furrows deepened. “Imploded?”

“That’s what’s done when the demolition of a large building might damage its neighbors.” Uncle Bob spelled it out as if he were speaking to a child, and not a person far more familiar with the construction industry than he was. Matt threw up mental hands. Not much wonder his uncle rubbed her the wrong way. He really was a moron.

“I know why it’s used.” Her pink-tipped toes tapped on the tiled floor. “But a new site has already been bought, and Sullivan Construction agreed to site preparation as part of the bid.”

“It was agreed that the current property remains the best choice to build on because it’s centrally located,” Uncle Bob said. “Since the old building has already been decommissioned, we can bring it down and start over.”

“You work fast,” Eve said. “And quiet, too. I’ll bet this bit of information hasn’t hit the newspapers yet.”

Uncle Bob beamed. “Thanks. It hasn’t.”

Matt wondered if his uncle realized she wasn’t issuing him a compliment.

“Have you given any thought to how this is going to affect the budget?” she asked next. “You can’t go around changing things without talking to Connor. He has a contract. Imploding the old building will cost a lot more than leveling off the property that was purchased for the new project.”

Uncle Bob waved it off. “Connor and I are on the same page.”

“You’ve already brought Matt into this. Now you want to change the building site. Do you have any idea how much implosion will add to site preparation costs?”

“Don’t you go worrying about money,” Uncle Bob said. “I have ways of covering additional expenses.”

“It’s my job to worry about money.”

Matt noticed with increasing alarm that Eve was almost vibrating from the effort it took to control her frustration. For Uncle Bob’s sake, Matt hoped he really did have ways of covering the additional expenses. He rubbed his leg, hoping that small gesture would be enough to cause a distraction and maybe win some sympathy. He wondered if a little moan would be overkill.

“I think I should lie down,” he said.

At once, Eve turned all her attention to him.

“Sure. You go lie down. There’s no big hurry on that design,” Uncle Bob said cheerfully, reaching for the door. “It can wait a day or so until you’re feeling better. Just don’t let Evie sweet-talk you into drawing some low-budget eyesore.” He disappeared with a wave of one hand.

Matt winced as he rose to his feet.
Low-budget eyesore
. There was no doubt about it. Uncle Bob seemed to go out of his way to antagonize Eve. The joke was on him, though. She wouldn’t have to do much sweet-talking at all to get Matt to do just about anything she wanted at this point. He rubbed his leg again. Unfortunately, her methods of persuasion weren’t what one could call “sweet.”

“Here, let me help you.” She wriggled her way under his arm as if she belonged there, and Matt’s knees nearly buckled. Man, she was little. And strong. He’d been too drugged earlier to fully appreciate what it must have taken for her to get him in the house and up the stairs, but he knew he hadn’t done it all alone. He dimly recalled her helping him out of his pants, too. Too bad he couldn’t talk her into helping him take a shower.

The thought of being naked with her wasn’t doing anything for his navigational skills as she helped him limp his way into the living room.

No, Uncle Bob, never in a million years would there be any reason other than business for me to be living with Eve
.

Matt tried to come up with something to say to distract her from the flowers, the construction project, Uncle Bob, and the unwanted attention she was receiving from certain parts of his body.

“Thanks for showing such remarkable self-control with Uncle Bob,” he said. “I know he can be hard to take sometimes, but he’s important to me. All my life, he’s stepped up to the plate whenever I’ve needed a dad. I owe him for that.”

“How do you know I was using self-control?” she asked, the beginning of a smile tickling the corners of her curvy mouth.

He knew more about her than she might suspect. He probably knew more about her than she did herself. For instance, Eve shouldered way too much responsibility for work. And if she worried too much about work, she probably worried too much about other things in her life, too.

“I just do.”

“Well, then, thank you for not saying anything to Bob about the real reason you moved in here.”

This was the closest she’d come to discussing it with him, and he wanted to push, but didn’t dare push too hard.

“How do you know I didn’t?” Matt asked.

“I just do.”

She said it with utter conviction, and a glimmer of pleasure lit Matt’s insides. If she believed he’d never tell anyone her secrets, it meant she trusted him at least a little. And Matt discovered he would do a lot to earn Eve’s trust. He liked her straightforwardness.

“I forgot to tell you,” he said, stretching out on the sofa with his shoulders braced against one armrest, and both feet dangling off the other. “Your mother called last night. She and your father are coming for a visit at the end of the month.”

He waited for her to bring up her house rules, especially the one about answering the phone, but she didn’t. Instead, she adopted the air of a woman resigned to the inevitable.

Eve sighed. “My parents are planning this huge fortieth anniversary party. It’s more of a family reunion. They’re coming to the city to pick up things they can’t buy in bulk locally. They always stay here. She’ll never believe you’re a roommate.”

