“He likes traveling.”
“You can’t constantly travel and still run a company. And then Kassandra.”
“Her behavior was despicable.”
“It hurt him, Tuck. Yes, he was disgusted and angry. But he was also very badly hurt.”
Tuck rocked back on his heels, his expression going pensive. “He didn’t let on.”
Amber hesitated but decided to share some more information. If it would help Tuck understand the gravity of the situation, it would do more good than harm.
“There were times when I heard more than I should,” she said. “I know Dixon was ready to be a father. He thought they were trying to get pregnant. Instead, she was taking birth control pills and sleeping with another man.”
It was clear from Tuck’s expression that Dixon hadn’t shared that information with him. He sat down, and his gaze went to the computer screen. “He still needs to know about our father.”
She knew it wasn’t her place to stop Tuck. “Do what you need to do.”
He glanced up. “But you’re not going to help me?”
“There’s nothing more I can do to help you find Dixon. But I’ll help you run Tucker Transportation.”
“Finding Dixon is the best thing we can do to run Tucker Transportation.”
“I disagree,” she said.
“Bully for you.”
“The best thing you can do to run Tucker Transportation is to run Tucker Transportation.”
Tuck was silent while he moved the mouse and typed a few keys. “You should have told me.”
“Told you what?” She found herself moving around the desk, curious to see what he would find on the computer.
“What he was planning,” said Tuck as he scrolled through Dixon’s email. “That he was secretly leaving.”
She recognized the headers on the email messages, since they automatically copied to her account. “I’m Dixon’s confidential assistant. I don’t share his personal information with anyone else.”
“There’s nothing here but corporate business,” said Tuck.
Amber knew that would be the case. Dixon was always careful to keep his personal email out of the corporate system. And he’d been doubly careful with the details of his secret vacation.
Tuck swiveled the chair to face her. “What would you do if you were mine?”
The question caught her off guard while her brain zipped off on a disorienting, romantic tangent. To be Tuck’s. In his arms. In his life. In his bed.
He rose in front of her. “Amber?”
“Sorry?” She scrambled to bring her thoughts back to the real world.
His voice was rich and deep, laced with an intimacy she knew she had to be imagining. “If you were my confidential assistant, what would you do?”
“I’m not.” She wasn’t his anything, and she had to remember that.
“But if you were?”
If she was Tuck’s assistant, she’d be in the middle of making one colossal mistake. Because that would mean she was sexually attracted to her boss. She’d want to kiss her boss. Eventually, she would kiss her boss. She was thinking about it right now. And if the dusky smoke in his eyes was anything to go by, he was thinking about it, too.
She plunged right in with the truth. “I would probably make a huge and horrible mistake.”
The lift of his brows told her he understood her meaning. And he slowly raised his hand to brush his fingertips across her cheek. “Would it be so horrible?”
“We can’t,” she managed to respond.
He gave a very small smile. “We won’t.”
But he was easing closer, leaning in.
“Tuck,” she warned.
He used his other hand to take hold of hers, twining their fingers together. “Professionally. On a professional level, given the current circumstances, what would you do if your loyalty was to me?”
She called on every single ounce of her fortitude to focus. “I’d tell you to go to the New York trade show. It’s the smart thing to do and the best thing to do for the company.”
“Okay.”
His easy answer took her aback.
She wasn’t sure she’d understood correctly. “You’ll go?”
“We’ll both go. I’m still going to find Dixon. But until I do, I’m the only owner this company has got. You’re right to tell me to step up.”
Amber moved a pace back and he released her hand.
New York? Together? With Tuck?
She struggled for a way to state her position. “I don’t want you to get the wrong idea. I’m definitely not going to—”
“Sleep with me?” he said, finishing her thought.
“Well. Okay. Yes. That’s what I meant.” She hadn’t planned on being that blunt, but that was it.
“That’s disappointing. But it’s not the reason I want you in New York. And I promise, there’ll be no pressure on that front.” He smoothly closed the space between them and leaned down.
She waited, her senses on alert for the kiss that seemed inevitable.
But he stopped, his lips inches away from hers, his voice a whisper. “I really like your shoes.”
She reflexively glanced to her feet, seeing the jazzy, swirling gold-and-red pattern of her high-heel pumps.
“They’ll look good in New York.” He backed off, his voice returning to normal as he took his place in front of the computer screen. “Let’s stay at the Neapolitan. Book us on a flight.”
Once again, she fought to regain her emotional equilibrium. She swallowed. “Do you want an airline ticket or should I book a company plane?”
“What would Dixon do?”
“Dixon never flies commercial.”
Tuck grinned. “Then, book us a company plane. If I’m going to take Dixon’s place, I might as well enjoy all his perks.”
Amber wanted to ask if he considered her one of Dixon’s perks. But the question was as inappropriate as it was dangerous. Her relationship with Dixon was comfortably professional. By contrast, her relationship with Tuck grew more unsettling by the day.
