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Authors: Samantha Chase

BOOK: Honor Bound
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She was crouched in a corner with a tiny flashlight in her mouth, reading the writing on some boxes. Rather than sneak up behind her, I stayed where I was and cleared my throat.

She gasped.

She dropped the flashlight.

She fell on her perfect, little ass.

My hands twitched to go over and see if she was all right.

“What are you doing up here?” she asked breathlessly.

“I was about to ask you the same thing.” I put my hands in my pockets to force myself to behave. She stood up but didn’t make a move to come any closer. “Did the lighting guy send you up here?”

She seemed to rack her brain for a moment and then began to fidget with her clothes. She straightened her black pants and smoothed down the blue top. There was nothing sexy about her attire—there never was—and yet watching her run her hands over herself like this was more exciting than a Victoria’s Secret fashion show. I seriously needed to get my head examined. I could have understood my reaction if she had on a pair of stilettos, but she didn’t. Sensible black heels as usual. Practical. As was her habit, she finished her quick-fix by smoothing down the sleek, dark ponytail that she always wore. I wanted to reach behind her and pull the band loose and watch her hair fall across her shoulders.

Focus, dammit! This was so not a time to go and get turned on by the sexy librarian or school marm. Seriously, I needed to either get some therapy or get laid. Soon.

“As a matter of fact, yes,” she said finally, breaking me out of my wayward fantasy. “I was looking to see if there were any outlets up here for him to connect to and run some lines from.” I knew she was lying. Her voice was shaking, and her eyes refused to meet mine. Her hands were twisting together, and she pretty much exhibited every textbook sign for lying.

“Any luck?”

“Um…no,” she said, bending to pick up her flashlight. “I guess we’ll just have to deal with unsightly surge protectors and whatnot.” She finally moved and all but ran by me to get to the stairs. “I really should go and let him know.”

And then she was gone.

I had to give her that one—she didn’t back down when I had her in a corner. Both literally and figuratively. I did my own check of the attic and looked at the boxes that she’d been inspecting. They were labeled “Private 2008”. That could be around the time of the layoffs, but what were the odds of Ken keeping anything incriminating up in his attic?

Walking down the stairs, I turned off the lights and shut the door. There wasn’t a lock on it, so I just let it be and went on with my rounds.

There was a technician at the master bedroom installing the security camera and a keypad lock. I simply nodded at him and went on my way because I was the one who brought him in, and I knew exactly who he was and what he was doing.

The rest of the house was in good shape. and I decided to take advantage of the weather and head outside for a bit. Ken had mentioned the catering people, among others, being out here today so it only made sense for me to check things out. I didn’t mind. The weather was great, and that house was like a damn mausoleum. Walking across the great lawn, all I could think was that it was good to breathe again.

Off to the right of the patio in the back, I could see the food tent going up. Just beyond it I could see the trailer for it being placed in position. I walked down a wide staircase to the lower level and waved to the sound guy—
jerk
—and then over to the pool area. It was like an Olympic-sized pool on steroids. Besides being massive in size, it had every possible accessory you could think of. Water slide, double diving boards, stairs, a whirlpool, a lazy river off to the side—on and on and on it went. It was surrounded by exotic plants, and I think I heard that it had been featured in some sort of house and garden magazine.

I was surprised there wasn’t some sort of billboard advertising it somewhere.

Beyond the pool was the pool house. I hadn’t been in there before because it didn’t seem necessary. Now that there were so many people out in the yard, I figured I’d better. The entire side of the house that faced the pool consisted of sliding walls of glass, and it only took a minute to figure out where I was supposed to open them from.

They were covered in gauzy white fabric that I had to push aside to get into the house itself. The temperature inside was about ten degrees cooler, and I actually got a chill. Yikes. Turning my head, I stopped and laughed. There on the wall were several large-framed posters that held the magazine article on the pool. Figured.

