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Takeover Engagement
Takeover Engagement
Takeover Engagement
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Takeover Engagement

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Substitute fiancé?

When Case Travers wanted something, he wouldn't let anything or anyone stand in his way! And he seemed determined to take over Lucy's life.

It all happened so fast. One minute her boyfriend had proposed, and Lucy was happily looking forward to planning the wedding. Then she met Case, and discovered he had very different plans for her! And it seemed he had the power to arrange anything even transferring Lucy's fiancé to another city. The man was infuriating intriguing. Lucy had no idea what to do if Case decided to offer himself as a substitute fiancé!

"Ms. Duke captivates readers with intense passion, a strong emotional conflict and endearing characters."
Romantic Times
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 1, 2012
ISBN9781460872567
Takeover Engagement
Author

Elizabeth Duke

Elizabeth Duke aka Vivienne Wallington was born in Adelaide, South Australia, but has lived in Melbourne all her married life. She trained as a librarian and has worked in many different types of libraries, but she was always secretly writing. Her first published book was a children's novel, after which she successfully tried her hand at romance writing. She has since given up her work as a librarian to write romance full-time. When she isn't writing or reading, she loves to travel with her husband John, either within Australia or overseas, gathering inspiration and background material for future romances. She and John have a married son and daughter, who now have children of their own.  

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    Takeover Engagement - Elizabeth Duke

    CHAPTER ONE

    LUCY glanced at her watch as she hurried across the tiled lobby to the lifts. Two minutes to twelve. She was cutting things a bit too fine.

    It was an old building, one of the oldest in Melbourne. The two lifts looked as if they were from the same era, judging by the heavy doors and the ancient iron numbers on the panel above. An amber light showed that one lift was stationary on the top floor—the sixth. The other was slowly, ever so slowly descending.

    Time was ticking away. She began to tap her foot. Would that darned lift never come? David would think she was doing this deliberately.. .making him wait until the last possible moment…teasing him by showing up just in the nick of time. David, I wouldn’t do that to you, she told him silently. I meant to be early.. .truly.

    She felt a twinge of guilt. Then why hadn’t she left the clinic earlier and made allowances for any possible delays, like traffic jams?

    Approaching footsteps diverted her. As she turned her head a beam of sunlight from the front entrance of the old building caught her face in its harsh autumn glow.

    She would have sworn she heard a sharp intake of breath from the man who had paused a few paces away from her, a tall, dark-haired man in a charcoal-grey suit.

    For the briefest second their eyes met, vibrant turquoise clashing with heart-stopping, depthless black. With the daylight behind him, the man’s face was shadowed, yet even so she could sense his interest in her, his almost startled reaction, his lips parting as if he were about to speak. Then he clamped his mouth shut and flicked his gaze away, as if realising he’d mistaken her for someone else.

    She felt an involuntary tremor run through her as she turned back to the lifts. There was something about the man…some potent force about him that she found…disturbing. Even that single brief glance had been enough to tell her that here was a successful, supremely self-confident, possibly powerful man. A man who would despise weakness and failure—in himself as much as in others. He didn’t strike her as the kind of man who would easily make a mistake.

    A ding from above signalled the arrival of the lift. At last! She looked at her watch and swore under her breath. Five past twelve! She was five minutes late already. Damn!

    The heavy doors rattled open and she stepped inside, the fine hairs at her nape prickling as the dark-eyed stranger followed her in.

    Without looking at him, she extended a finger and pressed the button marked ‘6’ before melting back against the wall to allow him access to the panel. He merely inclined his head and moved back a step, to stand with his back against the opposite wall. Facing her, she noted, rather than the door.

    She willed herself not to react, or look directly at him. But as the doors clanged shut and the lift began its slow grinding ascent she found herself watching him out of the corner of her eye. Feeling his eyes on her again.

    For the first time she felt a twinge of unease. Had he really been heading for the sixth floor, or had he only decided to do so after seeing that she was going there herself? With the rate this lift was moving it could take an age to get there. Was he aware of that?

