: Chapter 12
Kissing the Boss
As soon as I acquiesced, Ezra rose from the chair heâd been sitting in. He held a hand down to me. I took his fingers and had to bite the inside of my lip at the thrill that raced through me when his warm touch made contact with mine. Not even glancing down at all the dust no doubt covering my slacks, I continued to gaze into Ezraâs blue-blue eyes as I brushed my knees clean.
His smile widened as if he thought my antics were amusing. He kept staring into my eyes and holding my hand as he started toward the exit of Brickâs office.
My stepbrother was still on the phone when we entered the hall. He paused talking, and dropped one end of the cell from his mouth so he could rubberneck, his shocked gaze darting from our clasped hands to our faces. I could only imagine how brightly my cheeks were glowing. It felt as if I were under a spell that made me unreasonably content.
âUhâ¦â Brick said, his gaze narrowing on Ezra. âWhere do you think youâre taking my new secretary?â
âWeâre going to lunch,â Ezra informed him, stepping protectively closer to me as he eyed my brother distrustfully.
Brick blinked, then pulled the phone away from his ear so he could check the screen. âBut itâs not even nine a.m.â
âThen weâre going to breakfast,â Ezra correctly smoothly.
I pressed a hand to my stomach where my guts were stirring with ecstatic anxiety. âI havenât eaten anything today,â I offered, which was true. âIâm starving.â
Ezra glanced at me, his gaze sharp as if he didnât like the idea of me going hungry. So he sent Brick a decisive nod and pulled me toward the elevator. âSheâll be back later.â
My stepbrother had no answer for that. He merely stared after us as we continued down the hall. Ezra pressed the button for the elevator doors, and they slid open under his command. Then he motioned for me to enter first.
I stepped inside, my heart doing jumping jacks in my chest as he followed me in.
As soon as the doors closed, Ezra turned to me. I had no idea what he had in mind, but I had a bad feeling it would be more tempting than I could handle resisting, so to diffuse whatever he had planned, I blurted, âIâm glad weâre having this breakfast actually, becauseâ¦â
With his blue eyes so extremely intent on mine, my brain short-circuited and words drifted silent.
Had I been talking? I had no idea what Iâd been saying.
âYou are so damn cute,â he murmured, his eyes squinting slightly with how big he was grinning.
Oh, boy.
I cleared my throat and glanced away. There. Connection broken. I could talk again. âBecause⦠Because, well, yeah. I need you to understand that nothing between us can ever happen. Ever. And furthermoreââ
He leaned in and set his mouth against mine.
When he pulled back a second later, I sucked in a breath and tried to reorient myself.
âI, uhâ¦â I shook my head and blinked him back into focus before tugging my bottom lip between my teeth so I could get more of the taste heâd left behind. It was like coffee and chocolate and cookie. My chocolate chip cookies. Oh, damn, he tasted good. I shook my head again and pointed at him. âWhat was that?â
âThat was me disagreeing with you on the we-can-never-happen-again point you were trying to make.â He shrugged. âI mean, I mightâve been more inclined to listen to your argument if you didnât kiss me back whenever I kiss you. But you do. Every. Single. Time. So from my perspective, it seems like we could happen quite nicely.â
âYes, butâ¦â I sighed. âThatâs another thing we need to discuss. You really need to stop kissing me, no matter how I respond. Because⦠Becauseâ¦â When I didnât readily come up with a reason, he grinned and lifted an eyebrow, smugly waiting for me to continue. I scowled and sniffed. âYou know, thereâs more to a relationship than just chemistry, and kissing, and⦠Andâ¦â
âIs there?â he asked with the utmost interest, as if he were vastly intrigued to hear exactly what made up a relationship.
Then he stepped closer, and my breathing went shallow as my mind fizzed out, making me forget everything I was trying to say. I stared up into his too-blue eyes and gulped, wanting him to kiss me again.
âY-yes?â I whispered, though it sounded more like an uncertain question than an answer, because Iâd kind of forgotten what I was even saying yes about. Hopefully it was yes, he should kiss me again.
He smiled at me as if he thought me adorable. âKnow what your problem is, Kaity?â He tucked a piece of hair behind my ear. âYouâre thinking about this way too much, anticipating every possible problem before it can even happen.â
True. âButââ
He grinned and lifted a finger to stop me. Except it was the wink following that that actually caused me to fall mute.
âIâm not asking you to marry me. Iâm not even asking for a relationship. Or sex. Right now, all I want is a meal with you and time enough to get to know you. Iâm curious to learn more about the woman whose mouth I know so intimately.â His eyebrows lifted. âArenât you curious to know more about me?â
Infinitely curious.
Feeling tempted all over again, I sighed. âYes. Yes, I am.â And I convinced myself no harm could come from simply talking to a guy in a public restaurant while we both ate our respective meals at the same table.
