Meddling with a Millionaire
Page 1
“Have You Made Any
New Year’s Resolutions?”
“Just one,” he said.
Emma lifted her hands to Nathan’s face, sliding her fingers over his bold, masculine bone structure and sharp, well-defined jaw line. Even in the darkened room he had an arresting face.
He tugged his bow tie loose and left it dangling, drawing her attention to his impressive chest. Heat poured off his long torso, seeping into her skin and setting fire to her better judgment. Her fingers tingled as she traced the muscles beneath his white shirt. He radiated power and vitality. The sensation of all that caged energy weakened her knees.
“What is it?”
His mouth brushed against hers, lingering just long enough to blend their breath. She tried to catch his lips, to compel him to kiss her hard and deep, but he pulled away.
“I’m going to spend the rest of my life making love to you.”
Dear Reader,
I’ll bet every debut author gets attached to their first hero and heroine. After all, we spend years putting them through all sorts of hell before they get their happily ever after. They become as familiar to us as those friends who share their romantic dramas over happy-hour drinks. I’m just that attached to Nathan Case and Emma Montgomery.
Growing up, I used to watch musicals and old movies with my parents. The heroes of my childhood were Cary Grant, Frank Sinatra and Errol Flynn. So, is it any wonder I gave my first Desire hero a little of Cary’s dashing charm, Sinatra’s amazing voice and Flynn’s scoundrel ways?
Deciding Emma should make original fine jewelry was easy. I’m an art show junky and love buying from the talented artists in my area. Her journey to success required hard work and believing in herself. Two things I hope my daughter learns from me.
I hope you enjoy meeting Emma and Nathan. And if you can, support your local artists.
Cheers from Minnesota!
Cat
CAT SCHIELD
MEDDLING WITH A MILLIONAIRE
CAT SCHIELD
has been reading and writing romance since high school. Although she graduated from college with a B.A. in business, her idea of a perfect career was writing books for Harlequin. And now, after winning the Romance Writers of America 2010 Golden Heart® for series contemporary romance, that dream has come true. Cat lives in Minnesota with her daughter, Emily, and their Burmese cat. When she’s not writing sexy, romantic stories for Desire, she can be found sailing with friends on the St. Croix River or in more exotic locales like the Caribbean and Europe. She loves to hear from readers. Find her at www.catschield.com. Follow her on Twitter@catschield.
To my daughter, Emily. Thanks for believing in me.
I couldn’t have done it without you.
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
One
Sighting his quarry at last, Nathan Case dodged a waiter carrying a tray of champagne and navigated around a chocolate fountain. Twenty feet ahead, Emma Montgomery slipped through the cream of Dallas society gathered to celebrate New Year’s Eve. Ever since arriving at her father’s home an hour ago, Nathan had been searching for Emma, contemplating exactly what he intended to do when he tracked her down.
His options ranged from kissing her to throttling her.
He had yet to decide which way to go.
As if sensing the intensity of his thoughts, she glanced over her shoulder. A strand of hair caught on her lush lips as she scanned the party guests. Delicate fingers brushed long sable bangs back from her forehead, exposing the frown that pulled her brows together. She looked like a wild creature caught out in the open, unsure of where to flee. Then, her chocolate eyes locked on him.
Quick as a rabbit, she ducked around a potted palm and disappeared.
His heartbeat surged as he picked up his pace. He’d had women play hard to get before. The game sweetened their ultimate surrender. But Emma had taken the maneuver to a whole new level. If he didn’t know better, he would think she was avoiding him.
Ridiculous, given what he’d learned today.
He passed the library where a rollicking sing-along was taking place, with two dozen people crowded around the grand piano to belt out Sinatra tunes.
He caught sight of Emma just before she ducked into the room and followed, glad to leave behind the throng drinking Silas Montgomery’s booze and gawking at the mansion the oil tycoon had built as a testament to his wealth and power.
The two-story library with its cherry paneling and wall of bookshelves was more intimate than the colossal great hall they’d left behind, but not quiet enough for Nathan. He intended to have Emma to himself by midnight. He had no intention of letting anyone but him kiss her incredible mouth.
She stopped dead as he cut off her escape route. The noise level was too high for conversation, but Emma had little trouble communicating her impatience as he herded her toward the piano and nudged her into a narrow space between a blonde in a red halter dress and a short balding man whose attention was riveted on the woman’s cleavage.
Nathan surveyed the blonde without interest. Although he appreciated a half-naked woman as much as the next guy, he wasn’t a fan of augmented breasts. He preferred curves that jiggled. Emma’s in particular.
His lips hovered just above her ear as he softly sang the lyrics that accompanied the romantic tune. He put his hands on the gleaming black instrument, trapping Emma between his arms. She stepped closer to the piano to avoid contact with his body.
With her luscious frame calling to him, Nathan locked his elbows to prevent himself from pressing his lower half against her round rear end. He almost groaned at the memory of cupping those sexy curves in his palms. Desire roared in his ears, drowning out the music. He lowered his head and inhaled her perfume. The scent wrapped around his libido, causing momentary amnesia. Why was he angry with her?
