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Under the Millionaire's Mistletoe(5)

By:Maureen Child & Sandra Hyatt






Four




A few phone calls were all it took to give Sam all of the information he  needed on Cameron Leather. Yes, the company was in trouble, but it  wasn't in its death throes just yet. Dave Cameron had expanded when he  should have been more cautious, but with a little judicious input of  capital, the company would be back on its feet.

Didn't make him feel any better to realize that. All it told him was  that the odds of Anna being exactly as mercenary as he suspected her to  be just went a lot higher.

He leaned back in his desk chair and stared out the window at the  backyard. Working from home had its perks. Even though Hale Luxury Autos  had a full-size shop on the outskirts of town, Sam also had a specially  built garage here at home. At the shop, his master mechanics, artists  and upholsterers had free rein and he rarely stepped in. Here, he had  his own setup and indulged himself whenever he felt the need to get his  hands dirty.

His gaze fixed on the manicured lawn and garden that ran down a slope to  the ocean below. Sam took a minute to realize just how far he'd come.  He'd started out small, building custom cars for people with more money  than taste.

Now, Sam had people flocking to him for his expertise and he spent most  of his time trying to rein in the near-constant stream of paperwork  involved.

"Mr. Hale?"

"Yes, Jenny?" He turned when his housekeeper opened the door and called to him.

"I made the call. Ms. Cameron will be here at one."

He smiled. "Excellent. Thanks."

When she left again to go back to the main house, Sam let his smile  widen as he imagined the look on Anna's face when she arrived to give  Mrs. Soren an estimate, only to find out he was the one who had  initiated the call. She wouldn't be happy, but Sam needed to know her.  If only to prove to himself he'd been right to break up her and his  brother.

Smiling to himself, Sam stepped out of the multi-bayed garage. He  studied the view and let his mind wander to the green-eyed redhead whose  memory was torturing him.



"The living room is this way."

Anna followed the fiftyish woman down a parquet hallway to an arched  doorway that opened into a huge room. Clearly masculine, the decor was  mostly big leather chairs, heavy tables and brightly colored rugs  scattered across the inlaid wood floor. A stone fireplace took up most  of one wall and floor-to-ceiling windows displayed a view of the wide  front lawn.

A huge, beautifully decorated Christmas tree stood in one corner, with  wrapped gifts beneath it. Which reminded Anna just how much she needed  this job.

"It's lovely," she said, meaning it. But she couldn't help wondering,  "This is your husband's lair, isn't it?" she asked with a smile.

"My husband?" The woman laughed and waved one hand. "Oh, my, no. My husband died twenty years ago. This is my employer's house."                       
       
           



       

She was the housekeeper? Anna frowned and looked around the room, as if  searching for a hint to the owner's identity. When she found nothing,  she said, "I'm sorry. I thought you wanted to talk to me about painting a  mural in here."

"No," a deep, familiar voice said from behind her. "Mrs. Soren made the call, but I'm the one who wants to hire you."

Anna went completely still. A setup. And she'd walked right into it.  Turning around slowly, she looked up into Sam's blue eyes and, keeping  her voice cool, she said, "I'm sorry. There's been a mistake."

He scowled at her. Small consolation, she knew, but she was pleased that she'd disrupted whatever plan he'd concocted.

Shifting his gaze to the other woman in the room, he said, "That's all, Jenny. Thanks."

"Yes, sir," she answered and nodded at Anna as she left.

"You had her lie for you. That's just low."

"She didn't lie."

Anna tipped her head to one side and tapped the toe of her boot against the floor. "So you want to hire me? Please."

His eyebrows arched high on his forehead. "Are you always this crabby with a prospective customer?"

"You're not a customer, prospective or otherwise," she said firmly and clutched her portfolio closer to her chest.

He walked into the room and Anna couldn't help but notice how at home he  looked in faded black jeans and the dark red T-shirt that clung to his  broad chest. His black work boots hardly made a sound as he walked  across the deep blue and green rug to stand in front of her.

"Business that good, then?" he asked. "You can turn down customers?"

"In my shop, I can do what I like."

"True, but seems shortsighted to turn down a job just because you're embarrassed about kissing me."

"What?" Her eyes widened and her jaw dropped. "Are you delusional?"

He smirked. "You seem a little sensitive."

"I'm not sensitive. I'm insulted."

"Don't know why. It was a great kiss."

True. Damn it.

"Look," Anna said, clinging to every stray fiber of her dignity, "we're  wasting each other's time here and even if you can afford it, I can't."

"You agreed to give me an estimate on a wall mural," he reminded her. "The least you can do is keep your word."

Anna glared at him and the dirty look she gave him had zero effect on  the man. If anything, he looked supremely pleased with himself. Well,  fine. She'd keep the appointment and then when she quoted him an  outrageous price, he'd tell her no and she'd leave. All she had to do  was take control of this situation.

"Fine, then," she said. "What did you have in mind?"

He gave her a wide smile that tugged at something deep inside her. The  man was a walking hormone party. Anna gave herself a stern, if silent,  talking-to. There would be no more kissing. No more flirting. No  anything with Sam Hale.

"Actually," he said, spreading his arms wide to encompass the room, "I'd  prefer to hear your opinion. What kind of murals do you usually  suggest?"

Anything would look fabulous in the opulent room, but Anna wouldn't give  him the satisfaction of saying so. She gave a quick look around and  fixed her gaze on the wide, empty space above the fireplace.

"A window and garden scene would look nice there."

"A window?"

"Trompe l'oeil," she told him patiently.

"Optical illusion?"

"You could call it that," she said and in spite of what she was feeling,  she found herself warming to her theme. She loved faux finishing. Loved  the trompe l'oeil murals that mimicked reality so completely, she'd  once seen a man try to pick up a marble that had been painted onto a  tabletop.

"A close translation of the French name means trick the eye. With the  right artist, you can pretty much remodel your entire home without  lifting a hammer."

"And you're the 'right' artist?"

"I'm really good," she said simply.

"I bet you are."                       
       
           



       

She flushed a little and hated herself for it. But she would defy any  woman in the world to remain completely cool and unruffled with this  particular man focusing all of his attention on her.

He watched her. "Explain what you mean about the painting."

She didn't know what he was up to, but as long as she was there anyway,  she couldn't resist talking about her favorite kind of work. "For  instance, on that long wall over there, I could paint a set of French  doors opening onto an English garden. It would look real enough to  convince you that you could step outside and smell the flowers." She  looked back at him. "Or I could give you an ocean scene complete with  crashing waves and seabirds overhead. I could really, within reason,  give you anything you wanted."

Oh, boy, that had come out a lot different than it sounded in her head.  He must have been thinking the same thing, because something hot and  wicked flashed in his eyes.

"And what do you charge for this amazing service?"

She cleared her throat, inhaled sharply and told herself that he didn't  really care. He wasn't actually interested. So she gave him a price well  above what she would normally charge for a mural.

He didn't even blink.

"I'll give you twice that if you can have it done before Christmas."

"Are you serious?" He couldn't be, she told herself. This was all part  of some twisted game. He'd brought her here for his own purposes,  whatever they were, and now he was dangling a great job in front of her  like bait.

The hell of it was, it was working.

"Yes, I'm serious," he told her, and walked toward her with slow, measured steps.

"Why?" Anna stared up into his deep blue eyes and didn't flinch from the  gleam of passion she saw shining at her. "Why would you hire me? Why  would you offer so much money?"