This is a romance novel I'm working on, this is just what I've written so far. |
Scene One Enya Covington stood outside of the small office building. This was her new workplace. Sheâd had an interview over the phone and had been chosen to be another assistant. The man who worked in this office was really just a member of a large company. The company bought and sold property for people, helping them make money off of it. She wasnât really clear on all the details, it wasnât really anything she was interested in but she needed money because she couldnât get a job at the moment in her chosen profession: acting. This job just required her to do a normal secretaryâs work-answer phones, type out letters and notes, organize files, get coffee, pick up files from other offices, basically anything her boss needed. As far as she understood there was already another secretary that worked her, but Mr. Phillips, her new boss, wanted another one to keep up with all the work. She took a huge breath and reminded herself of what was basically her life motto: All she had to do was act, just act. She set her mind to in now, act confident. She tossed her thick red hair and walked through the glass doors. She reached a desk with two doors on either side of it. One had a sign on the outside that said âMr. Phillips.â Sitting at the desk was a man, engaged in reading some papers. He looked somewhere around her age, twenty-five, or maybe a year older, she couldnât tell. He had dark brown hair and dark, deep brown eyes. He lookedâŚconfident, aristocratic, and he gave off an air that wasâŚarrogant. She could feel it in the room and in the way he didnât even look up when the door had opened. Like he was too busy to be bothered with anyone else. Maybe he just didnât hear me, she thought. She stepped up to the desk and cleared her throat. Nothing. I can see why Mr. Phillips needs another secretary! she thought. âExcuse me.â She finally said. The man looked up. He blinked when he saw her and looked her over. She had luxurious, thick red hair (heâd always had a thing for hair). She had a delicate, petite nose, a small mouth, and bright, sparkling green eyes that reminded him of emeralds. âYes?â he asked. âIâm supposed to report to Mr. Phillips.â He noticed her voice was clear and pure. He smiled. âWhat if I am Mr. Phillips?â he asked. âThen I would say itâs a good thing you hired me to be your secretary if your out here instead of you other one.â She knew this was not Mr. Phillips. This mans voice was deeper and stronger. Mr. Phillips had a voice that sounded like gravel. She had just implied that the man before her was bad at his job. He raised a brow. âDo you have something against answering phones and greeting customers?â âSurely not, since I applied for that job.â She turned to the door with the plaque for Mr. Phillips and put her hand on the knob. A large hand covered hers. âWhat do you think youâre doing, going into my office?â he asked. âThe plaque says Mr. Phillips, so it canât be your office. I think itâs quite obvious Iâm going in to see him.â âIâm his secretary, you have to have my permission.â His hand hadnât left hers. âDo I?â she asked impatiently. He just looked at her. He wouldnât move his hand from the knob so naturally she couldnât move hers. She kicked him in the shin. He gave a yelp and took his hand from the knob. âGood enough for me.â she said as she slipped into the office. She saw an overweight man of about fifty, and trying to stop his head from balding by raking what little hair he had over the top of his head. âMr. Phillips, I assume?â she said in a polite, sweet voice. âI told your assistant I could wait if you were busy but he insisted that I could see you now.â she continued as she walked forward. âOh, yes, yes, of course.â he said dismissively. âI guess we sorted everything out on the phone so you know your hours and pay and what not. You will find a desk for you in the other office. Please take these notes and type them then bring them back to my office.â âYes, sir.â She left Mr. Phillips office. No one was in the outer office anymore so she went into the other office. It was large and modern looking. There were two desks, both silver metal and glass. There were large silver file cabinets behind one desk and the walls were stark white. The man from the front room (she guessed now he was the other secretary) was sitting at one desk. He leaned back in his chair and looked at her when she came in. Her distaste for the room must have shown on her face because he suddenly looked around the room and said, âNot my taste either but Phillips decorated it.â Enya looked at him. âOkay,â he said, âSo Iâve decided to forgive you.â She blinked. âYou have decided to forgive me?â she asked in a dangerously quiet voice. âYes, I have.â âMy God, heâs serious.â she muttered under her breath. She tossed her hair, an action he would later recognize as something she did when she was about to get mad. âOh, well isnât that nice.â she said in a voice sweet enough to be convincing but not overdone. âIâll tell you what, Iâll let you know when Iâve decided to forgive you.â âWhat!â he sputtered, âForgive me for what!â he demanded. âFor lying to me and saying you were Mr. Phillips.â âI said âwhat if.ââ he reminded her. âYes, and you also said that it was your office.â âMaybe it is.â âWhat, do you own the company?â she asked sarcastically. He just stared at her. âMaybe we didnât do this right, letâs start over.â She looked at him speculatively. âGavin McGivins.â he said, thrusting his hand out to her. She shook it. âEnya Covington.â He nodded. She went to the desk in front of the file cabinets. She sat down, familiarizing herself with the computer, then started typing Mr. Phillipsâ pages of handwritten notes. And as she looked around her new office, and at Gavin McGivins working at his desk across the room, somehow she knew that everything was changing. That after today everything would change. She just knew. But then again, maybe she was being dramatic. After all, she thought, I am an actress. -----------------------------------Scene Two------------------------------------ Three months later Enya walked into the building to see Gavin already sitting at the front desk. âEnya, good. Phillips needs a bunch of notes typed and he has a few new files for you to enter into the computer. Oh, and-â âWell, good morning to you too.