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The Hill
The Hill
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The Hill

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“Here’s my standard contract.” He flipped open the file and slid a stapled set of papers toward her. “If you want your attorney to review it...”

“I’m sure it’s fine.” She plucked it from the desk and flipped through the pages. “Since it’s a boilerplate, can we make adjustments as needed? I have several events coming up—there may be some travel.”

“Of course. There’s a section of the contract that deals with that—page three. Once you review and sign it, I’ll ask for a retainer and we can get started.”

“How much?” She dipped her hand into her purse and pulled out a checkbook. “I want you to get started right now. I don’t need to review the contract. I trust you. You already saved my life once, and you were there for Theodore.”

He sat back in his squeaky chair and steepled his fingers. Finding that ski mask had really spooked her, or maybe the note had done the trick.

She didn’t even blink an eye when he told her the amount for his retainer. She scribbled out the check and slid it in front of him. “Where do we start?”

“Before we get started, I have a question for you.” He picked up the corner of the check and tapped the edge on the blotter. “I’m assuming Breck Global Enterprises has a security force.”

“We do.”

“Why not enlist their help? You could probably pluck a bodyguard from the staff—someone already vetted and polished up to the BGE standards.”

She glanced over her shoulder at the closed door. “They’re not my people. I haven’t been at the company that long.”

“You don’t trust them.” This introduced a new twist to the plot. “Who’s been running BGE since your father’s death? I’m assuming you’re still...getting up to speed.”

She jumped from the chair and it spun out behind her and hit the wall. “I am still getting up to speed, but I’m a fast learner and I’ll get there.”

“Wow.” He raised one eyebrow and settled his boots back on the desk. “You need to chill. If you act this defensive around all the muckety-mucks at BGE, they’re going to seriously doubt your abilities even more than they apparently do now.”

“Damn.” She turned and hit the wall with her palm. “It’s just that everywhere I turn, I have people questioning me. It’s Dad’s fault. He never groomed me to take over the company.”

“Did he groom someone else? Another relative?”

She puffed out a breath and swung the chair back in place. “Not really. He acted like he was going to live forever, even after the bypass. My cousin Niles has an interest in the company, and my half brother works there. He’s a numbers guy. To answer your previous question before I went ballistic on you, Richard Taylor has been running the show since Dad’s death. He and...his son have been my constant companions lately.”

He rubbed his knuckles against the stubble of his beard. This looked to be an easy job—expectant relatives or coworkers got their noses out of joint when the old man handed over the reins of his company to his inexperienced daughter, and they decided to use a few threats and scare tactics to get her to decline the responsibility and return to her partying ways.

Gripping the back of the chair, she leaned forward, her silky ponytail falling over her shoulder. She parted her luscious lips and the scent of her expensive perfume washed over him.

This could be an easy job, or it could be very, very hard.

“You think you can help me?”

“That’s what you’re paying me for.” He picked up the check and dropped it into his desk drawer. “First things first. I want to have a look at your place, check out the security there. When’s a good time for you?”

“Right now, but you saw my building. It’s like Fort Knox.”

He shoved out of his chair and hunched over his desk. “Are you going to let me do my job, Ms. Breck, or are you going to try to run the show?”

“London. Call me London. After all, we shared a beer and a dance and...other stuff.”

It’s the other stuff that had him worried. “You didn’t answer my question, London.”

“I have enough shows to run, Judd. You can have this one.”

“You didn’t drive over here, did you?”

She snorted. “I didn’t want to draw the attention of the paparazzi. So I snuck out and took a taxi.”

“Are you okay riding on the back of a bike?”

Her gaze dropped to his boots. “A motorcycle?”

“Yeah.”

“I’ve spent my share of time on the back of motorcycles.”

I’ll bet you have.

“I’ll take you back to your place and have a look around, check out your security and make some notes.”

“Sounds good to me.”

He locked up the office behind them and followed her downstairs to the street, her high heels clicking on the steps. When they got to his Harley, he unlocked the helmet from the side. “You can wear this. If I get pulled over for not wearing a helmet, I can always have my brother Sean fix the ticket for me.”

“Ah, nice to have connections.”

“Just kidding.” He placed the helmet over her head and buckled the strap beneath her chin. “My brother wouldn’t fix a ticket for me or anyone else. Take this, too.” He swung his jacket over her shoulders. The wind would blow right through that low-cut sweater.

She shoved her arms through the sleeves and zipped up the jacket.

He straddled the bike and tilted it to the side. “Hop on. I have a backrest, but you might want to hold on while we’re going uphill so you don’t shift back and forth.”

Placing one hand on his shoulder, she climbed onto his Harley. Her knees touched his thighs and she put her hands on either side of his waist while sitting upright. That erect posture wouldn’t last long once they started going up and down the hills of the city.

He revved the engine and took off from the curb. When the bike jerked forward, her hands clutched his shirt.

As they idled at a red light, she yelled in his ear. “Do you remember where my place is?”

He nodded once. How could he forget? She lived in one of the most exclusive buildings in the city, in an area where the old robber barons used to have their mansions before the earthquake and fire destroyed most of them.