Then he remembered.
In the pause between songs, he whispered in her ear, “Your father and I had an interesting chat this afternoon.”
Emma lifted her shoulder as a barricade. “Cody mentioned that you had a proposition for Daddy.”
Nathan had a proposition for her as well. A proposition of a very different nature than what he’d discussed with Silas Montgomery.
“Did your brother tell you what we discussed?” he quizzed.
“No.”
“Aren’t you curious?”
“Should I be?”
Leaning down, Nathan nuzzled Emma’s temple. “Your name came up.”
She jerked away from his lips and glared at him, but before she could voice the protests roiling in her eyes, the man tickling the ivories played the first bars of “Come Fly With Me” and conversation became impossible.
What was going on? Emma certainly wasn’t acting like a blushing bride-to-be. But he was convinced she’d been behind the terms her father had presented earlier that afternoon. Silas Montgomery couldn’t resist giving his little girl anything her heart desired, and Nathan knew Emma wanted him. She’d certainly demonstrated that after he’d stolen her away from the Christmas party they’d been at three weeks ago. So why had she bolted the instant she’d set eyes on him tonight?
Across the piano, a round, middle-aged woman frowned at him, an expression made all the more dramatic because it looked as if she’d used a black marker to drawn on her eyebrows. He met her gaze hard, silently warning her to mind her own business. She shifted h
er attention to the bald man, who was now captivated by Emma’s cleavage.
Nathan sucked in a breath and counted to eight before he mastered the impulse to bare his teeth at the guy like some overzealous guard dog. Instead, he focused on the familiar music, relaxed into the romantic lyrics that had caused generations of women to swoon, and contemplated the knockout he must marry if he hoped to do business with her father.
Nathan and her brother, Cody, best friends since college, had often talked about business opportunities that sparked their interest, but they hadn’t discovered any worth pursuing until recently. When he and Cody had first discussed the idea of a joint venture between Montgomery Oil and Case Consolidated Holdings, Nathan hadn’t anticipated marriage to Emma as part of the negotiations, but he couldn’t say he was completely surprised that Silas had made it a key factor in the deal. The project would be a long-term undertaking, requiring huge amounts of capital from both companies. Cementing the connection between Case Consolidated Holdings and Montgomery Oil through marriage ensured that both sides were totally committed to the venture.
Emma would know that. And use it to her advantage. He should be flattered that she wanted him so much that she’d cooked up the scheme and persuaded her father to go along with it. And why wouldn’t Silas agree? Once Emma was married, she became someone else’s responsibility.
“You have an amazing voice,” the blonde to his left told him. She smoothed her left hand across the piano’s glossy surface, showing off the huge diamond adorning her middle finger. The bare ring finger proclaimed her availability. “And you know all the words.”
Across the narrow space separating their bodies, Emma’s spine stiffened at the blonde’s blatant flirting.
“My mother loved Sinatra and played his music all the time while I was growing up. She used to call me her very own Rat Pack member. Although, I think her meaning had less to do with my singing and more to do with my knack for troublemaking.”
The blonde gave a throaty laugh.
“You’re trouble all right,” Emma muttered.
Nathan grinned. He liked her humor. She was a terrific package: sexy and funny.
Thinking he had smiled at her, the blonde rotated her upper body toward him. Her low neckline gaped farther as she extended her right hand. One shapely leg slipped between the long slit in her skirt and grazed his thigh. “My name is Bridget.”
“Nathan.” He clasped her hand while annoyance radiated from Emma like fallout from a nuclear disaster. “How do you know Silas?”
He didn’t catch Bridget’s answer because his arm no longer blocked Emma’s exit, and she’d seized the opportunity to run. As she turned to go, her chest brushed against the bald man’s shoulder and his eyes almost popped out of his head. Oblivious to the commotion she’d caused, Emma offered him a brief apology as she slipped past.
Nathan gave the blonde a what-can-you-do shrug. Her smile became a pout as he turned to follow Emma.
She didn’t get more than three steps beyond the library before he caught her. Nathan slid his hand around her waist and altered her direction, guiding her to the one place on the first floor where they wouldn’t be disturbed by party guests.
“The last time we met I got the feeling you were looking for a little trouble,” he murmured near her ear as he herded her down the hallway to her father’s study.
She eyed him as warily as a colt sensing the approach of a mountain lion. Perhaps she’d guessed what was on his mind. No man pursued a woman the way he had without wanting her naked and horizontal.
“Maybe I was,” she said. “But that was then.”
“And this is now.”
At the end of a long corridor, Nathan opened a door, and ushered Emma inside. Dark paneled walls absorbed the single light source: a lamp perched on one corner of a massive antique mahogany desk. In a home office of normal size, a piece of furniture like this might have overwhelmed the room, but this house had been built to impress. A leather couch, with flanking chairs, sat before the carved marble fireplace. Texas landscapes adorned the walls, painted by one of Nathan’s favorite artists of the early twentieth century. Unlike the delicate French antiques decorating the rest of the mansion, this room’s rugged lines and leather furnishings suited the Texas oil magnate who lived here.