â Enya interrupted. âOh, weâre being civil today? Iâm sorry, I wasnât aware of the change. Good morning.â She gave an irritated sigh and walked into their office to do the piles of dreaded paper work waiting for her. âOh why did I ever learn office work in school?â she moaned to herself. âI couldâve had a perfectly good excuse not to have to do this. I could be like Jamie.â âWhoâs Jamie?â Gavinâs voice behind her made her jump. âMy boyfriend.â Enya said absentmindedly as she began to work. âYou have a boyfriend?â Gavin asked. âYes.â âWow! Iâm surprised anyone would have you. Tell me, do you pay him to date you?â âShut up.â Enyaâs whole past month had been filled with angry exchanges like this one. She had decided she officially hated Gavin McGivins. He irritated her to no end. He was a large part of why she hated her job. Of course, she also didnât really like any of the work she did. But she needed the money. Lately she could only get small parts in plays. Plus, she was helping Jamie out with some of his expenses. She did have an audition this afternoon though, and she really hoped sheâd get the part. One of the well known local theatres was putting on Romeo and Juliet. Audition were that night and Enya was dying to get the part of Juliet. Sheâd played Juliet three years in a row in high school and she knew the part entirely by heart. She was still nervous though. When she left work she went straight to the Lâ Amore Theatre. There were already people there auditioning. She put her name on the sign in sheet and sat down to watch. Her confidence grew as she watched the auditions. All the people auditioning for Juliet werenât very good. Some were downright terrible and there were really only one or two that Enya considered competition. Finally Enyaâs name was called. She walked up on the stage and instantly knew how to get the part. Instead of doing the famous balcony scene that all the other actresses had done she asked the director if she could do another scene instead. âWhat scene?â the director asked her. She shrugged. âAny at all, you choose one and Iâll do it.â With a thoughtful smile the Mr. Bates, the director, told her which scene he wanted and called up the other actors involved in it. They had to use their scripts but Enya didnât. She really did know every bit of the play involving Juliet by heart. She acted the less known scene perfectly, even better than she had all those years in high school. As soon as her performance was done Mr. Bates burst into applause. âYou there, MissâŚâ he glanced at his sheet, âMiss Covington. That was marvelous, simply amazing! Wait a minuteâŚâ Even from the stage Enya could see his eyes widening. âCovington. Enya Covington. You played Juliet at Briardale three years in a row! I knew I recognized you! I went to see you every year in that play and you were the best Juliet Briardale had ever had. You turned those high school plays into real productions!â Enya grinned with pride. Briardale was the high school that she had went to that specialized in any kind of arts, particularly acting. âI stopped going to Briardale plays when I heard you graduated.â Mr. Bates continued, âI looked for your name in many plays but I could never find where you had acted in anything after that.â Enya frowned as she remembered the few years after she had graduated, working like crazy. She had moved out at sixteen because of differences with her grandmother over acting. Her grandmother had died and they had never made peace. She pushed the unpleasant thoughts away. âYouâve got the part!â Mr. Bates announced suddenly. Enya was overjoyed. âThank you so much!â she said, excited. -----------------------------------Scene Three------------------------------------ The next three weeks went by in a blur of rehearsals, fittings, endless practice, and of course, work. If Gavin noticed she was preoccupied or overtired he didnât say anything. There were times when she absolutely hated him and then there were a few occasions when sheâd actually get through a conversation with him and enjoy it. She didnât know him very well, because he generally teased her and she never saw him any other way. But she thought that he probably didnât act that way around other people. In fact, she had a strong suspicion that he purposely teased her to make her angry. She found it very annoying sometimes. But for the most part Gavin left Enya alone for those three weeks before the play and Enya was able to concentrate. She knew her part perfectly by opening night, her fellow cast members were all very good, and she was confident sheâd do better than any of her performances at Briardale. And so the first night of the play came. As she was in her dressing room, getting ready, there was a knock on her door. When she opened it there was no one there. Just as she was about to close the door she looked down. On the floor was a red vase with two dozen red roses in it. She smiled softly. Red roses were her favorite flowers. Se took it into her dressing room and eagerly looked at the card. Good Luck, though you wonât need it. That was all it said. No name, nothing else. The handwriting looked slightly familiar, like she might have seen it before, but Enya decided it was just coincidence. That night the performance went off perfectly. There were tons of people there and there was a thunderous applause when a glowing Enya stepped forward to take her bow. The next day at work she was blissfully happy and even seeing Gavin there early again with no good morning couldnât disrupt her wonderful mood. âHello.â she said as she walked through the room toward their office. He jerked his head up. âOh, hey Enya.â She laughed. âDonât sound so enthusiastic to see me!â she said with a grin and she went into the office. Gavin frowned at her back. He wasnât about to tell her how he felt every day when he saw her walk through that door. When Gavin walked in and set paperwork on her desk she was staring off into space. He waved his hand in front of her face. âEarth to Enya.â She blinked, startled. She had actually been reliving the play, from beginning to end. She wished that it hadnât been just a one night showing. But LâAmore never showed a production more than one night, which seemed to draw unbelievably crowds. âHuh? Oh, right, sorry Gavin, Iâll get right on these.â âWhat, no flames today, Little Fire?