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Authors: Lisa Plumley

BOOK: So Irresistible
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Despite everything, she was impressed with his aura of get-it-done competence. She needed that around Campania. A lot.
Besides, she and Shane were so alike, in so many ways.
What could possibly go wrong while they worked together?
“So.” Shane sounded sure and sexy. “Where do I start?”
Startled out of her contemplations, Gabriella caught herself staring longingly at his hand. All he was doing was gripping a mop handle. For Pete’s sake! What was wrong with her?
“You start in the same place I did,” she told Shane with staunch resolve, hoping she wasn’t making a huge mistake. “At the bottom, learning from the ground up, one day at a time.”
“Right.” Patiently, Shane waited. “In practical terms?”
“You start in the break room,” Gabriella clarified, catching herself smiling as she did so. “Changing out of your civvies and into some whites. After that? Mopping. So get busy.”
Chapter Seven
It turned out that Shane didn’t like being bossed around by Gabby at work nearly as much as he liked it at home.
For one thing, her philosophies about rules, the chain of command, and tradition seriously grated on him. Hearing Gabby talk about rules made him automatically want to break a few. Knowing there was a chain of command begged him to circumvent it. Being confronted with her steadfast adherence to tradition only reminded Shane that that outdated, overvalued concept was destined to be exploited by his father’s company to sell instant “faux-thentic” pizzerias.
On top of all that, he was mashed up in close quarters with his newfound dream girl, taking
non
erotic orders from her.
This wasn’t what he’d expected. Short of last night—which had been purposely footloose—Shane
always
got what he expected.
After a punishing day at Campania, Shane banged into his apartment, threw down the notebook he’d filched, then groaned.
“Look what the cat dragged in.” Startled out of the work she’d been doing arranging fake mail on his peninsula—all the better to create a sham sense of authenticity—Lizzy glanced up. “You look like hell. Tough day at work, honey?”
Grumpily, Shane squinted at her. “Why do you have one hand behind your back?”
“Because I’m hiding something from you.”
“Be serious. I don’t have the patience for games.”
“I am being serious.” Contravening her words, Lizzy showed him her hands, both of which were empty. “Want a drink?”
Wearing a vivid yellow dress, tights, and boots, she strode to the lacquered antique liquor cabinet near his black marble fireplace. She was wearing her glasses today. Those horn-rims made her look like a studious, hot-to-trot librarian. Only her punk-rock layered haircut ruined the illusion, but even that was partly covered with a knit beanie. Taken aback, Shane frowned.
“You’ve gone native, all of a sudden. The hat, the glasses, the dress—all of it screams cute Portland indie girl.” He gave his assistant a don’t-mess-with-me look. “What are you up to?”
“The usual.” She opened the cabinet and took out two cut-crystal glasses. “I stocked this today. Vodka or whiskey?”
“You know I don’t drink whiskey.” His adoptive father had ruined its flavor for him, shortly after his toast “to Shane’s new life.” “You also know I’m familiar with your past. You could have pocketed whatever you were hiding without my seeing.”
Lizzy waved away his insinuation. “Bygone days. I’ve moved on since then.” She poured a whiskey for herself, then tilted the vodka bottle toward him. “Looks like a two-shot day for you. I’ll have you fixed up in a jiffy.”
She did. A minute later, Lizzy strolled toward him, gave him his usual expensive vodka, then clinked glasses. “Cheers.”
Despite his suspicions, Shane relaxed a fraction. He liked it when Lizzy looked after him. He also knew that she knew that he liked it. He still wanted to know what she was hiding.
“You look like a burnout with bad fashion sense.” She eyed him. “Also, you smell like pizza. Did you bring any home?”
Hopefully, she looked at the things he’d brought. None of them were a tasty tomato-basil pie. She made an unhappy face.
“No. I see that all you brought was a notebook. Boo.”
“It’s full of dough formulas.” He’d lifted it while Gabby’s back was turned. Longtime force of habit had made him do it, but Shane still felt like shit about it. “It’s all I got today.”
“Well, you should go take a shower. Your eau de pizzeria is making me mad hungry.” A curious look. “How’s the job going?”
“How do you think it’s going? I had to improvise.” Newly agitated, Shane put down his drink with a clatter. He paced. “I had to make up a whole new playbook off the top of my head. I was on the hop from the moment I arrived at Campania.”
He’d been desperate for a cigarette, too. That was . . . telling.
