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Authors: Nora Roberts

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BOOK: Luring a Lady
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His eyes had darkened, but his hands remained gentle. “Because you have integrity?”

“Because I jumped the gun, so to speak. The resulting publicity only made things worse. The consensus is that someone with more savvy could have handled the Wolburg matter—that's how it's referred to at Hayward. The Wolburg matter in a quiet, tidy fashion. There's a board meeting at noon on Friday, and they could very well request that I step down as president.”

“And will you?”

“I don't know.” He was working on her shoulders now, competently, thoroughly. “I'd like to fight, draw the whole thing out. Then again, the company's been in upheaval for over a year, and having the president and the board as adversaries won't help Hayward. Added to that, my executive vice president and I are already on poor terms. He feels, perhaps justifiably, that he should be in the number one slot.” She laughed softly. “There are times I wish he had it.”

“No, you don't.” He resisted the urge to bend down and press his lips to the long, slender column of her neck. Barely. “You like being in charge, and I think you're good at it.”

She stopped rocking to turn her head and stare at him. “You're the first person who's ever said that to me. Most of the people who know me think I'm playing at this, or that I'm experiencing a kind of temporary insanity.”

His hand slid lightly down her arm as he came around to crouch in front of her. “Then they don't know you, do they?”

There were so many emotions popping through her as she kept her eyes on his. But pleasure, the simple pleasure of being understood was paramount. “Maybe they don't,” she murmured. “Maybe they don't.”

“I won't give you advice.” He picked up one of her hands because he enjoyed examining it, the long, ringless fingers, the slender wrist, the smooth, cool skin. “I don't know about office politics or board meetings. But I think you'll do what's right. You have a good brain and a good heart.”

Hardly aware that she'd turned her hand over under his and linked them, she smiled. The connection was more complete than joined fingers, and she couldn't understand it. This was support, a belief in her, and an encouragement she'd never expected to find.

“Odd that I'd have to come to a Ukrainian carpenter for a pep talk. Thanks.”

“You're welcome.” He looked back into her eyes. “Your headache's gone.”

Surprised, she touched her fingers to her temple. “Yes, yes it is.” In fact, she couldn't remember ever feeling more relaxed. “You could make a fortune with those hands.”

He grinned and slid them up her arms, pushing the sleeves of her jacket along so he could feel the bare flesh beneath. “It's only a matter of knowing what to do with them, and when.” And he knew exactly how he wanted to use those hands on her. Unfortunately, the timing was wrong.

“Yes, well…” It was happening again, those little licks of fire in the pit of her stomach, the trembling heat along her skin. “I really am grateful, for everything. I should be going.”

“You have time yet.” His fingers glided back down her arms to link with hers. “I haven't given you your present.”

“Present?” He was drawing her slowly to her feet. Now they were thigh to thigh, her eyes level with his mouth. It was curved and close, sending her system into overdrive.

He had only to lean down. Inches, bare inches. Imagining it nearly drove him crazy. Not an altogether unpleasant feeling, he discovered, this anticipation, this wondering. If she offered, and only when she offered, would he take.

“Don't you like presents,
milaya?

His voice was like hot cream, pouring richly over her. “I…the report,” she said, remembering. “Weren't you going to give me your report?”

His thumbs skimmed over her wrist and felt the erratic beat of
her pulse. It was tempting, very tempting. “I can send the report. I had something else in mind.”

“Something…” Her own mind quite simply shut down.

He laughed, so delighted with her he wanted to kiss her breathless. Instead he released her hands and walked away. She didn't move, not an inch as he strolled over to the shelves and tossed up the drop cloth. In a moment he was back, pressing the little Cinderella into her hand.

“I'd like you to have this.”

“Oh, but…” She tried, really tried to form a proper refusal. The words wouldn't come.

“You don't like?”

“No. I mean, yes, of course I like it, it's exquisite. But why?” Her fingers were already curving possessively around it when she lifted her eyes to his. “Why would you give it to me?”

