Louise Fuller - Blackmailed Down The Aisle

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‘What’s it to be – me, or the police?’Out-of-work actress Daisy Maddox would do anything for her brother – even sneak into a sleek New York office to return the watch he stole from billionaire Rollo Fleming.When Rollo catches her red-handed, Daisy is completely at his mercy. But Rollo needs a wife to seal a deal, and events take a wild turn–he demands Daisy become his temporary wife!Swept into Rollo’s world, Daisy’s caught in an intense tangle of emotions. And with every searing kiss, Daisy’s guard melts, as she discovers there are unexpected, pleasurable advantages to being blackmailed down the aisle…

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He shrugged. ‘Unlike some people, I prefer to tell and hear the truth.’

‘In that case you’re a bully.’

‘Is that right?’ His shoulders rose and tensed.

‘Yes, it is. Ever since you walked through that door you’ve done nothing but make threats and try to intimidate me.’

A muscle flickered in his cheek, and then slowly he held out his phone.

‘So call the police,’ he said softly. ‘Go on. Call them.’

Her pulse gave a jerk. She had effectively backed herself into a corner, and he knew it. But watching his green eyes gleam triumphantly, his smug assumption that she would back down, flipped a switch inside her head. Stepping forward, she snatched the phone from his hand.

‘Fine. I will,’ she snarled. ‘At least that way I won’t have to spend any more time with you.’

‘Don’t be so bloody childish.’

There was a tension in his voice she hadn’t heard before.

‘I’m not being childish,’ she snapped. ‘You’re going to call them anyhow, so what does it matter?’

Their eyes locked—hers furiously defiant, his cool, opaque, dispassionate—and then her mouth curved scornfully.

‘Oh, I get it. You wanted to do it. So who’s being childish now?’

There was a small, tight silence.

Rollo took a slow, deep breath. His chest felt hot and taut. Her stubbornness was infuriating, and yet part of him couldn’t help admiring her. She was just so determined to keep fighting him—even to the point of making this crazy kamikaze gesture.

Glancing from her face to her tightly curled hands, he sighed. ‘You don’t want to do that, Daisy,’ he said at last.

‘You don’t know what I want. You don’t know anything about me or David.’

He met her gaze. ‘So tell me.’

Daisy stared at him in silence. Why was he offering her a chance to talk now? More than anything she wanted to hurl it back in his face. But already her anger was fading and picturing her brother waiting, wordless with terror downstairs, she took a shallow breath and lowered the phone.

‘Why?’ she said sulkily. ‘So you can use it against him.’

His eyes narrowed. ‘That depends on what you tell me. To date, all I know about your brother—aside from his penchant for expensive watches—is that he works in Acquisition and Development. And he’s tall and twitchy—’

‘He’s not twitchy. He’s just a bit nervous.’ She spoke defensively and instantly wished she hadn’t as he turned his penetrating, unsettling green gaze on her face.

‘Guilty people often are.’

There was no short or easy way to refute that statement, so instead she satisfied herself with giving him an icy glare.

‘He’s not some criminal mastermind. He’s shy, and he finds it difficult to make friends with people.’

‘He might find it easier if he didn’t steal from them,’ he said smoothly.

‘It was a mistake.’ Her voice rose with exasperation.

‘So you keep saying. But a mistake is when you forget to charge your phone. Not when you purposely steal something that doesn’t belong to you. That’s called theft.’

‘Not always.’ She looked him straight in the eye, her shoulders set high and pushed back as though for battle. ‘Sometimes it’s called “charging market rent.”’

Rollo gritted his teeth. Not in response to her confrontational remark but because he knew that this time she was telling the truth. David Maddox was clearly not a criminal mastermind. Which was why he’d requested a background check instead of just firing him.

It had taken less than half a day for a file to land on his desk, and the research had been thorough—health records, academic results and employment history. And one line noting the existence of a twin sister who also happened to work for the Fleming Organisation’s hospitality team.

Glancing across at her face, he felt his breath suddenly light and loose in his chest; he felt weightless, off balance, as though he’d been drinking. That was all she’d been. A line in a report. A name without a face.

But no words could ever have conveyed Daisy’s beauty and spirit. Or the way her eyes softened when she talked about her brother. Or that tiny crease she got on her forehead when she was digging in her heels.

His fingers twitched and suddenly, more than anything, he wanted to reach out and touch the curve of her cheek, then carry on touching, his fingers sliding over the soft skin of her throat, then lower still, to the swelling curves of her breasts and waist—

He felt his body jerk to life—muscles tightening, groin hardening.

Sitting watching the camera footage of her breaking into his office, he’d thought she was beautiful but greedy—a woman who didn’t believe the rules applied to her. And it had angered him so much that for reasons he didn’t want to examine, he’d broken with protocol and convinced his security team to let him deal with her personally.

Only now here she was, clutching his phone like an amulet to ward off evil, and he couldn’t seem to hold on to his anger. At least not the vindictive, punitive kind. Instead—and he really couldn’t explain why—he felt wound up, and almost irritated by her reckless stupidity.

Had she really thought she could get away with it?

Then she was not only foolhardy but utterly deluded; there was no way he would ever have fallen for her lies.

Except that he would have done.

His muscles tensed as the truth hit him square in the chest: if he hadn’t watched her breaking in he would have believed every word, trusted each hesitant glance. She would have had him eating out of her hand.

The thought should have repelled him, but instead he felt his pulse accelerate, the blood humming inside his head, as slowly, miraculously he realised that maybe—just maybe—he had found a way to change James Dunmore’s mind.

Gazing blandly over at her, he shrugged. ‘Obviously I’d love to hear your views on social housing some other time, but right now I think we should talk about you.’

There was a startled pause. She stared at him suspiciously. ‘Why?’

He shrugged. ‘I’m curious. What do you do when you’re not breaking into offices?’ he said softly.

‘Why do you care?’ she snapped. ‘You’ve clearly made up your mind that David and I are some of kind of Bonnie and Clyde. Nothing I say is going to change that.’

‘Try me,’ he said lazily. ‘I can’t say for sure that it’ll change anything. But what have you got to lose?’

Holding her breath, Daisy watched in mute fascination as he reached up and undid the top button of his shirt, tugging the dark green tie loose to reveal a triangle of sleek golden skin.

Angry, Rollo Fleming was formidable, but she was just starting to realise that anger was not the most effective weapon in his armoury. His charm was far more lethal. And when the chill and distance left his voice he was at his most dangerous.

‘You said earlier you weren’t interested,’ she said stiffly.

‘And you said earlier I didn’t have a heart.’

His gaze rested on her face—cool, unblinking, unreadable—and her own heart skipped a beat.

‘So what are you saying?’

‘I’m giving you an opportunity to redeem yourself. And David, of course.’

Rollo could see she was tempted by his words. He could read the conflict in her eyes, her distrust of him battling with her impulse to protect her brother. He waited, knowing the value of both silence and patience, until finally she sighed.

‘There’s not much to say. I’m twenty-five. I live with my brother, who’s my twin. And I’m a waitress.’ Her eyes flared. ‘Just a waitress. But not through choice. I’m actually an actress, only I’m between jobs at the moment.’

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