Her Brooding Italian Boss

Her Brooding Italian Boss by Susan Meier Page B

Book: Her Brooding Italian Boss by Susan Meier Read Free Book Online
Authors: Susan Meier
Ads: Link
his pocket.
    “I have some errands in town. I’ll be back at noon to read any letters you’ve drafted.”
    She nodded and said, “Yes,” but before the word was fully out of her mouth he was gone.
    She sat at her desk, glancing at the new computer, which he’d set up while she finished breakfast. When she saw that everything was in English, she reminded herself that was why he’d bought a new computer.
    But that made her frown. If the computer had instructions and menus in a language she didn’t speak, why would he feel the need to hide it behind closed doors?
    Why hide it at all?

CHAPTER FIVE
    A NTONIO RETURNED A little after three. Angry with himself for being so obvious about hiding the computer, he’d avoided his office. But he couldn’t stay away any longer.
    With a resigned sigh, he walked down the long quiet hall. About two feet before he reached the door, he heard the click, clack of the computer keys. He sucked in a breath and stepped inside. Laura Beth immediately looked up.
    Her green eyes sparkled. Obviously, she loved to work, and he had to admit she looked right sitting behind the long, flat computer screen, her brown hair knotted away from her face and held together by two pencils.
    “Love your hair.”
    She laughed and stretched her arms above her head, revealing her perfect bosom to him. Her pink tank top expanded to its limits. The long lines of her slender neck all but outlined themselves for him. The slope of her breasts above the pale pink material made his fingers twitch.
    The desire to paint her tightened his chest and he had to fight to stop a groan. She was the last woman in the world he needed to have in his house right now. He didn’t want to give their attraction the chance to grow when he knew there was no future for them. Not only did he not want to hurt her, but he also could not handle seeing her pregnancy.
    But, oh, how he wanted to paint. How he longed for brushstrokes. For the joy of finding just the right light, just the right angle...and he could see all of it with her.
    She pointed at her head. “I forgot that my hair gets in my way. So I had to improvise.”
    She lowered her arms and his vision of painting her crumbled like the walls of the Coliseum. One second the urge to paint was so strong he could see the brushstrokes in his mind’s eye; the next minute it was gone and in its wake was a cold, hollow space.
    He wanted to curse. He’d finally gotten adjusted to not painting. He’d lost the hunger. He didn’t awaken every morning trembling with sorrow over losing himself, his identity, his passion.
    And she’d brought it all back.
    He fought the impulse to turn and walk out of the office, telling himself anything to do with painting wasn’t Laura Beth’s fault. These were his demons, left behind by the betrayal of a narcissistic wife and his own stupidity in tumbling into a disastrous marriage with her. He couldn’t take any of this out on Laura Beth.
    As casually as possible, he said, “Well, your hair is certainly interesting.” He motioned to the stacks of letters. “I see you made headway.”
    “It’s fun pretending to be you, thanking people for adoring my work.”
    He sniffed a laugh and leaned his hip against the corner of the desk. “Give me a pen and I’ll sign them.”
    Like a good assistant, she rummaged for a pen. When she found one, she handed it to him along with the first stack of replies to fan letters. He looked down only long enough to find the place for his signature, then began writing.
    He’d signed three letters before she grabbed the stack and pulled it away from him.
    A look of sheer horror darkened her face. “You’re not reading them!”
    “I don’t need to read them. I trust you.”
    “That’s nice, but aren’t you at least a little curious about what I’m telling people?”
    “No. I assume you’re saying thanks, and that you homed in on some detail of their letter to me, some comment, and you addressed that to make each

Similar Books

Deep Water

Peter Corris

Jumped In

Patrick Flores-Scott

Wayfinder

C. E. Murphy

Being Invisible

Penny Baldwin

Jane Two

Sean Patrick Flanery

Ascending the Veil

Venessa Kimball