    Suddenly she felt glaringly vulnerable and alone. It was unlikely that the lift would stop on its way up to collect any other passengers. Anyone waiting on the upper floors of the building would be more likely to be waiting to come down.

    She swallowed hard. It wouldn’t be the first time a lone woman had been attacked in a lift. And this man looked extremely strong, extremely powerful. If he lunged at her she wouldn’t have a chance.

    On the other hand, he looked far too smooth and self-possessed, far too well-dressed and respectable to be a potential rapist. But there was no point in taking any chances.

    She stiffened her jaw and turned her body slightly away from his, facing the lift door—hoping that her body language would send out off-putting signals.

    Glancing at the panel in front of her, she noted that they were slowly approaching the third floor. Barely halfway!

    If she hadn’t been feeling so edgy, with David’s ultimatum at the back of her mind and this disturbing stranger adding to her nervous tension, she might have seen the amusing side of this interminable lift ride and shared a wry smile with her fellow passenger.

    But she didn’t dare. Even though she wasn’t directly facing him now, she knew—she just knew—that he was still looking at her.

    It wasn’t that she’d never had a man stare at her before. Her eyes, being such an intense blue, tended to attract attention—from men in particular—though in her own opinion they were spaced too widely apart. And her hair, which was long and straight, except for a slight curl where it swirled round her shoulders, was an unusual colour too, she guessed. People had described it at various times as rich chestnut, deep honey, even as burnt gold…it seemed to change with the light.

    Her figure wasn’t too bad either, thanks to all the bike-riding, swimming and running she did. On the other hand her nose was too long, her mouth far too large and her lips too full. ‘Kissable lips’, David had called them once, but then, he was biased. As for her neck…well, swans weren’t in it!

    Still, whatever she looked like, she didn’t deserve to be eyed in the way this stranger was eyeing her. Never before had she been so pricklingly aware of a man’s scrutiny, so…confused by it. She didn’t know whether to find it flattering, irritating, tiresome…or alarming.

    From her own fleeting appraisal of him, he didn’t look the type of man who would stand and stare at a woman, even surreptitiously. He looked more the type who would be used to being stared at.

    Which she was tempted to do…and she just might have risked a quick glance if she hadn’t felt so alone and exposed, stuck in this confined space with him. Instead, she darted another anxious peek at her watch. And at the same moment the lift gave a ghastly jolt.

    Her darkly fringed eyes sprang wide, her gaze colliding with the narrowed black eyes of the stranger opposite. She gave a weak smile, holding her breath as the lift gave another frightening jolt before coming to a shuddering halt.

    Her eyes leapt to the numbered panel. ‘Oh, no,’ she groaned aloud. They were stuck between the fifth and sixth floors! So near and yet so far.

    ‘About time they installed some new lifts,’ her companion commented drily, and, despite her alarm, she noted how deep and softly vibrant his voice was. It seemed to coil right down into the pit of her stomach.

    She caught her breath as he lunged forward suddenly, his hand shooting out to press button ‘6’ on the panel. She almost had to catch her breath all over again as a waft of his aftershave drifted past her nostrils. Not that it was strong—it was extremely subtle, extremely…well, male. Disturbingly male. As he was, she realised, headily aware of his close proximity…his tall, athletic physique…his strong, chiselled face…those eyes.

    ‘Damn!’ he swore when nothing happened. He pressed another button, then another, stabbing at each one with an increasingly vicious finger. ‘Come on, damn it.. .move!’

    ‘What are we going to do?’ she burst out, alarm mingling with dismay. David wasn’t going to wait for her. Well, not for much longer. He’d warned her. If she didn’t turn up by twelve-fifteen at the very latest he was leaving. And he would too. He had an afternoon plane to catch.

