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Tempted by the Tycoon's Proposal
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“Dinner with you and Lily?”
“Yes, she can be our chaperone.”
“Are we in need of a chaperone?”
Too quick. Too feisty. Too full-on, Sophia!
Something flashed in Jack’s gaze, something akin to the heat streaking right to her toes as she realized she couldn’t take back her reckless words and knew she didn’t want to, either.
“So, what do you say?”
She didn’t know whether she should be disappointed or relieved that he didn’t answer her question. Not directly at any rate.
But what should she say?
No, because the chemistry between us is scaring the life out of me.
No, because I’m messed up and in no place for whatever this is.
No, because...just because.
“You know, I really am starting to question my charm.”
His grin, filled with the very charm she’d brought into question, seared away any intention of saying no.
And what was there to say no to when she thought about it rationally?
She enjoyed his company. She’d enjoyed Lily’s company that afternoon. Would it really be so bad to go to dinner?
Dear Reader,
I can’t quite believe I’m sending this little letter to you from the pages of my debut Harlequin Romance novel. I’ve lived and breathed Mills & Boon for too many years to count, as a reader and as an aspiring writer, and now a published one, too. It truly is an honor to bring this tale to you. The idea that you will spend your precious time getting swept up in a world I’ve created is incredibly humbling and heartwarming. It’s a feeling that will never get old and I thank you from the bottom of my heart.
As for the tale itself, it’s a story of loss, of losing loved ones and the guilt that can consume us. But it’s also a story of hope, of what comes next. It’s a story of healing, of learning to trust and let go, to love and be loved in return. It’s about the bond between family, lovers and friends, the many facets of love, and I hope you find the same joy in reading it as I did writing it.
Love,
Rachael x
Tempted by the Tycoon’s Proposal
Rachael Stewart
Rachael Stewart adores conjuring up stories, from heartwarmingly romantic to wildly erotic. She’s been writing since she could put pen to paper—as the stacks of scrawled-on pages in her loft will attest to. A Welsh lass at heart, she now lives in Yorkshire, with her very own hero and three awesome kids—and if she’s not tapping out a story, she’s wrapped up in one or enjoying the great outdoors. Reach her on Facebook, Twitter (@rach_b52) or at rachaelstewartauthor.com.
Books by Rachael Stewart
Tempted by the Tycoon’s Proposal is Rachael Stewart’s debut title for Harlequin Romance.
Look out for more books coming soon!
In the meantime, why not try Rachael Stewart’s Harlequin DARE titles:
Mr. One-Night Stand
Mr. Temptation
Naughty or Nice
Getting Dirty
Losing Control
Unwrapping the Best Man
Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com.
For my editor, Carly,
For believing in me when I struggled to believe in myself and making this another dream come true, this one is for you!
Rachael x
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Epilogue
Excerpt from Wedding Date with the Billionaire by Andrea Bolter
CHAPTER ONE
‘SOPH, WE HAVE a situation.’
Normally those words from her extremely capable assistant hotel manager would have had Sophia Lambert on edge, but not today. Today, she needed the distraction. In fact, she’d take a month of situations just to get through January and keep the past at bay.
Taking a breath, she turned from her computer screen to give Andrew a smile and felt it freeze midway.
Whatever it was, it wasn’t good. Andrew was unflappable and yet his age-old wrinkles were creased tight, his warm eyes bright with concern.
Maybe this would be a distraction too far...
‘What is it?’
‘The McGregor child has gone missing.’
‘Missing?’ Her semi-smile became a frown. The McGregors were staying in the penthouse suite, one of the most luxurious suites London had to offer and as such rarely used. Only the richest of the rich could afford its extortionate nightly rate and the billionaire businessman McGregor was one such man.
A widower too. Not that Sophia knew this first-hand; the trusty grapevine of the hotel trade was responsible for that. His financial status and the tragic tale of a hit-and-run that took his wife three years ago, and almost took his child too, had spread far and wide thanks to the world’s media. She could just imagine how fast news of his child being missing would spread...
‘She came back with her nanny just after lunch and before they made it to her room...’ He shrugged, the move stilted with unease. ‘Poof—vanished.’
Sophia shook her head and pushed herself out of her seat. ‘A little girl can hardly vanish.’
Although, if she was honest, she’d disappear if she was in the care of that particular woman. She hadn’t had the pleasure of meeting the illustrious McGregor yet—he hadn’t arrived—but she’d met his little miss of a daughter and the battle-axe caring for her.
She approached him in the doorway. ‘We have twelve floors, one hundred and thirty rooms, cupboards, trolleys, luggage; if the girl wants to hide, she’s in the right place. There’s no need to think the worst.’
He scratched his brow. ‘I hope so.’
‘Come on.’ She started off down the corridor that led into the main foyer. ‘Where have you tried?’
‘The toilets, the public rooms downstairs, the lifts and stairwell.’
