‘More importantly, I always give my PA my complete trust and in return I expect discretion and one hundred per cent loyalty…’
His words made Gail feel hollow inside.
‘Because of the occasional long hours, I’m flexible with regard to the length and the number of holidays my PA takes, and the salary is generous…’
He quoted a figure that made Gail blink and she found herself thinking, no wonder his previous PA had been reluctant to leave.
‘Oh, just one more thing. When we’re away from the office I like a friendly, informal working atmosphere with the use of first names.
‘Now, if you want it, the job is yours.’
She didn’t. But the thought of Paul’s anger prevented her from saying so. If there was still a chance, he would want her to grab it with both hands.
And, after the way Zane Lorenson had treated her, did she really care if he came a cropper? Wouldn’t she be justified in cheering if he could be brought to his knees?
Yes, she would.
But the truth was that she didn’t want to play any part in it. Didn’t want to have to work closely with a man who had turned her whole life upside down once before, and who, she was forced to admit, might well have the power to do so again.
She had never met anyone else who had such an overwhelming effect on her. Just being with him was traumatic, turning the cool, competent woman she had become into a mass of nerves and making her feel like a gauche, insecure seventeen-year-old again.
If she didn’t take the job, she knew Paul might never forgive her. But it was more than that—when it came to Zane Lorenson, Gail couldn’t say no.
‘Well?’ There was the merest hint of impatience in Zane’s voice.
Still she hesitated. If she said no, she would be free and Paul need never know that she had had the chance and turned it down.
Sorely tempted, she battled with her conscience. Her conscience won.
There was no way she could deceive the man she loved and was going to marry. It would be like living a lie…
Looking up and meeting Zane Lorenson’s green eyes was like walking into a plate glass window.
She was still mentally reeling when he said silkily, ‘You seem to be having a great deal of difficulty deciding.’
‘Yes,’ she stammered. ‘Yes, I want it.’
She saw what appeared to be a look of almost savage relief and satisfaction cross his face.
It was gone instantly and she knew she must have been mistaken. He wouldn’t care one way or the other whether or not she took the job. If she didn’t take it, no doubt the next girl he interviewed would.
‘Very well,’ he said, his tone businesslike, ‘it’s yours for a three month trial period. I’ll let my secretary know what’s happening and get her to deal with all the details.
‘I understand from Mrs Rogers that you’re free to start at once?’
She nodded, though in truth she didn’t want to start at all. The second the words, ‘ Yes, I want it ,’ had been spoken she had regretted them.
‘How did you get here?’
Momentarily thrown, she echoed, ‘Get here?’
‘Did you come by bus? Tube?’
After a brief hesitation, she answered, ‘Taxi.’
‘You have a current passport?’
She frowned, unsure where this conversation was heading. ‘Yes.’
‘Good. How long will it take you to pack a bag?’
‘P-pack a bag? You mean to travel?’
‘My, but you’re quick,’ he said with a hint of sarcasm.
She flushed. ‘I’m sorry. It’s just a bit sudden.’
Though Paul had warned her,‘ Lorenson has a massive office complex in Manhattan and he likes his Personal Assistant to be free and unencumbered, to be available to travel to his New York offices with him at the drop of a hat ,’ she hadn’t expected to be going quite this soon.
‘So how long?’
‘Fifteen minutes.’
‘Right. Let’s get on our way. My private jet’s waiting at the airport.’ A hand beneath her elbow, he hurried her to the door.
Wits scattered by his touch, and feeling as though she had been caught up and swept along by a tidal wave, Gail found herself escorted to the lift.
As it carried them swiftly downwards, he said, ‘I need to discuss something with my secretary, so perhaps you can get a taxi home to pick up your passport and luggage, then go on to meet me at the airport?’
‘Of course.’ She could always ask the driver to wait while she slipped inside for some money.
And this way, she thought with relief, she would have a breathing space, time to talk to Paul and let him know the score.
If she told him how Zane Lorenson had treated her, he might be concerned enough to forbid her to take the job…
She was warming herself with that small flicker of hope when—as though her companion knew exactly what was in her mind and was determined to thwart her—he said, ‘On second thoughts, I’ll only be with Claire for a short time so I might as well take you.’
Apart from needing to speak to Paul, she didn’t like the idea of Zane Lorenson going anywhere near her flat. His knowing her address was one thing, his actually ending up on her doorstep another.
Just the thought made her feel vulnerable, exposed.
Biting back the panic, she said as levelly as possible, ‘There’s really no need for you to go to all that trouble. I can easily—’
‘It isn’t any trouble,’ he told her crisply as the lift doors slid to behind them and they made their way down the corridor, ‘and it makes more sense for us to go together.’
‘Oh, but—’
‘If you took a taxi to the airport you might have some difficulty finding me, so it’ll save time in the long run.’
Knowing she couldn’t keep arguing, she relapsed into silence, her teeth biting into her lower lip.
‘Something wrong?’ he queried, giving her a sidelong glance.
Damn the man, he never missed a thing. ‘No, nothing,’ she assured him.
‘Quite sure? We don’t want to start our relationship with any undisclosed issues or problems. I know it’s the friction in the oyster that makes the pearl, but now you’re my PA I’d like there to be harmony, complete trust and confidence between us.’
She was saved from having to answer by the office door opening and Mrs Bancroft appearing, a sheaf of papers in her hand.
‘Ah, Claire, before we start for the airport, I need a minute or two of your time.’
‘Of course, Mr Lorenson.’ Turning on her heel, she led the way back inside.
Gail found herself shepherded into the office and given a seat.
Her thoughts busy, she paid scant attention while, quickly and precisely, Zane Lorenson issued his orders, ending, ‘I may be gone for a couple of weeks, but I intend to remain incommunicado.
‘If anything really urgent crops up that Dave can’t handle, you know how to get hold of me. Otherwise, I don’t want to be disturbed while I’m away.’
‘I understand, Mr Lorenson.’
‘Good. Then we’ll be off. Perhaps you’ll ask John to bring the car round?’
‘Certainly, Mr Lorenson.’ She lifted the phone. ‘Shall I ask him to pick up your luggage?’
‘It’s already in the boot, thanks.’ Turning to Gail, he queried, ‘Ready to go, Miss North?’
The brisk question scattering Gail’s thoughts like a gunshot scattered starlings, she got to her feet.
They went down in the lift without a word being spoken, but she was uncomfortably aware that he never took his eyes off her face.
As, his hand at her waist, they made their way across the foyer, the pretty blonde behind the reception desk smiled brightly and called an eager, ‘Good morning, Mr Lorenson.’
‘Morning, Miss Johnson,’ he responded pleasantly. ‘Settling in all right?’
Читать дальше