Кэрол Мортимер

Billionaire Bosses Collection


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dinner and drinks rather than an engagement and a bassinet.

      His gaze zeroed in on Callie as she fielded an enquiry on the phone, her pen scrawling at a frenetic pace as she jotted notes, the tip of her tongue protruding between her lips.

      Callie had been that girl once. The kind of girl who wanted the picket fence dream, the equivalent of his ultimate nightmare. Did she still want that?

      The finger on her left hand remained ringless, he saw as he belatedly realised he should have checked if she was seeing anyone before coercing her into heading down to Torquay on the pretext of business when in fact she’d be his date for the wedding.

      Then again, she’d agreed, so his assumption that she was currently single was probably safe.

      Not that she’d fallen in with his plan quickly. She’d made him work for it, made him sweat. And he had a feeling her capitulation had more to do with personal reasons than any great desire to make this campaign the best ever.

      That flicker of fear when she’d thought he might walk and take his business with him... Not that he would have done it. Regardless of whether she’d wanted to come or not CJU would have had the surf school campaign in the bag. She’d proved her marketing worth many times over the last few years, and while he might be laid back on the circuit he was tough in his business.

      Success meant security. Ultimately success meant he was totally self-sufficient and didn’t have to depend on anyone, for he’d learned the hard way that depending on people, even those closest to you, could end in disappointment and sadness and pain.

      It was what drove him every day, that quest for independence, not depending on anyone, even family, for anything.

      After his folks’ betrayal it was what had driven him away from Callie.

      He chose to ignore his insidious voice of reason. The last thing he needed was to get sentimental over memories.

      She hung up the phone, her eyes narrowing as she caught sight of him lounging in the doorway. ‘You still here?’

      ‘We’re not finished.’

      He only just caught her muttered, ‘Could’ve fooled me.’

      As much as it pained him to revisit the past, he knew he’d have to bring it up in order to get past her obvious snit.

      He did not want a date glaring daggers at him all night; his mum would take it as a sure-fire sign to set one of her gals onto him.

      ‘Do we need to clear the air?’

      She arched an eyebrow in an imperious taunt. ‘I don’t know. Do we?’

      Disappointed, he shook his head. ‘You didn’t play games. One of the many things I admired about you.’

      Her withering glare wavered and dipped, before pinning him with renewed accusation. ‘We had a fling in the past. Yonks ago. I’m over it. You’re over it. There’s no air to clear. Ancient history. The next week is business, nothing more.’

      ‘Then why are you so antagonistic?’

      She opened her mouth to respond, then snapped it shut, her icy façade faltering as she ran a hand through her hair in another uncertain tell he remembered well.

      She’d done it when they’d first met at a beachside vendor’s, when they’d both reached for the last chilled lemonade at the same time. She’d done it during their first dinner at a tiny trattoria tucked into an alley. And she’d done it when he’d taken her back to his hotel for the first time.

      In every instance he’d banished her uncertainty with practised charm, but after the way they’d parted he doubted it would work in this instance.

      ‘Cal—’

      ‘Us being involved in the past complicates this campaign and I’m not a huge fan of complications.’

      She blurted it without meeting his eye, her gaze fixed on her laptop screen.

      He wished she’d look at him so he could see how deeply this irked, or if she was trying to weasel out of the deal.

      ‘You said it yourself. It’s in the past. So why should it complicate anything?’ He didn’t want to push her, but her antagonism left him no choice. ‘Unless...’

      ‘What?’ Her head snapped up, her wary gaze locking on his, and in that instant he had his answer before he asked the question.

      The spark they’d once shared was there, flickering in the depths of rich brown, deliberately cloaked in evasive shadows.

      ‘Unless you still feel something?’

      ‘I’m many things. A masochist isn’t one of them.’

      She stood so quickly her chair slid backward on its castors and slammed into the wall. The noise didn’t deter her as she stalked towards him, defiant in high heels.

      With her eyes flashing warning signals he chose to ignore, he stepped back into the office, meeting her halfway.

      Before he could speak she held up her hand. ‘I’m not a fool, Archer. We were attracted in Capri, we’re both single, and we’re going to be spending time together on this campaign. Stands to reason a few residual sparks may fly.’ Her hand snagged in her hair again and she almost wrenched it out in exasperation. ‘It won’t mean anything. I have a job to do, and there’s no way I’ll jeopardise that by making another mistake.’

      He reached for her before he could second-guess, gripping her upper arms, giving her no room to move. ‘We weren’t a mistake.’

      ‘Yeah? Then why did you run?’

      He couldn’t respond—not without telling her the truth. And that wasn’t an option.

      So he did the next best thing.

      He released her, turned his back, and walked away.

      ‘And you’re still running,’ she murmured.

      Her barb registered, and served to make him stride away that little bit faster.

       CHAPTER THREE

      CALLIE strode towards Johnston Street and her favourite Spanish bar.

      Some girls headed home to a chick-flick and tub of ice-cream when they needed comfort. She headed for Rivera’s.

      ‘Hola, querida.’ Arturo Rivera blew her a kiss from behind the bar and she smiled in return, some of her tension instantly easing.

      Artie knew about her situation: the necessity for her business to thrive in order to buy the best care for her mum. He knew her fears, her insecurities. He’d been there from the start, this reserved gentleman in a porkpie hat who’d lost his wife to the disease that would eventually claim her mum.

      She hadn’t wanted to attend a support group, but her mum’s doc had insisted it would help in the disease’s management and ultimately help her mum.

      So she’d gone along, increasingly frustrated and helpless and angry, so damn angry, that her vibrant, fun-loving mother had been diagnosed with motor neurone disease.

      She’d known nothing about her mum’s symptoms until it had been too late. Nora had hidden them well: the stumbling due to weakness in her leg muscles, her difficulty holding objects due to weak hands, her swallowing difficulties and the occasional speech slur.

      The first Callie had learned of it was when her mum had invited her to accompany her to see a neurologist. Nora hated needles, and apparently having an electromyograph, where they stuck needles in her muscles to measure electrical activity, was worse to bear than the actual symptoms.

      The diagnosis had floored them both—especially the lack of a cure and mortality rates. Though in typical determined Nora fashion her mum had continued living independently until her symptoms