Chapter Two
Roxanne “Razor” Haught obviously thought
she was dealing with an idiot.
She was wrong.
Tanner shook his head in amusement as he followed
her to the underground parking lot. She hurried out to her car,
clicking over the pavement on some of the sexiest high heels he’d
ever seen. The artificial overhead lighting gleamed off her
perfectly styled hair, showing off several shades of golden blond
that matched her wide cuff bracelet exactly. Her bare arms were
subtly muscled, with a combination of strength and softness that
made Tanner sweat from fighting the need to see what that felt
like. The brief touch of his finger against her soft mouth was more
than enough to haunt his dreams for a week. Now that he knew what
her lips felt like, he was going to spend way too much time
thinking about them.
Her shiny lip gloss clung to his finger, and he
couldn’t quite bring himself to wipe it away. He liked it there—a
small reminder of a few brief, pleasant seconds that would never be
repeated.
Beneath her classy slacks that hid more than they
displayed, her legs were probably sexy as hell. Even though he was
working with her, he couldn’t help but wonder just how those legs
would look if all she was wearing were those strappy leather
heels.
Not that he was ever going to find out.
He’d known from the instant he saw her in her fancy
clothes and sparkling jewelry that she was going to be trouble.
Women with money always were, and office rumors claimed that she
was rolling in it. Not only was she an only child who’d gained a
substantial inheritance when her parents died a few years back; she
also owned more land than was healthy for a person. Between the
real estate and old oil money, Razor was set for life and then
some.
She was a woman used to getting her own way, but
that was about to change.
Razor slid behind the wheel of a shiny silver
Mercedes and pulled out of the parking lot at the Edge. Tanner
followed her, keeping his distance in the heavy lunch-hour traffic.
She turned into the lot of a high-rise building and parked in a
visitor’s slot.
Tanner gave up his secret chase and found the first
open parking spot he could, rather than lose her in the maze of the
building. By the time she hit the elevators, he was right on her
sexy heels.
“Why are you following me?” she asked without
turning around.
“Bella told me to.”
The elevator doors opened, and a small crowd of
people got out, heading to lunch. Razor got in. When the doors slid
shut, she turned and glared at him. “This is ridiculous. What harm
can possibly come to me in broad daylight in an office
building?”
“Bella seemed worried.”
“Bella is overprotective.”
“I noticed. Possessive, too. But so long as she’s
signing the paychecks, she gets to be.”
Razor frowned, which only made him notice her mouth
that much more. It was a nice mouth—soft, with just the barest
sheen of lip gloss. In a mad corner of his mind, he wondered if it
was flavored.
Tanner shoved his hand into his pocket and made
sure he’d wiped away all hints of that lip gloss from his finger
before he did something stupid and tasted it.
They were working together, and that meant he
needed to keep things professional between them. He knew better
than to mess up his chances at the Edge by getting involved with a
coworker—even one wearing flavored lip gloss.
“Is it really that simple for you?” she asked.
“Bella has the money, so she gets the last word?”
“Bella hired me. Not you.”
“So if I were to offer you more money to walk away,
you would?”
Anger rose, flashing just below the surface. “My
loyalty can’t be bought.”
“Seems to me as if it already has been.”
The elevator doors opened and Razor strode forward,
her heels clicking on the polished marble floor.
“I’m here to see Kurt,” she announced as she passed
the receptionist.
The young woman shot to her feet, scurrying to stop
Razor from passing. “Do you have an appointment?”
Razor kept going without an answer, and as soon as
the receptionist realized she could not be stopped, she scurried
back around her desk and picked up the phone.
Tanner wasn’t sure if she was calling this Kurt guy
or security, but he wasn’t about to stop and listen long enough to
figure it out. Wherever Razor was going, so was he.
She opened a door on her left, walking in as if she
owned the place. The man behind the desk quickly shut his laptop
and stared up with a guilty look on his face.
