Falling for Her Boss. Bonnie Winn K.
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Название: Falling for Her Boss

Автор: Bonnie Winn K.

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Современные любовные романы

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isbn: 9781474035019

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СКАЧАТЬ love pudding.” Tessa sought to make her voice sound bright as she reached for the tongs.

      He looked at the tiny serving she scooped out and frowned. “Not your favorite flavor?”

      “I want to save room for all the courses,” she improvised, knowing she wouldn’t finish even the small amount of food she would put on her plate.

      To her relief, Morgan didn’t pursue it, instead turning to his daughter. “Extra olives?”

      “Yes, please.”

      He carefully plucked a generous helping of black olives from the bowl along with a portion of the greens and tomatoes. Tessa guessed Dorothy had loaded the salad with Poppy’s favorites.

      She wasn’t sure how or why, but Morgan’s presence had changed the entire dynamic of their little gathering. Poppy was aglow, her connection to Morgan deep and visible. Alvin and Dorothy seemed more content somehow. And she...she wasn’t sure what she was. It was no longer easy and light. Tessa realized she was being silly, that she had eaten more business lunches with employers than she could count. No need to be nervous.

      “Daddy, you promised to take me to ride Cornflake,” Poppy pleaded.

      Morgan paused, his fork midair. “Today?”

      The child’s head bobbed up and down as though attached to a string.

      Tessa was tempted to offer to cover for him for the afternoon if he needed the time with his daughter, but she wasn’t sure how the gesture would be taken. And, in truth, she didn’t know enough about Harper Petroleum to cover for him.

      Morgan glanced her way. “Cornflake is Poppy’s pony.”

      “Ah,” she replied, picturing the cute child on an equally cute pony.

      “All work and no play,” Dorothy mused, passing the platter of fish.

      The forces had gathered. Graciously, Morgan bowed to them. “After lunch. That doesn’t mean we skip the fish, either.”

      Poppy’s face crinkled, her plan apparently quashed.

      Tessa couldn’t suppress her own smile as she imagined Poppy bolting her pudding, then tearing upstairs to change into riding gear.

      Morgan caught her eye, apparently interpreting her smile. “Experience,” he explained succinctly.

      Poppy practically danced in her chair as she gobbled down her lunch. Tessa wondered if their outings were that rare or if she was just excited. A glance that morning at the company’s structural chart had indicated that Morgan carried the bulk of the executive load. There wasn’t a tier of vice presidents to allocate the work to. Despite having help at home, he was a single parent. One she guessed spent a great deal of time working if what she’d seen so far was any indication.

      In record time, Poppy finished her lunch. “May I be excused?” she asked breathlessly, already sliding off her chair.

      “Yes.”

      Grabbing her stuffed dog, the child ran from the room, her shoes clattering as she crossed the entry hall and reached the staircase.

      Morgan pulled out his cell phone, checked his missed calls, then sighed.

      “Anything I can do to help?” Tessa questioned, now that Poppy was gone.

      He shook his head. “Even if you’d been here long enough to know these people, they’re calls I have to deal with myself.”

      “Don’t you have another executive who can handle some of your duties?” she questioned, hoping she wasn’t crossing a line.

      “No.”

      “And he should,” Dorothy chimed in, tipping the pitcher, refilling glasses.

      Morgan shot the housekeeper a look that might scorch the skin off some, but she remained unperturbed. He laid his napkin on the table. “I’m going to change. Tessa, I assume you noticed that the calls are rerouted today. When I get back from the ride, we can go over the state reports.”

      She nodded. “I hope you and Poppy have a good time.”

      His gaze was reflective. “No need for you to worry. Poppy’s my concern.”

      Tessa tried not to take offense. He was her boss, not a friend. He was right. His personal life wasn’t her concern. But she’d never worked in a situation quite like this one. An office in his home, her cottage on his property. It was a major change from working for a big corporation. Then again, everything in her life was changing. She’d never thought she would leave her hometown. Her marriage was supposed to last forever. And children...they were supposed to be part of her future. How would it be to have a lovely girl like Poppy to spend the afternoon with? One whose face lit with love when she spotted her parent?

      Tessa blindly turned her attention back to her plate, not seeing what it contained, not caring. There was no hint of tears. When Karl had tossed her away, she’d cried until all her tears were gone. Instead, there was emptiness, a great cavern nothing would ever fill. It was only in the dark of night, when she should be sleeping, that the tears dampened her pillow, refusing to remain inside.

      Morgan spoke quietly with Dorothy and Alvin, their voices filling in the silence Tessa isolated herself in. She had accepted that her life had changed, had embraced the finality of moving away from Karl. But in her plans for building a new life for herself, she hadn’t counted on missing one essential factor: hope in the future. Because from where she sat, that seemed unbearably bleak.

      * * *

      Morgan watched Poppy skip toward the house, her short legs lifting in the early-evening dusk. He had planned to keep the outing short, but Poppy had been so taken with Cornflake that they’d extended the ride. She even elicited a promise from him that he would take her to ride Cornflake every week.

      Dorothy had been nagging him to spend more time with Poppy. So when she pleaded for ice cream he gave in. One delicious but messy cone later, she had insisted that she was still hungry. So, he’d caved and they ate dinner at the café. Poppy loved going out. Anywhere, anytime. His parents had catered to her, taking her with them constantly. He didn’t have that luxury. Too many employees were counting on him to keep Harper solvent, to make sure their jobs were safe.

      Cutting through the side lawn, he paused, glancing ahead. Tessa walked slowly away from her cottage. He wondered where she was headed. His property line extended a good distance. His great-grandparents had purchased the property as acreage that amounted to four large city lots. One of the cottages was their original home before the big house had been built. His great-grandfather had been a pipeline gauger, then an oil lease hound, taking a small investment and making it grow. The generations that followed kept building the business. During those years, a larger house had been needed to entertain clients.

      And the cottages were handy, he thought, watching Tessa through the gauzy twilight. Her hair was definitely long. No longer neatly pinned up, the dark strands tumbled past her shoulders. She had changed from her stylish suit to a long cottony-looking dress. Aquamarine, he decided, squinting in the dimming light. The color of her eyes, he remembered. Funny the details that stuck out in his memory.

      Tessa turned just then as though СКАЧАТЬ