LOGIN“Are you sure you want to do this, Mandy?” her mother said. “Your sister’s wedding is only a few months away and she really needs you right now. Besides, I don’t think days of sitting down will do anything for your diet.”
She wanted to throw a pillow at her mom. Really? Not one ounce of encouragement or congratulations? Mandy gritted her teeth. “Just think of it this way; now that I’m making money, I can get them a better wedding present.”
Her mother still looked skeptical. “You had better get them a very nice present,” she said. “Stephen had to go through a lot of trouble to get you this job.”
Yes, because I can’t get anything on my own merit. That was probably why he recommended me. To get them a better wedding present. She doubted the dickhead actually had anything resembling a conscience which needed easing. “I will, Mom.” Mandy forced a smile as she packed the rest of her belongings in the last cardboard box and taped it shut.
It was eight o’clock at night, only a little less than six hours since she had been officially hired to work for Carl Salvo. This was the fastest move she had ever done, even faster than when she had moved out of her—excuse her, Stephen’s—apartment. Except now, she needed to get out of her parents’ basement before they drove her crazy or they discovered the stash of junk food she kept under the couch as she dealt with the worst wedding craze ever. She’d take her stuff to the new apartment which was, luckily, already available. Carl Salvo had raised his eyebrows when she had asked for the key, but he had given it to her without question. She planned to unload everything herself and sleep on the floor tonight.
Her mother sighed loudly for the umpteenth time that evening. “I really wish you had thought this through, dear.”
“I already have,” Mandy said. “Really. It’s a good decision, Mom. For all of us. This place will be good for me.”
“I just wish you had thought about your sister before going.”
Mandy rolled her eyes. Claudia was hardly dependent on her and she had her own life to live. Why the hell would she have to think about Claudia before every decision she made? She grinned. That was Stephen’s job now. “I’m going, Mom. Deal with it,” she snapped. She lifted the box up and walked through the open door and set the box on the grass beside her car. Her mom went off to sulk, leaving Mandy to move her own stuff, which was all right with her, even though it took twice as long and left her exhausted. At least the apartment came furnished.
As she slammed the trunk of her car shut, her father came out of the house. “Your mother’s crying inside,” he said, looking like he wanted to come with her. “You’re leaving?”
“I got a job, Dad,” she said. “It comes with its own apartment. I start tomorrow.”
He grinned and then pulled her in for a hug. “Congratulations, kiddo,” he said.
Mandy grinned, savoring his approval. “Thanks D—”
Just then his phone rang. He pulled it out of his pocket and looked at it. “It’s work,” he said. “Excuse me, Mandy. Good luck moving.” He answered the cell as he walked back to the house.
Mandy watched him go as she climbed into the driver’s seat and started her car.
Just like that, the only excitement that came from her family over her new job was over.
She pulled out of the drive determined to make this a new beginning for herself.
He inclined his head and then gestured her into the office. “Like I said on the phone yesterday, your resume was impressive.”
Mandy went in and sat down stiffly in the chair in front of the giant, but neatly organized, mahogany desk. So this was how it was going to be from now on. Aside from their informal meeting and talk on the phone, it was clear that Carl preferred his business relations strictly formal. That was fine by Mandy. She preferred to keep her distance.
“Shall we get to it then?” Carl sat down behind his massive desk in a chair that was unnecessarily big, even for his significant frame. He folded his hands over a leather binder. “Why should I hire you?”
Because I don’t want to live in my parents’ basement? “I have an outstanding work ethic,” Mandy said. “I’m not afraid of hard work, I’m efficient, overtime doesn’t scare me, and I’m overqualified for your job.” Was he smiling? She blinked and focused on what her qualifications were. “I’m beyond efficient with multitasking and time management – both yours and my own.”
“Most time management courses say that multitasking makes you inefficient with low quality work that takes too long.” He didn’t bat an eye.
Neither did she. “Those people are doing it wrong.”
He raised an eyebrow. “You don’t say.” He shifted and undid the button on his suit jacket. “Why do you say that?”
