unfortunately I have so much work to doâ¦â
âYou have to eat.â
His charm offensive was overwhelming. âIâll probably have a sandwich here. Iâm conscious of the tight deadline youâre working to as far as launching the ad campaign in the NewYear is concerned, and Iâm also working on some ideas of my own.â
âYouâre doing what?â
âTrying a new angle.â Her voice was starting to shake. Quinnâs expression wasnât exactly encouraging. He couldnât imagine a lowly woman coming up with a single original idea. She owed it to the team she was now determined to build to prove him wrong.
âI take it these ideas you mention have nothing to do with the work you do for me?â His tone was critical.
They had everything to do with the creative work she wanted to do for him. âCorrect, butââ
âIf the work you do for me suffersâ¦â
âIt wonât suffer.â
Standing up, Quinn propped one hip against the desk, managing to look both formidable and desirable at the same time. âIt had better not,â he said.
Half-man, half-beastâall male⦠The shout line on a sixties massage-cologne rushed into Magentaâs mind. The thought of massaging it into Quinn was quickly stifled. She held her breath as he stared at her thoughtfully.
âLet me see those ideas when youâre ready.â
Did she have to feel so gratified at his grudging concession?
âAnd donât tire yourself out working on personal projects to the point where youâre no good to me.â
âIâm only too happy to stay behind and work.â
âYou should have asked the girls to help you.â
The girls had enough to contend with from the men during normal working hours without Magenta asking them to stay behind and do more work for her. âIâm fineâhonestly. You go.â
â May I?â Quinn demanded ironically. âThatâs very good of you.â
âIâm sorryâI didnât meanââ
âGoodnight, Miss Steele. Remember to lock the door behind you when you leave.â
Watching Quinn stride towards the exit made her wish that just for once she could be a femme fatale that no man could walk out on.
Dream on , Magenta thought wryly, turning back to her work.
Â
She was stiff from sitting at her mean little work-station for hours on end, working on the final tweaks to the campaign, when the sound of the lift arriving made her tense with alarm. She felt exposed and vulnerable without an office door to lock and sat bolt-upright as the lift doors slid open.
It was almost a relief to see Quinn emerge, but what was he doing here?
Her heart thundered with anticipation. âHave you forgotten something?â She hurried to greet him. However much Quinn infuriated her, there was no doubt he injected life and vitality as well as a sense of security into the empty, silent officeâthough she still felt uncomfortably like a soldier on parade.
âMiss Steele.â Quinnâs eyes were sparkling in a very un-Quinn-like wayâwhich was to say his expression was both warm and amused, leaving her a very confused and shaken-up soldier. âCan I get you something?â she pressed.
âCoffee?â Quinn suggested.
âNo problem.â She could smell the night air on him, cold, clean and fresh. There was snow on his collar, and ice crystals sparkling like diamonds on his thick, black hair. It was a change to see Quinn looking so windswept, a good change that took her back in timeâor was that forwards?âto a young biker removing his helmet and shaking out his unruly mop of inky hair.
âYou didnât expect me to come back tonight,â Quinn guessed correctly. Shrugging off his overcoat, he tossed it over the backof a chair and walked with her to the kitchen. âI saw the lights from the street and took pity on
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