She was getting fanciful. Luc hadn’t brought her here to
pounce; he’d brought her here to discuss a job…she hoped.
“Drink?” he asked.
It probably wasn’t a good idea. In fact, it was probably a
terrible one, but then what was one more bad idea? She nodded.
“What would you like?”
“Anything. Whatever you’re having.”
He poured two glasses of golden liquid and handed her one.
Taking it, she brought it up to her nose, and sniffed.
“What is it?”
“Scotch,” he said. “Quite safe.” He watched, amused, as she
swallowed the contents of the glass in one go. “Well, in
small quantities.” He took her glass and poured her another.
Instead of handing it to her, he placed it on the coffee
table in front of the sofa, then sank onto the black leather
and patted the seat next to him.
Lia hesitated for a moment; she was starting to feel quite
warm, and decided it was probably safe to remove her jacket.
She took it off and placed it carefully on top of Luc’s then
came around and sat down next to him. He studied her for a
few minutes, then he smiled, and suddenly she didn’t feel
quite so safe anymore.
“Why do you think I brought you here tonight, Lia?” His
voice was dark and smoky, full of sensual promise, and Lia
quivered under the onslaught of it against her battered
senses. She felt totally off-balance—safe one minute,
hovering on the edge of something terrifying the next. The
truth was, she didn’t know why he’d brought her here. Or why
he’d helped her out at the club. So she clung to what she
did know.
“To talk about my job?” she suggested hopefully.
“There’s a job for you here, whatever else happens, though I
can’t promise you glamour and excitement.” He slanted her a
heavy-lidded look from those stunning eyes. “Well, not in
the job anyway.”
She licked dry lips, and knew his eyes followed the
movement. “Whatever else happens?”
“I want you to know that the job is separate and not
dependent on you sleeping with me.”
Lia had been in the process of taking a restorative sip of
her Scotch, and she almost choked. “Sleeping?”
“Well, probably not sleeping.” He gave her a long
considering look. “You know I find you very attractive?”
Lia shook her head. No, to be perfectly honest, it hadn’t
even occurred to her. Things like this didn’t happen to her.
Kelly told her it was because she positively exuded keep-off
vibes in the presence of men. She risked another quick
glance and found him still watching her, his eyes
deceptively sleepy.
“And I think the feeling is mutual. You want me, don’t you,
Lia?” His voice was all dark seduction, oozing softly
against her ears, sending quivers down her rigid spine.
Her mind went blank, and then started working double speed.
Yes, of course, she had wondered about this man—what woman
wouldn’t? He was the most gorgeous male specimen she’d ever
encountered. He was probably going to feature in every
single one of her sexual fantasies from this day forward,
but all the same, she hadn’t considered anything happening
between the two of them.
But why not?
While she’d never had a one-night anything before, she’d had
boyfriends. Well, boyfriend, singular. They’d split up after
Joe had complained that she spent more time with the horses
than she did with him. He’d given her an ultimatum, and told
her it was him or the horses. There’d been no competition.
The sex had been okay, but not enough to change her
priorities. That was two years ago, and she hadn’t been
tempted since.
Until now.