Matt was getting tired of her worrying that people might think there was something going on between them. He was considered quite a catch—by everyone but Eve.

Patience
, he reminded himself. And lots of it. Let her come to him.

“I can move back into the hotel for a few days,” he said, just to torment her. He’d probably go to Toronto, but he was curious how she planned to handle this before he gave her an out.

“At three hundred dollars a night?” She tightened the belt on her robe. “I don’t think so. I’ll sleep on the sofa. My parents will sleep in my bed.”

“If anyone sleeps on the sofa, it should be me,” Matt said. Then he wondered why he was offering to sleep on her sofa. It was two feet too short for him.

Eve measured him with her eyes, apparently coming to the same conclusion.

“We’ll share your bedroom,” she decided, looking less than enthusiastic but prepared to suffer. “I’ll set up an air mattress on the floor for myself. It’s either that or you stay with Bob.”

As much as Matt liked the idea of sharing a room with her, he didn’t think he could enjoy it with her parents a few feet away. Having lain awake at night listening to her sheets rustling when she moved and the small, breathy noises she made when she slept, he knew how thin the walls were.

“What will your parents think about you sharing your room with a man they’ve never met?” he asked, mostly because testing her problem-solving skills was proving entertaining.

“The same thing they’ll think if you sleep on the sofa, only that we’re being more honest about it,” she said. “There’s nothing I can say to my mother that will convince her you’re a roommate, so let her think what she wants. We might as well be comfortable. I’m not a teenager anymore. I quit worrying about what she thought a long time ago.”

Which meant she really hadn’t. Matt wondered what there was between Eve and her mother that made her so testy over the thought of such a short visit.

He wondered, too, who she thought was going to be comfortable with the sleeping arrangements she’d suggested, because it wouldn’t be him. Judging by the expression on her face, it wouldn’t be her, either.

No, sharing a room was out of the question. He’d definitely take that trip back to Toronto he’d been putting off, but he’d wait until after her parents arrived to tell her about it. Matt smiled to himself.

Let Eve spend the next two weeks worrying about having to share a bedroom with him. She’d been causing him plenty of sleepless nights already, and he anticipated more to come.

Chapter Eight

Eve rubbed her temples and stared out of her tiny office window overlooking the parking lot. Matt had dropped her off that morning, as he had every other day during the past two weeks when he’d needed to borrow her car, then gone home to wait for a delivery.

The meeting Bob had arranged with City Council was set for eleven o’clock, and Matt’s drafting department in Toronto was sending the preliminary blueprints by priority post—for plans he wouldn’t let her see beforehand, although he’d assured her over and over that he’d taken her notes into consideration and that she’d love the design.

He refused, however, to share it with her. She was willing to bet that it was because he wanted her to see the reaction of other people first before she started in with her list of complaints.

Maybe he was coming to know her a little too well.

If he’d truly taken her notes into consideration, then the least she could do was give his design a fair chance. But she wasn’t going to get her hopes up. She was getting to know him better, too, and he had expensive tastes. His shampoo cost more than hers. Not that she had any right to judge how he spent his own money, but their ideas of fiscal restraint appeared to be vastly different. She wanted to get this meeting over with so she could get started on the budget.

Again.

To top it all off, her parents were due to arrive in the morning. There went her weekend.

The view of the parking lot didn’t help the headache slamming behind her eyelids. She sat up straighter in her chair, all but pressing her nose against the pane of glass. Bob Anderson was getting out of a car. He was early, and that meant he was here to see someone beforehand. She prayed it wasn’t going to be her.

The company secretary knocked on Eve’s open door, nervously clearing her throat. “Hi. I thought I should tell you the site supervisor from out in Bedford called, and the delivery date for the structural steel you ordered has been moved back a week.”

The day got better by the minute. Eve let out a long, slow breath. She had handed in a completed schedule for that particular project to Connor just that morning. Now she’d have to redo the whole thing.

She’d dressed for the office today, too. She kicked off her uncomfortable high heels and hung her thin, linen suit jacket over the back of a chair so it wouldn’t wrinkle, then prepared to get back to work.

Bob’s silvery head appeared in the doorway. “Hey, Evie. Got a minute?”

She wished she could break him of calling her that, but pointing it out made it worse. “What can I do for you?”

He cleared a stack of files from a spare chair crammed in a corner and drew it close to her desk. “Just thought I’d drop by early and invite everyone here at Sullivan Construction to a ground-breaking ceremony.”

Eve’s headache grew steadily worse. “You can’t have a ground-breaking ceremony if you don’t have any ground to break.”

Bob dismissed that minor detail as if it were of no particular concern. “Then we’ll make it another fundraising party and unveil the new plans to the public.”