“Hmm. Maybe you should have studied your dossier harder.”
“Maybe
you
should have told me that you situated my apartment right next door to a restaurant-industry hangout!”
Because of the coincidence involved in their two fluky meetings, Gabby (rightly) hadn’t trusted him today. Not at first. Frankly, Shane would have thought less of her if she had.
It’s just that this is a huge coincidence! Seeing each other today after running into each other last night

At a brewpub frequented by restaurant-industry types
, Shane had guessed in the most reasonable tone he could muster . . . and Gabby had bought it, confirming his story without a blink.
Shane hadn’t been sure the brewpub was a foodservice haunt when he’d thrown out that justification. But he’d needed a plausible explanation for their meeting, and he’d gambled hard when providing that one. He was lucky Gabby had taken the bait.
Alibis were always better when the most doubtful person involved originated them. By not going overboard with excuses, Shane had led Gabby to the explanation he wanted her to believe . . . and the rest of his story had taken root from there.
He’d been helped along by her fake name, too. It was credible that Gabby Vivaldi was not Gabriella Grimani. But Shane knew he couldn’t afford another coincidence. It couldn’t happen.
“A hangout down the street?” Lizzy asked. “Which one?”
“The brewpub.” Shane named it. “It was crawling with all the people I needed to be undercover with, starting today.”
“So? That sounds convenient. You got an early start.”
“Right. Except I
wasn’t
looking for an early start.”
“What were you looking for?”
Affection. Laughter. Sex. Sentimentality. Smiles.
Gabby
. Shane shoved away the sappy thoughts that threatened to overwhelm him all over again. “Your poor planning and idiotic location spotting put the whole job at risk.”
Lizzy’s expression hardened. “Hey. Easier is better. My job is to make things run smoothly for you. That’s what I did.”
At that, Shane gave a bitter chuckle. “It
wasn’t
easier.”
“Well, maybe you don’t have a knack for real work.” Carelessly, his assistant gestured at his workaday getup of a worn T-shirt and work pants. “You
are
a trust-fund kid.”
Shane’s mood darkened. “Don’t push me. Not tonight.”
In the silence that fell, Lizzy studied him.
Then, “Maybe I’m pushing you on purpose.”
“That would be stupid.”
With confounding certainty, Lizzy downed the rest of her whiskey. “I’m not stupid. I just think you need to confront your demons, that’s all. And I
didn’t
blow this job. I’m the proximity and logistics girl. I did what I was supposed to do. You’re close to your target. This apartment is
perfect
.”
“This job is a fucking mess.” He strode onward.
“Look, recon is your responsibility,” Lizzy pointed out in a practical tone. “You should have done due diligence.”
Annoyed that she was right—that he’d been too distracted by feeling
good
in Bridgetown to do a proper job of investigating the things he needed to—Shane tossed her an irked glance.
“I read the dossier.”
Briefly
. “It was outdated. Full of bad intel. I met everyone at Campania today. They weren’t the people I read about. They didn’t behave . . . predictably, either.”
Instead, Gabby’s crew had been weird. Idiosyncratic. Hostile to the new guy and—to his surprise—their boss, too.
Shane was going to have to do something about that. For Gabby. He didn’t like seeing her struggle unnecessarily.
“If you wanted predictability, you should have orchestrated it.” Lizzy’s levelheaded tone suggested that, to her, reality was malleable. “Didn’t you put a couple of ‘ringers’ in place?”
Shane didn’t want to answer that. His methods were private. Even—especially—when they involved implanting people he
knew
he could trust behind the scenes on the fixes he was doing.
It was always helpful to have an inside advantage.
“Come on,” Lizzy coaxed good-naturedly. With her glasses, she seemed especially clever—and persistent. “I wasn’t born yesterday. I know how you work. I know how wide a network you’ve built. It’s full of miscreants like yourself. If you
hadn’t
put in a ringer or two, I’d have been concerned about you.”
“Don’t be. I can take care of myself. I always have.”
Her warmhearted look surprised him. “Someday, maybe you won’t have to. Maybe someone else will take care of you.”
Her words put Lizzy’s recent caretaking in a whole new light. Then there was her seductive attire, her flirty tone.... Suspiciously, Shane frowned. “Are you making a move on me?”
Her laughter could have blown off the roof. It was, in a word, insulting. “It’s not an outrageous idea,” he grumbled.
“You’re right.” His assistant sobered long enough to throw him a nod. “It’s not. It’s just . . . geez, Shane. You’re like my brother. The last thing I want is to knock boots with you.”
