Once Upon A Mattress. Kathleen O'Reilly
It was only a first step, and not a big one at that. Time to return to the family. Not that anyone seemed to notice that he’d been missing, of course.
Ben went back to the safety of his desk and popped two aspirin. Where to start?
He took the folder from the top of his desk and read the computer printout of the staff’s Internet access reports. There seemed to be widespread page views of Playboy on the fourth floor, and there was some dating instruction viewage on the third floor. Ben laughed. He should check into that. It wasn’t like security at Fort Knox, but there just wasn’t a lot going on.
The aspirin started kicking in, and he felt strong enough to tackle the more mundane part of the job. He tugged open his desk drawer and pulled out a book. Hacking Exposed: Network Security Secrets & Solutions.
He opened the book to the first page. Chapter 1. Casing the Establishment.
By page fifteen, he was ready for an afternoon nap. He locked his hands behind his head and eased back in his chair, studying the walls. Maybe he could patch up the spidery cracks that ran near the ceiling, then at least he’d have something to do.
He’d worked for a roofer in St. Thomas one year. Item number four—one summer in the Caribbean. Check. Ah, that had been the perfect place. While hammering away at the flat roofs of the villas, he’d had a hard time looking away from the crystal blue waters that sparkled as far as the eye could see.
Not like Dallas, where the five-day forecast this week was rain, rain, and more rain.
He shouldn’t be daydreaming. He should check out that Internet site. He clicked on his mouse and pulled up the page.
Top ten pickup lines. Ben started to laugh as he read.
“Hey, baby, do you believe in love at first sight, or do you want me to walk in again?”
Gag. Too clichéd. He could do better than that. He thought for a minute.
“Do I have a chance in hell with you? Don’t tell me if I don’t because I just gotta try,” he said to himself.
He never heard the person entering his office; he just had the feeling someone was behind him.
Ben clicked on the word-processing icon, but it was too late. He looked behind him.
Busted.
By Hilary Sinclair.
She smiled tightly, her lips curving in a smug manner.
Ben was quick—threw himself into things right from the start—but when she looked at him as if he didn’t belong here, it really ticked him off. One thing about Miss Sinclair, she knew mattresses. One thing about Ben, he didn’t.
To make matters worse, she wore this dark shade of lipstick that should have looked goth, but instead it looked inviting.
“May I help you,” he asked, not thinking about her mouth.
“Busy, Mr. MacAllister? Didn’t want to interrupt.”
Ben started typing away in the word processor. “Clearing my train of thought. Humor is an excellent stimulus when your cerebral cortex is overutilized.”
She pursed her midnight-dark mouth and her eyes narrowed. “Is that true?”
“No.”
Her green eyes narrowed even further. They were cat eyes, tilted at the corner, and now they were mere slits. “Your father asked that you help out with the travel arrangements for the team. I’ve put together everyone’s itineraries, and their airline requests.”
Ben’s headache returned. Travel agent was not on his list of things to do.
She tossed her long dark hair back from her face. She had the kind of hair that kinked in the wet weather, and now that he thought about it, it’d pretty much perpetually kinked since the first day she started at MacAllister Beds. That’s what ten days of solid rain did to hair.
Why did he let her get under his skin? Ben’s emotional Richter scale was usually on low to very low, but she spiked the needle, both in a figurative and literal sense.
Perhaps charm and a little bit of ignorance were in order. He could do both well. “Do we know what hotel to book?”
“The show is at the Paris Las Vegas. We’ll do the press conference there, as well.”
Ben jotted it down on his notepad. “Airline?”
“Iberia.”
He looked up. She didn’t crack a mandible muscle. Ben stood his ground. For a long time she stared him down. What she didn’t know was that he’d spent six months as a bouncer during his Stanford years. And that gave him the upper hand. Finally she broke. “That was a joke,” she mumbled.
“Yes, I’m sure it was. Airline?”
“Whatever’s cheapest. We’ll be flying out on Sunday evening, although Allen has asked for a Saturday flight because he wants to gamble. Your father wants to rent a motorcycle and ride around Vegas while he’s there, and I’ll be happy with whatever arrangements you make.”
“Window or aisle?”
“I beg your pardon?”
“Would you and Allen like a window or the aisle?”
“Aisle.”
“Special dietary needs.” He quirked a brow, a blatant show-off gesture.
“I’d like a plate without processed meat.”
“Vegetarian?”
“No, thank you. Vegetables don’t agree with me.”
“Perhaps I could pack a peanut butter and jelly sandwich? It might be gentler on your system.”
She took a deep breath, her rumpled blouse rising and falling. In, out, in, out. His eyes followed her breathing, and damned if he wasn’t getting hard.
“Sarcasm is unbecoming in a professional environment,” she said, and he wondered if she’d think hard-ons were unbecoming.
Instead, he cleared this throat. “And I thought I was being considerate.”
“Shall I assume this task is not beyond your capabilities and that you can work it into your—” she shot a glance at his monitor “—busy schedule?”
Her voice was full of rebuke, as if she were a schoolteacher correcting a wayward student. Ben had never indulged in schoolteacher fantasies, but images popped into his brain—images that could get him in trouble with Hilary Sinclair.
For a moment he contemplated her prickliness. She wasn’t his type, not to imply that he limited himself to a type, but she had something that appealed to him. Here was someone clearly in need of a life adjustment. She didn’t smile enough, didn’t look happy at all. He’d never seen a woman more in need of rescuing than Hilary Sinclair.
And Ben, who’d never rescued anything in his life, was captivated.
Life was too short to ignore such heaven-sent opportunities. “I like your blouse, Miss Sinclair,” he said.
Finally, success. He was rewarded with a deep flush. Deep and decadent. In quite a disordered manner, the rigid Miss Sinclair pulled a tin from her pocket and popped an Altoids in her mouth, and then, remembering her manners, put the box on his desk.
Ben didn’t look at the tiny mints; instead he was fascinated by her curves. She had been all tight lines, straight back, narrow eyes, but now, as if by magic, her cheeks were rounded, almost plump, her eyes wide and liquid. She had the guilty look of a woman who’d been caught in the wrong bed.
Ben idly traced the rim of the desk with his index finger, imagining what lay underneath that rumpled white blouse. There was nothing like crossing the line to make things interesting. His smile grew wider, his hard-on harder.
“I