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Forbidden Desire (Maid for the Billionaire Prince)

Page 6

by Artemis Hunt


  I need this job.

  I really, really need this job.

  I sit on one of the plush leather seats across from the personal assistant’s desk. There’s no one behind this desk. However, the monitor hums with bright reproach and the desk is scattered with documents and folders as thick as my fist. A multicolored monogrammed Louis Vuitton tote bag sits on one side next to a bright vermillion thermos flask.

  Someone must be here, I reckon, even though I’m applying for her very job. I wonder if she’s resentful, or if she’s a temp.

  I have my portfolio in a file on my lap. There are neatly stacked magazines on the side table beside the row of seats, but I ignore them. My hands are damp, and I surreptitiously wipe them on my skirt, even though there’s no one around to see me. I keep imagining that there’s a hidden camera in one of the ceiling corners, and my potential employer has it trained on me to see how I would react in front of an empty desk.

  OK. So I’m a little paranoid.

  One of the double doors to the office of the Chief Executive Officer, Morton Enterprise Ltd. opens. A wan-looking woman with slightly disheveled red hair stomps out on her equally red high heels. She’s pretty in a supermodel anorexic kind of way, but her features are scrunched up and her nose is red as if she has a cold, or if she’s been crying.

  I sit up as she goes over to the desk and grabs the Louis Vuitton bag and flask. She eyes me vehemently.

  “It’s all right,” she says, her eyes flashing. “You can have the job, I don’t want it.”

  My jaw drops.

  She stalks out through the front door, but not before turning to give me an imperious stare. I can’t help but quail from the physical blow of her eyes.

  “Whatever he wants you to do, think hard and deeply about it before you say ‘yes’,” she snaps.

  With that, she pivots on her sharp heel and breezes out of the office’s waiting area. A gust of wind goes with her, and it is as if a tornado has left the building.

  If my hands were damp before this, they are practically dripping with sweat now. I get that she was the PA before this . . . but what happened? Should I even be here, applying for this job?

  Suddenly, I’m scared.

  I’ve come all the way for this after getting the heads up from my old college roommate, Lyla, who works as an exec down in Accounting . . . all the way down, down in the 42nd floor from this 75th floor ivory tower. I’m not even familiar with Chicago, having only been here once with my parents during my tenth grade summer. I don’t have a job, I don’t have a room, and I’m crashing in a cheap apartment somewhere in River North, the kind you rent by the week. So I’m basically bumming right now.

  Should I be going in? The redhead has left that one door to the forbidding CEO’s office open like an invitation.

  Step into my parlor, says the spider to the fly.

  I clutch my portfolio as I get up. I take a few tentative steps to the open door. There’s no one to usher me in, and I can choose to sit here in the waiting area like a dummy or seize my own job opportunity in my hands.

  Why are my hands so clammy and why is my pulse threatening to spill out of my throat?

  “Hello?” I call out in a nervous voice. There could be no one in there after all, and if I walk in, they might accuse me of trying to filch corporate secrets.

  A man’s voice replies, “If you’re the new PA, come right in. If you’re not, take a rain check and call me in the morning.”

  Uh. Right. I’m not sure which option I’m supposed to choose.

  I take a few more guarded steps to the doorway. I peer in.

  The CEO’s office is almost like an entire floor to itself. It strikes me that it is oval – the significance of which is not lost on me. Yes, I know the skyscraper we are in is one of those architectural marvels with curved walls, but still – to have an actual oval office. I wonder if it’s the architect’s idea or the boss’s.

  A large mahogany desk sits on one side and the walls are filled with rows and rows of dark bookshelves. There’s a painting that looks like a Rembrandt, but I’m not sure if it’s a real Rembrandt or if it’s a reprint. A sofa and two armchairs set in a blue-and-white striped design occupy another section.

  Did I mention the view? Ah well, it’s staggering. Downtown Chicago sprawls below with its tiny toy cars and bustling pedestrians. And beyond, Lake Michigan stretches as far as the horizon – far, far into Canada.

  The man with the deep, masculine voice is not sitting behind the desk. He’s coming out of what looks like an attached bathroom, and he is buttoning up his white shirt. I catch a glimpse of his chest – his pectorals are well-defined and broad and richly muscled, and his skin is creamy smooth, like a gym trainer’s.

  But I’m not prepared for the man who steps out.

  I take a step back, stunned.

  He is singularly the most attractive man I have ever laid eyes on. OK. That is an understatement. He is utterly, mesmerizingly, mind-blowingly, take-your-breath-away gorgeous. His eyes are richly hazel with green and gold flecks in them. These catch the sunlight filtering through the glass windows as if they were mirror themselves. His dark hair – the color of rich teak – is slightly disheveled, as if he’s just tumbled out of bed.

  And his face. Oh, his face. He could have been an actor or a New York model, and he would be a superstar of superstars. It’s as if the angels really put out the mold and taken a painstaking time to sculpture the most exquisite features possible on a man. I’ll put his age at around mid-thirties, because he already has some gravitas on his face – a world weariness and a slightly manic edge to his eyes.