That was until the elevator stopped and the doors slid open. Ezra swept out a hand, offering me to go first. I stepped into the hallway, only for all the reasons why continuing any kind of contact with him was unwise to come back to me, standing barely thirty feet away.
âOh my God,â I gasped and immediately reversed into the elevator. âBack, back, back.â
Ramming my spine into Ezra as I corralled him back onto the lift, I slapped at the close door button before we were fully inside again.
âWhat the hell?â He reached for the wall to regain his balance.
The door finally closed, and I turned to him beyond relieved we hadnât been spotted, only to be faced with an entirely new problem.
Oh, crap.
From the look on Ezraâs face, I knew there was no way Iâd be escaping this elevator without revealing all, especially when he pushed the stop button and turned to me menacingly. âOkay. What the fuck is going on?â
âIâm sorry,â I gushed, clutching my face as my guts twisted with worry. The worst thing was, I wasnât apologizing for shoving him, but for ruining our lovely night in the courtyard together, which Iâm sure I was about to ruin for himâ¦most thoroughly. âIâm so sorry about all this. But⦠Lana was out there,â I tried to explain.
He cleared his throat, straightened away from the elevator wall and tugged his jacket back into place before very calmly saying, âOkay⦠And?â
Huh. That was usually all I had to say to people. But not for Ezra Nash, apparently. He needed the entire story.
No matter how poised he sounded, I could tell he wasnât very composed under the surface. He was beginning to lose patience with me. I cringed. âAnd⦠And she canât see us together. Ever.â
He opened his mouth. Since I already knew he was going to ask why, I answered before he could.
âShe hates me. She absolutely detests the very air I breathe. And she wants you. She wants you bad. So if you think she was ever unpleasant to you before, that is nothing like the holy hell she would rain down on both of us if she ever spotted us together, and I mean even just sharing an elevator together.â
Ezra stared at me with the blankest expression for the longest time. I had no idea what was going through his brain. Finally, he held up a finger before shaking his head. âAlright, wait.â Looking mildly sick to his stomach, he said, âWhat exactly do you mean by she wants me?â
I sent him a telling glance. âYouâre a young, attractive, virile, powerful man. What do you think I mean?â
He recoiled away from me, or maybe he was just recoiling from the ideas I was putting into his head, before he backed into the wall of the elevator. Then he grimaced as if heâd just tasted something vile. âNo fucking way.â
A second later, he shook his head, and the disgust on his face told me how much he rejected the very idea. âAre you sure? I mean, to me, it seems as if the only strong feelings she has for me is animosity.â
I shrugged with another wince. âIâm pretty sure. I mean, even Brick has commented on the way she looks at you. Sheâs definitely interested.â
A full body shudder consumed him before he brushed at the sleeves of his jacket as if to clean such filthy knowledge off him. âBut thatâs just sick.â
âIâm sorry,â I said, biting my lip and feeling awful for being the one to bring this to his attention.
He shook his head and focused on me, narrowing his gaze. âYou know what, even if that were the case, which Iâm in complete denial about, who cares if she sees us together? Weâre both consenting adults. We canââ
âYou do realize weâre talking about Lana Judge, right?â I asked, gaping at him incredulously. âIt wouldnât matter if you paraded a complete stranger in front of her on your arm, sheâd hate anyone she saw playing with the toy she wants.â
âUm.â He lifted a finger. âIâm not a toy.â
I ignored that, not finished making my point. âBut if she knew the very bane of her existenceâyes, that would be meâhad kissed you, it would be complete and utter mass destruction.â
âSee, nowâ¦â He let out an uneasy laugh and pressed a hand against his chest. âUp until twenty seconds ago, I wouldâve said I was the bane of her existence. So this is hard for me to follow. Exactly who are you to her?â
Letting out a heavy sigh, I backed into the opposite side of the elevator as him and sank to the floor until I was sitting with my knees up by my chin. âAre you sure youâre ready to hear that answer? Itâs going to change everything.â
His blue eyes squinted. âJust tell me.â
With my eyes full of apology, I sent him a single, sad wave. Probably a farewell wave. âHi, my name is Kaitlynn Marcella Judge. Itâs nice to meet you.â
Ezraâs eyes went wide. Then he blew out a lungful of air before he sank down to the floor and sat directly across from me. âYouâre Arthur and Marcellaâs daughter. The one I didnât think existed.â
I nodded.
âAnd therefore Lanaâs⦠Stepdaughter?â
A wince. Then I nodded again.
âChrist.â He looked about as sick by that prospect as he did about learning Lana had the hots for him. Burying his face in his hands, he wiped his palms over his face before sinking his fingers into his hair.
âIt gets worse,â I confessed, sinking lower.