“Because she reminds me of you. She's lovely, fragile, unsure of herself.”

The description had Sydney's pleasure dimming. “Most people would term her romantic.”

“I'm not most. Here, as she runs away, she doesn't believe enough.” He stroked a finger down the delicate folds of the ball gown. “She follows the rules, without question. It's midnight, and she was in the arms of her prince, but she breaks away and runs. Because that was the rule. And she is afraid, afraid to let him see beneath the illusion to the woman.”

“She had to leave. She'd promised. Besides, she'd have been humiliated to have been caught there in rags and bare feet.”

Tilting his head, Mikhail studied her. “Do you think he cared about her dress?”

“Well, no, I don't suppose it would have mattered to him.” Sydney let out an impatient breath as he grinned at her. It was ridiculous, standing here debating the psychology of a fairy-tale character. “In any case, it ended happily, and though I've nothing in common with Cinderella, the figurine's beautiful. I'll treasure it.”

“Good. Now, I'll walk you downstairs. You don't want to be late for dinner with your mother.”

“She won't be there until eight-thirty. She's always late.” Halfway through the door, Sydney stopped. “How did you know I was meeting my mother?”

“She told me, ah, two days ago. We had a drink uptown.”

Sydney turned completely around so that he was standing on one side of the threshold, she on the other. “You had drinks with my mother?” she asked, spacing each word carefully.

“Yes.” Lazily he leaned on the jamb. “Before you try to turn me into an iceberg, understand that I have no sexual interest in Margerite.”

“That's lovely. Just lovely.” If she hadn't already put the figurine into her purse, she might have thrown it in his face. “We agreed you'd leave my mother alone.”

“We agreed nothing,” he corrected. “And I don't bother your mother.” There was little to be gained by telling her that Margerite had called him three times before he'd given in and met her. “It was a friendly drink, and after it was done, I think Margerite understood we are unsuitable for anything but friendship. Particularly,” he said, holding up a finger to block her interruption, “since I am very sexually interested in her daughter.”

That stopped her words cold. She swallowed, struggled for composure and failed. “You are not, all you're interested in is scoring a few macho points.”

Something flickered in his eyes. “Would you like to come back inside so that I can show you exactly what I'm interested in?”

“No.” Before she could stop herself, she'd taken a retreating step. “But I would like you to have the decency not to play games with my mother.”

He wondered if Margerite would leap so quickly to her daughter's defense, or if Sydney would understand that her mother was only interested in a brief affair with a younger man—something he'd made very clear he wanted no part in.

“Since I would hate for your headache to come back after I went to the trouble to rid you of it, I will make myself as clear as I can. I have no intention of becoming romantically, physically or emotionally involved with your mother. Does that suit you?”

“It would if I could believe you.”

He didn't move, not a muscle, but she sensed he had cocked, like the hammer on a gun. His voice was low and deadly. “I don't lie.”

She nodded, cool as an ice slick. “Just stick to hammering nails, Mikhail. We'll get along fine. And I can find my own way down.” She didn't whirl away, but turned slowly and walked to the elevator. Though she didn't look back as she stepped inside, she was well aware that he watched her go.

 

At noon sharp, Sydney sat at the head of the long walnut table of the boardroom. Ten men and two women were ranged down either side with crystal tumblers at their elbows, pads and pens at the ready. Heavy brocade drapes were drawn back to reveal a wall of window, tinted to cut the glare of sunlight—had there been any. Instead there was a thick curtain of rain, gray as soot. She could just make out the silhouette of the Times Building. Occasionally a murmur of thunder sneaked in through the stone and glass.

The gloom suited her. Sydney felt exactly like the reckless child summoned to the principal's office.

She scanned the rows of faces, some of whom had belonged in this office, at this very table, since before she'd been born. Perhaps they would be the toughest to sway, those who thought of her as the little girl who had come to Hayward to bounce on Grandfather's knee.