‘Okay, who’s on the search?’
‘Everyone who’s not needed out front. I even have the maids who were due to clock off hunting and Marie has taken Ms Archer back to the penthouse to calm her nerves.’
Marie was a good choice. Calm, efficient, matronly even, and a fabulous head housekeeper. ‘Good.’
‘But it’s been half an hour; we’ll have to call the police soon.’
‘We’ll find her.’ Sophia paused to rest a hand on his shoulder. ‘What about CCTV?’
He nodded. ‘We’ve checked. She was last seen heading towards the conference room on the second floor.’
‘And you’ve tried there?’
‘Of course—no joy.’
‘But there’s no sign of her leaving the building?’
He shook his head. ‘Absolutely none.’
‘There we go; she has to be here somewhere. We just have to think like a child and we’ll find her. I’m going to head up to the conference room; you carry on the search down here. Call me if you find her.’
‘Will do.’
They branched off and Sophia took to the stairs. She wasn’t ready to worry yet. Things and people went missing in hotels every
day and it was their job to see it resolved, to keep the guests happy. Which included Little Miss Trouble and her elusive father.
The conference room looked deserted, tables and chairs all stacked neatly to one side ready to be laid out for a company’s belated Christmas function. One table had already been set up, a red cloth covering it, with flowers, glassware and napkins all arranged to the organisers’ exacting standards. But no child.
She turned to leave and then something caught her eye. She looked back, eyes narrowing on the tablecloth. She could have sworn it had fluttered.
‘Hello?’ She took a tentative step towards it. Another flutter. Definite this time. ‘Hello?’
This time she got a small giggle in response and her heart lifted. ‘Is that you, Miss McGregor?’
* * *
‘I don’t have time for this, Connor. Why wasn’t it on our radar?’
Jack scowled at the hotel doorman. It wasn’t intentional—his mind was on the call—but it got the door opened promptly and he was off, striding across the foyer. He pressed the button to call the lift and threw his focus down the line, surveying the room with unseeing eyes.
‘We hadn’t even heard of them before today,’ Connor was saying. ‘Apparently it’s some new start-up that’s done well enough to outbid us.’
Fantastic. This was all he needed. The plan had been to fly into London, stay for a week—two at most—get the takeover signed and get out again. He hated the city at the best of times. Too cold, too grey, too loaded with the past.
‘Well, get digging. I want to know all there is by close of play t—’
‘Er...excuse me, Mr McGregor.’
Jack frowned and turned towards the voice. A quick appraisal of the man’s uniform and badge told him he was the assistant manager and he looked nervous, his hands wringing before him.
‘Hang on, Connor... Yes?’
‘I’m afraid, sir...’ he bowed his head slightly ‘...we have a...situation.’
The guy had to be kidding. Was this really going to be his life today? Connor had used the exact same words not twenty minutes ago.
‘What kind of situation?’ He couldn’t think for a second what it would be. Was his room not ready? Had there been a double booking? Nothing could be worse than Connor’s unwelcome news. ‘Well?’
The guy stopped wringing his hands and placed them behind his back, his chin lifting. ‘It’s your daughter... I’m afraid she’s gone—’
His walkie-talkie sounded as Jack’s stomach took a dive, and the manager jolted as he scrambled to pull the device out of the pocket of his hotel-issue blazer. ‘Yes?’
Jack couldn’t catch what was said over the blood ringing in his ears, his patience hanging by a thread. What the devil was going on? What had Lily done now?
The guy physically relaxed before him, his body deflating as he blew out a gust of air. ‘That’s great news. Thank you!’
He repocketed the device and smiled up at him. ‘I’m very happy to report all is well.’
Jack just frowned. ‘Excuse me?’
‘Sorry, Jack,’ Connor piped down the phone line, ‘like I was saying—’
‘Not you...you.’ He glared at the manager, now flushing crimson.
‘Pardon me, sir. It’s just...it seems your daughter decided to play a little hide-and-seek with Ms Archer this afternoon. However, she has now been found and—’
He cursed, his head and heart racing with a multitude of what-ifs that didn’t even matter now that she was found, but they existed anyway. ‘How long was she missing?’
‘Well... I... It was...’ He started to wring his hands again. ‘I’m not sure. Perhaps Ms Archer can explain. I’ll take you to your daughter, shall I? She’s with Ms Lambert, our hotel manager.’
Jack gave him a brusque nod. ‘Connor, I’ll call you back.’ He cut the line and followed after the manager, who was already walking away faster than his advancing years would suggest possible.
Jack shook his head and pulled at his tie, easing it away from his neck as his skin prickled and perspired, the stress building in spite of her safety. This really was not his day. And as far as Lily’s nanny-cum-tutor went, maybe it was time to find another—something Lily would no doubt appreciate.