  He looks unpredictable and volatile. A man who has earned his reputation as the hostile corporate takeover king of the last five years.

  Oh yes, I’ve done my homework.

  His father is the Chairman of the company, and his younger brothers are the COO and President respectively. All this would lend him an aura of invincibility, of old money and family power, but the family is shrouded in secrecy, as if they are organized crime dons rather than respectable businessmen. They are hardly seen at social functions and are rarely photographed. Not much else is known about them other than that they lead equally shrouded lives.

  He doesn’t wear a jacket and his pants sport a damp patch tellingly on his groin. His hazel eyes blaze at me.

  “Well, what are you staring at?” he says, the side of his mouth crinkled in amusement. “Haven’t you ever seen the aftermath of guy getting coffee splashed on him before?”

  Is that what happened? It’s funny the way he said it. Get coffee splashed on him. Does he mean it wasn’t accidental? You may forgive me if I’m a little dubious, because the whole scene with the redhead was a little suggestive.

  My instincts are all telling me to flee. I don’t really want this job. There are other jobs in this city and other cities.

  Christopher Morton is bad, bad news.

  But I’m transfixed somewhat. Like a bug drawn to a flame, I can sense his raw, magnetic power. He exudes pungent, primal sex – the sex of cavemen and hunters and Highlanders riding on the coastline.

  Now, I am not one to be drawn to bad boys. My parents are strictly religious and they brought me up to revere the institution of marriage and to preserve my virginity until then. I know. It’s archaic in this day and age. But I’m from a small town in the Bible belt, and I went to an all-girls’ Catholic school. Everyone thought like this, or at least pretended to think like this.

  “Well,” Christopher Morton says, “I take it you’re not a corporate spy. So what are you doing here?” He doesn’t take his eyes off me as he walks to his desk. He moves like a predator.

  “I-I’m here to apply for the job as the new PA,” I say, trying to suppress my rising panic.

  “Really?” He glances at an open diary. “She didn’t pen it in. Figures. Then again, she didn’t slot anything else for me either. So sit.” He gestures to one of the chairs in front of the desk.

  I’m goin
g to get my interview? Butterflies do kamikaze runs in my stomach.

  It’s just a job interview, Elizabeth Tyrell, I tell myself, trying to swallow the multiple lumps in my throat. How are you ever going to work for somebody like this? If you can’t even walk through a CEO’s office without wobbling like jelly, then you’ve got no business being in the corporate sector.

  I seat myself in the swivel chair before his desk. I’m wearing a long-sleeved blouse and pencil skirt. Very officious. Very demure. I lay my portfolio on the desk before me. I daren’t look into his eyes. They are too intense. Too terrifying.

  Besides, I don’t quite trust myself.

  “So tell me about yourself,” he says as he folds his hands on the desk.

  He has fine large hands, I notice. I can well imagine those hands stroking a woman’s body. Not mine. But another woman’s.

  I clear my throat and launch into my well-rehearsed spiel. Come on, Beth, you can do it.

  “My name is Elizabeth Tyrell, and I’ve just graduated from TMU in business administration. These are my qualifications.”

  I nervously pass him my portfolio. He takes it and puts it down, unopened. His unflinching gaze still hasn’t left me.

  I continue, my voice wavering slightly, “I have had no experience, but I’m a fast learner and I’m willing to work very hard and for very long hours . . . if someone would give me the chance.”

  Someone, I said. Not ‘you’.

  “Where are you from, Ms. Tyrell? Your accent places you South. No, let me guess. Alabama?”

  I’m astonished. “Yes.”

  “Small town?” He leans back, as if he’s enjoying this interview. His chair creaks with a mild protest.

  “It’s called Little York,” I admit bashfully. “Population 5000. It’s really small. You wouldn’t have heard of it.” Most people haven’t.

  “And yet you went to college in a town where . . . I’m guessing here, so correct me if I’m wrong . . . most teenagers are content to marry their high school sweethearts at nineteen?”

  “Yes.”

  “I admire that,” he says. “Bucking the trend. That’s what my grandfather used to say. He came to America with nothing but the clothes on his back from a town in which everyone did what their fathers and grandfathers did before them – coalmining.”

  I nod. I’m still wary of him, but I find myself relaxing a bit.

  “And you came all the way here . . . to Chicago.”

  “It’s my first job interview.”

  Briefly, I tell him about Lyla in Accounting and the way she gave me the heads up on this job, even before it was advertised widely.

  “Do you know what this job entails, Ms. Tyrell?”

  Is it me, or has his voice taken a significant edge? I remember the redhead storming out of here like a woman scorned at the altar.

  No, I’m not quite sure what this job entails. I thought I had it all figured out, but now I’m not so sure.

  Bravely, I say, “I’m your first point of contact with everyone outside. I will maintain and file your data, arrange your travel and accommodation, take minutes, screen your telephone calls, produce documents for you and do your background research. I’ll organize your meetings and liaise with internal and external customers on your behalf. And I’ll get you coffee.”

  I pause.

  Is that all? I don’t know why my heart is beating so fast.

  He doesn’t say anything for a long, long while.

  Then: “Yes, Ms. Tyrell, you’ve pretty much got that covered. That is the job scope.”

