“You’re suggesting I could replace an MBA and eight years of experience with a good makeover?”
What kind of a man would think that?
“Yes,” he said.
She stopped. She couldn’t believe he’d actually said it out loud.
“But,” he continued. “I’m also suggesting you’ll blow the competition out of the water when you have both.”
“You think Chantal is my competition?”
“I think Roger thinks she’s your competition. I think you could do a makeover with your eyes closed. And I think she’s only a threat to you if you let her be a threat to you.”
“So I’m choosing to have this happen?”
All she’d ever done was her job. She’d shown up early every day for eight years. She’d written speeches and press releases, planned events, supported her coworkers, solved problems and taken the message of Lush Beauty far and wide. If her performance evaluations were anything to go by, she’d been more than successful in her role as PR manager.
“You’re choosing not to fight it,” said Hunter.
“I shouldn’t have to fight it.” When had hard work and success stopped being enough?
“Too bad. So sad. Are you going to let her win?” He paused. “Do you want your career path to end?”
“Don’t be ridiculous.” She loved her job.
“I’m the one being ridiculous? Chantal’s nipping at your heels, and I’m the one being ridiculous?”
“Why do you care?”
There were a few seconds of silence. “Why do you think I care?”
Sinclair didn’t have an answer for that, so she finished climbing the ladder.
“I’m not saying it’s right,” he spoke below her. “I’m saying that’s the business you’re in. And you’re the PR manager. And, yes, I’m sorry, but it matters. And, as for why I care.”
He stopped talking, and she held her breath.
“I like you? I slept with you? You’re an asset to Lush Beauty? You’re family? Take your pick. But I’m about done fighting, Sinclair. If you don’t want my help, I’m out of here.”
She dipped her paintbrush, feeling hollow and exhausted. Hunter’s words pulsed in her ears, while paint dribbles dried on her hands. She pretended to focus on the painting while she waited for the door to slam behind him.
Emotion stung her eyes.
She didn’t mean to fight with him.
It wasn’t his fault that Chantal was prancing around the city like a poster child for Luscious Lavender. It wasn’t his fault that Roger was interfering in her management of the PR department. And what did Sinclair want from Hunter, anyway? For him to intervene with Roger?
Not.
She could take care of her own professional life.
Sort of. Maybe.
Because a tiny, little voice inside her told her some of what Hunter said made sense.
She focused on the paint, stroking it into the corner, listening for his footfalls, for the door slamming, for him walking out of her life.
“I’m sorry,” his unexpected words came from behind and below her. “I should have approached that differently.”
She stopped midstroke. Shocked, relieved and embarrassed all at the same time. She set down the brush.
“No,” she spoke to the wall. “I’m the one who’s sorry.”
Silence.
“Will you come down then?”
She gave a shaky nod. She couldn’t bring herself to look at him as she started down the ladder. Maybe all of what he said made sense. Maybe she’d been hasty in dismissing a makeover. After all, what could it hurt to try?
What exactly was the principle she was standing on? She’d always wanted the world to take her seriously. She hadn’t wanted a free ride because of looks and glamour. But did she want to put herself at a disadvatange?
“I suppose,” she said as her foot touched the floor and she turned toward him. “It wouldn’t kill me to try the shampoo.”
“That a girl.” His voice was full of approval.
“It’s just that I never wanted to cheat,” she tried to explain. “I never wanted to wonder if a promotion or a pay raise, or even people’s reactions to me were because of my looks.”
“You’re not cheating. You’re leveling the playing field. Besides, being beautiful has nothing to do with makeup and mousse.” He shrugged out of the ruined jacket and tossed it on the floor. He whipped off his tie. “You’re beautiful, Sinclair. And there’s not a damn thing you can do about it.”
Her heartbeat thickened in her chest, wondering what would come off next.
But he rolled up his sleeves. “Okay, let’s get to work.”
That threw her. “We’re going to the office?”
“We’re painting your walls.”
“You want to spend the afternoon here?”
“You bet.”
By late afternoon, Sinclair’s arms were about to fall off. Her shoulders ached, and she was getting a headache from the paint fumes. Her latest can was empty, so she climbed down the ladder to replace it.