Three
Tuck knew he had no right to be cheerful. Dixon was still missing and Zachary Ingles was unforgivably late arriving at the JWQ Convention Center in midtown Manhattan. Add to that, thirty Tucker Transportation employees were working with the convention center staff to assemble the components of the company’s pavilion, with less organization than he would have expected.
Still he couldn’t help but smile as he gazed across the chaos of lights, signs, scale models and scaffolding. Amber was at the opposite end of their allotted space, watching a forklift raise the main corporate sign into position. Her brunette hair was in a jaunty ponytail. She wore pink-and-black checkerboard sneakers, a pair of dark blue jeans and a dusky-blue pullover. It was as casual as he’d ever seen her.
“Mr. Tucker?” A woman in a navy blazer with a convention center name tag on the lapel approached him through the jumble. “I’m Nancy Raines, assistant manager with catering and logistics.”
Tuck offered his hand. “Nice to meet you, Nancy. Please call me Tuck.”
“Thank you, sir.” She referred to the tablet in her hand. “We have the east-side ballroom booked for Friday night, a customized appetizers and hors d’oeuvres menu with an open bar for six hundred.”
“That sounds right,” said Tuck.
He’d read through the company’s final schedule on the plane and he understood the general outline of each event. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw Amber coming their way.
“We understand that there was a last-minute booking of a jazz trio, Three-Dimensional Moon,” said Nancy. “Are they by any chance an acoustic band?”
“An acoustic band for six hundred people?” Tuck found the ques
tion rather absurd. How would anyone ever hear the music above the conversation?
“The reason I ask,” said Nancy, “is we have no arrangement in place for a sound system.”
“There’s no sound system?”
That was clearly a mistake. Aside from the music, there were three speeches on the event schedule and a ten-minute corporate video.
Amber arrived. “Can I help with something?”
“This is Nancy. She says there’s no sound system for the reception.”
“There should be a sound system,” said Amber. “And three projection screens.”
But Nancy was shaking her head. “There was no tech ordered at all.”
“Someone from the marketing department should have handled that. Have you heard anything from Zachary?” Tuck asked Amber. He needed to get to the bottom of this right away.
“I’ve texted, emailed and left a voice mail, but he’s not returning.”
Tuck withdrew his phone from his pocket. “We’ll need the tech setup,” he said to Nancy. “Can you take care of it?”
She made a few taps on her tablet. “I can try. It will have to be rush, and that’ll mean a significant surcharge.” She looked to Amber. “Do you have the specs?”
“I’ll get them to you,” said Amber, pulling out her own phone. “I’ll track someone down.”
Nancy handed her a business card. “You can send them to my email. I’ll call a couple of local companies.”
“Thanks,” said Amber.
Tuck pressed the speed dial for Zachary.
Once again, it rang through to his voice mail.
“Maybe his flight was delayed,” Tuck mused.
Amber held up her index finger. “Melanie? It’s Amber. We need specs for a sound system for Three-Dimensional Moon. Can you find their web page and contact their manager?” She paused. “In the next ten minutes if you can.”
Tuck checked his text messages, and then he moved to his email interface.
“I’ve got a new message from Zachary.” He tapped the header.
He read for a minute and felt his jaw go lax.
“What?” Amber asked.
“It’s a letter of resignation.”
“No way.” She moved to where she could see his small screen.
“It says he turned in his keys to security and asked them to change his password.”
Tuck had no idea what to make of the message. Zachary had been with the company for a decade, rising through the ranks to his current, very well-paid position.
“Why would he do that?”
Excellent question.
Tuck’s phone rang. He saw that it was Lucas Steele.
Tuck took the call, speaking without preamble. “Do you know what’s going on?”
“Zachary walked,” said Lucas.
“I just got his email. Do you know why?”
“Harvey went with him,” said Lucas.
“Harvey, too? What on earth happened?” Tuck couldn’t keep the astonishment from his voice. Two long-term directors had quit at the same time?
Amber’s eyes widened while she listened to his side of the conversation.
“Peak Overland made them an offer,” said Lucas.
“Both of them?”
“Yes.”
The situation came clear in Tuck’s mind. “Without Dixon, we look vulnerable.”
“Yes, we look vulnerable. Nobody knows anything concrete, so there are theories all over the place. I’m hearing everything from he’s been thrown in jail in a foreign country to he was killed skydiving.”
“He’s in New Orleans,” said Tuck. “Or maybe Miami.”
There was a silence.
“You don’t know where he is.” Lucas’s voice was flat.
“He’s on vacation. He needs some time alone.”
“The divorce?” asked Lucas.
“That’s my best guess.”
“Okay,” said Lucas, his tone growing crisp again. “You need me to come out there?”
“Yes. But I also need you in Chicago. And I need you in Antwerp.”