Walking further into the house, I heard a noise. It wasn’t a banging like someone was hammering or like any kind of work-noise at all. It was…clicking. Like a camera. Okay, nothing to get too alarmed about yet. It could have been that someone else was doing a story on the place and was in here taking pictures. Only…no one mentioned that to me. At all. Not once, in any of the meetings that I’d had, had anyone mentioned a magazine or newspaper coming in prior to the event to do a story or take pictures.

Quietly, I paced toward the sound. It was coming from the back changing room. The curtain to it was partially closed, and I could see some papers lying on a bench and then a hand shifting them around.

A feminine hand.

I looked a little closer and noticed the low black heels that I had seen earlier today. In the attic.

Click, click, click.

Dammit.

I didn’t have a choice. She’d left me no alternative. Stepping forward, I paused for only a second outside the curtain before pulling it back. Ali’s big, dark eyes stared up at me in shock. Part of me wanted to throttle her while another wanted to pick her up and hold her close.

Shock turned to annoyance in the blink of an eye.
She
was annoyed? Seriously? Did she have any idea what she was doing to
me
?

I knew that yelling wasn’t going to get me anywhere. Neither was being some sort of bully or getting all cop-like on her. Instead, I leaned against the doorway, arms crossed, seeming to all the world like I was relaxed.

I wasn’t. I was wound tighter than I’d ever been in my life. I took a deep breath and let it out and hoped that my features relaxed enough to the point that she couldn’t tell what was going on in my head.

“Why don’t you tell me why you’re really here?”

 

Seven

Ali

 

I didn’t have an answer for Sebastian. Not a single one.

I tried to get my mind to work, tried to think of some sort of response that would rectify this situation, but I couldn’t make my mouth work any better than my brain.

He’d caught me red-handed—I had the papers spread out before me, papers I clearly had no reason to be looking at. I’d snuck back into Gentry’s office earlier and found some banking statements that weren’t behind locked file drawers. I couldn’t risk taking the time to read them in the office, where I wasn’t supposed to be, so I’d taken them with me and come out here in private to scan them before I returned them to their proper place.

I’d managed to think of semi-plausible excuses for every other time he’d caught me, but I couldn’t think of anything at all right now. I just stared at him, my lips slightly parted.

He looked gorgeous, relaxed, and almost amused—all of which infuriated me. If I was going to be found out, then he could at least look like he was taking it seriously.

It was
very
serious to me.

Since he was waiting for an answer, I finally said, “It’s none of your business.”

It wasn’t the brightest or the most original response I’d ever come up with, but at least it was something to say.

His lips tilted up just slightly, his green eyes warming. With amusement, I thought. “Actually, it is kind of my business. My job is security, you know.”

“Well, I’m not a threat to anyone’s life, so you can just leave me alone.”

“There are potential threats that have nothing to do with physical safety,” he said. His eyes drifted down to the papers. “And my job is to protect against those too.”

“Well, I’m not doing anything.” It was a lie. An obvious one. And one that would never hold up, given what I was doing. But I said it anyway, since that’s what you do when you’re cornered.

He stepped closer and took the sheet of paper out of my hand, his eyes running up and down it before it returned to my face. “This definitely doesn’t belong to you.”

“I’m going to return it.”

“The theft wasn’t really what I was concerned about.”

He still sounded laidback, casual. As if none of this was any big deal.

It was the biggest deal in the world to me. I straightened up to my full height beside him so I could be closer to his eye level. “I’d like to leave now.”

“Oh no. You’re not going to run away until I get some answers.” He reached out and took my upper-arm in his big hand—not hard but too firm for me to shake off. “Every time I see you, you’re snooping around where you don’t belong. And I want to know why.”

“I have a problem,” I improvised. “An obsessive nosiness. I’m trying to get it under control, but I have to snoop around wherever I go.”

It sounded halfway plausible.

Not plausible enough.

He actually chuckled. “Nice try. Why don’t you try again—with the truth this time? What are you trying to find in this house?”

I was starting to get nervous. He was big and strong, but I wasn’t afraid he would hurt me. Mostly I was afraid he would turn me in. I would get in trouble. I would get fired. I wouldn’t have a job to help support my family. And I would never be able to fix everything that was wrong.

