Brides, Babies And Billionaires. Rebecca Winters
can I do for you, Miss McKenzie?’
‘It’s Callie, please.’
He nodded. ‘Okay, then. What can I do for you, Callie?’
Her stomach jilted just a little at the way he said her name. She cleared her throat. ‘I wanted to say sorry.’
He almost smiled. ‘It’s becoming a habit, then.’
She let out a laugh. ‘Seems like it. I’ve made quite the mess since meeting you.’ She stepped forward, resisted pulling at her clothes. ‘But I am sorry. The first time I apologised it was because I’d made a mistake. This time it’s because I shouldn’t have barged in here and spoken out of turn.’
‘I’m not upset with you because you spoke out of turn.’
Blake stood, walked around the desk and leaned against it. He was wearing a blue shirt, and the top button was loosened. She swallowed, and wondered if the temperature in the room had increased.
‘I’m not your school principal.’
‘Aren’t you, though? In some ways?’
This time he did smile, and it did something strange to her heart.
‘I won’t take the bait on that one.’
He paused, and then crossed his arms. She could see the muscle ripple under his shirt, and the heat went up another notch.
‘You say you’re sorry for barging in here. But not that you eavesdropped?’
‘No, I’m not sorry about that. If I hadn’t you wouldn’t have considered investors. Which you have been doing, right?’ she asked, and knew that subtlety was not her forte.
‘I have. I made a few calls this morning, and I have a few people interested.’
He walked towards her, and though the distance between them wasn’t small her heart thudded.
‘So the answer to your real question is yes, I am going to do this.’
‘You are?’ Relief washed over her. ‘Oh, wow!’ She pressed a hand to her stomach. ‘That’s amazing.’
‘But I need your help.’
Relief turned into confusion. ‘What do you mean?’
‘Like I said yesterday, we need a very specific kind of investor. An international one who will be willing to invest in the hotel, but also in this city. Especially if I want him to agree to my strict terms regarding the expansion of Elegance Hotels.’
His hands were in his pockets now, and he moved until he was just close enough that she could smell his cologne. It reminded her of when they were in the elevator together—a time when she hadn’t had to think of him as her boss.
She shook off the feelings the memory evoked, but when she spoke, her voice was a little husky. ‘And how can I help with that?’
‘You can help me sell the city. You are the “Specialised Concierge”, right?’
He smiled slyly, and she realised he knew about her made-up title.
‘Or, in more common terms, a tour guide,’ she said.
‘Exactly. So I’ll need you to help me sell Cape Town to potential investors. Your knowledge of the city will be an asset to any proposal I make. I’ll take care of the business side of it, of course, and once that’s done we can take them on the tour you will custom-design to fit my proposal.’
‘How do you know I can do it?’ She felt her heart beat in a rhythm that couldn’t possibly be healthy.
‘Because your job depends on it.’
He smiled now, and she couldn’t read the emotion that lined it.
‘Callie, are you prepared to work with the boss?’
She stared helplessly at him, and despite everything inside her that nudged her to say otherwise she answered, ‘Yes, I am.’
‘YOU’RE HERE BECAUSE you want to keep your job. You’re here because you want to save Connor’s job. You’re here because you’re saving your colleagues’ jobs.’
Callie repeated the words to herself as she walked into what had previously been known as Conference Room A. Blake had turned it into an office. Not one he would share with Connor. No, that had ended the minute she had agreed to work with him. This conference-room-turned-office was hers and Blake’s to share. It was one of their medium-sized conference rooms, and Callie had only been in it a few times when she’d had tours with groups of more than six. But, despite its reasonable size, Callie felt closed in. And this time she wasn’t fooling herself by attributing the feeling to claustrophobia.
Her heart hammered as she saw him sitting at one end of the rectangular table, a large whiteboard behind him already half filled with illegible writing.
‘Are you sure you weren’t meant to be a doctor?’ she asked, hoping to break the tension she felt within herself.
Blake looked up at her, his eyes sharp despite how hard she knew he had been working. The hotel had been rife with the news that Blake had been holed up in the conference room for the entire week it had taken for Callie to sort out her schedule. She’d done her tours for that week, but had cancelled everything beyond that. Blake had made it very clear that Callie’s full attention would be needed for the investors, and that was what she was doing.
She tilted her head when he grabbed a cup of what Callie assumed had once been coffee from in front of him. By the look on his face, it was something significantly less desirable now.
‘I’ll get you some more,’ she said, and placed her files and handbag a few seats away from his.
This was their first official day of working together, and Callie wasn’t sure what it would be like to work with the boss. She was already distracted by being alone with him in the same room, she thought as she poured coffee into two cups that sat on the counter along one side of the conference room. The hotel staff had made sure that everything their boss could possibly need was in that room.
She’d heard them whispering amongst themselves, and had taken it upon herself to defuse their curiosity.
‘We’re going to try and save the hotel,’ she’d told Kate, knowing her friend couldn’t keep a secret for the life of her, ‘and if we do things will stay the same for the foreseeable future.’
Since she’d let that little titbit go, her colleagues had done everything in their power to make sure they had the fuel to save the hotel. And maybe the world, she thought, and wrinkled her nose at the extensive display of pastries that lined the rest of the counter.
‘How many people are eating this?’ she wondered out loud, and set the coffee in front of Blake.
‘Two today.’ He sighed as he sipped from the coffee. ‘It’s been like that ever since I started working in here. I think they think I’m a competitive eater in my spare time.’
She laughed. ‘Or a man who needs as much energy as possible so that he can work to save their jobs.’ He frowned, and she elaborated. ‘People were getting restless about what you being here means. I told a friend, and she told everyone else. Trust me—it’s better this way. Otherwise they might have been planning to starve you instead of feed you.’
She grinned, and felt herself relax. This wasn’t so bad. They were having a normal conversation. Just as she would with any of her colleagues. But then Blake smiled in return, and her heart thumped with that incredibly fast rhythm she was beginning to think was personalised for him. Like a ringtone.
She cleared her throat. ‘How’s everything going here?’
‘Good.’