Nathan shut the door, caught Emma’s arm and spun her around. Before she offered a protest, he backed her against the door. On the other side of the panel, voices and music blended into hazy, indistinct murmurs. Alone at last.
He leaned his forearm above her shoulder, letting his intent settle over her like a silk sheet. “Aren’t you curious why your name came up?” he questioned, returning to their earlier topic.
“Not in the least.”
“It seems that your father is shopping around for a husband for you.”
“Damn.” Her head fell back against the door, and the fight whooshed out of her. “He’s been trying to marry me off since college.”
“Why?”
“Because I’m a handful of trouble he wants to dump into someone else’s lap.” Bruises developed in her eyes, put there by her father’s harsh opinion. “He’s got this idea stuck in his head that I need someone to take care of me.”
Being the pampered daughter of a billionaire was part of her charm. Nathan was looking forward to spoiling her rotten.
“What’s wrong with letting someone take care of you?” he asked.
“Because the assumption is that I can’t take care of myself.” Her chin came up. Fire returned to her eyes, but her voice gained a ragged edge. “And that’s completely unfair.”
In the interest of keeping the conversation civil, Nathan resisted arguing that point with her. Even though he didn’t see her brother, Cody, much since he’d gotten married, they kept in regular contact, and Nathan had heard all about Emma’s escapades. The near-engagement to a fortune hunter, a sentence of community service after she’d been caught holding a friend’s purse containing drugs, and a totaled Mercedes from driving home after a party in the middle of an ice storm.
Granted, she appeared to have settled down in the last few years, but her impulsiveness with him three weeks ago made him question whether she had truly grown up, or whether she’d just gotten better at keeping her activities a secret from her family.
“Have you told your father how you feel?” he asked.
“Yes.” She expelled her breath in a rush. “For all the good it did me. When Daddy sets his mind to something, it stays set. He wants me engaged by Valentine’s Day. Whether I like it or not.”
And whether Nathan liked it or not.
He needed this joint venture with Silas to seize control of the family business from his half brothers. Neither Sebastian nor Max had any faith in his vision for their company. That’s why the partnership with Montgomery Oil was so important. Not only would the new venture’s cutting-edge technology put Case Consolidated Holdings on the map as an innovator, the future profits would ensure that the balance of power in the company would shift to Nathan. His half brothers would hate it, and there would be nothing they could do about it.
But first he needed to make the deal happen.
On a sudden whim, Nathan quickly unfastened Emma’s diamond and sapphire earrings from her ears.
“Give me back my earrings,” she demanded as he dropped them into his pocket
The last time he’d stolen her away from a party, she’d fought the chemistry between them, driving him half mad in the moments before her complete surrender. Afterwards, she’d raced off, leaving nothing behind but the evocative scent of her perfume on his skin. Tonight he intended to keep something she’d want to reclaim.
“Not yet.”
Artfully arranged wisps of sable curls framed a heart-shaped face with exotic high cheekbones and a slender nose. Tonight she’d tamed her sumptuous brown waves into a fancy, upswept hairdo that drew attention to her elegant neck. Although he liked the way the style bared her lovely golden skin and the hollow of her throat
, he preferred her hair loose around her shoulders, tousled by his hands.
He removed the pins holding her hair in its fancy updo. A rich, satiny curtain tumbled about her bare shoulders, stripping away another layer of sophisticated veneer.
“Nathan, what are you doing?”
“I should think it was pretty obvious.” He feathered the tips of his fingers along her gown’s neckline, grazing her skin.
“Can’t we just talk?” she gasped, putting a hand on his chest to hold him off.
The heat of her touch seared through his shirt, igniting a thousand fires. His powerful need for her unsettled him. She made him wild. No other woman turned him on as fast as she did, or made him lose control so completely.
He sifted his fingers through silken waves of sable, twirling one curl around his hand. “If you’d bothered to call me back, we could have talked numerous times in the last few weeks. Right now I have other things on my mind.”
“Here? In my father’s study? Are you crazy?”
Lust surged at the notion of taking her hard and fast against the door, but he had no intention of doing that again.
Three weeks ago, his first glimpse of her in a dozen years had knocked him off his game. He’d gone to the holiday party, looking to relax and reconnect with another college buddy of his and Cody’s. A couple of hours at one of Grant Castle’s parties offered him the opportunity for some casual flirting with beautiful women. In fact, he’d been surrounded by five lovely ladies, all vying for his attention when Emma had strolled through the front door, her long, shapely legs bared by a black minidress that shimmered.
Her gaze had shot to him as if he’d released the wolf whistle hovering in his mind. When their eyes locked, all casual thoughts went out of his head. He targeted her like a jungle cat sighting a leggy gazelle and had her out the door and in his car before an hour had passed.
He’d kept his hands to himself until they arrived back at his condo. But once inside, his lips captured hers. He’d been caught off guard by their first kiss. He’d expected more expertise, not the tentative, sensual attack of her fingers against his face, through his hair. Emma acted like a woman who hadn’t been kissed in a long time, or at least not one who had been kissed properly.