Entangled To The CEO

Episode Fifty-Eight



Tasha’s [POV]

Stan smiled. “You’ll get there. It’s the board’s decision. I’m just the chaperone.” I didn’t like the way Rainer chuckled.

I shot out of my chair, shook Stan’s hand first, and marched out of his impressive office first. Still, I had to glance back.

Stan was the one person at Hyperion who I trusted to tell me the truth, and here he was shaking Rainer’s hand and telling him something in confidence.

The only comfort I had was the speed with which Rainer’s smile fled his face. He even looked a little pale as he joined me at the elevator.

“More bad news?” I asked. Rainer fiddled with his tie.

“He’s a sharp old man, isn’t he?” I caught Rainer’s guarded glance and had to laugh.

“He can read people better than anyone I know. Why?” Rainer’s eyes roved over my face, and I felt his gaze like hot sunlight.

It felt as if he was searching for something in me and when he found it, he smiled.

“It wasn’t bad news. Might be really good. But first, we have to save this project.” We rode the elevator down to our floor in silence.

I kept my eyes on the tips of my shoes, but I could feel Rainer’s curious looks.

He glanced at me like we’d only first met and it made my stomach do giddy turns.

When the elevator doors opened, I couldn’t help myself. I grabbed his arm and had to ask.

“What did Stan say to you?” Rainer stepped out into our lobby, pulling me with him.

“No. No way. I don’t know how you do it, but you always know more than me. So, this one thing, I’m going to keep it to myself.”

Somehow, my other hand had found him and we stood face to face, inches apart.

“You really don’t know how teams work, do you?” I asked.

“Maybe I’m more of a partner guy. Just us.” Rainer’s grip on my hand was warm, and inviting.

“What do you say, partner? Brainstorming lunch? I know a great place.”

Another elevator opened and I knew I should pull away from Rainer, but it was a distant, nagging thought.

Being near him was like finding the one hill that hadn’t been caught in the fog. Everything else just faded away.

“Tasha?” Ivy stepped off the elevator, leaving behind a cluster of awed admirers.

They stumbled out behind my rich and royally fashionable friend, breaking the spell between Rainer and me.

“Ivy! You didn’t need to come all the way up here. You should have just called me,” I said. Ivy switched her Italian-leather clutch from one hand to the other.

“I’m glad I came up. Getting a glimpse of you at work, with your co-workers, was worth the trip.” Her soft brown eyes sparkled as she held out a hand to Rainer.

“Nice to meet you. I’m Ivy Madison.”

“Suddenly, you’re friends with Ivy Madison?” Rainer asked me. He shook Ivy’s elegant hand then settled his gaze back on me. Ivy’s smile widened.

“We were friends long before my last name had such meaning.”

“Ivy, this is Rainer Maxwell,” I said. First with Stan, now with Ivy. What was it about Rainer that made all my closest friends smile like that?

“Oh, I’ve heard that name” I looped an arm through Ivy’s and pulled her down the hall toward my office.

“Sorry, Rainer, I already have lunch plans. Meet up again in two hours?” Rainer stood where he was and watched me drag Ivy away.

“Nice to meet you, Mrs. Madison. Since when do you take two-hour lunches, Tasha? I’ll see you in an hour.”

“Ooh, I like it,” Ivy said as I shoved her past my gawking assistant and into my office.

“Like what?” I asked.

“The way he doesn’t have eyes for anyone but you.” Ivy tossed her leather clutch on my desk and smiled at me.

“What?” I shut my office door harder than I intended.

“That’s insane. I thought you said you’d heard of Rainer Maxwell before. He’s the biggest playboy San Francisco has to offer.”

“Was,” Ivy said.

“I’d be willing to bet his reputation slides from here on out.”

“How much?” I leaned against the door and crossed my arms.

“Ten thousand dollars.” My jaw dropped, and Ivy laughed.

“You keep forgetting about your money, don’t you? Happened to me too, at first. You’ll get used to it.”

“It’s not the money,” I said.

“It’s this insane idea that Rainer is interested in me. In that way. He’s the one I told you about. He horned his way onto my project just in time to get the big bonus. And now I’m stuck working with him. We’re in major crisis mode.”

“How romantic,” Ivy said. I groaned and shoved away from the door.

“Just because Matthew started off as an arrogant snob and turned into the husband of the century doesn’t mean fairy tales come true. You got lucky.” Ivy checked her watch.

“Seems to me you’re luck has been improving these days. Ever since you ran into Rainer. Is it safe to assume you’re not free for lunch?”

“I’m sorry, Ivy. I’ll make it up to you,” I said.

“With a double date? Perfect.” I groaned again.Nôvel(D)ra/ma.Org exclusive © material.

“Isn’t it enough that I let you shop for me?”

“Oh, no, you did all that yourself. And you look wonderful, by the way,” Ivy said.

She picked up her purse and headed for my office door”

“Ivy?” I called.

“Thanks for stopping by. I still can’t wrap my head around the whole billionaire thing.”

“Who cares about the money?” Ivy asked.

“You’ve got other things to think about, and I hope you do.” I knew she didn’t mean work, but I smiled anyways.