“The trick is not to do two things simultaneously,” Mandy said, her mind imagining what she wanted to explain to him. “It is to do one while waiting for the other. For instance, if my computer is doing updates, I can be answering the phone, or organizing my materials to suit my schedule that day. For this to work, you need to switch all of your focus completely from one task to the other immediately.”
“What if the phone rings first?”
“Pardon?”
“What if you’re waiting for the phone to ring and while you are waiting you decided to update your computer?”
She stared at him. “You answer it. The computer can update by itself. All you have to do is click ‘ok’ when it’s done.” Was this some sort of trick question?
“Interesting,” Carl said, his face and body language giving away nothing. “Tell me, Ms. Connors, what was the crisis your sister was having?”
And now she would lose her chance at this job. Mandy sighed. “She needed to know about the invitations for the wedding.”
“What about them?”
“Whether or not they were sent out.”
“Were they?”
She shook her head.
“Your fault or hers?”
“Neither. Both, I guess. The guest list isn’t finalized and the stationary envelopes hadn’t arrived with the invitations. We’re still—”
“How did you find my secretary’s hospitality?” He nodded, leaving her completely baffled as to why he had even asked her the question.
“She was very courteous and professional,” Mandy replied without missing a beat.
“What was that about the stationary envelopes?”
“They haven’t arrived.”
“There’s an important file that is too big to be attached in an email, but I need it in an hour. How are you going to get it to me?”
“Bike messenger.”
“You’re going to bike?” He blinked as if surprised at his own comment. “Why not fax?”
“Because you don’t have a fax machine.” There! Take that! Kapow!
Mandy caught a trace of a smile on his face and returned with a small one of her own.
“You do know how to switch focus easily.” Carl leaned back against his chair. “At least in conversation. Your former bosses have done nothing but sing praises of your work ethic. Why did you leave your last job?”
Mandy pressed her lips together. She had left because Stephen was her former boss’s son. Except that would mean Carl Salvo would have to know that Stephen was her ex, and dating the boss’s son was definitely a professional no-no, not to mention it would make her look that much more pathetic. “There was a personal conflict between me and another employee. It’s been resolved, and I don’t intend to repeat it.”
Carl rested his arms on his chair, the trace of the smile gone. “Let me make myself clear, Ms. Connors. I value complete honesty from my employees more than anything else and if you think vague half-truths will make yourself look flawless, and will get you the job, then think again. I won’t ask you why again.”
Mandy took a deep breath. “Fine. I left because I had gotten into a relationship with my boss’s son. It didn’t feel right working at that company after that happened.”
Carl nodded. “How do I know that something like that would not happen again?”
“It didn’t end well. I’ll never make that mistake again.”
“What happened?”
“He got engaged to my sister.”
Carl’s eyes widened slightly and Mandy waited for the look of pity. She expected him to hurry her out of his office so he would never have to see or speak to her again. Instead his usual cool and enigmatic expression slid into place. He smiled and stood up. “I believe I have all the information I need,” he said.
Mandy stood as well and shook his hand.
“Thank you, Ms. Connors. Have a nice day.”
“Have a nice day, sir,” she said, her heart sinking.
He walked her to the door of his office and opened it for her. Mandy was halfway to the elevator when he called out, “Ms. Connors?”
She turned. “Yes, Mr. Salvo?”
“Be here tomorrow at six o’clock sharp. You don’t want to be late for your first day of work.” He shut the door, leaving Mandy in the lobby, her mouth hanging open in a very unprofessional manner.
