Authors: Debra Dixon
As a waiter cleared away the remains of his birthday dinner, Morgan Abbott absently touched the silvering temples of his chocolate-brown hair and decided that birthdays were overrated, embarrassing, and only fussed about by people whose birthday it wasn’t. After all, he
was
thirty-six. and not a nine-year-old, excited about presents and birthday cake. He didn’t even like desserts anymore.
But George Boswick, his friend and business associate, had insisted on celebrating this milestone by taking him out for drinks and dinner at an elegant North Shore Chicago restaurant, since he, Morgan, had been away from home on a business trip on his birthday. George and his wife had even provided a kind of date for him to make the party a foursome.
Morgan glanced at his date. Lisa, an attractive
blonde, was a junior executive in the accounting department of George’s electronics supply company. She had just the right amount of brains, ambition, and soothing personality to take her far in the corporate world. As chairman and chief executive officer of Abbott Industries Morgan knew that she was exactly the kind of person he wanted working for him. Lisa knew it, too, he thought, as she gave him a polite, yet acknowledging smile that meant she was happy with her job, but was open to another company’s offer of more money and quicker promotions.
Realizing he was vaguely thinking of her only as a prospective employee, Morgan ruefully chuckled under his breath. He was getting too damn old.
He silently conceded that recently there had been very few women in his life. In fact, there had been very few women in his life, period. Running a corporation demanded all his time.
Briefly closing his eyes, he wished he could find
the
woman who would be his first priority in life.
Instantly Morgan gave himself a silent lecture. Making a silly birthday wish at his age! He had never met a woman challenging enough to take the place of Abbott Industries in his life and probably never would. Lisa was certainly someone who could understand his often twenty-hour workdays, but she wasn’t a challenge. Nothing about her was new or different. There were no hidden facets to discover. One quick reading of her résumé, and he could accurately guess the rest. Lisa was the typical, career-oriented, no-nonsense modern woman. He saw too many Lisas striding purposefully along AI’s corridors to be more than mildly interested in her.
A slight grimace crossing his sharply etched features,
Morgan decided why he was still a bachelor at thirty-six. He was damn picky.
Amused by his private thoughts, he absently gazed around the crowded dining room. And instantly froze, when he caught sight of a lone woman standing in the entryway. She was the most beautiful woman he had ever seen, and she was looking directly at him.
His gaze roved over her oval face. Delicate reddish-brown brows arched over wide, dark eyes, contrasting alluringly with her milky skin. A hint of a sensual smile played on her full lips. Lips made for a man’s kisses. Her nose was slim, and her chin was raised at an almost haughty angle. Flaming red hair was wrapped in an intricate chignon. It seemed too heavy for her slender neck, yet she held her head proudly.
Her beauty would have drawn second looks anywhere, but it was her dress that left the other diners gasping. The long-sleeved gown of black crepe fit like a glove over her slender body, covering her from neck to toes. But it was cut on a diagonal
between
her breasts, shockingly exposing the flesh of the right side of her upper body under a sheer black net sparked with diamentés and tiny black crepe flowers. Only the breast itself was modestly covered by a large crepe flower, a winking stone nestled in the center directly over her nipple.
Morgan couldn’t take his eyes off it.
The woman spoke to the maître d’, then turned back in Morgan’s direction. She gazed coolly around the room for a moment before she followed the maître d’. Her walk was lithe and graceful, and Morgan knew he could have watched her movements for hours. She was a goddess come to life.
The thought popped into his head that if he had wanted a birthday present, she would have been it.
A hush had fallen over the restaurant, and heads turned in her wake. The men were more than appreciative; the women enviously disdainful. Realizing she was actually coming to his table, Morgan felt his heart leap and begin to pound its way out of his chest. As he continued to stare at her everything seemed to fade into a gray mist until he and she were the only ones in the room. A still-functioning corner of his mind cursed his schoolboy reaction to the woman, and sternly told him if he didn’t snap out of it he was going to make a fool of himself.
That thought penetrated his numb brain, and he managed to politely stand when she reached his table, vaguely aware that George had also stood. He didn’t even take notice of George’s wife and Lisa as they sat stiffly, glaring at the female stranger.