What Tuck really needed was Dixon and there was absolutely no time to waste. His next call would be to Jackson.
Lucas gave a chopped chuckle. “Where do you want me?”
“Can you hold the fort in Chicago?”
“I can.”
“Talk to security. Change the locks, change the system passwords. Make sure they can’t do any damage.”
“Will do.”
“Is there an heir apparent to either Zachary or Harvey?”
“Nobody comes instantly to mind. But I’ll think about it. And I’ll ask around.”
“Thanks. Talk to you in a few hours.”
Tuck’s lack of knowledge and experience with the family company suddenly felt like an anvil. He needed his brother more urgently than ever before.
“I’d choose Hope Quigley,” said Amber.
“Who?”
“She’s a manager in the marketing department. She’s been on the social media file for a couple of years, but she’s incredibly organized.”
“You want me to promote a blogger to marketing director?”
Amber frowned. “It’s a lot more than just blogging.”
“That’s a huge jump in responsibility.”
Her hand went to her hip. “And you’d know this, how?”
Tuck did not want to have to make this decision on his own. “I’m calling Jackson. No more messing around. We’re turning over every possible rock to find Dixon.”
Something shifted in Amber’s expression. “You don’t need Dixon back.”
What an absurd statement. “I absolutely need Dixon back.”
“You can promote Hope. And there are others who can step in.”
“The company needs a strong president. Look around you. We’ve got two days to pull this thing together. The reception is already in trouble, and there are thirty private meetings set up with the marketing director.”
“You take the meetings.”
“Yeah, right.” As if he was going to speak knowledgably about Baltic Exchange indices and intermodal freight transport.
“Take Hope with you. Give her a new title. She’s got two days before the meetings. She can come up to speed on the specific client accounts.”
“I’ve never ever met the woman.”
“Then, take Lucas with you.”
“Lucas has to keep our current freight moving across the ocean.”
“You’re right.” Amber pursed her red lips, folding her hands primly in front of her. “It’s all hopeless. We should just give up and go home.”
He didn’t have a comeback for her obvious sarcasm. He knew what she was doing, and he didn’t appreciate it.
“Are you this insubordinate with Dixon?” How had she kept from being fired?
Tuck dialed Jackson.
“I don’t need to be insubordinate with Dixon. He knows what he’s doing.”
“Well, I...” But there was no retort for that. Tuck didn’t know what he was doing. And that was the problem.
Jackson answered his phone. “Hi, Tuck.”
“You need to pull out the stops,” said Tuck. “Do whatever it takes.”
“But—” Amber began.
Tuck silenced her with a glare. “I just lost my marketing director and my finance director.”
“Did you fire them?” asked Jackson.
“They quit. Rumor has it they got an offer from a rival, and with Dixon out of the picture—”
“People are getting nervous.” Jackson filled in the thought.
“It seems I’m not seen as a strong leader.”
“You’ve barely
gotten started.”
Tuck knew that was no excuse. Maybe he should have barreled past his father’s objections years ago. They might have been able to stop him from having any power at Tucker Transportation. But they couldn’t have stopped him from learning. This was his fault, and he had to fix it.
“Find him,” he said to Jackson.
“I’m in New Orleans.”
“Do you think he’s there?”
“I don’t know that he’s not. There’s no evidence that he left.”
“Is there evidence he arrived?”
“Maybe. It could be nothing. Can I get back to you?”
“Don’t take too long.” Tuck’s gaze met Amber’s.
She gave a slight shake of her head.
He knew she wanted him to leave Dixon alone and do it all himself. But there was too much at stake. He didn’t dare try.
* * *
Tuck looked fantastic in a tuxedo. But then Amber had known that all along. She’d been seeing pictures of him in the tabloids for years, mostly at posh events or out on the town with some gorgeous woman. His ability to work a party had never been in question.
The Tucker Transportation reception was ending, and the last few guests trickled out of the ballroom. Amber made her way to the main doors, grateful to have the evening at an end. Her feet were killing her, though that was her own fault. She’d knowingly worn two-hour shoes to a five-hour party.
But she hadn’t been able to resist. This was by far the fanciest party she’d ever attended. And she’d never even taken the silver lace peep-toe pumps out of the box. They had a crimson stiletto heel and she’d done her toenails to match. Her feet looked fabulous, setting off her rather simple black dress.
The dress had cap sleeves and a slim silhouette. Its one jazzy feature was the scattering of silver sequins at the midthigh hemline. She’d worn it at least a dozen times, but it was tried and true, appropriate to the occasion.
Tuck appeared beside her, lightly touching her waist. “You promised me a dance.”
“Your dance card seemed full,” she answered him.
“Women kept asking, and I didn’t want to be rude.”
Amber kept walking toward the elevator. “You forget the point of hosting such a lavish reception was for you to make business contacts, not to collect phone numbers.”
A Bargain with the Boss Page 4