Kurt’s skin said he was nearing forty, but he had
the body of a much younger man. Several pictures sat atop his desk
for visitors to see, showing him rock climbing and skydiving. There
was another of him shirtless, wearing boxing gloves and dripping
with sweat.
His hair had begun to gray, and he’d tanned his
skin until it was a deep, crinkly brown. Even though the man was
dressed in a suit and tie, Tanner could tell he was an
athlete.
“This has to stop, Kurt,” said Razor.
“What the hell are you doing in my office?”
“You sent another man to follow me again, didn’t
you?”
Kurt glanced back at Tanner, who planned on keeping
his mouth shut unless things got out of hand.
“No. I’ve never seen this man before in my life,”
said Kurt.
“Not him. The skinny guy with the bad
haircut.”
“I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
Razor pulled out her phone and brought up a photo.
She set it down on Kurt’s desk. “Proof. Which I plan on showing the
police if you don’t stop sending your buddies around to follow
me.”
Kurt looked at the photo. “I don’t know this guy.
Looks like a drug addict to me.”
“This isn’t funny anymore. We’re over. Deal with
it.”
“I have. As a matter of fact, I’m seeing someone
else now. Not that you care.”
Razor lifted one eyebrow in suspicion. “Really?
What’s her name?”
“Like I’m going to tell you. You’ll probably go
find her and act all crazy like you are with me, claiming she’s
trying to read your mind or something. You need help. This whole
paranoid thing isn’t at all becoming, so put on a tin foil hat and
leave me the fuck alone.”
Razor frowned and tilted her head. “You’re not
lying, are you?”
“No. I’m not. I got over you weeks ago. If someone
is really following you—which I doubt—I have nothing to do with
it.”
Tanner felt a brush of air as the office door
opened. He spun around and came face-to-face with a large,
stone-faced security guard.
“Is there a problem here?” asked the guard.
Tanner moved so that he was between Razor and the
guard.
“I think that’s up to Ms. Haught,” said Kurt. “What
about it? Do you need an escort out?”
He hadn’t called her Razor the way everyone else
did. Was it because they’d been close, or because only the people
she worked with used the nickname? Roxanne fit her better. It was
softer and prettier. He couldn’t fathom how she’d gotten the
nickname.
Razor shook her head and straightened her
shoulders. “No. I’m leaving. I’m sorry I bothered you.”
Kurt handed over her cell phone, and the guard
stepped aside for them to leave first. Of course, he rode down in
the elevator with them and watched until they exited the
building.
“I don’t suppose you’re going to tell me what that
was all about, are you?” asked Tanner.
Razor shook her head in confusion, making the pale
highlights in her hair catch the sun. “Apparently, there’s nothing
to tell. I was imagining things.”
“And the photo?” he asked. “Did you imagine that,
too?”
“I must have been wrong about the man in the
picture following me. Or if he was, I guess it had nothing to do
with Kurt. He probably just wanted to ask me out or
something.”
“Can I see it?”
She shrugged, drawing his attention to her bare
shoulders peeking out from her sleeveless blouse. “I guess
so.”
Tanner took the phone from her and looked at the
image. It showed a tall, thin man dressed in layers of dirty and
rumpled clothing. His hair was wild, and there were dark circles
beneath his eyes. “Kurt is right. He looks like a druggie. Does he
associate with people like that?”
“He likes to drink, but I never saw any proof of
drugs being used by him or his friends.”
“Why did you think he sent this man to follow you,
then?”
“Because he’s the only one I knew who would do
something like that. When I broke things off, he wasn’t happy. He
had his friends follow me. I thought he was trying to get back at
me for breaking up with him by scaring me.”
“Were you scared?”
“I wasn’t,” she said, making it sound as if she’d
changed her mind.
“But you are now?”
She used the remote access fob to unlock her car
doors and turned to face him, stopping in the middle of the searing
pavement. She held up her hand to block out the sun and stared up
at him. The wide gold bracelet on her left wrist gleamed in the
sunlight. “I’m sure that whoever this guy was, I lost him
yesterday. Worst-case scenario, he was checking me out as a target
to mug me for drug money.”