Ezra glanced up, his gaze turbulent. âI donât see how.â
âI want my company back,â I stated boldly. Shock coated his features and his eyebrows lifted, but he said nothing, so I kept talking. âI was raised to believe JFI would be mine someday. My inheritance. This place is my familyâs legacy; Iâve never wanted to be anywhere else. But when my dad died, his will stipulated all of it would be left in the hands of Lana. And of course, she wouldnât even consider hiring me back on after I graduated from college. So six months ago, I finally talked her into letting me work for her as an unpaid intern untilââ
âWait, wait, wait.â He waved his hands, halting me. âAre you saying youâve worked hereâArthur Judgeâs daughterâfor how long, and I havenât been aware of it?â
âI was just an intern. And unpaid,â I repeated. âThereâs no record of me working here. I never filled out a W2, received insurance, gotten any benefitsââ
âIs that even legal?â he asked, sounding incredulous.
I shrugged. âI have no idea. I was just so determined to get my foot in the door any way I could, I was willing to do whatever I had to do in order to work my way to the top. Except, Lana fired me last week. But then Brick hired me back on as his assistant, so at least Iâm a paid employee now. He also thought itâd be safer for me to work under your branch of the company, anyway, where she couldnât touch me. But nowââ
âSo wait. Youâre seeking my protection as you attempt to work your way to the top and take my company away from me?â
I gnashed my teeth. âYou make it sound worse than it is. Iâm fully prepared to buy you out when I can. I mean, isnât that what you Nashes do? Buy companies and sell them for a profit? You canât possibly want to stay here forever.â
âBuying and selling is my dadâs thing. I have no plans of leaving JFI.â
âOh. Wellâ¦â I cleared my throat, feeling my face flush with anxiety. This wasnât going at all how Iâd planned. Not that Iâd planned any of it. But it felt like it was going south so quickly. âMaybe youâll play a different tune someday when I make you an offer you canât refuse.â
His jaw hardened and eyes narrowed. âWhy didnât you just buy Lana out when she sold half the company to my family a year ago?â
I bowed my head, humiliated. âI didnât have the money.â
He sniffed. âArthur Judgeâs daughter? And you didnât have the money?â
Scowling at him, I muttered, âItâs not like he left me stupid rich or anything.â
âDidnât he? I never met the guy, but I knew how generous of a philanthropist he was. I still get charities contacting me for handouts because of how much he had his company donate to them every year. You canât sit there and tell me he gave away that much money to complete strangers, yet left youâhis only true childâdestitute.â
The obstinate stare I sent him told him to go to hell, but he merely narrowed his eyes, waiting for an answer. My jaw hardened before I glanced away and bit out, âHe left me a college fund, which I used for college, and then another trust fund I canât touch until Iâm thirty. Right now, it pays out a small dividend monthly.â
Ezra arched an eyebrow. âAnd thatâs it?â
My God, what did he want from me? To confess I had billions stashed away in some Swiss banking account? âYes!â I hissed. âNot that itâs any of your business, but thatâs it. The rest went to Lana and her sons.â
Eyebrows knitting with disbelief, he asked, âAnd you accepted that?â With a shrug, he added, âI mean, it just sounds fishy to me. He left you so little, yet you didnât question the will or contest it at all.â
Getting irritated, I pushed to my feet and glared him down. âNo, I did not question the will. It was my fatherâs final wishes. Why would I challenge what he wanted?â
Pushing to his feet as well, Ezra dusted off everything that had had contact with the floor. âYeah, butââ
âNo buts!â I boomed, poking my finger into the center of his chest. âHe raised me to believe I had to work for the things I wanted. So why would I truly believe he left me with everything and therefore would never have to work for anything in my life again? That doesnât make sense to me.â Realizing how close Iâd stormed to him as I snarled up into his handsome face, I huffed out a breath and eased a step back. âWhy are we arguing about this anyway?â
âI donât know,â he admitted, looking flustered as he took his own step back and ran a hand through his hair, mussing it artfully, which in turn made my fingers ache to play in those dark locks. Lifting his face from his shining black shoes, he said, âMaybe because I donât want to hear you admit you knew exactly who I was when you stepped into that courtyard with me Saturday night.â
My lips parted.
It was like a punch to the gut to hear him even question it. Our few minutes in the courtyard had been magicalâspecialâand heâd just turned it into something sinister and conniving.
Sure, Iâd worried this was exactly what heâd think, but now that he was, it still hurt. More than I thought it would.
âI had no idea who you were then. You know I had no idea who you were.â
âDo I?â he asked, the question in his eyes breaking my heart. âOr are you just that good of an actress?â He lifted his hands. âI wouldnât put anything past Lanaâs daughter.â
Rage, hurt, and shock welled in me. âI am not her daughter.â I was nothing like her. Being compared to her was the harshest blow anyone could serve.