“Drinks soon, no matter what is going on.” Ivy opened the door.

Amy turned around so fast that she almost fell out of her chair. Ivy had that effect on people. Not everyone was used to seeing a high-society darling live and in person.

And Rainer hadn’t even blinked. I knew because his eyes were on me. I shook off the thought and helped Ivy past my star-struck assistant.

Walking back from the elevators, I almost collided with Rainer’s rushing assistant.

Topher caught the flutter of papers before they flew everywhere and made room for me to walk past. Then he followed me, stopping only when we reached Amy’s desk.

“Could you please let me know when Ms. Nichols has a free moment?” Topher asked Amy. Amy snorted.

“She’s right there. Like a foot away from you.” Topher looked pained at my temp’s lack of professionalism.

He was about to explain her job description when I sighed.

“Come in, Topher. I trust you have pertinent research for me.” The young man followed me into my office and laid out four crisp, new reports.

“I sent these to your assistant, but then I made extra copies while printing these for Mr. Maxwell.” I picked up the first report as Topher’s phone buzzed.

The young man jumped as if the phone gave him an electric shock.

“I’m so sorry, Ms. Nichols, but it is Mr. Maxwell. He’s actually calling me.” I nodded and let the surprised assistant take the call.

Topher was obviously underutilized by his boss, and it irritated me. Amy sat outside at her blank desk and waved at the copy machine repair man.

“I’m sorry, Ms. Nichols, but I have to go,” Topher said, his face glowing with excitement.

“Mr. Maxwell wants to run through the reports with me.” He rushed out without shutting the door. I let out a long, controlled breath and shut the door myself.

It had probably all been a ploy, a showy little move that was supposed to prove to me that Rainer was taking his work seriously.

I didn’t buy it, and, based on the reports I was reading, I didn’t have time to be impressed.

GroGreen was getting national attention as a problem, it was being touted as the new monster threatening America’s health, and I had to find a way to get out ahead of it. Finally, I sat down and opened up the plan I had started.

My office door popped open before I heard the jaunty knock. Rainer stepped in and shut the door behind him.

“Sorry to show up unannounced, but your assistant is truly useless. You’d be better off sharing Topher with me.” I fought the urge to throw a stapler at him.

“It hasn’t even been an hour. I really need to get some work done.”

“We,” Rainer said.

“We really need to get some work done. That’s why I sent your assistant to the Vista Cafe to get us some lunch. No, telling what she’ll bring back, but we’ll survive.” I glared at him, but it had no effect.

Rainer pulled one of the stiff-backed chairs closer to my desk and settled in. With a grin, he loosened his tie and popped open the first button of his crisp, white shirt.

“What are you doing?” I asked, dragging my eyes away from the tempting line of his jaw.

“Brainstorming. Remember? We need the plan to stop the nation from going all pitchforks and torches on our app.”

“Our app?” I laced my fingers together and squeezed. Rainer lounged in the uncomfortable chair with no reports, no notes, not even a pen.

“Hey, did I hear that your sister planted those orange trees in the atrium? She must really have a green thumb,” Rainer said. I blinked, my fingers going lax.

“My sister? Yes. She took on all the gardening after . . . Do you want to borrow a notepad? For your brainstorming?” Rainer studied my face, saw the gaping hole in the conversation, and gave me a sympathetic pass.

“Is your sister all corporate-driven like you?” I tossed a legal pad at Rainer harder than was necessary.

“No. Barbie is not all ‘corporate-driven.’ She couldn’t ever stand desk jobs.”

“What does she do now?” Rainer asked. I started to glare at him but realized he was being sincere. He honestly wanted to know more about my family.

Maybe it was how he skated by without doing much; everyone liked talking to him because he was genuinely interested.

“She’s six months pregnant, and the doctor has warned her repeatedly to take it easy,” I said.

“That’s what she’s doing now.” Rainer smiled and nodded. “Let me guess: she’s not good at following doctor’s orders.”

“No,” I said, refusing to enjoy the easy flow of our conversation.

“It’s gotta feel good knowing you’ve got a niece or a nephew on the way. No wonder you’re so focused on getting your big money all squared away.”

“Speaking of that, we need to focus on work,” I said. I closed down the document containing my plan and focused on Rainer.

“Any ideas yet?” Rainer leaned back in the stiff chair and stretched.

“Well, I was thinking about how someone like your sister might use the app. We’ve got to show the nation the best aspects of it. Why not create a community garden? We could document the whole thing, show the app being used in the real world, and get people out there, literally on the ground.” I tore my gaze away from Rainer’s flat stomach and felt the room reel.

In one casual comment, he’d hit on the very idea that I had spent half the night forming.

I thought about Topher as a spy but dismissed it. My plan was no more than a few notes that no one but myself had seen.

I had to admit that despite his reputation, Rainer had razor-sharp instincts.

“Come on, Tasha. Don’t dismiss it just because I said it.” I took a deep breath.

“I had the same exact idea. Here, let me show you the notes I’ve already started.” Rainer jumped up and leaned over my shoulder.

I opened the document and tried not to notice how work was bringing us closer than ever.


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