Momentary Marriage (3 page)

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Authors: Carol Rose

BOOK: Momentary Marriage
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“Kels,” Doug said to her quietly as his boss made some notes for changes in the ads. “What time shall I pick you up for the awards dinner tomorrow night?”

“What?” She sat bolt up-right in her chair. Oh, heavens, she’d forgotten!

“The dinner,” Doug reminded her playfully, “where they give out awards for advertising.”

“Uh….” She scrambled furiously trying to think what to say. Damn her, she
had
assumed Doug would take her, just as Amy said. And he’d just as easily assumed the same. Guilt clutched at her. She had to do something about this, had to find a healthy balance with Doug and give him room to have a life of his own.

Doug frowned. “You’re not going with James, are you?”

“No!” Kelsey blurted out, last night’s torture still fresh in her memory. It took about half a second of watching Doug’s expression clear, before she realized he’d offered her the perfect out. And she’d blown it.

“Well, then…,” Doug said.

“I have a date with…someone else,” she declared in a panic.

“Who?” The faint frown was back on his brow.

“You don’t know him,” she said, quickly. “Listen, you don’t always need to worry about me. Take a date of your own. Someone you enjoy.”

“I always enjoy you,” Doug said, his voice low and soft.

Kelsey winced. How could she have been so selfish all these years, so glad to have a constant, steady friend in her life that she’d missed seeing what was right under her nose?

Doug had always been there when precious few people had. For some women, that might be reason enough to marry the guy. But Kelsey looked up at his earnest, sweet face and knew she could never do that to him. He deserved a woman who loved him to distraction, a woman who'd at least give him four or five years of wedded bliss if not a chance at that lottery love.

Not knowing what to say, Kelsey turned quickly to where Jared sat, a faintly satirical look on his face as he penciled notes on the copy. “So, any more changes?”

“I think I’ve got it all,” Jared said, handing her the pad.

“The text changes, anyway. I’d still like us to go over the photo layouts.”

“Of course,” Kelsey took the pad.

“Doug,” Jared said. “Why don’t you run those changes down to J.T. while Kelsey and I work on the rest of it. If J.T. has any questions, you’re more qualified to answer them.”

“Thanks, Jared.” Doug took the pad, a flush of pleasure on his face. “See you later, Kelsey. Just call me if your date has a problem or something comes up.”

Kelsey watched him go, a sinking feeling in her stomach. It didn’t matter to Doug that she had a date with someone else for the awards banquet, she realized. How many boyfriends had he waited through? Doug was made of tougher stuff. She couldn’t help but be impressed by his commitment to his ideal, even though she was sadly aware that his devotion was sorely misplaced.

Somehow, she had to convince him that she wasn’t the woman for him…and she had to do it before her sister moved to London.

*
**

She thought she was so tough. Jared glanced up from the proofs he’d been studying, his gaze lingering on Kelsey as she made a phone call.

He’d gone to get himself a cup of coffee and returned to her office to find her absorbed in a series of phone calls, her back turned to the door.

He’d rarely met a more attractive, fascinating woman, all hip-girl on the outside, soft and sweet somewhere inside. She didn’t willingly show that more vulnerable side, but Jared guessed it was there. He’d learned to trust his instincts through the years of building Barrett, Inc. from a small hotel chain to one of the more profitable luxury resort enterprises in the country. Business was all about being able to read the other guy…or girl.

“That’s okay, Raphael,” Kelsey murmured, the sweep of her dark, smooth hair blocking her expression. “I know it’s late notice. Yes, of course. Sometime soon.”

She hung up the phone with a muttered, “Damn.”

Jared didn’t lie to himself, Kelsey was a big part of the reason he’d decided to stay actively involved in the ad campaign for The Meriton’s expansion. The New York market still had room for one more haven for the very rich, and if he found a fascinating woman while attending to business, so much the better.