Full of relief, Shane agreed. “Then why all the lovey-dovey talk? Let’s face it—you’re about as interested in sentimentality as I am.” Which, until recently, had meant
not
interested.
“I know what you’ve been up to, that’s why. I saw the state of this place when I got here.” Lizzy poured herself another drink. Shane could have sworn that she stealthily stashed something in the liquor cabinet while she was at it. Hmm . . . “If you want to hide your romantic liaisons, boss,” she went on, “you’ll have to start by making your bed in the morning.”
In a flash, Shane remembered the rumpled state of his bed linens. The overall clothing-strewn ambiance of his new apartment. The sights and sounds and smells of Gabby, moving against him, whispering racy suggestions, kissing him senseless . . .
Everything looked spotless now, though.
“I have a housekeeper.” With renewed guardedness, Shane regarded Lizzy. She stood with her back to him, admiring the view of the city below. “You shouldn’t have seen any of that.”
“You shouldn’t have
done
any of that,” his assistant admonished, turning away from the sparkling city lights. “I understand needing to blow off steam before a job, but—” Lizzy stopped abruptly as she caught a look at his face. Then she continued, “But this was
more
than that, wasn’t it?”
Shane drained his vodka. “I don’t know what you mean.”
“Right. I would have believed that two days ago.” Another uncomfortably shrewd look. “But tonight? Not a chance in hell.”
“You’re fishing. It won’t work.”
“It’s already worked.” A tone of awe worked its way into Lizzy’s voice. “You’re . . .
different
tonight. What happened?”
I remembered Gabby . . . and everything we meant together
.
“I already told you. You set me up for a fiasco with this location. It’s too close to the action. I can’t relax.”
She watched him deliberately fidget. Then she scoffed.
“You
never
relax. There’s more to this.”
“The dossier.” Irately, Shane waved his arm toward it. “It’s no damn wonder I was in over my head today. That thing is so full of bad intel, it’s worse than a joke. It’s like—”
At the same time, an unwanted revelation struck him and Lizzy alike. His assistant’s eyes went wide behind her specs.
“It’s like the previous fixer set you up to fail!” she breathed, voicing one of the most obvious explanations.
“Or the previous fixer is still on the job,” Shane said, coming up with the other. At the prospect, his mind reeled.
Yes, his father’s company had dismissed the other fixer. Yes, Gregory Waltham had called in Shane to finish the job. But fixing was freelance work. Its practitioners weren’t employees in the usual sense. They were guns for hire. They couldn’t
really
be fired. Not if they didn’t want to be. Technically, if they brought in the prize, they earned the bounty.
“I might have a competitor on this one,” he said.
The idea didn’t sit well with him. This job meant a lot to him. All of a sudden, so did Gabby. If an unknown rival fixer got the jump on him, Shane would lose control of the situation.
“Do you think Mr. Waltham kept on a backup?”
“It would be like him”—
not to trust me
—“to play it safe. He didn’t amass a fortune by working fast and loose with details.”
“But he
knows
you’re on it now!” Lizzy’s aggrieved tone owed itself to her devotion to him, Shane knew. “That bastard—”
“Is the same man he’s always been. The same man who used me to add a little ‘downtown’ flavor to his boring, country-club life. The same man who pitted me against my stepsiblings in everything from table tennis to college admissions.”
Wearily, he regarded his assistant. “It’s possible that my dad double-crossed me, is what I’m saying. He might have wanted insurance on this job. It’s an important one.”
Looking infuriated, Lizzy paced. Her eye-popping yellow dress swirled around her kick-ass boots and tights, moving with the same intensity she did. She flung her arm in the air.
“‘I’m counting on you, Shane!’” she mimicked in a dead-on imitation of Gregory Waltham. “‘I need your skills for this one.’” Lizzy whirled to face him. “‘I need
you
!’” Exasperated, she put her hands on her hips. “Doesn’t that mean
anything
?”
Shane had been hoping like hell it did. Now, he wasn’t so sure. But he couldn’t back down. He couldn’t give in.
This job was all that stood between him and happiness.
At least whatever happiness he could manage as a fixer.
“I appreciate your outrage. But we have to be deliberate, here. I took this fix, and I’m not quitting.” Shane folded his arms, frowning at his misleading damn dossier. “If I didn’t quit this morning, I sure as hell am not quitting tonight.”

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