    ‘This is the last time I’m going to ask you, Lu,’ he’d pronounced only yesterday. ‘I’ve waited long enough. If you don’t turn up tomorrow, I’ll know your answer. That’ll be it. It’ll be over.’

    He’d meant it too. She’d never seen him more decisive. And she couldn’t blame him. She’d kept him dangling for far too long. Even elastic could only stretch so far.

    Why did I leave it so late to drive into town? she berated herself. And why didn’t I run up the stairs when I saw the lift was taking so long to come? What’s six flights of stairs when your future’s at stake?

    She felt a wave of mingled mortification and panic. She’d taken David too much for granted. Expecting him always to be there, patiently waiting…waiting until she was ready to make up her mind, to make a commitment. She had been so unfair to him!

    For the first time she paused to think about what she might be losing if she missed today’s appointment with him. She’d be losing one of the gentlest, most decent, most dependable men a girl could ever hope to find. Was she crazy?

    ‘Can’t you do something?’ she cried. ‘I’m supposed to be meeting someone at twelve!’

    The man turned his head, his mouth quirking into a crooked smile which, despite its mockery, was startlingly sensual. ‘He’ll wait, won’t he?’ The black eyes raked over her.

    A surge of heat scorched up her slender neck. She clutched her handbag to her chest in an instinctively protective gesture, feeling suddenly stripped bare.

    Despite the predicament they were in, and despite her fevered wariness, she found herself covertly examining his face from under her fringe of thick lashes, trying to work out just what it was about him that she found so disturbing.

    His face was lean and hard, slashed with cynical lines on either side of his square jaw. His sensual mouth had a sardonic twist. His hair was very dark, almost black, its wiry thickness tamed by a stylish cut. But there was nothing tame about him. She only had to look into the glittering black eyes to sense that. He exuded a dangerously potent masculinity that made her intensely aware that she was a woman.

    She dismissed the treacherous thought with a firm thrust of her dimpled chin.

    ‘My friend can only wait fifteen minutes.’ She tried to sound tart and crisp, but the words came out husky and defensive.

    ‘Any man who will wait only fifteen minutes for you needs his head read,’ the man drawled.

    Hot prickles broke out all over her skin. It wasn’t the words so much—flirtatious comments of that nature normally left her cold, or brought a derisive curl to her lips—it was the fact that the words had come from the mouth of this suave, self-assured stranger, this stunningly attractive businessman, who had success and privilege written all over him.

    What is it with this guy? she pondered in confusion. He just didn’t add up. First the way he’d stared so intently at her, when he didn’t look the type who would stand and gawp at a woman—any woman, let alone a stranger in a lift. And now here he was making silvertongued personal remarks, when he didn’t strike her as the type who would sink to oily flattery either.

    ‘My friend has a plane to catch,’ she informed him curtly. ‘He can only wait until twelve-fifteen.’ She looked pointedly at her watch, her heart sinking when she saw that it was ten past already.

    ‘Then we’d better try to do something,’ the stranger responded easily. He thrust out a hand and she tensed, until she realised that he was reaching past her for the emergency phone mounted on the wall. It was an old-fashioned telephone, its ancient dial lacking numbers.

    But there was no need to dial. The moment he snatched it from its hook, a voice answered, ‘Emergency lift service.’

    He explained their predicament, and after an exchange of words he grimaced and hung up. ‘They’ll send someone straight away. There are no engineers in this building, apparently. We’ll just have to wait until help arrives.’

    ‘Did they say how…how long they’d be?’ She felt a sinking feeling in her stomach. David would be pacing the floor by now. He was probably already losing patience, thinking she’d stood him up. She had only a few minutes left before he gave up and walked out. For good.

    ‘Let’s just say I don’t like your chances of making your appointment,’ came the ironic reply. ‘And I’m afraid you won’t be able to call your…friend. This phone’s directly connected to the lift service downtown, not to this building. Never mind…I’m sure he’ll forgive you once he hears what held you up. If he doesn’t, I’d say he’s not worth it.’