â He asked with a smirk. Gavin had taken to calling her by that ridiculous nickname heâd come up with a month or two ago. âDespite how amazingly irritating you are Gavin, nothing can ruin my mood today.â she informed him. Three hours later she wished she hadnât said that. The day had gotten very bad very quickly. First sheâd spilled coffee all over important paperwork. Then sheâd cut her finger with the letter opener. Luckily Gavin had already left for the day when those two events occurred. And now she had to tell Mr. Phillips that one of his files was missing. She hadnât seen him much at all since sheâd come to work her. Mostly sheâd been given directions through Gavin. She knocked lightly on Mr. Phillipâs office door. She heard a faint âcome in.â She walked in. âMr. Phillips?â âYes, Miss Covington?â Enya decided to get straight to the point. âI canât seem to find one of the companyâs most important files. Gavin, er, Mr. McGivins said that the company was going to review the accounts of one client because their money wasnât all accounted for. A huge chunk, actually. Anyways, why am I telling you all this stuff you already know?â She rolled her eyes at herself. âYes, quite.â Mr. Phillips said quietly. Enya didnât know what that meant. âThe point is, I canât find the file anywhere. I know for a fact it was here yesterday morning.â Mr. Phillips frowned. âThatâs not good, Miss Covington. Were you the last to see it?â âI suppose, Gavin asked me to have it out today.â she said, forgetting to use Gavinâs last name because in her mind he was always just Gavin. âIâll see what I can do. But Miss Covington,â Enya paused at the door with her hand on the knob. âThis does not look good for you. Iâm sure you had nothing to do with it, but you wouldnât want to jeopardize your job. Iâll take care of Mr. McGivins, and I suggest you not say anything to anyone else. I wouldnât want gossip about you to circulate about missing files or your involvement.â In mentioning her job, Mr. Phillips had inadvertently said the one thing that would make Enya shut up and forget the matter completely. Which is exactly what she did. -------------------------------------Scene Four------------------------------------ âYou are so annoying!â Enya snapped at Gavin. Over the past three and a half weeks they had been getting along fine. Well even. There had been the occasional teasing on both their parts, but lighter and more enjoyable, without the previous undercurrent of malice. Today, however, was not a good day for Enya. She was on edge. She was having money problems now. Jamie wasnât helping and her nerves were shot. Gavinâs teasing this morning had been irritating and sheâd made it obvious, but he hadnât stopped. Heâd finally pushed her to the limit with a half joking comment on how she did her job. Sheâd just finished verbally attacking him and had ended with the very lame sentence about him being annoying. The previous words had not been so lame, they had been mean and they had hit their mark. Gavin stared at her with an angry glint in his eyes. âIâll be in the outer office, Miss Covington.â he said coolly. All her anger faded with a rush of guilt. No matter what heâd never called her by her last name before, always Enya. Sheâd taken out all her stress on him. She had been really mean. Sure, there had been times before when sheâd been justifiably angry with him, but now was not one of them. His recent teasing had been just that-simple, playful teasing. She could tell by the random, almost unnoticeable, complements spattered through his taunting that he didnât really think she was bad at her job. Sheâd been wrong to take her stress out on him. âGavin-â she started to say. âMr. McGivins.â Gavin snapped, interrupting her. âIf I call you that will you stay to listen to my apology?â she asked meekly. Gavin paused hesitantly at the door. Enya opened her mouth to add a persuasive âpleaseâ then snapped it shut. âWhy do I care about apologizing to you?â she asked herself out loud, angry at herself for being willing to give in so easily. She sighed, she knew the answer. Gavin turned back to face her, apparently interested in her answer. She gave a frustrated sigh and threw up her hands in defeat. âBecause I have a horrible temper, comes with the hair, and I was wrong to suddenly get mad and take my stress out on you. Iâm sorry. Apology accepted?â she asked. He pondered for a moment. âHmmâŚâ he murmured, walking up till he was standing in front of her. âI guess Iâll be so kind as to accept your apology and grace you with my presence a while longer.â She had just thrust aside her pride long enough to apologize and now this egotistic man had the nerve to say all that? Her last nerve, already frayed beyond belief, finally snapped. âYou are everything I hate in a man!â she said randomly. âOh really?â was the mocking challenge. âYes! You are conceited, arrogant, and full of yourself.â Okay, so he wasnât really any of those things, he just liked to tease, but Enya was so mad she didnât care if what she said was true or not. Gavin infuriated her in a way she couldnât understand. âYou act like youâre better then everyone else!â His face was so close to hers she could just barely fell his breath. She clinched her fists at her side. âMaybe because I am.â he suggested lightly. It took every bit of her will-power not to punch him right then. Gavin could feel her energy, passion, angerâŚLife. Suddenly, he did the one thing heâd been dying to do since heâd first met her. He leaned forward and kissed her passionately, pushing her back against the wall behind her. She had been kissed before, but never quite like this. With Gavin it felt different. It felt, well, she hated to admit it but it just felt right. He broke past all her defenses. He gripped her shoulders and pushed her harder against the wall. Enya had never felt to alive before. Suddenly the door to the outer office slammed shut. It startled Enya so bad that she jumped. She tried to gather her wits about her, catch her breath, get her brain functioning again. All of which was incredibly hard to do considering Gavin still had his hand resting lightly on one forearm, standing to the side instead of in front of her. Mr. Phillips strode into their office with a newspaper plastered to his face. He glanced up at them, then back down at the paper. âMiss Covington,â he started. âYes?â she squeaked. âI need the file on that company in Minnesota in about fifteen minutes. Also, do you have the papers for Rollington typed up yet?