That wasn’t the worst-case scenario, but then
Tanner wasn’t exactly going to fill in any blanks she might have in
that area. He didn’t want to scare her more, so he kept his mouth
shut.
“He’s long gone now. All I have to do is get
through the next few days without a visit, and Bella will have me
back working again, where I belong. Until then, I’m going to make
use of my time off to get some things done that I’ve been putting
off.”
“What about my training?” asked Tanner. “You’re
supposed to be showing me the ropes.”
She eyed him up and down. “We both know that was
just an excuse Bella needed to assign me a babysitter. She wouldn’t
have hired you if you didn’t already know what you were doing.
Besides, any gaps in your training will have to be filled in while
you’re on a job. Sitting around and discussing things over coffee
isn’t going to help when you’re in the field.”
“Maybe, but I still plan to do what I’m told. Since
that includes your participation, I’m going to have to insist that
you play along as well.”
“Insist?” she asked, inching closer.
He could smell her skin, warm from the sun. He
pulled in a deep breath before he caught himself. Even shaded, her
golden eyes caught and held the light, making them sparkle. But it
was her mouth that kept pulling his attention. It had been way too
long since he’d kissed a woman, and her full lips kept reminding
him of exactly what he’d been missing.
Sweat broke out along his hairline, but it did
little to cool his blood. “I’m afraid so.”
“Here’s what’s going to happen,” she informed him,
her tone firm. “I’m going to go home. So are you. We’ll meet
tomorrow morning and discuss enough business to make Bella happy,
and then we’re done. You’ll go join the brute squad, and I’ll be
back to my own, more delicate missions.”
Delicate definitely suited her. Not that he guessed
for a second that what she did wasn’t dangerous. He knew it was.
The bruise on her arm proved that.
“That’s not what Bella wanted, and you know
it.”
“What I do on my time off is my business. Bella
doesn’t get to dictate that. Neither do you. I’ll see you at the
office at eight tomorrow morning. Don’t be late.”
With that, she turned and got in her car.
Tanner sighed and hurried to his car to follow her.
Bella had warned him that Razor wasn’t going to be easy to work
with. She’d told him it was his job to make it work, and he
planned to do just that.
Roxanne’s new home currently looked more like a
warehouse than the cottage she’d fallen in love with. Moving boxes
were still piled up everywhere, turning her living room into a
maze. She’d been here two months now and still hadn’t had time to
unpack. Of course, she wasn’t home much to notice the mess, but for
the next few days, it was going to be staring at her, annoying the
hell out of her.
Unless she used the time to unpack. That was what a
rational person would do.
Maybe it was best to call a charity and have them
come and haul it all away. She didn’t need any of it. All the stuff
she needed was already unpacked. These boxes were simply full of
memories—most of which she really didn’t care to relive.
The only thing that kept her from getting rid of
everything was that some of these things reminded her of Jake and
the time they’d spent together as kids. He and his mom, who was the
head housekeeper for Roxanne’s parents, were the brightest spots in
an otherwise lonely childhood. She couldn’t toss those memories
away with the rest. Nor could she throw away his belongings that
had been left behind in his room at her parents’ mansion. Most of
his things had been moved to a rented storage facility, but there
was no way she’d found them all. Jake was off defending the
country, and she wouldn’t repay him by throwing away the things
that might mean something to him.
It was time to bite the bullet, sort out the good
from the bad, and face the disappointments of her past. Chances
were that her dismal memories weren’t going to make her feel any
worse than failing Mr. Chord had.
Roxanne let out a long sigh and ripped the tape off
the first box.
A heavy knock sounded against her front door, and
she knew without looking who it was. Tanner. He’d tailed her from
Kurt’s office, and it had taken her a good twenty minutes to lose
him. Or so she’d thought.
She flung the door open, keeping her arm across the
entrance to let Tanner know he was not welcome.
Sunshine backlit him, highlighting the breadth of
his shoulders. His posture was straight and confident, telling her
without words that he fully expected to get his way.