Eve pressed her fingertips against her eyebrows. “Shouldn’t you wait until after the plans are approved?”

“They’ll be approved.” He picked up a stress ball from her desk and rolled it between his palms. “Matt’s a great guy, you know. Shame he doesn’t have a special someone in his life.”

She thought she knew where this conversation was headed, and it had nothing to do with the upcoming meeting. “Don’t even think about it. Matt’s not my type.”

“Of course he’s not your type,” Bob said, surprised. “You aren’t his, either. Where would you even get such an idea? You two are all wrong for each other. Matt needs more of a…homebody.”

There was an insult in there somewhere. Eve was sure of it.

“To knit him socks?” she suggested. “And fetch his slippers?”

“Ha ha.” Bob thought about it. “But close. His dad died when Mattie was just a baby, and while I hate to say this about my own sister, his mother has always been kind of a flake. She didn’t provide him with much affection growing up, yet he’s such a low-key, gentle person himself. So responsible and reliable. While you, Evie…you’re…” His voice trailed off as if he’d suddenly thought better of whatever it was he’d been about to say.

Eve’s hands clenched into two tight fists. She rapped the back of her knuckles on the desktop. He’d better not be calling her a flake. “What am I?”

He flashed an apologetic smile. “You’re kind of a bully.”

Eve almost laughed. Almost, but not quite. Bob Anderson, who dwarfed her by almost a foot—who steamrolled over people like he was spreading hot asphalt—thought
she
was a bully?

Her eyes narrowed. Had he also implied that she somehow wasn’t responsible and reliable?

“I’ll have you know that I’m very good at my job,” she said, seizing on the one insult she felt most able to rebut. “I’m as responsible and reliable as anyone else in this industry, and more so than most.”

“I can’t argue with you there,” Bob agreed, propelling his chair back a few inches. “Except you could be a little more careful with a nail gun, I suppose.”

Eve’s mouth opened and closed.

Connor chose that split second of indecision to interrupt. “Bob! I thought I heard your voice. Got a few minutes for a coffee?”

Bob leaped to his feet, relief evident on his face. “You bet.” He paused and half turned back to Eve. “Want to join us, Evie?”

She forced a smile to her numb lips. “I can’t. I have a new project schedule to complete.”

The two men fled. She listened to their voices echoing down the hallway. Then, she crumpled up a sheet of paper and fired it at the wall.

The secretary came back in and made a move to lay some more papers in front of Eve. “Here are the typed minutes you requested from the last project meeting.”

“Do you think I’m a bully?” Eve demanded.

“Of course not.” The secretary dropped the minutes like they’d grown teeth and snarled at her. “Gotta go.”

Eve twirled an earring. She might not be a bully, but maybe her people skills could use some fine-tuning. She’d practice them at the meeting by being open-minded about the design.

As long as it wasn’t some funky modern nightmare that would blow the budget out of the water, she could handle it.


The meeting was held in the air-conditioned boardroom at Sullivan Construction.

“Good afternoon.” Connor breezed in behind Bob, and immediately got things underway by introducing everyone around the table. Aside from the Sullivan Construction team, the architect, and the mayor, there were three city councilors.

“Now,” Connor said, taking his seat at the head of the table, “let’s turn things over to Matt.”

Eve couldn’t take her eyes off him. She’d gotten used to the casual clothes he wore around home, but Matt donned a good suit like a second skin. The expensive cut underscored the long, lean muscles of his arms and legs, and the rich, fluid fabric flowed like water with every move he made. His cropped, tousled hair added a touch of untidiness that set him apart from the neatly combed councilors in the room, too. He looked confident, successful, and really, really sexy.

Eve’s heart took an odd little tumble. Her heels pinched her toes, and her pantyhose itched at the waistband. She wore office attire only when she had to, and never looked that well put-together. Bob was right—she wasn’t Matt’s type at all. They were from different worlds.

Electric blue eyes connected briefly with hers in an intimate, almost-possessive display, intended solely for the benefit of the other males in the room.

There it was again, Eve thought, irritated. That way men had of marking territory, even when the territory didn’t belong to them.


This is No-Man’s Land, buddy
,” she telegraphed. He smiled at her, then launched into his architect’s spiel.

It was soon evident that Matt had, indeed, done his homework, just like he’d claimed.

“And,” he concluded, stacking his notes together into a neat little pile, “since the preservation of the history of this region is an important factor, I took that into proper account.”

He approached the drawings positioned at the front of the room and pulled back the cloth covering them, inviting everyone to come forward for a closer look.

Eve studied the blueprints with a combination of horror and resignation. It wasn’t a funky modern nightmare at all. The building was beautiful. It was breathtaking. He’d taken her ideas and he’d made them…

Better. And she was a little jealous. But this building was so far out of their price range, she didn’t know how to break it to people.