Hunter appeared, taking the can from her hands.
“You’re done,” he said.
“There’s another whole wall.”
He pointed across the room. “See that bag over there? Full of bath oil, shampoo and gel?”
“Uh-huh.”
“I want you to take it into the bathroom and run a very hot, very deep bath. In fact—” he set down the paint can and propped up his roller “—I’ll do it for you.”
Before she could protest, he picked up the shopping bag and marched into the bathroom.
She heard the fan go on and the water gush from the faucet. She knew any self-respecting woman would fight against his high-handed behavior. But, honestly, she was just too tired.
After a few minutes, he returned to the living room. He didn’t talk, just unplugged her CD player and gathered up the two compact speakers. He popped out U2 and replaced it with Norah Jones.
Then he was back to the bathroom.
Curiosity finally got the better of her, and she wandered in to find her tub full of steaming, foamy water, and three cinnamon-scented candles flickering at the base of the tub. They’d been a Christmas gift from somebody at the office. But she’d never used them.
“I never have baths,” she admitted.
“Why not?”
“Showers are more efficient.”
“But baths are more fun.”
“You have baths, do you?” she couldn’t help but tease.
He faced her in the tiny room. “Guys don’t take baths. They want girls to take them. It makes them all soft and warm, and in the mood to get beautiful.”
She gave a mock sigh. “It’s time-consuming being all girly.”
He grinned. “Piece of cake being a guy.”
“Double standard.”
“You know it.”
“Still.” She glanced down at the steaming water. “It does look inviting.”
“That’s because it is.” He reached across her shoulder and flicked off the light.
“Time to take off your clothes,” he rumbled.
A sensual shiver ran through her, and she reflexively reached for the hem of her T-shirt.
But his large hands closed over hers to stop them. “I mean after I leave.”
“You’re leaving?”
He kissed her forehead. “I didn’t come here to seduce you, Sinclair.”
Suddenly, she wished he had.
“Don’t look at me like that. I’m going to paint for a while, or we’ll never finish.”
“I can paint later.”
His finger brushed over her lips to silence her. “The price of being a guy. Your mission is to get all glammed up and frou frou. My mission is to give you the time to do that.”
Then he winked, and left the room, clicking the door shut behind him. And Sinclair shifted her attention to the deep, claw-footed tub.
It looked decadently wonderful. He’d set out the shampoo, bath gel and lotion. And he’d obviously poured some of the Luscious Lavender foaming oil into the water. She’d spent the last six months thinking about the artsy labels, the expensive magazine ads, the stuffed sample gift baskets for the ball, and the retail locations that needed some extra attention promotions-wise. Funny, that she’d never thought much about the products themselves.
The water steamed, and the lavender scent filled the room, and the anticipation of that luxurious heat on her aching shoulders was more than tempting.
She peeled off her T-shirt, unzipped her jeans, then slipped out of her underwear. She eased, toe-first, into the scorching bathwater, dipping in her foot, her calf, her knee. Then she slowly brought in her other foot, bracing her hands on the edges of the tub to lower her body into the hot water.
After her skin grew accustomed to the temperature, and her shoulders and neck began to sigh in pleasure, her thoughts made their way to Hunter. He was on the other side of that thin wall. And she was naked. And he knew she was naked.
She pictured him opening the door, wearing nothing but a smile, a glass of wine in each hand. He’d cross the black and white tiles, bend to kiss her, maybe on the neck, maybe on the lips. He’d set down their glasses. Then he’d draw her to her feet, dripping wet, the scented oil slick on her skin. His hands would roam over her stomach, her breasts, her buttocks, pulling her tight against his body, lifting her—
Something banged outside and Hunter swore in frustration. Clearly, he wasn’t out there stripping off his clothes and popping the wine cork. She was naked, not twenty feet away, and he was dutifully painting.
She sucked in a breath and ducked her head under the water.
Four
By the time Sinclair emerged from her bathroom, wrapped in a thick, terry robe, her face glowing, her wet hair combed back from her face, Hunter had cleaned up the paint and ordered a pizza. The smell of tomatoes and cheese wafted up from the cardboard box on the breakfast bar while he popped the cork from his housewarming bottle of wine.