â Gavin was idly rubbing his fingers back and forth on her arm, except there was nothing idle about it, it was a carefully calculated distraction that left her mind fuddled. âI, uh, IâŚyes sir!â Enya finally got out. âGood.â And with that he left the office, shutting the door behind him with a bang. âI am so fired!â Enya burst out as soon as he was gone. This could not happen to her! âOh God!â she was seriously worried now. âI cannot lose this job. What am I going to do? Who knows how long it would be till I could find another with as good a pay as this. Iâve got my apartment, Jamieâs, half of Jamieâs car payments, the other bills, oh God!â Enyaâs voice faded as Gavin studied every inch of her. He liked what he saw. She was still standing with her back leaning against the wall. She looked startled, disheveled. Her unusual, striking red hair cascaded in its thick, wavy curls down her back over her shoulders. Her emerald green eyes were wide and she was babbling about something. Gavin realized she thought Mr. Phillips would fire her. âYou think heâll fire you?â he asked her suddenly. She didnât notice though. âWhat in the world am I going to do? I cannot lose this job!â âHeâs not going to fire you. Heâs the most oblivious boss in the world. He didnât notice a thing. Besides, her canât fire you for this.â Enya once again turned her anger on him. âYou!â she pointed a finger at him. âThis is all your fault!â âHey! Hold up now, Little Fire.â he started. âHold up? Hold up!â Gavin decided that probably hadnât been the right thing to say. Enya knew it wasnât. Her anger lashed out at him. âI do believe Iâm the one who should have been telling you to hold up!â He wondered if the same trick he used to shut her up last time would work again. He stepped closer to her but before he could even consider the idea she grabbed him by the shoulders and turned them both till she could push him against the wall, which she did, channeling her anger into it, though he was stronger than her and it didnât do much of anything, just a frustrated action. Gavin needed to turn the situation around. This time he grabbed her by the shoulders, turned her, and pushed her against the wall. He kissed her hard, pining her against the wall, simply because he couldnât help himself. When he drew back for breath she glared at him, breathing hard. âI hate you!â she hissed. Her words lost their affect when she suddenly kissed him, even though he still had her pined against the wall. He chuckled as she pulled back. âOf course you do, Little Fire, of course.â Enya tried to move her hands from behind her back to push him away, she couldnât think with him so close to her, but Gavin wouldnât let her. He pushed her harder against the wall and kissed her with slow sweetness that made her melt. He let go of one shoulder and slipped a hand behind her neck. Enya was a mass of confused anger, passion, and a myriad of other emotions. She didnât know what she was doing or why or how she felt about anything. She did know that Gavin was one good kisser. She was fighting liking Gavinâs kisses, because she had been fighting him since she started working here, but it was a losing battle. He started grinning as if he knew her thoughts. Releasing her other shoulder he wrapped his arms around her waist and, instead of pushing her against the wall, pulled her toward him. She leaned back but he had her around the waist and wouldnât let go. âOkay, okay, okay!â She pushed her hands firmly against his chest, ignoring how wonderful it felt, and pushed him away. She needed to think. What was she doing? She had a boyfriend! She was mad at herself and Gavin and ignored him the rest of the day, which wasnât hard because Mr. Phillips sent him out soon after and he was gone the rest of the day. The time he had been there he had acted as if nothing at all had happened. Well, she thought, two can play at that game. ------------------------------------Scene Five------------------------------------ The next day Enya sat in the chair at her desk with a sigh. She didnât have to try very hard to ignore the events of the day before. She was stressed to the max. For some reason she wasnât happy and she couldnât figure out why. Because, she thought, Iâm having to do everything. And she realized that for some reason Jamie wasnât seeming quite as appealing anymore. He let her do what she wanted, which was nice, but there was not spark between them. Not like there was between Gavin and I the other day. Furious with herself and determined not to break taboo again she turned her thoughts to that morning. She had gone over to Jamieâs apartment early to make him breakfast as a surprise before he woke up. She had kissed him for a long time before she left. But it hadnât feltâŚinteresting anymore. It had been boring. She also had been having some problems sorting out bills and rent payments. She was having to pay for much more than she could make, even working five days a week from eight to five. Suddenly Gavin came into their office with three coffees. âMr. Phillips wants his coffee in fifteen minutes, plenty of time for us to drink some first.â He handed her a cup and she, needing the caffeine to stay awake after a night of worrying, gulped the whole thing down in two breaths. Gavin shook his head at her. âYou look tense.â he commented. âIâm absolutely fine.â she snapped. âOuch! You must stressed Little Fire, more bark then usual.â She rolled her eyes. Gavin walked over to her and started massaging her shoulders. She should have stopped him but it felt so good. She couldnât remember the last time sheâd had a massage. She closed her eyes and unconsciously leaned her head back slightly. Suddenly she found herself being kissed upside down. âGavin!â she cried, jumping out of her chair. He just grinned. He studied her, taking in what he could tell. She was startled, she was fighting herself on liking him, and at that moment she looked beautiful. She looked very uncomfortable and she started fidgeting with her hair, like she felt self-conscience. He guessed it was because he was staring at her so hard. Whatever her reason for pushing him away, he knew (whether she would admit it or not) that she had enjoyed that kiss. And the ones from the day before. Thinking about the day before and the obvious havoc heâd wreaked on her senses he grinned again. âStop that!