hit.’
She grimaced. ‘It must have been the alcohol. I’m not used to it.’
‘There is lots of alcohol in St Petersburg. You will have plenty of opportunities to build your stamina if you work for me.’
Eleanore narrowed her eyes. ‘You’re glad that I stayed, aren’t you?’
‘I wouldn’t say glad but if you mean it gives me an advantage in getting what I want, then yes, I suppose you could say I’m glad.’
‘And you want me?’
As the silence between them lengthened Eleanore realised what she’d said. ‘I meant to work for you. Obviously.’
He smiled. ‘Da. Yes. To work for me.’
Eleanore shook her head. ‘I would never leave my job. My heart is with Harrington’s.’
‘And do you always follow your heart?’
Did she? ‘Yes, I suppose I do. My family means a lot to me. And they need me.’ At least she hoped that was true.
‘Staying in a company for family reasons can limit your true potential.’
Eleanore felt the pointy edge of that comment and it raised her hackles. ‘That’s cynical.’
Unperturbed by her put-down he shrugged.
‘Tomaso seems to think you have enormous potential that is not being tapped where you currently are. I’m willing to back it. How do you take your coffee?’
‘At my hotel,’ Eleanore said churlishly, annoyed at his barbs and the way he chuckled at her response. He had a habit of laughing at her and it was getting under her skin. Still, she needed to keep him onside if she was to talk to Isabelle about his ice hotel. And preferably before he contacted the Chatsfields. She wouldn’t work for him directly, but that didn’t mean Harrington’s couldn’t do something for him. If Isabelle agreed…‘Which I need to get back to,’ she said briskly. ‘I’ll contact you later with regard to your proposition.’
He shook his head. ‘While I admire your loyalty to your family and I’m sure they appreciate it I need to move on this now if the hotel is going to be ready for opening night in a month.’
‘A month!’ Her eyebrows shot up. ‘How much of it is already completed?’
He counted a list off with his fingers. ‘The ice blocks have been harvested and stacked in the warehouse, the arched corridors are done and waiting to be tractored onto the site. The vaulted steel support walls are up, and the construction crew and some of the ice carvers are in place.’
‘That’s not a lot.’ She did some calculations in her head. ‘I’d say a month is leaning heavily on the optimistic side of things.’
‘So you’ll do it?’
‘I didn’t say that,’ she said, feeling railroaded.
‘Why don’t you go and freshen up and think about it? I need your answer now. This morning.’
‘That’s impossible.’
He shrugged. ‘I have found nothing is impossible, Miss Harrington, for good or bad.’
Something in his tone, a bleakness, hit her in the stomach and made her pause. Unable to understand it she frowned. ‘I can’t decide about this on the spot.’
He folded his arms across his impressive chest and she wondered how he managed to look so fresh on probably less sleep than she had had. ‘Why? Do you not have the authority to make the decisions?’
No, she didn’t. But that was another thing she wouldn’t tell him. ‘Businesses don’t function like that.’
‘I’m only asking for a month of your time. If you can’t do it say so now.’
Fuming at him and desperate to use the bathroom she shoved the blanket aside—refusing to see it as a thoughtful gesture on his behalf—and swung her legs over the edge of the sofa. Her dress was bunched up around her hips and she flushed as she noticed Lukas’s eyes drop to her legs.
Expecting him to make some sexist comment she was surprised when he turned away toward the window instead. Another nice gesture? Probably not.
Escaping to the bathroom she was appalled to see she looked like a bad rendition of a panda. A panda with really bad hair.
Well, was it any wonder he’d turned away? She was about as attractive as … She stopped. Stared at herself.
‘You do not want that man to find you attractive no matter what you think,’ she told her wide-eyed reflection.
So he was good-looking. Since when had she been shallow enough to want a man for his looks? His body?
Disgusted with her train of thought she splashed warm water onto her face and used a cloth to scrub the excess of make-up away and wished she hadn’t left her clutch purse beside the sofa. Not that it had anything useful in it other than money and her keycard.
Something Lukas had said before reformed in her mind—about her family appreciating her loyalty—made her pause. She wasn’t sure that Isabelle appreciated it as much as she took it for granted but an idea was taking shape.
If Lukas agreed to hire her as a consultant for his project and would form a partnership with Harrington’s, then Isabelle would be forced to sit up and take notice of her achievements. And she had no doubt, given Lukas’s passion for the project, his budget would be huge.
Would Isabelle go for the idea?
Eleanore chewed on her lower lip. She might dislike Lukas Kuznetskov, but as he had said to her, business was business, and she was pretty sure Isabelle would see it the same way. And the opportunities were obvious.
This would be Harrington’s first hotel in Eastern Europe. A foot in the door to another market with zero capital outlay up front. It was like a gift, but a conditional one, because it came with Lukas Kuznetskov attached.
Could she work with a man she found so incredibly attractive and resist him? Eleanore scoffed at her reflection. Well, of course she could.
‘A PARTNERSHIP?’
Lukas felt his eyebrows climb his forehead. Was the woman crazy? He’d never had a partner in his life. Not that he didn’t admire her chutzpah in putting the idea to him.
She had guts, and he admired that in a person. ‘And you think I’m an opportunist?’ he quipped.
‘I didn’t say that.’
He smiled at her quick back step. ‘First I get the brush-off tune and now I get the suck-up tune. I can’t wait to see what comes next. Will it be the seduction tune?’ Not that he wanted that …
‘Listen, Mr Kuznetskov.’ She planted her hands on her slender hips. ‘I haven’t changed my tune at all. I said you were self-important and obnoxious and comments like that only confirm my view.’
He studied her in her crumpled dress and face free of make-up, her hair pulled back neatly once again. She had the most translucent skin he had ever seen and his fingers itched to trace over her face to see if it was as soft as it appeared. He wondered if she had any idea that standing before him all riled and cranky made him want to channel all that pent-up energy into another activity. One that involved her naked on the carpeted floor and him buried deeply between her soft thighs. All the blood in his body surged south at the idea and it took some effort to force it to return to his brain.
With time running out what he needed to do right now was get Eleanore Harrington’s expertise and knowledge to complete his ice hotel, not be thinking about how her breasts would feel in the palms of his hands.
‘I