“How did you know sausage and mushroom is my favorite?” she asked as she padded across the paint splattered tarps.
“I’m psychic.” He retrieved two stools from beneath the tarp, then opened the top of the pizza box.
“How’d it go in there?” he asked her, watching her climb up on one stool.
She arranged the robe so that it covered her from head to toe, and he tried not to think about what was under there.
She smiled in a way that did his heart good. “I’m a whole new woman.”
“Not completely new, I hope,” he teased as he took the stool facing her. The covered breakfast bar was at their elbows.
She grinned. “Don’t worry. I saved the best parts.”
“Oh, good.” He poured them each a glass of the pinot. “So, are you ready to move on to makeup?”
She reached for a slice of pizza. “You planning to help me with that, too?”
He took in her straggled hair, squeaky clean face and oversized robe. If he had his way, he’d keep her exactly as she was. But this wasn’t about him.
“I don’t think you want to arm me with a mascara wand.”
“But you’ve done such a good job so far.” She blinked her thick lashes ingenuously.
“We could call one of the Bergdorf ladies.”
She waved a dismissive hand. “I’ll be fine.”
“You sure?”
She hit him with an impatient stare. “It’s not that I can’t put on a lot of makeup. It’s that I don’t put on a lot of makeup.”
“Oh.”
She chewed on her slice of pizza, and he followed suit. After a while, she slipped her bare feet off the stool’s crossbar and swung them in the air while they ate in companionable silence.
“What about clothes?” he asked.
“I’ll call Kristy and get some suggestions.”
He nodded his agreement. Having a sister in the fashion design business had to help. “Sounds like you’ve got everything handled,” he observed.
She shifted on the stool, flexing her neck back and forth, wincing. “It’s not going to be that big of a deal. I’m a pretty efficient project manager. The only difference is, this time the project is me.”
Hunter wasn’t convinced project management was the right approach. There was something in the art and spirit of beauty she seemed to be missing. But he was happy to have got her this far, and he wasn’t about to mess with his success.
She lifted her wineglass and the small motion caused her to flinch in obvious pain.
He motioned for her to turn around.
She glanced behind her. “What?”
“Go ahead. Turn.” He motioned again, and this time she complied.
“You painted too long,” he told her as he loosened her robe on her neck and pressed his thumbs into the stiff muscles on her shoulders.
“I wanted to finish.”
“You’re going to be sore in the morning.” He found a knot and began to work it.
“I’ll live. Mmmmm.”
“That’s the spot?”
“Oh, yeah.”
He’d promised himself he’d stick to business, and he would. But his body had reacted the instant he’d touched her. Her skin was warm from the bath, slick from the bath oil, and fragrant from the water and the candles. But he scooted his stool closer, persisting in the massage, determined to keep this all about her.
To distract himself, he glanced around at the freshly painted room. It was small, but the windows were large, and he could see that it had potential to be cozy and inviting. In fact, he preferred it to the big, Osland family house on Long Island.
He stayed there whenever he was in town, but with just him and a couple of staff members, it always seemed to echo with emptiness. Right now, he wished he could invite Sinclair over to fill it up with laughter. “Have you always lived in New York?” he asked her instead.
She nodded. “Kristy and I went to school in Brooklyn. You?”
“Mostly in California.”
“Private school, I bet.”
“You’re right.”
“Uniforms and everything?”
“Yes.”
She tipped her head to glance up at him. “You must have looked cute in your little short pants and tie.”
“I’m sure I was adorable.” He dug his thumb into a stubborn knot in her shoulder.
“Ouch. Was that for calling you cute?”
“That was to make you feel better in the morning.”
She flexed her shoulder under his hands. “Did you by any chance play football in high school?”
“Soccer and basketball. You?”
“I edited the school newspaper.”
“Nerdy.”
“Exciting. I once covered a murder.”
He paused. “There was a murder at your high school?”
She gave a long, sad sigh of remembrance. “Mrs. Mitchell’s goldfish. Its poor, lifeless body was found on the science table. Someone had cruelly removed it from its tank after hours. We suspected the janitor.”