â she exclaimed. âWhat?â âLooking at me like that.â She looked away from him. âLike what?â âI donât know, like I have three heads or something!â He grinned broader. âStop!â âIs it my staring that bothers you? Or my grinning like I can read your mind?â She blushed, having been thinking about when theyâd kissed the day before. Hah! he thought triumphantly. He knew sheâd been disconcerted the day before after their kissing. The whole rest of yesterday that he was in the office she had avoided him, looking at him, talking to him. He thought she might be scared. He knew he would literally rather die than admit that, but he thought it was true. She felt as strongly attracted to him as he did to her, and it scared her. Pushing his thoughts onto the backburner he brought the coffee to Mr. Phillips. When he went back into their office, Enya wouldnât look up at him. She looked preoccupied. She was sifting through several envelopes and their contents with a look of worried concern. He walked up behind her very quietly and read over her shoulder. There were two rent bills and she had a list beside them with monthly costs and what they were for. The first that he noticed read My Apartment. The next said Jamieâs Apartment. âYouâre paying for Jamieâs apartment!â he exclaimed. She jumped and gasped. Quickly she started to gather the bills but he snagged the list she had made of monthly costs. There was no way she made enough to pay for all of this. âYou pay for Jamieâs apartment?â he asked again, disgusted sounding when he said Jamieâs name. She reached out to snatch the list back but he was tall and held it up, just out of her reach. Now she was irritated, she didnât have time for games at the moment. âGive that to me.â Gavin laughed and held it higher when she tried to grab it. She chased him around the room for it, every time sheâd almost be able to grab it heâd jerk it back again. He reached his desk and leaned back against it, holding the paper behind him. She leaned across him to try to reach around him. He was grinning and she realized the position she was in. He was leaning against his desk and she was leaning against him as she tried to reach the paper. âYou love taunting me like this.â she accused angrily. His grin just got bigger, and made him look boyish, younger. âI never deny the truth.â he said. She quickly stepped away from him. âFine.â she muttered. As she turned to walk away she added, âJerk.â He grabbed her by the arm. Not hard enough to hurt, just so she couldnât get away âApologize.â he said playfully. âWhat!â âApologize. That was rude and I think you owe me an apology.â âI donât owe you anything.â she hissed, her voice and words, and eyes and even hair-in the sense of color-were like fire. He almost expected her to breath fire in his face. He had a sudden overcoming desire to kiss her gain. In one fluid motion he pulled her over, clamped an arm around her waist, and kissed her. If she thought yesterdayâs kiss wasâŚpassionate, this one was unbelievable, on both their parts. Whoa was all she could think. When they broke off for some much needed air her furious mind thrashed her. How do you always start out fighting him and end up kissing him? âIâm just irresistible.â he stated. He started kissing her neck. Normally she would have pulled away by now. âHmmâŚso are you.â he murmured. He looked at her, surprised that she wasnât pushing him away. She started at him, disconcerted looking. âNo,â he said in an overly patient voice, âI canât read everybodyâs mind.â he leaned towards her and whispered, âJust yours.â This brought too many disconcerting thoughts to her mind to number. She tried to step back. Gavinâs had tightened around her waist. âHold on, not yet.â He turned her against his desk, it hit just above her waist. âNow wait a minute.â she started, âI-â but as soon as she opened her mouth to begin a tirade against him he kissed her. She leaned back some. But she knocked over some pens and, not wanting to make to much noise and thus attract Mr. Phillipsâ attention, she didnât pull away again. And she had to admit she didnât really want Gavin to stop. He cradled the back of her neck with his hand. He took his other arm from her waist and ran it through her thick red hair, which was loose around her shoulders. Suddenly he slipped the arm that had been running through her hair behind her knees and, picking her up, set her on his desk. She was better on level with him now. He broke off suddenly and stared at her. Enya knew she must look like an idiot. Eyes wide, face flushed, hair a mess. But man heâs a good kisser! It just gets better and better. She thought. Gavin grinned. âJust wait.â he said. She blushed, feeling like an idiot for letting her face be read so easily. He grinned wider, as if he knew how many times in the past few minutes the words âoh myâ had run through her head. âYou look considerably more tense now, maybe we should try that again.â Enya jumped off his desk and hightailed it back to her own and sat down. She started to shuffle through her papers again but her mind wasnât concentrating on much of anything. Silent as a feather he came up behind her. She stiffened when he put his hands on her shoulders, but couldnât help but relax as his fingers worked magic with her tense shoulders. Gavin leaned down and kissed the side of her neck. Enya shivered. He was very distracting to what she was trying to get down. He kissed the other side of her neck, back and forth. âYou know what I think?â he whispered to her. âI think youâre scared of m-â Enya pushed herself out of her rolling chair so fast it slammed into Gavin standing behind her. She turned and before he knew what was happening took him by the shoulders and kissed him. It was steamy and convincing. Gavin was stunned by her initiative. When she broke away suddenly she hissed, âI am not scared of anything, most especially you and any physical chemistry we happen to have.â With that she flounced out of the office to bring Mr. Phillips the mail. Gavin stared after her. âWhat a way to prove a point.â he muttered into the empty air, then added âNot that Iâm objecting.â ---------------------------------------Scene Six----------------------------------- âJamie, have you even tried to get a job yet?â Enya asked as she gave him the breakfast she had come over to make before work. âBaby, these things take time.