With a wave of panic, I said, “What does it matter? You caught me before I found anything, so no harm done. I’ll just go now.”

I started to walk away from him, out of the pool house, but he stopped me by tightening his hand on my arm. “Uh-uh. Tell me the truth, Ali Cooper.”

My last name wasn’t an uncommon one, but something about the way he said it made me realize he knew who I was. He knew everything. Already. So lying was completely futile.

A surge of anger replaced the panic. Because he was a Maxwell. And just like his father, he thought everything should just fall in his lap—no matter who he stripped bare in the process.

“I don’t owe you the truth,” I snapped. “I don’t owe you anything.”

“Since I’m in the position of deciding what to do at this point, you might reconsider that position.”

Even his word choice sounded pompous, rich, entitled. I was suddenly so mad I almost gnashed my teeth.

“Fuck you, Sebastian Maxwell.” I said the last name like a curse. “I am not a pawn to be moved around for your amusement, and there’s no way in hell I’m going to be beholden to a Maxwell. For anything.”

“I’m not expecting you to be beholden to me. I know what happened to your dad, and I can understand why you’d be angry with the company because of it. None of it has anything to do with me, though, unless you think I somehow manipulated the decision to let your father go while I was a Marine halfway across the world.” For the first time, his tone was edged with something like resentment.

“I never implied anything of the kind. Just that I know whose side you’re on in this, and it sure as hell isn’t mine. Now let go of me.” This time, I shook my arm hard until he loosened his grip.

I took three quick steps backward.

“So, seriously, what are you trying to accomplish here?” He sounded genuinely curious, almost concerned.

It didn’t tempt me to open up though.

I just glared at him, finding him unbelievably attractive, despite everything, and hating myself for it.

“There’s nothing here to find,” he added. “There’s nothing that can change what happened.”

“That’s what you think,” I managed to say. “I don’t agree with you. It doesn’t matter now, though. I’ll just leave.”

I needed to get away from Sebastian before I said something even more revealing than I’d already said. I turned away from him and hurried out of the pool house, relieved when he didn’t follow me.

As I strode quickly back to the house, I tried to clear my mind and think.

This was it for me. I was going to be revealed for who I was, and I’d never be let back into this house. I would probably be fired, but I’d deal with that later. For now, I just needed to find anything I could while I was here.

No one noticed me in the slightest, and I headed back toward the home office. There, I returned the papers I still held to the file I’d found them in, and then I looked around, realizing immediately what I needed to do.

The obvious place to find incriminating information was on his computer. I never would have risked logging on under normal circumstances, but this was my last chance. I might have as little as five minutes before Sebastian found Gentry and told him the truth.

So I ignored all the prickling of my conscience and the roaring of my fear-instinct and sat down at the computer desk. I checked the computer and saw it was on, so I click the mouse to clear the blackened screen.

If there’d been a login required, I’d never be able to get on. I wasn’t any sort of computer whiz, and I wasn’t even very good at guessing games.

But the desktop came up immediately. Evidently, Gentry hadn’t logged off the last time he’d used the computer.

So everything was available to me. It was like a gift from heaven.

Quickly, I pulled up the folder list and scanned them. I had absolutely no idea what I was looking for, so it all looked like gibberish to me.

How the hell did people do this sort of thing in movies—managing to land on exactly the right document in the three minutes they had before the bad guys showed up?

I clicked a folder and then scanned the documents, but none of them looked like they’d be helpful.

I was just opening another folder when the office door opened.

It didn’t happen in slow motion, the way the approach of doom should really occur. The door just swung open, and Gentry and Sebastian appeared in the office.

I froze.

If I thought it was bad being caught in the pool house, it was nothing compared to being caught now.

There was absolutely no way to talk myself out of this.

I just stared, completely frozen, too stunned to even be scared.

“What the hell?” Gentry demanded, stepping farther into the office with an angry glare.

“So you managed after all?” Sebastian asked, sounding light and innocuous. He moved until he was beside Gentry. “How long did it take you to get on?”