Hunter could picture an earnest, young Sinclair hot on the trail of a murder suspect, all serious and no-nonsense, methodically reviewing the evidence.
“Did he do it?” Hunter asked.
“We couldn’t prove it. But it was the best headline we ever had. Broke the record for copy sales.” She sounded extremely proud of the accomplishment.
“You were definitely a nerd,” he said.
“I prefer the term intellectual.”
“I bet you ran in the school election.”
“True.”
“There you go.” He’d made his point.
“Billy Jones beat me out for class president in ninth grade.” She put a small catch in her voice. “I was crushed. I never ran again.”
“I’d have voted for you,” said Hunter.
“No. Like everyone else, you’d have fallen for Billy’s chocolate coconut snowballs—”
“His what?”
“Chocolate and coconut on the outside, marshmallow cream on the inside. He brought five boxes to school and handed them out during his speech. I didn’t have a chance.”
“Marshmallow cream, you say?”
Sinclair elbowed him in the chest. “Quit salivating back there.”
“I’d still have voted for you.”
“Liar.”
He chuckled at her outrage and eased her back against his body. “Oh, I’d have eaten the snowball. But it’s a secret ballot, right?”
“Traitor.” But her muscles relaxed under his hands, and her body grew more pliant.
Finally, he stopped massaging and wrapped his arms around her waist. “I bet you were a cute little nerd.”
She rested her head against his chest. He didn’t dare move. He barely dared breathe. All it would take was one kiss, and he’d be dragging her off to the bedroom.
She tipped her head to look up at him, all sweetness and vulnerability.
“Hunter?” she breathed, lips dark and parted, eyes filled with passion and desire.
He closed his, fighting like hell to keep from kissing her lips. “I don’t want to be that guy,” he told her, discovering how true that was. Because he didn’t want to screw up their budding friendship.
“That guy?”
“That guy with the bath and the candles and the shoulder massage.”
“I liked that part.”
He opened his eyes again. “It’s Seduction 101 for losers.”
“Are you calling yourself a loser?”
“I’m saying if I make love with you, I’ll feel like I cheated.”
“There’s a way to cheat?”
He reflexively squeezed her tight. “I cheated, and you never had a chance.”
“As in, I don’t know my own mind?”
“Is there an answer for that that won’t get me in trouble?”
“Not really.”
He ruthlessly ignored the feel of her in his arms. He wasn’t willing to risk that she might regret it in the morning.
“You’re tired. You’re vulnerable. And we haven’t thought this through. We turn that corner,” he continued, “we can’t turn back.”
“I know,” she acknowledged in a soft voice.
He leaned around her, placing a lingering kiss on her temple. “I’ll see you at the office?”
“Sure.”
He forced himself to let go of her. Then, using every ounce of his strength and determination, he stood up and walked away.
By 7:00 a.m., Sinclair was in her office.
After Hunter left last night, she’d lain awake, remembering his soft voice, his easy conversation, and the massage that had all but melted her muscles. She would have willingly made love with him. But, he was right. They hadn’t thought it through. It was hard enough ignoring what had happened six weeks ago, never mind rekindling all those memories.
Hunter was a thoughtful man. He was also an intelligent man, and she’d spent some time going over his professional advice. He saw Chantal as her competition. And he saw Roger in Chantal’s corner. Sinclair realized she had to do this, and she had to do it right. It was time to stop fooling around.
So, she’d arrived this morning with a plan to do just that. She submitted an electronic leave form, rescheduled her meetings, plastered her active files with Post-its for Amber, and left out-of-office messages on both her voice mail and e-mail.
She was working her way through the mail in her in-basket when Roger walked in.
“What’s this?” he asked, dropping the leave form printout on her desk.
“I’m going on vacation,” she answered cheerfully, tossing another piece of junk mail in the wastepaper basket.
“Why? Where?”
“Because I haven’t taken a vacation in eight years. Because I’m entitled to vacation time just like everybody else. And because I’m not currently needed on the Valentine’s Day ball file.”
“Of course you’re needed on the file.”
“To do what?”
Roger waved his arms. “To make plans. To order things.”