Then there was Lloyd, halfway down the gleaming surface, his face so smug, so confident, she wanted to snarl. No, she realized as his gaze flicked to hers and held. She wanted to win.

“Ladies, gentlemen.” The moment the meeting was called to order she rose. “Before we begin discussion of the matter so much on our minds, I'd like to make a statement.”

“You've already made your statement to the press, Sydney,” Lloyd pointed out. “I believe everyone here is aware of your position.”

There was a rippling murmur, some agreement, some dissent. She let it fade before she spoke again. “Nonetheless, as the president, and the major stockholder of Hayward, I will have my say, then the meeting will open for discussion.”

Her throat froze as all eyes fixed on her. Some were patient, some indulgent, some speculative.

“I understand the board's unease with the amount of money allocated to the Soho project. Of Hayward's holdings, this building represents a relatively small annual income. However, this small income has been steady. Over the last ten years, this complex has needed—or I should say received—little or no maintenance. You know, of course, from the quarterly reports just how much this property has increased in value in this space of time. I believe, from a purely practical standpoint, that the money I allocated is insurance to protect our investment.”

She wanted to stop, to pick up her glass and drain it, but knew the gesture would make her seem as nervous as she was.

“In addition, I believe Hayward has a moral, an ethical and a legal obligation to insure that our tenants receive safe and decent housing.”

“That property could have been made safe and decent for half of the money budgeted,” Lloyd put in.

Sydney barely glanced at him. “You're quite right. I believe my grandfather wanted more than the minimum required for Hayward. He wanted it to be the best, the finest. I know I do. I won't stand here and quote you figures. They're in your folders and can be discussed at length in a few moments. Yes, the budget for the Soho project is high, and so are Hayward standards.”

“Sydney.” Howard Keller, one of her grandfather's oldest associates spoke gently. “None of us here doubt your motives or your enthusiasm. Your judgment, however, in this, and in the Wolburg matter, is something we must consider. The publicity over the past few days has been extremely detrimental. Hayward stock is down a full three percent. That's in addition to the drop we suffered when you took your position as head of the company. Our stockholders are, understandably, concerned.”

“The Wolburg matter,” Sydney said with steel in her voice, “is an eighty-year-old woman with a fractured hip. She fell because the floor in her kitchen, a floor we neglected to replace, was unsafe.”

“It's precisely that kind of reckless statement that will open Hayward up to a major lawsuit,” Lloyd put in. He kept his tone the quiet sound of calm reason. “Isn't it the function of insurance investigators and legal to come to a decision on this, after a careful, thoughtful overview of the situation? We can't run our company on emotion and impulse. Miss Hayward's heart might have been touched
by the Wolburg matter, but there are procedures, channels to be used. Now that the press has jumped on this—”

“Yes,” she broke in. “It's very interesting how quickly the press learned about the accident. It's hard to believe that only days after an unknown, unimportant old lady falls in her downtown apartment, the press is slapping Hayward in the headlines.”

“I would imagine she called them herself,” Lloyd said.

Her smile was icy. “Would you?”

“I don't think the issue is how the press got wind of this,” Mavis Trelane commented. “The point is they did, and the resulting publicity has been shaded heavily against us, putting Hayward in a very vulnerable position. The stockholders want a solution quickly.”

“Does anyone here believe Hayward is not culpable for Mrs. Wolburg's injuries?”

“It's not what we believe,” Mavis corrected. “And none of us could make a decision on that until a full investigation into the incident. What is relevant is how such matters are handled.”

She frowned when a knock interrupted her.

“I'm sorry,” Sydney said, and moved away from the table to walk stiffly to the door. “Janine, I explained we weren't to be interrupted.”

“Yes, ma'am.” The secretary, who had thrown her loyalty to Sydney five minutes after hearing the story, kept her voice low. “This is important. I just got a call from a friend of mine. He works on Channel 6. Mrs. Wolburg's going to make a statement on the Noon News. Any minute now.”

BOOK: Luring a Lady
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