â She gave him a no-nonsense look. âIâll look today, I promise.â he pacified. Yeah, right, she thought. âOhâ he stopped her before she left. âMy rent is due today. You know I hate asking you, butâŚâ he let the question trail off. She just looked at him. Shoot! She had enough cash for his rent but it wouldnât leave her with any money âtil she finished work and cashed her paycheck this evening because she wouldnât have time to make it to her bank for a withdraw until after work. She shelled out the money, then left, slamming the door shut behind her. Irritated she dashed out of the apartment complex. Too lost in angry thoughts to pay attention to her surroundings she stared to walk across the street without hardly looking. A horn blared. She jumped back onto the sidewalk as the black BMWâs brakes squealed to keep from hitting her. The passenger window slid down. Gavin leaned across from the driverâs seat. âGod, Enya! You didnât even look before you walked into the street!.â She rolled her eyes, then was irritated with herself. Why was she so rude to him all the time? Because he gets under my skin. She didnât know why, but he did. âWhereâs your car parked? Iâll drive you to it.â Gavin offered. âDonât have one.â âOh,â Gavin was only deterred for a second though. âYou need a ride to work?â âIâve got a bus pass.â Enya said, trying not to think about how stupid that sounded. Normally sheâd take Jamieâs car but heâd said that if he was going to look for a job then he might need it. Enya started rummaging through her purse as she walked at a half run down the sidewalk. Gavin put his car in gear and drove slowly beside her. She couldnât find her card and sheâd already walked two blocks. âYou sure?â Gavin asked. She jumped, not having realized he was still following her. âIâm looking for it!â she snapped. She couldnât find it. âShoot!â she cried suddenly. âI left it at Jamieâs. Iâll have to run back and grab it.â âThatâs too far to go all the way back.â He said. Enya looked back towards the apartment, unsure. âYouâll be late and Mr. Phillips will fire you.â That decided it for her. She sighed. Gavin grinned in that know-it-all way Enya was beginning to hate. âNeed a ride little fire?â Gavin asked again. She yanked the passenger side door open and slid in. As they sped down the street he suddenly turned. âWhere are you going?â Enya asked. âIâm gonna go ahead and grab some coffee first.â âGavin! Iâm gonna be late!â âYouâre not going to be late. I have this job too remember, I wouldnât put my own job in jeopardy. We have twenty minutes, besides, a car is faster, no bus stops.â He parked the car. âDo you want anything?â âNo.â âCome on,â he said, âIt wonât make you any later.â âNo.â she replied again, although the idea of a strong cup of coffee sounded marvelous. âMy treat.â Gavin tried one last ploy. She shouldnât. She didnât want to owe him anything. You could pay him back later, the coffee lover in her prodded. Finally she sighed. âRegular, black, large.â He grinned. âNo one, especially you, can resist coffee.â He jumped out of the car and ran in. After a few minutes he came back and handed her the to-go cup. She closed her eyes and smiled as she breathed in steam and the wonderful smell of fresh brewed coffee. It was a windy day, in the middle of November, close to winter, and the coffee tasted perfect. Enya waited but Gavin never started the car, he just sat there and drank his coffee. He turned to her after his second sip. âSoooo, how come you donât have any money right now?â he asked conversationally. Enya choked on her gulp of coffee. "I have money, just no cash till the end of the day. I had to pay rent.â she said vaguely, treating it as casual as Gavin. âYours?â he prodded. She made another vague gesture and mumbled something as she busied herself with sipping her coffee. âJamieâs.â He said flatly. She ignored him. âHeâs just using you, ya know.â Gavin set in angrily. He leaned on the consol between them. She opened her mouth to deny it but he talked first. âYou pay his rent. Let me guess, he doesnât work.â âHeâs looking for a job.â Enya defended immediately. âUh huh, face it Enya, youâre being used. For Godâs sake! Youâre not his girlfriend youâre his mother. You pay his board, feed him, and he lazes around all day. I get that you think you want someone whoâs not controlling, he doesnât try to change you, but youâre taking care of him!â She tried to find something to say to defend Jamie and herself, she really did, but her mind just came up blank. âHe makes me so angry.â Gavin started in again. And his words surprised her. âHeâs just using you, living off you, so he can have an easy, work free life.â She started to ask what it mattered to him, but she didnât want to know, and so it was one of the rare occasions where she kept her mouth shut. Gavin stared at her. Finally, accepting that she wasnât going to say anything, he sighed and shook his head as he started the car and pulled out. All day she kept thinking about what Gavin had said, and she felt more and more miserable. But misery quickly turned to anger, and she had a few questions of her own for Jamie. She was so distracted that she didnât notice Gavin closely watching her changing emotions all day. Good, Little Fire, good. he thought with a satisfied smile. --------------------------------------Scene Seven--------------------------------- By the end of the workday Enya had decided to confront Jamie that night. As she and Gavin walked out of the building he took her arm. âCome on, Iâm taking you home.â he said. âNo, Iâm going to walk.â Enya replied, knowing she needed the time to think about exactly what she would say to Jamie. âThatâs ridiculous, youâre riding home with me. I donât want you walking all the way home this late.â Her anger at Jamie got transferred to Gavin. âSince when do I care what you think? Iâm walking and thatâs final. Last time I checked that was still my decision to make.â âWell, too bad, Iâm making it for you.â âOh, really?â Enya raised a brow, fed up with Jamie and Gavin and men in general. âI do not want a ride home from you. I am walking. Yes, I am talking to you slowly like you are an idiot because Iâm beginning to believe all men are. Are we now clear?