Kiss Me Crazy
Page 1
KISS ME CRAZY
E.B. WALTERS
Copyright © E. B. Walters 2011
Published by Firetrail Publishing at Smashwords
Firetrail Publishing
Logan, UT
eBooks are not transferable. They cannot be sold, shared
or given away as it is an infringement on the copyright of this work.
Reproducing this book without permission from the author
or the publisher is an infringement on its copyright.
This book is a work of fiction. The names characters, places,
and incidents are products of the author’s imagination
and are not to be construed as real.
Any resemblance to any actual events or persons,
living or dead, actual events,
locale or organizations is entirely coincidental.
Firetrail Publishing
P.O. Box 3444 Logan,
UT 84323
Copyright © 2011 Ednah Walters
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 0983429723
ISBN-13: 978-0983429722
Edited by Melissa Maytnz
Cover Design by Margaret McFarland. All Rights Reserved.
First Firetrail Publishing publication: August 2011
www.firetrailpublishing.com
DEDICATION
This book is dedicated to my sisters, Joyce and Merab.
Thank you for instilling in me the love for books.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
To my editor, Melissa Maytnz,
thank you for tweaking the plot and streamlining a manuscript.
To my beta-readers, Julie Barrett and Toni Steiner,
you girls are gurus at finding typos and inconsistencies.
I couldn’t have polished this without your keen eyes. Thank you.
To my dearest friend and an extraordinary woman, Katrina Whittaker,
thank you for your wonderful feedback and support. You always take
time from your busy schedule to go through the finished product
and give it the stamp of approval. You’re amazing.
To my critique partners, Chicki Brown, Dawn Brown, Teresa Bellow,
Katherine Warwick/Jennifer Laurens, you guys are amazing at
removing the junk and being there when the muse goes missing.
We are more than writing partners. We’re a family.
To my husband and my wonderful children,
thank you for your unwavering love and support.
You inspire me in so many ways
Love you, guys.
CHAPTER 1
“I quit! Now kiss me and beg me to stay.”
Kara Michaels glared at the white envelope on her table. Saying her wishes out loud wouldn’t make them a reality. She still had to leave the safety of her basement workroom, invade her boss’ inner sanctum upstairs, and hand over the letter with a cordial smile. No marching band. No slapping it on his massive cherry desk or throwing it at his gorgeous face. It wasn’t his fault she had lusted after him for five years, and he only saw her as his trusted, loyal employee. That burden was hers, fair and square.
The thought of looking into Baron Fitzgerald’s starry night blue eyes and telling him she was quitting left her edgy. He would hit the roof, and once he calmed down, turn on the charm. She’d been at the receiving end of that calendar pin-up male’s flirtatious charm once too many times. It was potent, dangerous, and darn near impossible to resist.
Sighing, Kara pushed her nagging thoughts aside, adjusted the glasses on the ridge of her nose, and leaned forward in her chair to contemplate the painting in front of her. Could the scrape near the bottom left corner be fixed without devaluing the piece? She sighed again. Of course it could. The damage was minimal, less than ten percent, just like she preferred. The problem was the enthusiasm she usually felt restoring such a masterpiece was gone. Thoughts of Baron and her resignation letter were screwing with her head.
A knock at her workroom door interrupted her musing, then her best friend peeked inside her workroom. Kara waved.
“Renee. What brings you to my humble studio?”
“Don’t you mean dungeon.” Renee closed the door and surveyed the room from the top of the stairs. She grinned when her gaze connected with Kara’s narrowed eyes. “Don’t mean to disrespect your space, Kara, but the covered canvases give it a gloomy look, if you know what I mean.” She started down the stairs, her shoulder-length flipped-up-at-the-tips auburn hair bouncing with each step she took. “Anyway, I thought I’d stop by and see if you want to do lunch.”
Kara stole a glance at her watch. Lunch at ten in the morning? She knew exactly why Ms. Assistant District Attorney was in her office. Kara leaned forward and tried to grab the resignation letter on the sly before Renee saw it. “You didn’t have to come all this way. You could’ve called and—”
“You wouldn’t have answered, just like you didn’t yesterday and the day before.” Renee wrapped the strap of her designer bag on the coat rack stand at the foot of the staircase and strolled toward Kara. Renee looked stunning, as always, the chic suit hugging her willowy body, her makeup flawless. She made Kara more aware of her own plain Jane appearance—apron over tan pants and simple black top, pale blonde hair pulled back in a ponytail, and no makeup.
Renee stopped beside Kara’s desk and propped a fist on her hip. “When your best friend starts to screen your calls, something’s up.”
“Oh, please. You know how I hate to be interrupted when I’m in the middle of a project. I’ve been working late.”
Renee laughed, her eyes going to the letter in Kara’s hand. “Is that what you call it now? I’d say you’ve been procrastinating, stressing, and thinking about all possible scenarios that go with offering your resignation to the hunk upstairs.”
Kara gave up the pretense of trying to hide the letter. “Don’t tell me your case load is so small you had to come downtown to poke fun at me.”
“No, I didn’t, but it’s been three days, Kara. What’s going on?”
