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Bought by Her Italian Boss(5)

By:Dani Collins


His tone was commanding, his mouth a stern line, while he gave her a  circumspect look and tucked a loose strand of her hair behind her ear.

She knocked his hand away, chest tightening again. "I just explained  that they're using me. You won't even take a second to consider that  might be true? You're just going to fire me and throw me to the wolves?"

"Your termination can't be helped, Gwyn. I have to think about the bank."

His detached tone sent a spike of ice right into her heart. "Thanks a lot."

They wound up in another stare down that pulled her already taut nerves  to breaking point. She hated that he was standing while she was still  seated. He seemed to have all the power, all the control and advantage.

She hated that, with their gazes locked like this, her mind turned to  sexual awareness, refusing to let her stay in a state of fixed hatred.  She wondered things like how his lips would feel against hers and grew  hot as an allover body flush simmered against the underside of her skin.

She stood abruptly, forcing him to take a step back.

"Good girl," he said, moving to the door.

"I'm not obeying you. I-" She cut herself off. She wanted to leave, she  did. She wanted to lock herself in her flat where she could lick her  wounds and figure out what to do next.

"The reporters won't leave until you do," he said heartlessly. "People will be trying to go for lunch."

Don't inconvenience the staff with your petty disaster of a life, Gwyn. Think of others in the midst of your crisis.

"Everyone's going to stare," she mumbled, trying to find her guts, but her insides were nothing but water.

"They will," he agreed, still completely unmoved. "But it's only two minutes of your life. Look straight ahead. Come. Now."

Her heels wanted to root to the floor in protest. She wanted to beg him  to let her hide here until after closing, but he was right. Better to  get it over with.

She knew then what it was like to walk toward execution. While her low  heels took her closer to the door, her heart began slamming in panic.  Sweat cooled the ardor she'd experienced a moment ago, leaving her in  something close to shock.

She sought refuge in her old yoga lessons, concentrating on breathing in  through her nose, out through her narrowly parted lips, holding reality  at bay, picturing the crown of her head being pulled by an invisible  wire toward the ceiling.                       
       
           



       

"Good," Vittorio said as he opened the door, then settled his arm around  her, tucking her shoulder under his armpit as his hand took possession  of her waist.

She stiffened in surprise at the contact. A disconcerting rush of heat blanketed her, making her knees weaken.

He supported her, forcing her forward and keeping her on her feet when  she would have stumbled. He matched their steps perfectly, as though  they had walked as a couple many times before.

Two minutes, she repeated to herself, leaning into him despite how much  she resented him. She'd never realized how long a minute was until she  had to bear the rustle of heads turning and chairs squeaking,  conversation stopping and keyboard tapping halting into a blanket of  silence.

Vittorio's aftershave, spicy and beguiling, enveloped her. It was  dizzying. An assault to already overloaded senses. Were her legs going  to hold her? Amazing how being escorted like this made you feel like a  criminal as well as look like one.

Her eyes were seared blind. She couldn't tell who was looking, couldn't  really see the rest of the open-plan office because Vittorio kept her on  his side closest to the wall and stayed a quarter step ahead of her so  his big shoulders blocked her vision of the rest of the floor.

Another man paced on his far side, broad and burly and carrying a file  box that held a green travel cup that she thought might be hers. Had  they also collected the snapshot of her with her mother and stepfather,  she worried?

The elevator was being held open by another hitman type with a buzz cut.  He couldn't care less about her silly scandal, his watchful  indifference seemed to say. He was here to bust heads if anyone stepped  out of line.

The elevator closed and she let out her breath, but rather than dropping  as she expected, the elevator climbed, making her stagger and clutch  instinctively at Vittorio's smooth jacket.

He cradled her closer, steadying her, fingers moving soothingly at her waist. Disturbing her with the intimacy of his touch.

"Why aren't we going down?" she asked shakily.

"The helicopter will avoid the scrum."

"Helicopter?" she choked out, mind scattering as she tried to make sense of this turn of events.

"Thirty seconds," he warned, tone gruff, and nudged her a step forward as the elevator leveled out with a ding.

His arm remained firm across her back, urging her through the opening doors.

She trembled, trying not to fold into him, but he was the only solid  thing in her world right now. She had to remember that despite his  seeming solicitude, he wasn't on her side. This was damage control.  Nothing more.

The refinement at this height in the building was practically polished  into the stillness of the air. Nevertheless, humans were humans. Heads  came up. Eyes followed.

Vittorio addressed no one, only steered her down a hall in confident,  unhurried steps, past a boardroom of men in suits and women with  perfectly coiffed hair, past a lounge where a handful of people stood  drinking coffee and into a glass receiving area beyond which a  helicopter stood, rotors beginning to turn.

The security guard took her box of possessions ahead of them and tucked it into a bulkhead, then moved into the cockpit.

Wow. This wasn't a helicopter like she'd seen on television, where  people were crammed into three seats across the back wall, shoulder to  shoulder, and had to put on headphones and shout to be heard.

This was an executive lounge that belonged on a yacht. She didn't have  to duck as she moved into it. The white leather seats were ten times  plusher than the very expensive recliner she'd purchased for her  stepfather two Christmases ago. The seats rotated, she realized, as  Vittorio pointed her to one, then turned another so they would sit  facing each other.

There was a door to the pilot's cockpit, like on an airplane. An air  hostess smiled a greeting and nodded at Vittorio, taking a silent order  from him that he gave with the simple raising of two fingers. She  arrived seconds later with two drinks that looked suspiciously like  scotch, neat.

Vittorio lowered a small table between them with indents to hold their glasses.

Gwyn took a deep drink of her scotch, shivering as the burn chased down  her throat, then replaced her glass into its holder with a dull thud.  "Where are you taking me?"

"This isn't a kidnapping," he said dryly. "We're going to Paolo's home  on Lake Como. It's in his wife's name and not on the paparazzi's radar."

"What? No," she insisted, reaching to open her seatbelt. "My passport is in my apartment. I need it to get home."

"To America? The press there is more relentless than ours. Even if you  managed to drop out of sight, I would still have an ugly smudge on the  bank's reputation to erase."                       
       
           



       

"I care as much about the bank as it does about me," she informed him coldly.

"Please stay seated, Gwyn. We're lifting off." He pointed to where the  horizon lowered beneath them. "Let's talk about your photo of me."

A fresh blush rose hotly from the middle of her chest into her neck.  "Let's not," she said, squishing herself into her seat and fixing her  gaze out the window.

"You're attracted to me, sì?"

She sealed her lips, silently letting him know he couldn't make her talk.

Nevertheless, he had her trapped and demonstrated his patience with an  unhurried sip of his own drink and a brief glance at the face of his  phone.

"You smiled at me one day," he said absently. "The way a woman does when she is inviting a man to speak to her."

And he hadn't bothered to.

"I play a game with a friend back home," she muttered. "It's silly. Man  Wars. We send each other photos of attractive men. That's all it was,"  she lied. "If it makes you feel objectified, well, you have a glimpse  into how I feel right now."

Her insides were churning like a cement mixer.

"You're embarrassed by how strong the attraction is," he deduced after watching her a moment. He sounded amused.

Her stomach cramped with self-consciousness. Could her face get any hotter?

"This releasing of compromising photos is very shrewd," he said in an  abrupt shift. His tone suggested it was an item in political news, not a  gross defilement of her personal self. His finger rested across his  lips in contemplation.