“It represents a ship, for the Atlantic Ocean,” Matt explained to the room. “And the relationship this region has with the sea.”

Eve leaned forward to review the blueprint. She smoothed the sheet with one fingertip, impressed and not wanting to be. “There isn’t one straight line on the whole drawing. It would be impossible to build,” she said.

“It’s not impossible. We’ll use a lattice-like grid steel structure to replace the concrete the engineers would normally use. Then we’ll put local sandstone on the outside of the building to help it blend in with the neighbors.”

“And where are you going to find the structural engineers who can build such a thing?” she asked. Not to mention that structural engineers didn’t come any cheaper than architects.

“Your local technical college is on the cutting edge of this type of technology. One of the professors has been breaking new ground in free-standing steel structures. All the college needs is to have the same CAD program I use in my office, which they do. I checked.”

Dollar signs continued to click before her eyes. Matt wasn’t used to worrying about budgets, that much was obvious. “This is—”

“Innovative,” Connor interrupted. He shot her a warning look. “We’ll consult with the engineers and get a cost estimate. Then we can make a final decision.”

“I like it.” Bob, silent until now, added his two cents. “But do you suppose you could make it look more like a space ship? To represent the future?”

Space ship
? Eve turned her head to stare.

Even Matt was startled by that suggestion. “I don’t think a space ship would blend in well,” he said cautiously. “Halifax isn’t NASA.”

“If we build this the way you’ve designed it, it will look like a ride at Disney World. Which would be so much better.” Eve said it under her breath, but she knew Matt heard. Ripples of laughter meant others had heard, too. “But it’s certainly modern,” she added.

Matt’s jaw set, the intimate, possessive look he’d given her earlier now gone from his eyes. She could tell by the glint of steel in them that she’d gone too far with the Disney remark.

“I could always stick a bit of gingerbread trim around the archways,” he suggested. “Would that satisfy you?”

Now, he was just fighting dirty.

“Are they married?” she heard one councilor whisper to another. “Because they do a really good impression of it.”

“I don’t think they’re married, but I hear they live together,” the second councilor whispered back.

Good news traveled fast.

“Putting up one more building with Palladian arches in this city would be cheating future populations,” Matt continued. There were a few nods of agreement. “The past is important, yes, but so is the future. I believe my design encompasses both.”

“And it’s impressive.” Connor rose from his seat, indicating that the meeting was over, and reached over to shake his hand. “I suggest we wait until we get the engineers’ estimates before we discuss this any further.”

The room was emptying fast, and Eve hustled to join the tail end of the queue.

Matt snagged the belt loop on the back of her skirt. “Not so fast.”

He was beyond angry. The tiny jerk of muscle underneath his clean-shaven jaw gave that much away.

“I thought of everything—the history of the region, the other buildings bordering its location, even how much sun exposure the front entrance would receive—winter and summer. What’s your real objection to my design?” His words were low and measured.

This couldn’t be the first time someone hadn’t fallen in love with one of his designs.

But she had. She simply couldn’t bring herself to admit it. She’d convinced herself he couldn’t come up with a terrific design, and she’d been wrong. On the other hand, she wasn’t wrong about the cost. This building was never going to happen.

He clasped his hands together and tapped his lower lip with his index fingers. He raised an eyebrow and studied her for an excruciating moment. A sudden gleam erupted in his fierce blue eyes. He took two more steps toward her until her back was literally against the wall. He planted his palms on either side of her head and looked down at her.

“Do you know what I think?” he said. “I think you won’t admit you like my design because you’re afraid if you do, you’ll be admitting you like me, too.”

What
?

He was so close that, if she leaned forward, she could press her cheek into the crisp, broad solidness of his white, cotton shirtfront. She could wrap her arms around him or rise up on her toes and kiss him on the corner of his solid, sexy mouth. She could breathe in his expensive, spicy aftershave, mint cough drops, and fabric softener, all mixed together in a heady male scent.

“It doesn’t matter whether or not I like the design,” Eve said over the sudden hammering of her heart. “Bottom line is that we can’t afford it.”

“So your only objection is the money?” Matt asked, shifting his body closer.

Eve struggled to remember what it was she was objecting to. He was standing far too near for her to think straight. His tie was temptingly close to her nose, and she grabbed the knot, giving it a hard tug, and he jerked back in surprise.

There. She could think again.

“I know how much money we’re working with,” she reminded him. “Bob would have to come up with a whole lot more in order to pay for your building, and I don’t believe he can do it.”

Matt took her fingers in his and held them against his chest. His hand was warm, strong, and swallowed hers whole. “You’d be amazed at what a person can do when given the proper incentive.”

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