The woman stood directly in front of him, and he found her even more impossibly beautiful. Her brown eyes locked with his. For a moment he thought she was angry, until she smiled an impy little grin that belied all her regal elegance.
His face beginning to heat, he wondered if she was a birthday surprise arranged by George. Belly dancers, singing telegrams, and strippers were popular gifts nowadays for the American male.
Morgan fervently prayed she wouldn’t burst into a chorus of “Happy Birthday.” Or worse, start stripping to her bikini!
Suddenly her arms wound around his neck, and she kissed him. Her lips were petal-soft, a butterfly’s caress to tease and tantalize, and her breasts pressed against his chest, the small mounds causing an ache he had never felt before. Perfume,
as light as dew on the morning grass, seemed to enfold them in a private cocoon.
It was the sweetest kiss he’d ever received.
She quickly broke the embrace, and Morgan opened dazed eyes, expecting to see her standing before him. But she wasn’t there.
Wild-eyed, he glanced around the dining room, only to discover the woman had completely vanished, while all the diners were staring at him as if he’d suddenly gone insane.
Dark red staining his cheekbones now, he instantly turned to George and demanded, “Who was that woman?”
“I thought you knew her!” George said. “Because I certainly don’t.”
“George! Stop playing dumb. My birthday surprise was very funny, and a little embarrassing, but I’m not angry. So don’t be afraid to admit you hired her.” He chuckled dryly. “At least, I’m not as angry as I would have been if she’d started belly-dancing in front of me.”
“Morgan, I didn’t hire her. Believe me, I wouldn’t be afraid to admit it if I had. But I never saw that woman before in my life.”
Morgan stared at George in confusion. George’s consternation was too genuine: he obviously had no idea who the beautiful redhead was. Morgan looked around the room to see if he could spot a familiar, laughing face, then drew his brows together in puzzlement when he didn’t find one.
“Well, whoever she is,” he said with a lopsided grin, “she forgot to wish me a happy birthday.”
Morgan stepped out into the searing heat of a Dallas summer day. He smiled in satisfaction at
Peter Scarborough, the head of his Dallas office. Having just acquired a small oil company, Abbott Industries’s power base was growing in leaps and bounds. This phase of his business trip had certainly been most successful.
“Hey! Watch it, lady!”
Morgan stopped dead and nearly snapped his neck as he turned in the direction of the shouted warning. At first, he didn’t recognize her, then the flaming red hair rang a loud bell. It was she! The kissing “birthday present” from the restaurant.
But what was she doing in Dallas, Texas, three days after Chicago? In hot-pink shorts, a green T-shirt, and on roller skates?
Morgan watched in disbelief as she enthusiastically skated toward him. All her cool sophistication was gone, and her red hair was in two ponytails, sticking straight out above her ears.
She braked slightly when she reached him, stopping within inches of him. Her hands tangled in his hair and she kissed him soundly on the lips. Then, giving him that thoroughly impy grin, she skated off, disappearing around the corner.
“Who was that?” Peter asked in a surprised voice.
Morgan barely heard him, his thoughts more occupied by the way her breasts had delightfully jiggled the words on her T-shirt: “Kiss a Gorilla Today.” Somebody was pulling a fast one on him, he thought, and when he found out who it was, he’d kill him.
“My question exactly, Pete,” he said finally. “My question exactly.”
One week later, Morgan smiled politely at his
companion as they stepped into the elevator of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Sultry and sensual, Carla always expected a wild time in New York nightclubs, and a wilder time in bed. Tonight Morgan found her dull and boring. More than once during the evening he had caught himself wishing that she were taller and less chesty. And had stunning red hair.
It had been seven days since he had seen
the
woman. He didn’t know why he should be thinking about her, but he was. Who was she? Why had she kissed him again? Which one of his friends was putting her up to it?
Those questions, and others like them, had constantly intruded these past few days, while he was at meetings, touring manufacturing facilities, on construction sites, reading blueprints. At night, he found himself lying in bed for hours, speculating on the unanswerable answers.