But he paid her to look after Lily twenty-four-seven and in the last two weeks alone she had misplaced her a dozen times. He really was at his wits’ end, let alone his nerves.
Finding another would take time—time he didn’t have. What he really should be doing was explaining the dangers to his daughter, making her realise her safety was more important than whatever distraction she had sought out this time. And he could just imagine how much of that she would take on board. She was too much like her mother: free-spirited, impulsive, a sitting target for another hit-and-run or, heaven forbid, a kidnapper seeking a ridiculous ransom sum.
And how exactly did he tell his five-year-old daughter that her father’s success made her a target? That for all he worked to ensure their financial stability and a quality of life that far exceeded anything he had ever known, she was to be caged by it too. Maybe it was high time he employed a security detail. He’d avoided it thus far, trying to retain some normality for his daughter, but he wasn’t sure how many more of these incidents, these disappearing acts, he could take.
‘They’re just this way, Mr McGregor...’ the manager said, ending Jack’s troubled inner ramblings as he pushed open a door and gestured for him to enter.
He gave him a grim nod, being too strung-out to speak. And it wasn’t this guy’s fault his temper was frayed. It was all—
He didn’t get to finish the thought. He was too surprised to do anything but gawp.
And he never gawped.
Before him was a festive table. A festive table with a pair of nude stilettos attached to dainty ankles and slender calves poking out beneath its deep red tablecloth.
What the devil?
* * *
Within minutes of meeting the little girl, Sophia found herself lying on her back beneath the beautifully laid table staring at its underside, while Miss McGregor flashed a torch at it.
‘Isn’t it pretty?’ The little girl rolled the r as she waved her hand at the star constellation the torch projected.
‘It is...and clever... Is this what you’ve been doing all this time? You know Ms Archer has been quite worried about you.’
The girl gave a dramatic frown, her eyes, dark in the low light, now appeared both serious and disappointed at once. Here it came—the excuse. There always was one with children and Sophia had a sneaky suspicion she was going to be reeled in regardless.
‘She never lets me look at the stars. She says it’s a waste of my noggin.’ She prodded her forehead with one forefinger as she stared Sophia down. ‘That I should be learning my maths and reading.’
‘Well, I’m sure Ms Archer just wants what’s best for you.’
She looked back to the lit-up stars. ‘I’m going to be an astronaut; I don’t need maths...or the books she wants me to read.’
Sophia gave a soft laugh. ‘Maths will certainly help you if that’s what you want to be when you grow up.’
‘Really?’
‘Really.’
She sighed heavily, her bottom lip jutting out. ‘Maybe I will try a little—’
‘What on earth?’ The heavy booming voice took over the girl’s and her eyes widened as she switched off the torch.
‘Uh-oh, Daddy’s mad.’
Daddy’s mad... Oh, no.
Sophia imagined the scene from Mr McGregor’s eyes and felt the heat radiate out from her middle, her cheeks burning bright. All he would see were her calves and her shoes, like something out of The Wizard of Oz... Only her shoes weren’t red; they were nude and attached to her. No witch, just a blushing hotel manager about to face the music.
Not that there
was anything to be apologetic or embarrassed about. She’d found his daughter and really he ought to be grateful for that, not—
‘Lily, come out here this minute.’
‘I’m sorry,’ the little girl whispered to Sophia, her hair a bobbing mass of dark ringlets as she clambered onto her knees and crawled out backward. She made it look so simple, almost graceful, and Sophia ought to do the same.
She really ought to.
Really, really ought to.
But there was something vulnerable about being caught lying on your back beneath a table, the oddity of the situation leaving her quite incapable of thinking straight.
‘What do you think you’re doing, running out on Ms Archer like that?’
Sophia couldn’t make out the girl’s response, just a short, sharp sniff. The next thing she knew, the tablecloth was being flicked up and the most dramatic pair of grey eyes speared her. ‘Ms Lambert, I presume?’
She looked down her nose at him, literally, since she was still lying back on the floor and wishing the ground would swallow her up. Particularly as the eyes spearing her were far too attractive and far too hard all at once.
Get with it, Sophia.
She cleared her throat and rolled onto her knees, mimicking his daughter’s method, only she was very much focused on tugging her dress as low as possible over her behind and doing her utmost to avoid not only his eye but his entire body.
Even in his crouched position he exuded a panther-like grace. All power, sinew and strength, in a dark suit complete with tie...and the effect he was having on her pulse really wasn’t helping her focus on words. Words of any shape or form.
‘It’s a pleasure to meet you, Mr McGregor,’ she said, finally standing and lifting her gaze, only to wish she’d kept it lowered. Yes, she knew he was a widower. Yes, she knew he was the father to a young daughter. Yes, she knew he had a reputation for being a bit of a looker. But for some reason she’d had him pegged as being older, his reputation stemming from money and power, not a seriously impressive frame and a face that belonged on the cover of a magazine.