“Plans are made. Things are ordered.” She rose from her chair and smiled at him. “You’ll be fine, Roger. You’ve got Chantal on the case. She can oversee things.”
“But, where are you going?”
“Chapter Three, Section Twelve of the employee manual. Employees shall not be required to disclose nor justify their vacation plans. All efforts will be made to ensure employees are able to take leave during the time period of their choosing. And leave shall not be unreasonably withheld.”
“She’s right,” came Hunter’s voice from the doorway.
Roger looked from Hunter to Sinclair and back again. “You knew about this?”
“Hadn’t a clue.” Hunter looked to Sinclair. “Taking a vacation?”
“I am.”
“Good for you. A refreshed employee is a productive employee.”
“I plan to be refreshed,” she said.
Hunter smirked. “I’m looking forward to that.”
“I’ve left notes for Amber,” Sinclair said to Roger. “The meetings with the Roosevelt Hotel have been rescheduled. Unless Chantal wants to take them. You could ask her. The florist order is nailed down. The music … Well, there’s a little problem with the band, but I’m sure Chantal or Amber can handle it.”
She dropped the last piece of mail in the waste basket and glanced around the room. “I think that about covers it.”
“This is unexpected,” said Roger through clenched teeth.
“Can I talk to you for a minute?” asked Hunter.
“My office?” Roger responded.
“I meant Sinclair,” said Hunter, stepping aside from the open door.
Roger frowned.
Sinclair should have cared about his annoyance, and she should have been bothered by the fact that the CEO had just dismissed the president in order to talk to her. But she truly didn’t care. She had things to do, places to go, beauticians to meet.
Roger stalked out of the office, and Hunter closed the door behind him.
“Career-wise,” said Sinclair. “And by that, I mean my career. I’m not sure that was the best move.”
“You’re taking some time for the makeover?” asked Hunter.
She straightened a stack of reports and lifted them from her desktop. “You’re right that Lush Beauty Products is going through a huge transition. And you’re right I should thwart Roger by getting a makeover. And, honestly, I believe Roger and Chantal need some time alone to get to know one another.”
Hunter grinned, obviously understanding her Machiavellian motives.
“I’m a goal-oriented woman, Hunter. Give me a week, and I can accomplish this.”
“I’m sure you can. Any interest in accomplishing it in Paris?”
She squinted. She didn’t understand the question.
“I had an idea,” he said. He paused, obviously for effect. “The Castlebay Spa chain. It’s a very exclusive, European boutique spa chain, headquartered in Paris.”
She got his point and excitement shimmered through her. “We’re going to try again?”
“Oslands don’t quit.”
Enthusiasm gathered in her chest at the thought of another shot at a spa. She squared her shoulders. “Neither do Mahoneys.”
“Good to hear. Because that platinum card I gave you works in Paris.”
“Oh, no.” She shook her head. “You don’t need me to do the spa deal, and I don’t need to go to Paris. I’ve got things to do in New York.”
He took her hand. “I want you in on the spa deal. And Paris is the makeover capital of the world.”
“Paris is definitely overkill.” She didn’t need to cross an ocean to get a haircut and buy dresses. Plus, in Paris, she’d be with Hunter. And there was the ever present danger of sleeping together. Since they’d so logically decided against it last night, it seemed rather cavalier to take off to Paris together.
“Do I need reinforcements? I could call your sister. She’ll back me up.”
“Don’t you dare call Kristy.” Kristy would be over the moon at the thought of a Paris makeover for her sister. And Sinclair would have two people to argue with.
He pulled out his cell phone and waggled it in the air. “She’s on speed dial.”
“That’s cheating.”
“I’ve got nothing against cheating.”
His words from last night came back to her, but she didn’t mention it.
“I need you in Paris,” he said.
She didn’t believe that for a second. “No, you don’t.”
“I need your expertise on the Castlebay deal.”
She rolled her eyes. “Like my track record on spa deals is any good.”
“You know the Lush Beauty company and the products, and you can describe them a lot better than I can.”
“There’s a flaw in this plan,” she told him. But deep down inside, she knew Hunter was winning. If she wanted to beat Chantal at her own game, a Paris makeover would give her the chance she needed.