When he had arrived in New York this morning, on the third leg of his business trip, he had immediately called Carla, an old girlfriend, hoping she would be a very effective remedy for the redhead. Carla had failed miserably.
Morgan didn’t pay attention to the people who filed into the elevator after him and Carla. He glanced at Carla, and she smiled back, catlike, and snuggled up against his side. Carla always clung, he thought absently, and sighed inwardly. He didn’t have the slightest desire for her.
Thirty-six was turning out to be a hell of a year, so far.
A light, exotic perfume suddenly teased his nose, sharply reminding him of a summer’s morning. He knew that scent, and it wasn’t Carla’s. Its uniqueness
matched the woman who had worn it in a Chicago restaurant. She was here.
He glanced to his right and was shocked to find her actually standing next to him. How had she done it? Her dazzling white gown was a stunning contrast to her creamy skin and flaming hair.
She was ignoring him, staring at the floor buttons lighting up one by one. Morgan studied her for a moment, noting the way her brown eyes were fringed with thick lashes, the incredibly soft column of her throat, the delicate shell of her ear. He silently congratulated whoever had picked her as the bait for this elaborate stunt. She was a beauty.
The woman finally slanted him a glance, and her full lips slowly curved into a grin. That delightful grin.
Morgan felt his chest tighten in anticipation, his blood flowing heavily in his veins. This time, though, he wasn’t about to play the game.
“Who are you?” he asked hoarsely, and immediately cursed the unsteadiness in his voice.
She kissed him in answer. Not a brief kiss or a buss, like the last two times, but a full-bodied kiss. Morgan greedily took the lips under his, determined to teach her the peril of kissing strangers for a living. A vague regret surfaced at that thought, but he immediately dismissed it, drinking in the heady wine of her mouth instead. He curved his arms around her willowy body, feeling the sleek satin and substance of her. Her tongue stroked across his bottom lip in invitation, and he opened to her invasion, wanting to taste her fully. Their tongues mingled, then dueled and flamed. He groaned into the moist cavern of her mouth, never hearing the gasp of outrage from Carla, or the bell of the elevator indicating another stop.
She suddenly faded out of his arms. Stunned by the impact of the kiss, he couldn’t get his brain working enough even to blink at her.
The elevator doors opened, and she stepped quickly through them. Then she turned around and braced her hand on the doorframe before they closed.
“I’m the woman you really want tonight,” she said in a husky voice that sent shivers down his spine.
The doors closed and, in almost the same instant, a loud crack resounded in the elevator. Morgan’s frozen state immediately disappeared, as his cheek stung fiercely from the slap Carla had just delivered.
“Who the hell was that, you pig?” she screeched in fury. Twin spots of red stained her cheeks, and her artfully applied makeup looked garish.
One hand nursing his bruised cheek, Morgan hid his sudden smile in a false grimace. The redhead had embarrassed him again, but this time she deserved a medal for her timing. The last thing he’d needed tonight was Carla, and now he didn’t have to worry about how to end the evening politely.
“That was my gardener,” he quipped impulsively. And reeled back from the force of her second slap.
Morgan jogged through the park in the early-morning light. It was a hot morning, rare for the usually wet and foggy San Francisco August. A stray wisp of fog, not yet burned off by the bright sun, floated by. The path he followed led him along
the edge of a steep cliff. Far below was the beautiful panorama of a mist-covered San Francisco Bay.
He was home now, his two-week-long business trip finished. He was also disappointed and more than a little frustrated. The beautiful redhead hadn’t reappeared since the fiasco in the elevator. He’d been waiting for her, too, in Philadelphia, Washington, and Miami.
Who was she? Of course, he still didn’t have the answer. And none of his friends had asked about his reaction to a surprise birthday gift.
He’d made a complete fool of himself with the redhead, he thought. First by being immobilized with shock at her daring, then by being immobilized again by his own response to her … while she escaped.
Yesterday afternoon, during a meeting of major importance with his top executives, his usually sharp attention had wandered from the reports to the redhead. That had never happened to him before. Not once had a woman, for whatever reason, kept him from concentrating on his work.