    His unconcern—and the realisation that she was going to be stuck here in this lift with him for heaven knew how long—brought her emotions, anger uppermost, boiling to the surface.

    ‘I’d thank you not to presume my friend’s worth or lack of it,’ she flared. ‘You know nothing about him!’

    He didn’t even blink. ‘I presume he must be worth something…to you,’ he said silkily, ‘or you wouldn’t be planning to meet him at Kowalsky’s…Melbourne’s most exclusive and expensive antique jewellers.’

    She caught her breath as the deadly innuendo sank in. Her enraged silence gave him a chance to slip in a further barb, edged with a cynical dryness.

    ‘You must be mighty keen to get those pretty little hands on whatever glittering bauble your friend has promised you…or you wouldn’t be in such a lather about him walking out on you.’

    She opened her mouth and then snapped it shut, too incensed to speak for a second. Of all the insufferable, arrogant, presumptuous—

    He laughed. A sharp, unexpected sound in the confines of the antiquated lift. Her eyes leapt to his, catching the amused glint in his black depths. Amusement…but no real softness. More a lethally dangerous gleam, she thought, caught off balance by it.

    ‘You have extremely expressive eyes,’ he remarked, the laughter still in his voice, licking through it, lightening its rich, deep resonance. ‘You’d like to hit me. Go ahead, if it will make you feel better. I plead guilty. I am all those things you’re thinking. But it doesn’t mean I’m wrong.’

    She nearly did hit him. She was sorely tempted to. But lashing out at him like a virago would only lower her further in his eyes. He didn’t think much of women, that was obvious. There was a wealth of cynicism in his voice and in his face. A world-weariness…disillusionment too, if she wasn’t mistaken. Why cement his low opinion of women by acting in the way he expected her to?

    She summoned a soft laugh instead, deliberately turning his laughter back on him. ‘I suggest you never take up psychiatry,’ she advised him lightly, with the faintest hint of derision. ‘You’d be bound to fail.’ She widened her gaze in mock dismay. ‘You’re not a psychiatrist, I hope?’ she asked, injecting a note of pity into her voice.

    Something flickered in the black eyes. The corner of his mouth twitched. His voice, when he answered, held an edge of dry humour. ‘I’m relieved to be able to say no, I’m not.’

    ‘Relieved?’ she echoed. Secretly, she was relieved too. Relieved that he seemed to have a sense of humour!

    ‘Very much so. And I shall bow to your expert advice,’ he promised, ‘and decline to take that particular career path in the future.’ He paused a moment, then added softly, ‘Being a man who doesn’t like to fail.’

    She could well believe that. He wouldn’t have had too many failures in his life, she hazarded. Except maybe.. .with women? Or a woman? The one who had made him so jaded and cynical?

    ‘Very wise,’ she applauded facetiously. And turned away, biting her lip. Did anyone else in this building realise that one of the lifts was stuck between floors, with people trapped inside?

    There was no sound of any activity from above or below. Would the emergency lift people take much longer to arrive? And when they did turn up, how much longer would it take them to fix the problem? What if it was difficult to fix? Dangerous, even? She’d seen movies where trapped people had had to climb out through a lift roof, or where the lift had suddenly dropped dramatically. She shuddered at the thought, her hands trembling on the handbag she was still unconsciously clutching to her chest.

    She heard a slight movement and tensed, thinking that her companion, sensing her anxiety, was about to close in on her, offering physical comfort. All her nerve-ends sprang to sharp alert. How would she react if he did.. .if he should put his arm round her and pull her close? She began to tremble anew…but not with fear this time…with something quite different, a strange, heady excitement.

    But he didn’t move closer, didn’t attempt to touch her. Perhaps at the last minute he’d thought better of it, fearing that if he offered a comforting shoulder she might break down completely and he’d have a hysterical female on his hands. Or maybe he’d remembered, just in time, that they were strangers, and he didn’t want her leaping to any wrong conclusions.

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