Название: Turning the Good Girl Bad
Автор: Avril Tremayne
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Контркультура
Серия: Mills & Boon Modern Tempted
isbn: 9781472017857
isbn:
And him choofing off to Canada was none of her business. She wished he’d go back to Canada. She wished he’d relocate to Canada and email his work in. Because it was not ‘our’ resort. It was his resort. And she would do well to remember that. Sharp, clear distinction between work and personal. Because work wasn’t personal. Work was work.
And, now she thought of it, she was going to change that scene in Passion Flower. That scene with Alex and Jennifer working in the office over a Thai meal—which she would make a...a...a Chinese meal. In fact she would delete the whole scene. Because in reality that interlude had ended with a brusque ‘Thank you for your help’ and a drive away—and what was so romantic about that? What did she think she was doing, turning that into a ‘Jenny, do you know how long I’ve wanted you?’ moment, complete with a slow reel in and a soft kiss?
She was a freaking idiot!
And her damned book sucked.
‘Sucked’: word of the day.
Her eyes moved to her in-tray, where her dark secret was buried.
Uh-oh. Where her dark secret was not buried.
Because the manuscript was sitting brazenly on top.
A whoosh of panic had her reaching for the back of her chair to steady herself. Until she remembered that the report had been covering it and Max had taken the report. That was the only reason the book was sitting there exposed.
Nothing to panic over.
Until she reached out to grab the pages so she could stick them in her briefcase...and saw the page on top.
She distinctly remembered scoring a red mark on the page when Max had called her name.
But there was no red mark on the page.
Catherine’s heart stopped, then started pounding. She slid into her chair, boneless. Flicked through her in-tray again. Sat stock-still for one appalled moment.
No red mark anywhere.
So...if the report had been on top of the manuscript, that meant...
No—God, no. Max Rutherford had picked up a few pages of her book along with his report!
And Max had started reading that report as she was leaving the office.
Hot, then cold, then hot. Hyperventilation. Paper bag...she needed a paper bag. Brain not working. Brain dead.
Then adrenaline tore through her veins and her synapses fired—electrified by pure fear—and she latched on to two essential facts: one, if Max had read even one sentence of those pages he would have come screeching out already and, two, she had to get those pages back.
Get them back immediately. But without running into his office, waving her arms and looking like an insane asylum escapee.
Breathe. Breathe. Breathe.
Nope—there was nothing for it. It was physically impossible for her to walk calmly into Max’s office.
She was going in like an insane person.
Max sighed, unwilling to give up until he’d read every page of the report—even if he had yet to take in a single word.
His mind wasn’t on it. His mind wasn’t in the office at all. His mind was at lunch.
But he wasn’t going to acknowledge whose lunch his mind was at, or why it was there. Because he was a moron, and had done nothing right for two weeks, and nothing had felt right the whole time he’d been away, and enough was enough, and it was time to put his mind back where it should be.
So he just sat at his desk, flipping, skimming, flipping, skimming. Counting down pages until he found a word he could take in: ‘Conclusion’.
One rush of air later he found himself holding nothing.
The report had been whisked out of his hands so fast it took a few seconds for him to feel the sting of the paper cut that had just been inflicted in the web between his thumb and his index finger.
‘Ouch!’
He looked up.
Catherine. Looking horrified.
That was...weird.
Catherine North never looked anything but completely composed. At least she hadn’t until today.
But, then again, Catherine North had never worn figure-hugging black that emphasised every mind-numbingly delicious curve until today. And Catherine North had never let a glossy, finger-luring curl stray out of place until today. And Catherine North had never had the skin of her legs visible until today. And Catherine North—
Was definitely looking horrified.
‘Lunch date stand you up?’ he couldn’t resist asking, wondering if there was a more direct way he could ask her who she was having lunch with without making himself look more of a moron than he already was.
Eyes huge behind the lenses of her tortoiseshell-rimmed spectacles, Catherine shook her head.
She didn’t seem inclined to add anything, so Max asked, ‘Did you want that report for a particular reason?’
He watched, fascinated, as the tip of her tongue came out to scoot quickly across her bottom lip.
She had the sexiest bottom lip he’d ever seen.
‘No,’ she said, and the bottom lip pinched itself in, in its usual repressed fashion.
Still looked sexy, though.
Max sucked a drop of blood from his wound, waiting to hear what Catherine would add. But it seemed no more information was forthcoming. ‘Then do you think I could have it back?’ he asked politely.
‘It?’
‘The report.’
‘Of course,’ she said, looking down as she hived off some pages from the back and held the rest out to him. She turned quickly on her heel.
Before she could take a step, Max asked, ‘Don’t I get to look at those pages, too?’
She stopped. Her shoulders tightened. And then she shrugged and said over her shoulder, ‘Just some shredding you picked up by mistake with the report. I wanted to take care of it before I left for lunch.’
And then she was running out.
And Catherine North had never run anywhere in this office. Until today.
So... What was so special about today?
Max’s mouth turned down. In short—nothing.
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