â She spoke the words slowly and insultingly. Gavin looked a little surprised but Enya was too mad to care at the moment. She yanked her arm out of his hand, he had taken it when she first declined his offer of a ride, and took off down the street, steaming mad. By the time she got to Jamieâs apartment it was after seven oâclock and Enya was ready to give him a peace of her mind. When she stepped into the building the landlord looked up at her, confused. âWhat are you doing here?â he asked. âI came to talk to Jamie.â âDidnât he tell you? I had to evict him. He was six months behind on the rent. I told him this morning I was gonna have to evict him today.â âWhat?â she said in a very quiet voice that they landlord, a skittish man, thought he wouldnât want to encounter. âWhere is he?â âHe said he was going out to Johnson Park for a while.â Enya stormed out of the building. But the time she got to Johnson Park it was 7:30 and pitch black outside. There was, however, plenty of street lights to light up Jamie, sleeping on a bench. âJamie!â He sat up. The sleep faded from his eyes as soon as he saw Enya though. âEnya, baby, what are you doing here.â âIâm not your baby Jamie, youâre the baby. You got evicted!â He had the decency to look slightly embarrassed. âOh, wellâŚuh.â âYour landlord said you were six months behind on your rent. What did you do with my money?â âWell, I had some extra expenses, and-â âShut up, Jamie. Just in case itâs not obvious, weâre through. I donât even want to know what you did with it, just be glad Iâm not going to bother trying to get my money back.â âEnya, honey! You canât break up with me!â âYouâre right, I canât. Because thatâs what boyfriends and girlfriends do! I was never your girlfriend, I was your free ride. I canât believe I wasted so many years on you. Goodbye, Jamie.â She walked away. By the time she reached her own apartment it was eight oâclock. I canât wait to just fall into bed, she thought. What a crummy day. When she entered her building her landlord was waiting for her. âYouâre evicted.â he stated in a flat, no arguing voice. âPack your bags, you have to be out by tonight.â âBu-wha-why! Iâve always been a good tenant! I donât make a lot of noise. Iâve only been late a few times and even then Iâve always paid my rent as soon as I had the money.â Her voice sounded desperate, even in her own ears. Her landlord wouldnât budge on the matter though. It didnât even connect-the obvious reason why-until she was on her way up to her apartment. Her landlord was Jamieâs uncle, of course. So no wonder he was kicking her out, Jamie had gotten her this apartment. He knew all kinds of landlords who owed him from back when he had been successful and his uncle had been one of them. The injustice of it all infuriated her. She was sure there was probably something she could do about it but she was to tired at the moment to bother. She packed her clothes, cosmetics, toiletries, shoes, and other possessions in three suitcases. She didnât own any furniture because her apartment had come fully furnished, so she had gotten rid of everything sheâd had before. She grabbed the phone book and, as quick as she could, wrote down every number for apartment buildings in town into her cell phone. She was glad that sheâd gotten more prepaid minutes for her phone before sheâd given money to Jamie. It was too late to deposit her paycheck into her account. She walked out the door of her apartment, resisting the urge to look back. She pulled her scarf over her ears and accustomed herself to the weight of her three suitcases, managing to sling two over her shoulders and roll the third. She called the first number and didnât remember that it was Jamieâs brothers. That is, until he slammed the phone down after she gave her name. Strike one. she thought grimly. -------------------------------------Scene Eight----------------------------------- By eleven-thirty at night her earlier mood seemed almost sunny in comparison to her present one. She had just left the thirteenth apartment complex that had turned her down. There were only fourteen in town. It wasnât until she had decided to just get a room, several hours ago, that she had learned to just what extent she had been played. Apparently Jamieâs father, whom she had never met, owned all five of the hotels in town. Jamie hadnât wanted to work for his father, so heâd been kicked out, and told that he could come back when heâd decided to play by his fatherâs rules. Sheâd also learned that Jamie was actually a year younger than her, which meant he had lied about his age and told her he was five years older than he really was. It was too humiliating to contemplate. Sheâd learned all this from a gossipy manager at one of the hotels, who apparently had known the family forever. Jamie had also apparently come home, because he needed money. Yeah, she thought, because his most recent business venture finally clued in. To say she had been furious was and understatement. Now, though, her anger had abandoned her, and was replaced by frustration and weariness. Jamie had made it obvious that he didnât take rejection well. Half the apartment complex owners were relatives of Jamieâs, who refused to let her in, and the other half owed him for one favor or another. She got off the bus in the middle of town and looked around. She liked this area, it was right by where she worked, just a few streets over. There was a park around here somewhere too, she knew. And it was only a few minutes from downtown. She let hope build as she walked up to the building and buzzed the land lordâs room. A sweet looking woman in her sixties came to the door. When Enya explained that she needed an apartment the woman smiled sadly. âJamie already called me, and frankly, I would give you a room anyways. I like you already, but the truth is Iâm packed solid and all my renters are real good-I wouldnât just kick one of them out now.â Enya sighed and thanked the woman, knowing she was right. She sat dejectedly on the front step of the building. She resisted the urge to burst into tears. Pull yourself together, she thought, youâre just tired. And it was true, she was tired. She hadnât gotten hardly any sleep the night before and she was one who definitely needed her sleep. She looked at her phone, 12:45. She sighed. So tired. she thought. She felt her eyes sliding shut as she sat there, not knowing what to do next. The door behind her suddenly opened and she jumped up. The woman looked at her. âThe strangest thing just happened. Someone I used to know just called me. They have one of those huge mansion homes and they redid the whole third floor to be an apartment. They just asked if I could spread it around that they were looking for someone to rent it out to immediately. Hereâs the address.