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“If she’s going to start nitpicking my accounts because of her problems with my wife, then you’re damned straight. We’re going to have problems,” Marion shot back.

Marion was a good man, but that wife of his made Timothy wonder at her parents’ parenting skills.

“Excellent. We have no problems then.” Kia leaned forward. “You can leave now, Dad.”

He glared down at her. “I want to sit in on this meeting.”

“Too bad.” Her eyes narrowed back at him. “We had a deal, remember?”

Damned girl. Her and her deals. He shot Marion a warning glance. “Fine. But we’ll discuss this later.”

“Later suits me.” Kia hid her smile as her father stalked from her office. She turned back to Marion. “That wasn’t wise. Daddy isn’t nearly as neutral as I am where the damage Drew and Rebbecca caused before the divorce is concerned. Do you think I fought him for six months to preserve your and Drew’s positions and reputations in this company so you could blow it all to hell by challenging my father now?”

She rubbed her hands over her face before pushing back from the desk and rising from her chair to glare back at him.

“Rebecca can take a flying leap into hell for all I care, Marion. Right along with Drew. I wouldn’t have fought my father over Drew’s position if I meant to walk in here and threaten yours.” She flattened her hands on her desk now. “You can work with me or you can walk out that door right now and we can turn this into a feud. We worked well together once, Marion. Surely we can again.”

They glared at each other before he eased back and narrowed his eyes, and, for just a second, a reluctant smile tipped his lips.

“You have teeth,” he finally grunted.

“A full set.” She flashed them at him.

“Dammit. I busted my ass on those accounts.” He finally threw himself into one of the chairs in front of her desk. “You’re kicking the hell out of my pride.”

She shook her head. “Fresh eyes, remember? Those accounts are your babies, not mine. I can look at them with greater detachment and that’s what I’ve done. Now, would you like to discuss how we can solve the problems?”

He narrowed his eyes back at her. “Would it do any good? If I disagree, your father’s just going to make sure you get your way.”

At that Kia breathed out roughly. “Five years ago you called me an arrogant upstart over another account. Told me I didn’t know my ass from a hole in the ground. Do you remember that, Marion?”

He winced.

“You showed me where I was wrong, and I listened, and I learned. I’m willing to do so again. If I’m wrong, prove it.”

He watched her for long, silent moments. “You know, Kia, it’s getting damned hard to imagine you letting Rebecca do what she did to you two years ago when I see you here.” He waved his hand around the room. “Would you like to explain how she survived it?”

Kia tapped the table with her fingernails. “She might not have been my friend, but it wasn’t entirely her fault.” She shrugged. “It was mine as well. And I refuse to discuss it further. We can discuss these accounts, though.”

He shook his head and rubbed his neck wearily. “Okay. Fine. Show me what you found and I’ll show you where you’re wrong.”

Four hours later he walked out of the office, disgruntled. He wasn’t exactly right, but there had been places where Kia hadn’t been entirely right either. They had ended up with four other associates in the office, a pot of coffee, and, at times, loud arguments.

They both had work to do over the next few days, but Marion swore it was the most productive meeting the department had had since she quit five years earlier.

Kia stacked her files before she checked her watch, grabbed her cell phone from her purse, and rushed from the office.

“Where are you?” her father barked as he answered the call.

“I’m running late. I’ll meet you at the dinner club in a few hours.”

“We were going for drinks first,” her father grunted. “You’ll miss that.”

“Can’t be helped, Dad.” She waved a cab down as she exited the office and gave him her address quickly. “The meeting ran over and now I’m rushing.”

“The dinner club then. We’re meeting Cameron Falladay and his fiancée as well as the Sinclairs to discuss the sale of that warehouse Sinclair owns. I was hoping to pick Cameron Falladay’s brain on a security issue as well. I want you there.”

“I’ll be there. I promise.” She prayed Chase wouldn’t be. “Two hours. I promise.”

“Two hours,” he snapped. “If you’re late, I’m docking your pay.”

The call disconnected before she could argue. She should be late just for the hell of it after that comment, she thought. Minutes later, the cab pulled up to her apartment building.

She rushed inside, calculated the time, and figured she’d be at least a few minutes early.

The good thing about working for her father again was that she didn’t have time to miss Chase as she would have had otherwise. The bad thing about it? She didn’t have time to. miss Chase as she knew she would have.

She almost laughed at that thought as the elevator doors opened and she moved to her apartment.

At least it was a dinner club, she thought as she let herself into the apartment and rushed for the shower. Because she was starved. And she missed Chase more than she thought it possible to miss anyone.

He hadn’t realized she was a pawn of such value. Of course, there had been talk, two years before, when Drew and Kia Stanton divorced. Talk that Chase Falladay was too interested in the girl’s welfare, talk that something could have been brewing.

He had been watching Chase, seen the girl with him and Khalid, but he thought she had better sense. He had thought she wasn’t so easy for Falladay to manipulate. He should have known better.

The other night, when he had followed them, watched her spread for him on the hood of that car and take him, he had known she was a pawn, not a child.

He’d been waiting. Waiting so patiently to find a way to hurt Falladay. To destroy him. Waiting was often the hardest part. Forcing himself to patience, forcing himself to wait, not to strike. He didn’t want Chase dead. Oh no, killing him was much too simple.

He wanted to destroy him. And this girl. She was the first in many years that Chase Falladay had been known to take alone. It was obvious she meant something to him.

He watched her dash into her apartment and made his plans. He would have to be careful, very careful. He would have to arrange things just right. And when the opportunity came, he would destroy Chase Falladay through this beautiful, vibrant young woman.

It was such a shame that she would have to pay the price for her lover’s sins. But wasn’t that the way of the world? Justice must be served, and he would serve it through her.

She was right on time.

Kia approached her father’s table, ignoring his shocked look as he caught sight of her clothes. The dinner club was trendy, new wave, and filled, as she had known it would be, with the best and the brightest of the happening business crowd.

After work it was time to relax and time to have fun. Jordain’s was becoming the place for a little business mixed with a little fun, and Kia dressed the part.

The black leather skirt was short enough to be flirty without being indecent. The bronze silk blouse was stylish and undecorated. But it was the boots that got the looks. Black leather, snug, over the knee, and with killer three-inch heels that made her legs look miles longer than they actually were.

The club was warm, filled with laughter and chatter, and nearly every person she knew in Alexandria was there, she was certain.

“I’m three minutes early, I should get a bonus,” she told her father as he stood and held her chair for her, glaring down at her balefully.