Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Romance,
Contemporary,
Mystery & Detective,
Man-Woman Relationships,
Love Stories,
Authors; American,
Romance fiction,
Embezzlement,
Women Authors; American
There was obviously a lot to be said for her basic, not-so-technological talents. Or, at least he assumed there was a lot to be said for those. Schuyler Kimball was a connoisseur of only the finest tilings in life, after all. And Lily Rigby was definitely one of those.
She might not be the brightest bulb on the Christmas tree, he thought, thinking back on that whole cat story she'd told him a few minutes ago. But, hey, a woman didn't have to be a rocket scientist to be good at her job. Unless, of course, he amended, she happened to be a rocket scientist. But that was beside the point. The point was that there were some jobs where little things like, oh… thinking… knowledge… a capacity for understanding… just weren't a major concern of employment.
"Well," she said, "if there's nothing else you'll be needing?"
He shook his head. "No. Thank you, Miss Rigby. Everything I need is right here."
"I have a pager," she said, flipping open her jacket again to indicate the little black box fixed at her waist, bestowing upon him another glimpse of her less technological—and extremely sensational—gifts. She gestured toward the telephone on the desk. "If something comes up, just press number one on the speed dial. That will beep me, and I'll know you need me here. Wherever I am on the estate, I can be here in ten minutes at the most."
An unwanted realization quickly materialized in Leo's brain, and no amount of trying to tamp it down would roust it. He already needed Lily Rigby. Badly. Only not quite the way she was thinking.
He bit back a frustrated sigh. Perfect. This was just perfect. The last thing he should be doing was indulging in libidinous plans for one of Schuyler Kimball's favorite playthings. With any luck at all, he'd be able to wind up his business here at the estate within a few days' time, and then he could forget he ever saw Lily Rigby.
Well, he could
pretend
to forget he ever saw Lily Rigby, anyway.
He watched her go, inhaling deeply as she passed by him because she just smelled so damned good. Like a field full of exotic spices. That he wanted to wallow in. For a long time. Naked. With one final, heart-stopping smile, she reached back to close the door behind herself, and then Leo was left alone in Schuyler Kimball's personal, private realm.
Immediately, he loosened his necktie, as uncomfortable in the idiotic persona of Leonard Freiberger as he had been when he first ventured out on his relentless pursuit to find the missing Kimball millions. He still couldn't remember how he'd been talked into submitting to this particular requirement of his employment, this wearing of the geek. But there it was just the same—Leo Friday, who had once seriously considered pursuing a career as a professional hockey player, who had fought in Golden Gloves competitions as an adolescent, whose nickname in high school had been Bloody Friday. He sighed with much gusto. Now he was lame Leonard Freiberger. And a beautiful woman had seen him that way.
Dammit.
After shrugging out of his jacket, he rolled his shirt sleeves to his elbows, then tossed his leather, satchel-style briefcase onto the desk and unbuckled it. From inside, he withdrew a stack of his own diskettes that were rubber-banded together, then set them next to the ones Miss Rigby had placed on the desk. That done, he folded himself into Kimball's comfy, throne-like desk chair, wheeled himself over to the computer, and went to work.
After weeks, months even, of virtually circling the globe for the board of directors of Kimball Technologies, Leo had uncovered nothing remarkable. Certainly, there had been discrepancies here and there in the records, a few things that didn't add up. But those instances hadn't been anything that he wouldn't normally find within a corporation the size of Kimball's. And none of them had been the result of any criminal or fraudulent behavior. Certainly none of them had added up to anything even remotely resembling fifty million