She was going to enjoy watching the mighty fall. “I
thought I’d lost you.”
“You did. Nice move, too, by the way. Do you have
the train schedules memorized or something?”
Irritation grated along her spine. “How did you
find me?”
“Bella. She wasn’t pleased that you were disobeying
orders.”
“Bella’s my boss, not my commanding officer.”
Tanner shrugged, making his muscles bulge. The fact
that her gaze darted straight to that delicious masculine display
served only to irritate her further.
“I was clear that I’d meet you tomorrow,” she
reminded him.
“You were. You just forgot the part where that’s
not what our boss requested, so I thought I’d come by and keep both
of us from getting fired.”
“I’m not worried about that.”
“Maybe that’s because you have more money than God.
Some of us, however, have to work for a living.”
Her irritation grew until it verged on anger. She
hated it when people threw her money at her as if she were somehow
dirty because of it. She hadn’t asked to be born into a wealthy
family. She hadn’t asked for the loneliness she suffered, or the
ridiculous expectations placed on her. She hadn’t even kept most of
the money after her parents died. She’d given millions away to
various charitable organizations. Who the hell was he to judge
her?
“Go away,” she told him, not even trying to put a
polite spin on it.
She started to shut the door, but he slammed his
palm against it, locking his arm to hold it open. Muscles shifted
under the skin of his forearm, but his posture remained relaxed.
She wasn’t even sure how he’d moved so fast, considering he hadn’t
been poised to strike.
Roxanne gave the door an experimental push, hoping
he’d relent, but the wood didn’t even shift.
Tanner moved forward, filling her doorway. “Please,
Razor. If you work with me, I swear I’ll make it worth your
effort.”
“Why?” she asked, her curiosity burning away some
of her anger.
His jaw tightened in frustration, but he admitted,
“I need this job.”
“Why?”
“Does it matter?”
“It does to me. Bella said you were in the
military—some badass special operations guy.”
His shoulders deflated on a sigh, and guilt pinched
his features. “My family needed me, so I left the service.”
“That’s it? They needed you, and you gave up your
career?”
He frowned at her, making lines of confusion
radiate out from his blue eyes. “What do you mean, is that it? I
said my family needed me. You would have done the same
thing.”
No, she wouldn’t have. In fact, she was convinced
that most people wouldn’t have. That he didn’t seem to realize how
selfless that made him gave her pause. She almost felt bad for
trying to ditch him against Bella’s wishes. “Why did they need
you?”
His gaze shifted away, and his throat worked as if
she’d made him uncomfortable. “My dad and brother died in a car
accident. My sister-in-law was left with two kids and no job. No
life insurance. There were lots of medical bills. I did what I
could to help, but the military didn’t pay that well, and it wasn’t
enough. My other brother—Reid—works for Bella, and he told me he’d
help me get a job at the Edge if I got out. So I did.”
Roxanne was left reeling at the news. She knew some
families were really close and had the kind of bonds she could only
imagine, but what Tanner had done was beyond generous. Then again,
Reid was a good guy, too. It seemed the O’Connell brothers were
deeply devoted to their family.
Tanner’s mouth flattened in resignation, and until
now, she hadn’t noticed just how nice a mouth he had. “With the
economy sucking like it does, I can’t risk screwing up my chance.
Bella’s testing me. I’m asking you to help me make the cut.
Please.”
What could she say to that? If she was selfish and
petty enough to send him away now, she might as well turn in her
decent-human-being card and become the evil oil baroness so many
people already assumed she was.
Roxanne braced herself for what she was about to
do, then let go of the door and took a step back. “Come on in. We
have work to do.”
He unleashed a grin that should have been
classified as a secret weapon. His blue eyes sparkled, and his
whole face lit up. That bright gaze fixed on her, sliding down to
her mouth and back again. “Thanks, Razor. You won’t regret
this.”
Based on the way her pulse had kicked up a bit just
looking at him, she was fairly certain she already did.