Ezraâs moody blue eyes swirled with suspicion and maybe even a little of his own hurt, as if he felt betrayed. âThen why didnât you tell me who you were? I brought up your parents, hell, I even doubted your existence, yet you said nothing.â
I shook my head, no idea how to answer. âIt didnât seem to matter then,â I whispered. âAt that moment, we were just two strangers in the dark looking for a pair of shoes. It seemed, I donât know, inappropriate to break the mood between us with facts. And then, later, when I realized who you were and it became important for you to know who I was, then it was too late. This is actually all your fault, you know. You never shouldâve kissed me before we learned each otherâs names. None of this wouldâve happened if youâd just asked me for my name first thing.â
âOr if you had volunteered your name when I started talking about your parents,â he countered through gritted teeth. âAnd stop looking at me like that, or Iâm going to give you what you want and kiss the fuck out of you again.â
I gasped. âI am not looking at you like I want to be kissed.â
He took a step toward me, looking very much as if he wanted to kiss me too. âYeah, you are,â he murmured. âYou want it as much as I do.â
I hated being so open. Grinding my teeth, I muttered, âWell, stop being such a good kisser, damn you, and Iâll stop wanting it.â
He groaned and took another step closer, his hand reaching out, just as the elevator doors opened.
We sprang apart, even though we hadnât yet been that close. The way we moved, however, like we were guilty of something illicit, made the man wanting to enter pause and eye us as if he had indeed interrupted something scandalous.
My face flushed hot as Christopher Elton shifted his wide-eyed glance away from Ezra to me. âSorry, I didnât mean toââ
âYouâre fine,â Ezra answered stiffly, motioning him into the car with us. I crowded closer to the wall and as far away from Ezra as I could get to make room for Christopher in the middle. All the while, I wanted to sink through the floor and escape.
But Christopher paused. âDonât you two need out? Weâre on the first floor.â
Oh, Lord, could the moment get any more humiliating?
Yes, yes, it could. Ezra pierced Christopher with a death glare but calmly said, âWe decided not to go out to breakfast after all.â
We had?
My gaze shot to him. He sent me a quick glance, only to turn his attention away again and shove his hands into his pockets before studying the buttons on the wall panel.
âStill,â Christopher tried, hooking his thumb over his shoulder as if he had somewhere else to be. âI can just take theââ
âGet in the damn elevator,â Ezra bit out.
âRight.â Christopher cleared his throat and nearly leapt inside with us. When he pushed the button for the second floor, the doors shut and my stomach dropped away as the ground lifted.
Next to me, my old crush sent me a quick uneasy glance before something flickered in his gaze. He pointed to my stain-free chest. âHey, werenât you at the meeting last week?â
From the corner of my eye, I noticed the question had gained Ezraâs attention. He looked between me and Christopher with great curiosity and more scrutiny than I wanted.
With a tight smile, I answered, âThank you again for the white vinegar tip. Worked like a charm.â
Christopher nodded, looking way too intrigued for my comfort. Once upon a time, say a week ago, I wouldâve relished that attention, but now, I kind of just wanted him to forget I existed.
âIâd never seen you at a meeting before,â he said, eyeing me up and down, taking in the floor dust on my dark slacks and then checking my chest, probably looking for more stains. âWhat department do you work in? And I didnât catch your name.â
The elevator stopped, and the doors began to open.
âSecond floor,â Ezra announced. âYour stop.â He nudged Christopher out and away from me.
Christopher stumbled away, only to turn and gape at us as the doors slid closed again, his eyes wide with shock, and my face no-doubt a million shades of red.
âWell, that was fun,â I said quietly, not daring to look Ezraâs way or address the fact that heâd seemed jealous of Christopher for merely talking to me, so much so that heâd actually shoved the guy away from me.
âYou know heâs gay, right?â I felt the need to inform him.
In return, Ezra merely hissed out a frustrated breath and glanced up at the ceiling.
When the elevator stopped on the third floor, he finally gave me his attention again. âIâll walk you back to Broderickâs office.â
I nodded stiffly and stepped into the hall. It was empty, so thankfully no one saw us together, because I had a horrible feeling we looked like a principal and student as he walked me to the office where he was about to suspend me. For life.
I risked a peek up at him as we reached my stopping place. Clearing his throat, he readjusted his tie. Then, without looking at me, he murmured, âYou were right. We shouldâve just let Saturday night become a nice memory and left it at that.â His expression darkened. âNow itâs ruined.â
Rotating on his heel, he strode away.
I stared after him, trying not to cry.
Here I was; Iâd finally gotten my wish to stop anything and everything there was between us, and it hurt more than I cared to admit. I guess this was why people always said to be careful what you wished for.