She picked up the receiver, flipping through a small address book and dialed again. Turned away from the door, she was clearly unaware that he’d stepped back into her office.

His instincts went on full alert when she was near. He was the last man to fall in love impulsively, but he trusted his gut and he knew Kelsey, with her intelligence and wry outlook, had significant possibilities.

He wanted a wife. A woman to have children with, to build a solid foundation for the family he envisioned. Kelsey’s caution and her veneer of hip, city girl did more than peak his interest. She challenged him, her cool attitude getting his hunting blood up and racing through his veins. The woman was spunky, meeting his teasing with quick retorts. He liked that in her, the willingness to stand up for herself.

Doug had once let slip that Kelsey and her sister’s family background was rocky and she was, therefore, wary of commitment. According to Doug, Kelsey didn’t think love lasted.

She might doubt marriages could last a lifetime, but that was all Jared would settle for, when he did marry again. For the six months of their acquaintance, he’d been pondering the woman, considering the possibilities she offered him, more and more convinced they had a strong attraction. Just those few moments of holding her in his arms when their elevator dropped had confirmed the chemistry. But getting her to commit would call for careful handling.

He’d grown up in a happy family with parents who were married for a lifetime. Having already failed once at marriage due to his own youthful carelessness, he was determined not to screw up again.

So he’d waited and watched these last few months, making sure of his own intentions, learning his opponent’s strengths and weaknesses and waiting for the right moment to strike. Maybe Kelsey wasn’t the woman he thought she was, but every indicator so far pointed to her generosity and basic sweetness. Her glossy veneer was just a shield to keep her from getting hurt, he’d realized. She was a princess in need of a prince.

Of course, she didn’t see herself that way.

Jared glanced over the ad layout, his ears acutely attuned to Kelsey’s murmured conversation. He’d slipped into her office quietly, wanting to catch her off-guard.

“…an awards banquet. It’s tomorrow night. Short notice, I know….” She fiddled with an editing pencil, tapping it against her desk.

Watching her, Jared wondered what she was up to. Ever since he’d come back into the room, she’d been busily trying to find a date for the banquet she’d claimed she already had a date for.

He knew she often went out with Doug, so why was this event different? Perhaps, his stirring the pot with Amy was having an effect, as he’d hoped.

Kelsey’s attitude toward commitment intrigued him. What scared her so much about letting a man make her promises? Anything but a wallflower, she shook hands with a firm grasp and met his gaze openly, a faint impudence in her bearing.

Working his way into Kelsey’s arms and life might call for a little maneuvering, Jared knew, welcoming the game.

“No, no, Michael,” Kelsey laughed. “You can’t ask your fiancée if we can go out ‘one last time.’ But I appreciate the offer and wish you two the best of luck. Okay. Bye.”

Still chuckling, she hung up the phone.

Jared shuffled the ad layouts.

Kelsey glanced over her shoulder. “Oh, I didn’t realize you were there.”

“Don’t worry about me,” he replied easily. “I just want to double check the ad. Go ahead with whatever you’re doing.”

She turned slowly back to her address book, reluctant, he guessed, to make personal phone calls in front of a client. Then again, maybe she didn’t want him to hear her angling for a date.

“Go on,” Jared urged her.

“Okay.” Kelsey dialed again. “Is Stan Samuel in? Stan! How are you? Oh, really.”

Jared’s amusement and interest grew as he listened to her work her way through the last part of the alphabet. No doubt about it, if she lived in a smaller town, she’d have exhausted the male population.

A less confident man might have felt intimidated. Jared felt challenged. She intrigued the hell out of him.

“Ron Tompkins…. No, I understand.”

“David Vanagas?”

“No! Bill, if the Wallace family is having a family reunion and your dying grandmother will be there, you have to go.”

“Sam Yancy. Tell me you’re not busy tomorrow night. Not one, but two dates?” Kelsey raised her hand in protest. “No, don’t cancel them for me. Please.”