Mandy crawled into bed. She couldn’t get the image of Carl in the pool out of her head. Just thinking about his body made her wet. “Get a grip on yourself,” she muttered to herself as she pulled the covers up over her. “He’s your damn boss. Let it go!” But the image of him swimming laps imprinted the backs of her eyelids as she drifted off. It didn’t take long to fall into a restless sleep where dreaming was her only escape.She lay tanning by the pool, enjoying the unusually hot and sunny spring day. She smiled, happy she could now feel comfortable lying by a pool in a bikini. It seemed like the diet and exercise had really worked. Her stomach was completely flat and not even a hint of excess could be seen, a six-pack could be seen through the shadows of the suntan lotion.She moved her sunglasses off her face and closed her eyes, enjoying the warmth of the sun against her skin.“Enjoying yourself?” Carl’s deep voice rumbled above her in what felt like seconds later.She opened her e
Mandy WAITED UNTIL she got into her car before she allowed the tears to fall. She hadn’t meant to yell at her sister like that. Everything had just boiled up and up and finally over. It was like Claudia’s mission in life was to make her big sister feel like she was nothing. She had been trying to lose weight and it was working. She had a whole new wardrobe to prove it! She was in no way jealous of Claudia marrying Stephen. Or maybe she was. Not of Stephen, but the fact her younger sister was getting married before her. “The marriage won’t last, anyways,” she told herself, and then felt like crap for trying to condemn it before they’d even said ‘I do’. As much as Claudia’s comments hurt, though, she had to admit the sense of relief lifting off her chest couldn’t be missed. She was tired of being spread thin by Claudia’s crises and work and the passive aggressive comments about her weight. She didn’t even want to think about the wrath she’d have to face from her mother, but suddenly Ma
Mandy SIGHED CONTEMPLATIVELY as she looked at the new clothes Carl had bought her. She had no idea how much he had spent. He wouldn’t let her look at the price tags as they shopped. In return, she refused to let him buy her clothes that were non-work related, even though he tried once during the shopping spree. She ended up with new suits, silk blouses, and some office-friendly dresses that all made her look like she was a CEO herself and not just a personal assistant. He told her he wanted her to look like she had power, and look good at the same time. He was going to have her attend more business meetings and maybe even entertain some of the clients’ wives, if she was interested, while their husbands were in meetings for negotiations. “My only condition is that I ask to approve the clothes you wear,” he said. “The last thing I need is for you to be looking so sexy that the men will be more focussed on you than the negotiations, or that the wives get jealous.”As if there were any cl
Carl wasn’t in the office the next day. When Mandy checked the office’s messages, he left an abrupt one to say he wouldn’t be in and to take care of things while he was gone. No explanation. No details on how long. No contact information. Nothing. She managed the day, but there was no news from him the next day or the next. Mandy spent most of her time at work cancelling appointments and fielding calls to cover for him. He was losing money, clients and deals. Not that it probably mattered with his billion-dollar company but still, it didn’t look good. And judging from the worried looks from Gina, this wasn’t normal. He wasn’t at his house either. She didn’t notice his car, or him, at the house. When she knocked on his door no one answered either. She had a key to his house but didn’t dare use it. She bumped into Murray one morning as she left for work and he mentioned that Carl had asked him to keep making her meals but to wait until he contacted him when he would need more. Fr
“How’s the new computer?” Carl asked her the next day, his tone having a certain edge to it, like he didn’t want her to snap at him.“It’s nice,” Mandy replied as she sat in his office going through the week’s schedule. She flipped the planner so it would sync up with his. They needed to keep things safe and distant, and she would prove to him that it was the best situation for both of them.Carl sat behind his desk going over a folder in front of him. “We have a lot of things to go over before the meeting with the investors.” He frowned and set a sheet of paper aside. “I need you to make sure everything’s in order so we can get the best deal. This is what’s going to get the investors sold on the project.” He gestured to the files on his desk, which was supposed to be their chaperone. It was full of different sketches for a new computer software program that made improvements on current models of voice dictation programs.There was a polite knock on the door that led to the lobby.“Co
“Sorry you had to leave your family before you got dessert.” Carl stood in his kitchen, his eyes slightly red as Mandy sat at the counter finishing the report he’d asked her to type up.She shrugged. “I knew there was no way in hell I would get cake with my family watching my thighs. They’re on this get-Mandy-skinny mission.”“I’d gladly watch your—” Carl suddenly cleared his throat and shook his head, as if physically trying to stop himself from saying the words. “Well, you guessed wrong on that.” Carl tossed her a plastic takeout box. “I got some to go.”She shifted, warming at the sentence he didn’t finish. She eyed him as she slowly opened the box. Inside were several slices of chocolate cake. Had he been drinking? He seemed off. It threw her. She’d finally grown accustomed to being back to business only. She needed something to divert her attention from the handsome half-drunk hunk leaning against the counter beside her.She stared at the layers of rich, delicious chocolate. “I o