Kara tried not to squirm under her friend’s quizzical gaze. Call it an insight, sixth sense, or whatever, but Renee could always read her. She claimed Kara wore her feelings in her eyes and would suck as a juror, but this juror reject refused to be analyzed or have her motives questioned.
“Nothing’s going on,” she said. “I just needed to prepare.”
“For what?”
“A de-roofing hurricane,” Kara answered without thinking and realized her mistake right away when Renee lifted a perfectly shaped eyebrow.
“Excuse me? A hurricane in L.A.?”
Kara laughed to cover the gaffe, jumped to her feet, and picked up the Hallè painting. “You know what I mean.”
She propped it on the easel she used when cleaning or restoring a painting. For a moment, she stood with her back to Renee. She hadn’t meant to openly refer to her boss as a hurricane, yet there was no fitting way to describe antique dealer Baron Fitzgerald when he went after something. He was unstoppable. About the time she started working for him, he’d let slip his five-year plan to expand the gallery by featuring furniture classics of the twentieth century, mid-career artists across the state, and two separate one-man shows every month. It took him three years to accomplish that. He even started an online gallery to introduce younger, emerging, and affordable artist to collectors. La Baron Galleria now occupied the first and second floors of the building. The building itself, he acquired after outbidding a real estate developer. Now he was opening a branch in San Francisco, a partnership between him and Mercedes Benz of San Francisco.
A year ago she’d made the mistake of going to see him on an impulse and learned just how relentless he could be. Her plan at the time was to offer he
r resignation, just like today. As soon as he’d learned the reason why she wanted to quit, he was on the phone facilitating everything so she got exactly what she wanted, which was to restore older paintings. Turned out he’d been rejecting restoration works involving historic pieces because he thought she wasn’t ready. His assumption had ticked her off. After she read him the riot act, he kissed her.
A zing of excitement shot through Kara, her lips tingling in remembrance. A year later, and she still remembered every detail of that kiss. She needed to get a life quick. Baron was a total shark when it came to business and to deal with him, one must anticipate his response and have a countermove. She was ready this time. All she needed was to get her butt upstairs.
“Kara?”
She turned to face Renee. Her friend had taken the only available chair, so Kara propped her butt on the edge of the desk. “Baron won’t like it.”
Renee shrugged. “Too bad. People quit jobs all the time.”
“Not at La Baron Galleria. He’s an amazing boss and pays too well for anyone to want to quit.”
“Yet you’re quitting.” Renee’s smile was sympathetic, as though she could see through Kara’s BS to the real reason she wanted to quit.
Kara bristled.
“You know why,” she said and wrinkled her nose. “I promised myself I’d go solo by my twenty-eighth birthday. I just turned twenty-nine.” In the last five years, she’d amassed the contacts she’d need once she started her company. She loved restoring works of art, but wanted the added advantage of being her own boss, free to pick and choose projects. She also planned to custom-frame paintings. “It’s time to move on.”
“Are you sure?”
“Of course I’m sure.” Kara scowled down at her. “What other reason could I have for leaving?”
“Why don’t you tell me? From my position, you seem to be dragging your feet.”
Renee had a nasty way of treating people like they were on the witness stand. Kara wasn’t in the mood to play her games.
“Don’t try your courtroom tactics on me, Renee Gunter,” Kara said with a bite. “Come out and ask me whatever it is you want to ask, and then hightail it back to your Beverly Hills office with a view, so I can get back to work in my dungeon. And no ten o’clock power lunch excuse either. You aren’t fooling anybody.”
“Ouch. Bitchy today, aren’t you?” Renee leaned closer and placed her elbows on the desk, her eyes becoming serious. “I know you’re nervous about this resignation thing, sweetie, but don’t you think you’re lobbing those salvos at the wrong person? Baron’s the one you should be targeting, not me.”
Kara cocked her head. “Now why would I want to do that?”
“The very reason you didn’t quit last year. You’re attracted to him. Worse, you’re about to leave without doing something about it. The question is whom are you really pissed off at? You? Him? Or both of you?”
Heat rushed to Kara’s face. She was angry with herself. Angry she was attracted to a man who’d never viewed her as anything other than his employee. Even if through some bizarre twist of fate he started panting after her, she was a one man woman while he liked variety.
“Sweetie, if you want him, do something about it already. Get him out of your system and move on.”
Easy for Renee to say that. She was stunning. Men stood taller and puffed their chests whenever she entered a room. Kara, on the other hand, tended to bring out their protective instincts.
“You know you’re crazy,” she mumbled.
“But right. You’ve thought about it.” Renee grinned and wagged a finger at Kara. “Yes, you have. I can see it in your eyes. I remember the first year you worked for him. I’d walk in here and the two of you would be in the middle of a heated discussion about some artwork or artist. It was like watching two halves of a whole.”
Kara took her previous conclusions back. It was Baron’s fault she’d fallen for him. He didn’t have to be so charming when she started working for him. Or bring her coffee, visit with her, and discuss her work. Now she only saw him on Fridays for their weekly conference, or when she caught a glimpse of him on the gallery floor.