  I take a deep breath. “Did I miss out anything, sir?”

  I don’t know what I want him to say. Something to hint at what the redhead has possibly been doing for him, perhaps. Is that part of the job scope, Mr. Morton? Sleeping with the boss? Because I don’t come with that sort of perk, Mr. Morton, no matter how desirable and available my boss is. I have a rule. (OK, I just made it up.) Never mix business with pleasure. Besides, I don’t do pleasure – not the kind of pleasure I think redhead was involved in, at least.

  Christopher Morton says, “No, you haven’t missed out anything at all. Except for one thing.”

  My heart skips a beat. “Yes?”

  “I don’t drink coffee, Ms. Tyrell.” He gestures to a refrigerator in a part of the oval office. “Just diet coke, and I get my own.”

  I blush despite myself. “Yes, sir.”

  “And none of this ‘yes, sir’, ‘no, sir’ crap. You call me Chris just like everyone else.”

  They call him Chris? Seriously?

  “Yes, sir. I mean, Chris.”

  Does that mean he’s offering me the job? Don’t I have to go through HR or something?

  But wait a minute. Am I really sure I want this job? I mean . . . I need it. But there’s something mercurial and unpredictable about Christopher Morton, and I have the pervading premonition (yes, actual premonition) that this ‘job’ is not going to be an easy ride.

  So you’re going to let yourself be scared off? my sly inner reasoning insinuates.

  “Great,” Chris says, “so can you start immediately?”

  Just like that?

  I’m stunned. What about background checks? What about my qualifications? He hasn’t even looked at them, for goodness sakes! I should be uneasy. All my senses should be screaming RED ALERT.

  “We, uh, haven’t talked about my package yet, sir . . . I mean Chris.”

  “I pay a hundred thousand dollars a year. For benefits, you need to go to see Sully in HR.”

  I’m floored. A hundred thousand? I think there’s something wrong with my ears.

  I say, “Uh . . . did I hear you correctly?”

  He grins. “You mean about Sully in HR?”

  I’m speechless. Somewhere inside my skull, wheels are cranking and suspicions are rising. For one hundred thousand dollars, is he expecting me to do a lot more than what is purportedly listed in my job scope?

  You’re reaching, Elizabeth Tyrell. Why would a man as sinfully attractive and dynamic as Christopher Morton want anything to do with you when he will have women crawling at his feet, practically falling over themselves to do anything he wants?

  Yes, I shamefully admit. There’s that. I’m getting ahead of myself. Just because he’s eyeing me with interest and speculation, it doesn’t mean it’s carnal. I’m at an interview. My interview. It would only be normal if my future employer’s vivid eyes rake over me with a fine-tooth comb, making feel naked in the process.

  And I do feel naked. Vulnerable and naked.

  But it isn’t the type of naked that makes me feel down and dirty inside, like if I’m caught reading a porn magazine at a kiosk. It’s the type of naked that sends an undeniable frisson of something electrifying and dangerous through my insides, and I have to suppress the shudder flowing through my loins.

  I steal a look at Christopher Morton’s face. Wham! It hits me again – his overpowering good looks and raw animal sensuality. My knees are wobbly underneath the table.

  No, no, no. I must not. I cannot. He’s my employer now. His hazel eyes burn with a startling intensity, and I wonder if this is the reaction he elicits from everyone.

  It strikes me that I have already accepted his job offer.

  I say, “Yes. I mean . . . I can start immediately, sir . . . Mr. Morton . . . uh, Chris.”

  His smile spreads broadly. “Good then. Let’s shake on it.”

  He offers me his hand. After deliberating for a while, I take it. It’s not that I don’t want to shake his hand. It’s just that –

  Our palms meet.

  A tingle like a nerve struck at my elbow courses up my forearm. My breath freezes in my throat.

  Oh. My. God.

  I didn’t know that his sexual magnetism would translate into his touch.

  I have to squeeze every ounce of my willpower to not retract my hand as though I have touched a livewire. This is not me. I don’t react this way to handsome boys, even though they may be sex gods. I’v
e been brought up to be a good girl with good, deeply entrenched family values of virtue and modesty.

  I’m starting to believe that I have been put here for a purpose. This is a test – of my willpower and reserve and my deep-seated commitment to my own values.

  I steel myself.

  I can do this.

  I smile. “Thank you, Chris. I take it that I’ll start tomorrow.”

  “Seeing as I’m left in a lurch without a PA, I’d rather you start right now. But tomorrow will be fine.”

  We both get up together, pushing back our respective chairs. He hands me back my portfolio, and I take it.

  “Sully in HR,” he says.

  “Right.” I take a step backwards and almost stumble. “So I’ll see you tomorrow, Chris.”

  I’m never going to get used to saying that name as long as I live, I swear.

  “Tomorrow then.” He regards me with that unsettling stare of his.

  I scuttle out of the room before I can embarrass myself further. Oh, this is a mistake. A major mistake, taking this job.

  What have I gotten myself into?

  Table of Contents

  Forbidden Desire (Maid for the Billionaire Prince)

  Midpoint

 

 

 


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