He climbed a hill with a picture-perfect view of the Transamerica building, and London tightened her grip around his waist as she slid back on the seat. As they rolled down the next hill, her body slammed against his.

“Sorry!” The wind snatched her word and carried it away.

As it should. He didn’t need an apology for the pressure of her soft body against his back, her arms wrapped securely around him, the scent of her perfume drugging him. Even her legs tightened against his hips.

He’d have to find another hill to descend.

All too soon he pulled up to the curb in front of her building. He cranked his head over his shoulder. “I’ll let you off here and park between those two cars.”

He steadied the bike as she clambered off, and then he backed into the space.

She was still fussing with the strap on the helmet when he joined her on the sidewalk.

“Let me. It’s a little tricky.” He flicked open the catch with his thumb and pulled the helmet from her head.

She tossed her mane of silver hair, which had escaped from her ponytail, back from her flushed face. “Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride. That was always my favorite.”

“Was it?” A strand of hair clung to the gloss on her mouth and he brushed it aside, the tip of his finger skimming across the smooth skin of her cheek.

Her chest rose and fell as her tongue swept along her bottom lip. Her half-closed lashes fluttered.

If he ever saw an invitation to a kiss, this ranked right up there with the best of them. Did she taste expensive, too? Like Cristal champagne and succulent strawberries?

The cold, hard cash—or at least the cold, hard check she’d written to him that was waiting in his desk drawer—had him pivoting away from her charms. Planting one boot on the step to her building, he smacked the heavy door to the lobby with the palm of his hand. “This is the first line of defense?”

She blinked. “Uh-huh.”

He tried the door handle and the solid door didn’t budge.

“There’s a code.” She pointed to the silver keypad to the right of the door, which he’d seen her use last night to gain entry.

“Wait.” He held up his hand and started randomly punching buttons on another keypad on the other side of the door.

After several tries, a voice came over the speaker. “Yeah?”

Judd leaned forward. “Forgot my code.”

The door clicked and Judd shook his head at London. “Fail.”

As they stepped into the marble lobby, she pointed to the security guard at the front desk in front of his monitors. “Backup.”

The guard looked up from his magazine and pushed his hat back from his graying hair. “Hello, London.”

“Hey, Griff.” She wedged her hip against the desk. “Griff, this is Judd Brody. I hired him for some extra security, so you’ll be seeing his face around here for a while. Judd, this is Gene Griffin, but we all call him Griff.”

The older man didn’t even rise from his chair, and Judd leaned over to shake his hand. “Retired cop?”

Griff grinned. “That obvious?”

Obvious he’d found himself a cushy job while collecting his pension. “I have a couple of brothers who are cops—it’s just the look.”

He walked behind Griff and hovered over his shoulder. “Why is that monitor dark?”

“Couldn’t tell you. I’m not the tech guy. It’s been reported and someone’s going to come out to work on it.”

“Which area does it cover?”

“The garage, I think.” He slapped his magazine down on the desk and tapped a few keys on the keyboard, which did nothing at all. “Yeah, that’s the garage.”

“What are your shifts here?”

Griff shot a look beneath shaggy eyebrows at London, who lifted one shoulder. “Eight to four, four to midnight, and midnight to eight. It’s twenty-four-hour coverage.”

“Do you ever leave the desk?”

The guard picked up his celebrity magazine and shook it out. “When nature calls, buddy.”

“Lunch? Patrols around the building?”

“Yep.”

“Any coverage when that happens?”

“Nope.”

Judd rapped on the desk with his knuckles. “Thanks for the info, Griff.”

He hadn’t meant to piss off the old guy, but some people took his tone the wrong way. Hell, London had hired him to protect her, not make nice with lazy security guards. The guys on the night shifts had to be better.

As he followed London across the lobby to the elevators, he glanced up at the cameras in the corners—visible and easy to dismantle or block.

London stabbed at the elevator call button and hissed, “Why were you interrogating Griff like that? He’s a good guy.”

“He’s a retired cop who found himself an easy gig where he can sit on his ass and read celebrity rags.”

“Shh.” She put a finger to her lips, her sculpted eyebrows colliding over her nose.

The elevator doors whispered open and he stepped into the mirrored car after London. “Just calling it like it is. I’m here to assess the risks to your security and I just found two of them. You don’t let random strangers into the building just because they buzz your place, do you?”

“No, sir.” She trailed a finger across her left breast. “Cross my heart.”

He dragged his gaze away from her cleavage and backed up against one mirrored wall. “Good, because that’s just stupid. What’s the point of having a coded key entry?”

“No point at all.”

“Are you making fun of me? Because this is serious. This is your security.”

Her smile twitched at one corner. “It’s just that you got all stern on me and poor Griff.”

God, he must’ve come across like his brothers. He folded his arms across his chest. “Just doing my job, ma’am.”

“And I appreciate that.”

The elevator dinged to a stop and the doors slid open onto a quiet hallway. The shiny marble from the lobby had been replaced by carpet so thick his boot would probably leave a crater in the pile.

“How many places up here?” He glanced down the hallway. Technically she had the penthouse, since her place occupied the top floor of the building, but it looked as if she shared the space with at least one other unit.

“Two.” She had her keys in her hand.

“Who’s your neighbor?”