“So?” she said with an indifference she didn’t feel. “We’ve always worked well together. No matter what his faults are, Baron has an amazing ability to discover talented artists and market them. And I,” she gave Renee a smug smile, “not to toot my horn, can fix any painting, no matter how old.”
“You know I’m not making this up. You two were close. In fact, I was sure something was going on until I read about his engagement to Valerie what’s-her-face. You took it in stride as usual.”
“Because he’s just a friend and a wonderful boss,” Kara retorted, starting to get tired of defending her relationship with her boss. She hadn’t taken anything in stride. It had hurt like someone took a stake to her chest. She was just good at keeping her feelings to herself.
“Is that why when Valerie dumped him, you rushed to his side?”
Kara got up and picked up the tray of cleaning liquids and brushes. She really didn’t want to discuss Valerie or Baron, but Renee was like a dog with a bone when she latched on a subject.
Kara narrowed her eyes. “That’s what friends do for each other, Renee. Just like I’ve come to your place when a case is not going well. Quit with the psychoanalysis and go back to work. I know I need to.” She went to place the tray by the Hallè painting.
“Kara, you would tell me if you more than like him, wouldn’t you?”
Seriously, when Renee was on her lawyer mode, there was no switching her off. Kara let out a deep sigh and turned around. The teasing grin was gone from her friend’s face. She actually thought Kara was in love with Baron? That would be foolish, and she didn’t do foolish. In lust with him, yes. He was gorgeous, sexy, and a maverick—an unbeatable combination. Throw in his wealth, not just from his gallery, he came from one of L.A.’s old money families, and you had a man every woman would die to own.
“Would you?” Renee asked again, interrupting her thoughts.
“Yes, I would confess all to you. I admit I liked him a lot in the beginning. He was charming, cocky, and playful. I think every woman who worked for him was a little in love with him. But my interest in him waned. I grew up.” Painfully and fast, the thought sneaked in on her, but she clammed on it. From the knowing look on her face, Renee wasn’t buying her explanation either. It was true that she had a crush on Baron, but then Valerie came into the picture. Soon after the woman left him, he became distant and driven, changed women often. It was as though he had something to prove, in the boardroom and the bedroom. Occasionally she caught glimpses of the old Baron when his guard was down; twinkling eyes here, a naughty grin there. Not that it mattered. “He isn’t my type.”
She didn’t realize she’d spoken aloud until Renee chuckled. “Sweetie, that man with his sculptured body, brooding blue eyes, and sinfully silky voice is every woman’s type.”
He’d starred in way too many of her hot, juicy fantasies for Kara to disagree with her friend. “Okay, you win. Yes, I’ve been procrastinating, but you’ve shown me exactly why I’m doing the right thing by quitting. Now go,” she pointed at the door, “scram…beat it. I’ll see you later in the week. We’ll have dinner or something.”
“We’re having lunch at Chloe’s. Today.” Renee got up, but she still had that look in her eyes, the suspicious D.A. expression. “After you give him the letter.”
“I swear I’ll make you pay for this. Read my lips. It will be handed to him today.” She spaced out her words to drive her message home, namely that she was tired of Renee’s interference.
“I don’t mean to be pushy, but my realtor has the papers for the office space you were interested in. I promised to let her know by the end of the day whether you want it or not.”
“Why didn’t you say so? Sure, I want it. Tell her to start processing the paperwork.” It was a prime property not far from L.A. County Museum of Art, George C. Page Museum, and L
a Brea Tar Pits. Her goal was to offer her services, once her offices opened its doors, to galleries like La Baron but also to the big guys in Museum Row.
“That’s the way to do it.” Renee retrieved her bag from the coat rack and paused to add, “Now if only you could apply that go-getter attitude to your personal life—”
“Goodbye, Buttinski.”
She laughed and patted her perfectly shaped butt. “I hope you’re referring to my very, very fine behind.”
No, she wasn’t. “Then stay out of my business.”
Renee laughed. “Will do, as soon as you stop letting people walk all over you. You’re too nice. Most of the time anyway. See you at lunch.”
“Not today. I have to work on that piece.” Kara pointed at the Hallè painting.
“Call me if you change your mind, or,” she paused for effect, “if you decided to jump his bones. I might give you some pointers.”
Kara growled as she watched Renee giggle up the stairs and out of her workroom. It was pathetic how easily the woman read her. It started when the two of them shared a room at Berkeley. Renee with her privileged background, designer clothes, and vacations in exotic islands could easily have treated her and her working class parents with disdain. Yet she hadn’t. She always looked forward to Kara’s parents’ visits. They’d stayed friends to the present. In fact, she couldn’t have found out about the job at La Baron Galleria if it weren’t for Renee. Renee grew up in the same neighborhood as the Fitzgeralds and heard through a mutual friend that Baron was looking for an art restorer.
As for her suggestion to seduce Baron, it wasn’t going to happen. Lusting after him and seducing him were two very different things. Still, the idea was tantalizing. Kara removed her apron, retrieved the letter from her desk, and shoved it in her purse. Better to give him the letter now and get it over with than continue to agonize over her decision. She started upstairs, each step more determined than the last one.