He was looking at me, talking to me, but I had no idea what he was talking about. He was acting like he and I understood each other, but we definitely didn’t.

“You know what’s going on?” Gentry asked, sounding angry and confused. “What is this woman doing in my office?”

“Nothing that’s a threat. I was worried that we were too lax on security in the private rooms, so I asked her to see if she could sneak back here and get onto your computer. She works for the event planner, so she has no experience in doing this sort of thing. But she obviously managed with no problem.”

I stared at Sebastian in even deeper shock than before. He was saying the words—casually, like they were true and not that big a deal—but I couldn’t understand how it was happening.

He was making an excuse for me. He was covering for me.

Why the hell would he be doing that, when I’d done nothing but resent him for his family ties?

“How long did it take you?” Sebastian asked again, giving me a discreetly significant look that was impossible to misinterpret.

He was telling me to get it together and play along. So I did.

“Less than ten minutes. It was easy. The computer was left on.”

Sebastian shook his head at Gentry. “Sloppy. I have some suggestions about improving your security habits so this sort of thing can’t happen so easily.”

“Okay. Thanks, I guess. I’d prefer you to have told me you were doing this little stunt beforehand, but I can see that I was vulnerable here. You’re just like your dad. Always thinking outside of the box.”

I could tell Sebastian didn’t like that comment, but the expression just barely flickered on his face before he smiled. “I guess so. You can go, Ali. Thanks for helping out.”

I got up and stumbled toward the door, baffled and disoriented.

Sebastian had just saved me, and I had no idea why.

***

I made a quick exit, even though there was some more I should have done at the house that afternoon. I was too rattled to get any more work done.

I went home, stopping by the grocery store on the way and then doing some housecleaning and fixing dinner. But Tyler wasn’t home and Dad and Rosie were both quiet and withdrawn, so I had nothing to do but think about Sebastian.

There could only be one explanation for why he had helped me out. He wasn’t like his family. He wasn’t a selfish, entitled ass. He was just a nice guy, and I’d treated him like total crap.

Eventually, the guilt and gratitude propelled me to action. I hadn’t behaved right, and I needed to do something to fix it.

I remembered he’d said he was staying at a hotel near the Gentry house while he was working this job, since it saved him the long commute back to D.C. every night, so I got in my car and headed over there.

My skin felt cold and my hands were shaky as I knocked on his door. Room 421, like he’d told me that day he walked me out to my car. I’d never done anything like this in my life—showing up at the door of a man unexpectedly. He might be busy. He might have someone over. He might be annoyed with me and not really want to see me standing here.

I suddenly regretted the spontaneous move and turned on my heel to walk away.

I’d taken two steps when the door opened.

So Sebastian found me—not just standing at his door like a normal person—but running away after having knocked, like some sort of schoolboy playing a prank.

My cool skin flushed red as he said, “Ali?”

I froze, still facing in a different direction. “Hi.”

“What are you doing here?” He sounded surprised and baffled, and that made me feel worse, since he obviously thought it was bizarre that I would be here, outside his hotel room, at 9:25 in the evening.

I managed to summon enough sense to turn my head to face him. He wore workout clothes—t-shirt and gym shorts—but he wasn’t hot and sweaty so he must not have worked out yet. He looked bigger and more masculine than normal—but also more real, with his bare legs and feet. I gulped at the sight of him and tried to think of something to say.

I couldn’t even remember what I was doing here.

He reached out and put a hand on my shoulder, turning me around so my whole body was facing him. “Ali? What’s wrong? What’s going on?” He sounded more urgent, worried.

“Nothing’s wrong,” I finally managed to say, his concern pushing me into speaking at last. “I’m sorry to just show up. I just wanted to…to…”

“To what?” His face changed, softened somehow in that way I’d seen before, that way that made my heart clench strangely.

“To say thank you. For helping me out earlier. I would have been in big trouble. Lost my job or even worse. I don’t know why you helped me, but I wanted to thank you. I’d done nothing to deserve it, so…so thank you.”

His face softened even more, this time into a smile. His green eyes warmed into an almost intimate look. “You’re welcome.”

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