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Her Deal with the Devil. Nicola MarshЧитать онлайн книгу.

Her Deal with the Devil - Nicola Marsh


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enjoy the contact too much.

      She settled for placing both palms on his chest and shoving—hard.

      ‘Can’t blame a guy for wanting to celebrate the most significant moment of his career.’

      The fact he was still using that boyish grin to try and disarm her a decade later made her want to knee him again.

      As for the flutter low in her belly? It was a reminder that she hadn’t eaten lunch and nothing to do with the insistent tug of attraction between them.

      An attraction torched to life by his kiss.

      Why did the most annoying guy on the planet also have to be the best kisser?

      It didn’t make any sense. She’d barely given him a second thought all these years—discounting the first few months after he’d left—yet all it took was one smooch—okay, one pretty scorching smooch—to resurrect how amazing he’d made her feel with his first kiss.

      She could kill him.

      Willing her pulse to stop pounding, she glared at him through narrowed eyes. ‘You do that once more and I’ll take Seaborns jewellery and walk.’

      He merely raised an eyebrow, not in the least intimidated by her bluff. ‘You need me as much as I need you, sweetheart.’ She gaped at his insolence and he laughed. ‘Come on, you know better than to con a con. I’m blunt. I say it as it is. You and me?’ He waved a hand between them. ‘We’re going to take Fashion Week by storm, so don’t let your predictable outrage over a little spur-of-the-moment celebratory kiss get in the way of a beautiful friendship.’

      Predictable outrage? She shook her head, unsure whether to applaud his honesty or reconsider that knee to the balls.

      She had to regain control of this situation—fast—and the way to do that was to focus on business.

      Not the naughty twinkle in his grey eyes.

      Not the smug smirk quirking his lips.

      Not the way he continued to stare at her mouth as if he was primed for a repeat performance.

      ‘What’s with the “most significant moment of your career” big talk?’

      For the first time since she’d entered his ultra-modern office he appeared a tad uncertain, tugging at the cuffs of his shirt.

      ‘I’ve been looking for an angle for Fashion Week—something to play to the company’s strengths.’

      ‘And?’

      His gaze raked over her but there was nothing overtly sexual about it. Maybe she’d imagined his hungry stare a moment ago. In fact he seemed to be sizing up her outfit and accessories in a purely professional manner.

      ‘When you first walked in here you made a statement.’ He tilted his head to one side, evaluating. ‘Class. Elegance. Timeless. Made me think of screen legends in the past.’

      A compliment from a guy who threw them out there like confetti. Who would have thought it?

      ‘Should I be flattered or concerned you just called me old?’

      The corners of his mouth quirked. ‘You don’t need to fish for compliments. You’re stunning and you know it.’

      Actually, she didn’t. The designer clothes, the jewellery, the make-up and hair were all part of her duties as spokesperson for Seaborns. Take away the fancy outer dressing and she was Sapphire Seaborn—the responsible one, the devoted one, the sensible one. She didn’t do outrageous things. She dated suitable men and socialised with a suitable crowd.

      Spending more than five minutes in the company of Patrick Fourde was decidedly unsuitable. Or, more to the point, it elicited decidedly unsuitable thoughts.

      He’d always had that effect on her. Been able to confuse and bamboozle and intrigue her with the barest hint of that lazy half-smile he had down pat.

      She might have been immune in the past, but having him in her face again—bolder, brazen, still bamboozling—unnerved her far more now than he ever had.

      ‘Get to the point.’

      He stalked around his desk and fired up his laptop, swivelling the screen to face her.

      ‘Bear with me a sec.’

      His fingers flew over the keyboard and, increasingly curious, she propped herself on the edge of his desk.

      The tip of his tongue protruded slightly as he concentrated on typing and her chest tightened in remembrance.

      He’d used to do the same thing when they studied together. She’d known when he’d stopped goofing off—which had been rarely, admittedly—and started taking their studying seriously by that tell, and it was as endearing now as back then.

      At the time, she’d done her best to give him the impression she couldn’t stand the sight of him. Had berated him constantly about slacking off and sketching instead of studying. Her chastisement had only served to stir him up further and he’d deliberately make fun of her work or call time out for a coffee.

      Interesting how his doodling had probably been a prelude to his career in fashion, an outlet for his creativity. And to see him now, CEO of a branch of a world-renowned fashion house, made her feel ashamed she’d given him such a hard time.

      Then again, considering the amount of time he’d spent poking fun at her study timetables and subject spreadsheets, her guilt quickly faded.

      Whatever he was doing now, it had captured his attention and given her an opportunity to study him. In his flawlessly fitted charcoal suit and open-necked black shirt, perched behind a glass-topped desk large enough to fit an entire classroom, with the skyline of Melbourne surrounding him with three hundred and sixty degrees of floor to ceiling windows fifty storeys high, he looked like the consummate businessman.

      A guy on top of the world, in total control and loving it. Who would have guessed the laid-back charmer had ambition?

      He’d never shared any of his plans with her—had never showed any interest in business beyond teasing her about taking such a manic interest in Seaborns.

      She’d been surprised when he’d absconded to Paris—had assumed it had been to live the high life on his family money.

      After that first kiss she’d reluctantly kept an eye on him, had followed him on the internet for six months, surprised by mentions of him doing an internship at Fourde Fashion headquarters.

      Pity those internet hits had also shown her the type of life she envied: parties and nightclub openings and theatre galas. The type of life she’d secretly craved but had been too focused on work, on proving herself, on seeking approval, to do anything about.

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