What Jared couldn’t understand was the fact that she kept coming up empty. A few times, she’d muttered a name to herself and then shook her head decisively. She had standards, apparently, and some of the guys in her book didn’t measure up. Two names even merited her searching for an eraser.

“Is Tom Zmikis there?” Kelsey asked wearily, closing her address book. “Out of town…South Africa for three months? Okay, thanks.”

“No luck?” Jared asked when she put the receiver down.

“No,” Kelsey sighed, leaning back in her chair with a rueful smile on her face. “Ten million people in the naked city and I can’t find a date for tomorrow night.”

“If you didn’t really have a date, why did you lie about it to Doug?” Jared asked, mild curiosity in his voice.

“Because Doug would have insisted on taking me if he knew I didn’t have an escort lined up and my sister doesn’t like being left home alone while the guy she’s in love with runs me around.”

Bingo.
Bless Amy. He suppressed a smile.

“I didn’t know Doug and your sister were dating,” Jared said, bending the truth.

Kelsey’s face turned sardonic. "That’s part of the problem. Amy’s really interested in him, but Doug’s not getting a clue.”

“Really. And all this time I thought Doug had a crush on you,” Jared said, letting amusement glimmer in his tone.

A little sympathy and some fresh mocha roast was all it had taken to get the low down from Amy on the situation between Kelsey, her sister and Doug.

An expression he couldn’t interpret flashed across Kelsey’s face. A mixture of sadness and guilt?

“I’ve always thought he had good taste,” Jared observed.

Kelsey smiled wryly. “Thank you.”

“You’re certainly my pick to ride elevators with.”

She laughed, her blue eyes turning thoughtful as she looked across the desk at him. Did he see speculation suddenly dawning? Would the woman put aside the cautiously professional tone of their interaction and actually ask him out?

“The initial campaign we did for The Meriton is up for an award tomorrow, isn't it?” she asked.

“In three different categories, I believe,” he acknowledged, his instincts telling him where she was heading. She knew he was single.

Her blue pencil, clasped in slender fingers, started tapping on the desk again. “I suppose…you have a date for the banquet.”

Bingo again.
Score another point for instinct.

“Is that the question of a desperate woman?” he asked with a grin, gambler enough to push the odds.

Kelsey’s smile broadened. “Yes, actually.”

“Honesty in a beautiful woman. Amazing,” he murmured. “I’ll return the favor by acknowledging that I’d planned on going to the banquet stag.”

“Oh,” she said, hesitating only a moment. “Well, unless you’re going there to pick up women, maybe we could go together, for Doug's sake.”

“I’d love to escort you,” Jared said with amused satisfaction. “For Doug's sake.”

*
**

As soon as she left the elevator later that day, heading for the front door, Kelsey saw the downpour and groaned.

Summer thunder bursts in New York City invariably meant you couldn’t find a cab. Kelsey had long suspected the cabbies gleefully hid out somewhere just to remind people how dependent they were in a city where few people actually drove their own cars to work.

The nearest subway entrance was a block away and she had a supper date with a friend. No doubt, she’d arrive looking like a drowned rat.

Naturally, a crowd had taken shelter under the awning just outside the door.

Kelsey pushed the door open, the damp, hot smell of rain engulfing her.

“Excuse me,” she murmured, trying to wend her way through the group under the awning.

On the street before her, cabs hurtled past in a steady rush, all of them occupied.

“Lovely afternoon.”

Kelsey whipped around, instantly recognizing the voice so close to her ear. “Jared!”

“None other.” Standing immediately next to her beneath the crowded awning, he squinted out at the rain. “I know it’s a pain, but I happen to enjoy rain in the city.”

She didn’t try to disguise her disgust. “Anyone who can afford a limo can enjoy rain in the city.”

Jared laughed, the soft sound barely audible above the downpour. “I can afford a limo, but I don’t happen to use one often.”

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