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More Than A Vow: Vows of Revenge / After Their Vows / Vows Made in Secret. Michelle ReidЧитать онлайн книгу.

More Than A Vow: Vows of Revenge / After Their Vows / Vows Made in Secret - Michelle Reid


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me what you’re thinking. He heard female voices complain from the past. You go through the motions, but I don’t feel like you really care.

      He cared. Cautiously. When it came to Melodie, he cared quite a bit. She was too sweet a person to deserve the battering of the Gautier gauntlet. He wanted to protect her from them, and he didn’t care for this new, overbearing boss of hers one bit, either. He should have given her his number, told her to call anytime. For any reason.

      Not bothering to overthink it, he dialed her number to tell her exactly that.

      A male voice answered.

      “Sadler?” Roman guessed, even though it didn’t sound like him.

      “This is his aide. Who’s calling?”

      “I’m looking for Melodie. It’s Roman Killian.”

      A muffled conversation, then a voice he recognized. “Killian,” Sadler said. “Melodie is no longer with us.”

      The worst emotion, the one she seemed to bring out in him most and which weighed the heaviest—guilt—descended on him. “You fired her,” he deduced instantly. “For spending the night with me.”

      “I need my employees to be accessible at all times,” Sadler said.

      “But you told her to be nice to me,” Roman said with false conciliation. The man was lucky the sounds of traffic and car doors were coming through behind him, or Roman would be hunting him down in this hotel right now.

      “Sluts become a liability,” Sadler said. “You know that.”

      Roman closed his eyes, fighting the fire of rage that roared alive in him. Too intense. It had the power to murder. “I think you fired her because she wasn’t nice to you. You’re going to be very sorry you were not nicer to her.

      Roman ended the call and strode out of his room, straight to Melodie’s.

      She didn’t answer his knock, so he took the stairs down to the registration desk, asking them to ring her room.

      “She’s checked out, sir.”

      He bit back cursing aloud, his fist so tight on the marble desktop he could have shattered the stone with a single pound. She was probably in a taxi heading to the airport and back to Virginia—

      Wait. A woman sat in the lobby restaurant wearing a fitted business suit. She had her shiny brown-gold hair pulled into a clip at her nape. Coffee steamed next to the tablet she had propped before her.

      She was going to splash that coffee into his face, he thought, but went straight over anyway.

      * * *

      Roman threw his disheveled form into the chair opposite her. He’d showered with her, still smelled faintly of hotel soap, but he hadn’t bothered shaving and, Lord, he was sexy with that stubble and hair that had dried uncombed. His shirt was still a deep, open V down his chest, the sleeves rolled back to his elbows. He was every woman’s walking fantasy.

      And he wore the most thunderous expression.

      “Really?” he demanded. “I got you fired again. Really.”

      “It’s like a gift, isn’t it?” she said, thinking she ought to be more furious, but the relief was too profound. “Trenton phoned you to tell you? God, that’s just like him. He waited until I was down here, you know. So he could do it in front of everyone. He didn’t expect me to call him a hypocrite. Nice and loud, too. They all do it. I guarantee you all the other aides were picking up women in the bar while I was working the ballroom with him last night, but just because I’m a woman, I’m a slut. Men are such pigs.”

      As Roman turned his face away, his expression falling into weary lines, she found herself feeling sorry for him.

      “Present company excluded, of course,” she said.

      He shook his head as if he couldn’t believe what had happened. “I didn’t mean to do this.”

      “You didn’t,” she said wearily. She was the one who had stayed in the penthouse with him, putting her physical gratification above her job, but she didn’t get a chance to say so. The waitress arrived with her breakfast special.

      “I’ll have one of those,” Roman said.

      “Take mine,” Melodie replied, snagging the fruit cup off the plate and nodding for the waitress to put the rest in front of Roman. “But he needs his own coffee.”

      He nodded agreement to the waitress, then looked at the plate of eggs and hash browns before him as if he couldn’t face it. “You’re giving me your breakfast? After I got you fired?”

      “I had a voucher, but this was all I really wanted.” She gently stirred the fresh berries into the yogurt beneath.

      “How are you this forgiving? Because I want to slash the guy’s tires. I want to slash my own,” he added with self-disgust.

      She shrugged. “I guess because I’d do it again,” she said, hearing the poignant rasp in her voice as she recalled their night together.

      “Would you?” He lowered his cutlery as he pinned her with a green stare as brilliant as the heart of a flame.

      “I meant...” Wow. This wasn’t going to be easy. He only had to look at her. Focusing on chasing a blueberry with the tip of her spoon, she said, “I mean that, given the chance, I wouldn’t have made a different decision last night. But the decision I made this morning still stands, Roman.”

      “Why?” he challenged immediately. “You don’t have a job to go back to.”

      “I’m aware,” she said tersely, glancing at the tablet that had gone black, but had conjured a handful of weak prospects a few seconds ago. “Rent is covered for next month, at least,” she muttered. “But everything else is going to be a challenge.”

      Paris was out of the question for the foreseeable future.

      “Melodie, you have to let me help you.”

      She shook her head. “I’ll manage. I’m just bummed about Paris. I feel as if I’m letting Mom down.” When her mother had refused treatment, had declined in such slow pain, the promise of Paris had been the only thing Melodie had been able to offer as comfort.

      He reached across to take her wrist, thumb caressing the back of her hand. “Let me take you.”

      “Roman...” She turned her hand so she was gripping his fingers. “I can’t.

      “You can. You just don’t want to.” He pulled his hand away, jaw thrust out belligerently. He took up his fork with an air of impatience.

      She acknowledged he was right with a jerk of her shoulder, wondering how he’d managed to make her feel guilty.

      They ate in silence, breaking it only to thank the waitress when she cleared their plates.

      Melodie took her last swallow of coffee, but struggled to get it down without choking as she realized this really was it. The end.

      “Will you do something for me?” he asked, not letting on what was going on behind his aloof expression. “Will you come up and let me show you something in my room?”

      “Etchings?” she guessed facetiously. “I really should get to the airport. I’ll be flying standby, so...”

      “Please.” He stood and shouldered her travel bag.

      “You can’t just tell me what it is?” She followed him to the elevator where she studied his enigmatic expression the whole way to the top floor. “You’re being very mysterious,” she said when he slid his key card into the reader.

      “I’m really not,” he said with a disparaging smirk, leaving her bag just inside the door. Moving to the bedroom, he jerked his chin at the bed.

      “What?”


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