and sophisticated, yet caught in a series of empty relationships.
So heâd stopped dating months ago, instead putting his energy back into the business. Nina Forrester was the first woman heâd found even remotely interesting in all that time. He exhaled, his breath clouding in front of his face, then pulled the door open. He hadnât been inside more than a few moments before he saw her. She was sitting at a table over in the corner. She turned to look at some papers sheâd spread in front of her and he silently studied her profileâthe pretty nose, the lush lips, the golden hair that framed her face in soft tendrils.
Without thinking, he crossed the room and came to a stop beside her table. Suddenly, he wasnât quite sure what to say. He felt as if heâd been transported back to that awful moment in high school when heâd worked up the nerve to ask the prettiest cheerleader out on a date, only to have her laugh in his face.
Cameron swallowed hard. âI owe you a cup of coffee.â
She looked up and for an instant, he thought he saw delight in her pretty blue eyes and a tiny trace of a smile curling her lips. âHi,â she said, her voice breathless with surprise. She stood up quickly, knocking her hip against the table and nearly spilling her cup of coffee in the process. âWhat are you doing here?â
Cameron knew enough about women to play it cool. âI was just passing by and thought Iâd give the coffee another try.â
âOh, right,â she said, a nervous twitch of her lips passing for a smile. âI guess you didnât get much of a taste of it last night.â She paused. âI should buy you a cup.â She motioned to the second chair at her table. âWhy donât you sit down.â Without another word, she hurried off. But a few seconds later, she returned, her face colored with a pretty blush. âHow do take your coffee?â she asked.
âWith just a little cream,â Cameron replied, slipping out of his jacket. He watched her return to the counter, then sat down and waited. When she came back with his coffee, he stood and pulled out her chair. But as she sat down, she caught her elbow on his arm and half the coffee spilled all over her papers.
âOh, no!â she cried.
Cameron grabbed the cup from her hand just as it was about to dump all over his sleeve, then set it down. He handed her a stack of napkins. âYou are a menace with a cup of coffee,â he teased. âMaybe we should stick to tea.â
Nina mopped up the coffee on her side of the table, then glanced up at him, gracing him with one of the most beautiful smiles heâd ever seen. âMaybe we should. Maybe itâs like that movie. Iâm doomed to repeat the same clumsy mistakes over and over, every time we meet.â
âWell, I made sure to dress in brown,â he said, indicating his brown wool trousers and sweater. âSo fire away. Iâm ready.â
When the table was finally cleaned up, they both sat down. The blush still stained Ninaâs cheeks and Cameron still wasnât sure what to say. Heâd have been completely satisfied just to sit across from her and look at her pretty face, but he guessed that she expected a little more. âIs this work?â he asked, pointing to the coffee-stained papers.
Nina nodded. âIt was. Iâve got a special project Iâve been assigned. Iâve been working on it all day.â
âAnd where do you work?â he asked, already knowing the answer. He felt guilty even bringing up the subject of her job, considering his position, but it was a safe subject for two people who barely knew each other.
âIâm the head of research for Attitudes,â she said. âItâs a weekly magazine. Our offices are right across the street.â
He couldnât help but smile at the embellished job title. Still, he was secretly pleased that she was trying to impress him. âAttitudes?â
âHave you ever heard of it?â She forced a smile. âI suppose not. I mean, youâre not really our typeâour readerâI mean, our demographic.â
âAnd why is that?â Cameron asked.
âWell, youâre a little tooâ¦â
He waited as she groped for a polite way to say conservative. âTall?â he asked. Her blush deepened and she shook her head. âToo stubborn? Thatâs always been a problem.â She shook her head again. âOr maybe Iâm too clumsy?â
Nina laughed. âThe word weâd use around the office might be âconservative.â Not that thatâs a bad thing. Itâs just not our demographic.â
âGee, I thought you were about to say I was too handsome or too charming.â
âMaybe I should have,â she murmured, sending him a coy look over the rim of her coffee mug. âSo, what do you do?â
âIâm inâ¦computers,â Cameron said.
âI could have guessed that,â Nina commented. âI mean, from the way you were dressed when we first met. You looked like a businessman.â
A long silence grew between them and Cameron fought the sudden urge to lean across the table and kiss her, simply to see if her lips tasted as good as they looked. Instead, he grabbed the next handiest subject. âTell me about this project youâre working on.â Cameron pointed to the papers. âYou said it was important?â He picked up his mug and took a sip of his coffee.
âThereâs not much to it,â Nina replied. âIâm supposed to find out everything I can about some guy named Cameron Ryder.â
A sudden cough burst from his throat and he sucked in a deep breath, the coffee going down the wrong way. Ninaâs brow furrowed in concern and she reached out and patted him on the shoulder. âAre you all right?â
He nodded. âItâs just a little hot,â he said, his eyes watering. âSo, what have you found out about this guy?â
âI spent all day on the Net, downloading what I could about his company, NightRyder. But the guy who runs it keeps a pretty low profile. If I had to guess Iâd say heâs some hard-hearted, ruthless businessman who buys up companies for sport, putting good people out of work, and he keeps a low profile so none of the employees he puts out of work can run over him with a bus.â
âHe sounds like a real bastard,â Cameron said.
âThis NightRyder, itâs a news and information site. Very trendy, very popular with our magazineâs demographic. He wants to buy Attitudes and turn himself into some media mogul. My boss doesnât want to sell.â
âAnd what else have you learned?â
âNot much. I canât even find a photo of the guy, except for this.â She slid a paper over towards him. âItâs his high school graduation picture. He looks like kind of a geek. But I guess even geeks can turn into bastards given enough power and money.â
Cameron winced inwardly. Damn, he hated when that picture surfaced in the media. Heâd done his best to stay out of the glare of the paparazzi, avoiding photographers like the plague. But for lack of a more current photo, they always trotted out the senior pictureâthe pimply-faced, pencil-necked doofus with the thick glasses. And he was once again faced with a reminder of the first eighteen years of his life.
But there was one advantage to the photo. There was no way Nina Forrester would recognize him. Hell, he barely recognized himself. âHe doesnât look very ruthless to me. He looks like the kind of kid who eats paste and spends most of his day stuffed in a locker. See there,â he said, pointing to the picture. âHeâs