â âOh, thank you!â Enya said gratefully. She took the address and started towards this mysterious destination. Her âmysterious destination was only a few streets away and just happened to be directly in front of the nice park she had been thinking about. She could see the beautiful Tudor style mansion behind tall hedge that surrounded the entire front except for the driveway. There was a small grassy area in between the hedge and the road with a park bench on it. Wow. she thought. It reminded her a bit of the house her parents had owned before sheâd lived with her grandmother. Which indicated that whoever owned this had money. She walked down the short drive and up the stairs, so tired she tripped over the last stair. Shaking her head at herself she smiled ruefully. She had never been able to do too much after twelve, her brain just sort of shut down. She rang the bell. When the large, beautiful double doors both opened she just stared, open mouthed. Gavin stared back. Aloud she said, to no one in particular, âSomeone really hates me.â -------------------------------------Scene Nine------------------------------------ âEnya?â Gavin stared at her, just as shocked as she was. Thereâs nothing I can do, she thought, I have to have a place to stay, for now at least. She decided to try and act like this was no big deal, like they didnât already know each other. âIâm looking for a new apartment and I heard there was a floor for rent at this house.â It was a good start but the effect was ruined when she couldnât force back a yawn at the end. Gavin ignored her attempt at not knowing him completely. âEnya, my word, itâs one-thirty in the morning.â She noticed he was still up and dressed. âCome inside, itâs freezing out here.â She stumbled when she crossed the thresh hold. Without a word Gavin scooped her up and carried her into a living room. âGavin, put me down! I can walk just fine!â she said, horrified. He ignored her protests and set her down on a couch. âWhat happened? Why do you need a place to stay? Tell me briefly what happened and then you have to go to sleep.â She shook her head. âNo, if Iâm going to do this we need to talk prices and how long and I-â âDetails in the morning.â Gavin interrupted. âI want to know what happened quickly and then youâre going to bed. Iâm your new land lord and you have to do what I say.â She rolled her eyes and groaned at the way heâd issued the decree. As tired as she was she found some anger left for him. âDonât get mad, just tell me what happened. Last time I saw you, you were going to break up with Jamie.â âNo, I was just going to confront him, discuss-wait a minute! I never said anything about that.â âItâs easy to read your thoughts when you donât realize someoneâs watching you. You have that whole expressive face thing going on. Tell me what happened when you went to brea-âŚconfront Jamie.â Quickly she related what happened when she went to Jamieâs apartment and hen what happened when she found him in the park. Originally she left out what had been said in the park, but Gavin insisted that she tell him what exactly she had said and grudgingly she complied. He gave a satisfied grin. âThatâs the Little Fire I know.â Then she explained that when she had first met Jamie he had been rising on the local business scene and had a lot of connections. Heâd gotten his whole family involved in apartments and hotels and whatnot. Then there had been the confrontation with his father and heâd gone broke. She explained how his relatives had taken a collective stand against her and how Jamie had managed to sway the other apartment owners. Incidentally, Gavin had enough clout to sway more than a few people to ignore Jamieâs orders but a very interesting opportunity had landed in his lap and he was going to take full advantage of it. By the time Enya had finished what had turned into a long story she was only half awake. âI swear the next time I see him heâll regret it.â She mumbled. Not as much as if I see him, Gavin thought. He was quiet a moment, then looked at Enya. She was asleep on his couch. Gavin hauled her two bags up to the master bedroom in the third floor apartment then went over to the couch. He halfheartedly tried to wake her up, but didnât really want to disturb her. He looked at the time, two oâclock. He scooped her up and carried her to the third floor. He managed to throw back the blankets on the bed as best he could then gently laid her down. He took off her stylish boots and then her scarf, gloves, and coat. He looked down at her and let her hand drift over her cheek. In her sleep she turned her head to press her lips against his palm. He leaned down and kissed her cheek. âSleep well, Little Fire.â he whispered. This is a lucky coincidence, he thought, a very lucky coincidence. -------------------------------------Scene Ten------------------------------------- When Enya woke up in the morning she was on a bed in an unfamiliar room. She fought back a pinch of panic as she got her bearings. Slowly she recalled everything that had happened the night before. She looked around. Her new apartment. Curious she got out of bed and left the room. She explored the whole apartment and to her dismay she loved it. Staying was out of the question, she reminded herself, even as she explored every nook and cranny. The whole third floor had obviously been built jus to be an apartment. There were two small bedrooms and one bathroom. She next walked into a combined living room/study. It had a couch and two large, comfortable looking chairs with a coffee table in between. Against one wall was a large antique desk and a matching bookshelf lined the other wall. The whole space was very open, warm and inviting. The bedroom had been done in light tan walls and was very neutral with a beautiful bedspread that was brown embroidered with green vines and red poinsettiaâs. The colors had been carried through the rest of the apartment with all the walls tan except for the extra bedroom, which was green. The couch was green and the two chairs were red. There was a beautiful rug in the living room, over the hardwood floors, that matched the bedspread. There was a small kitchen with a stove, refrigerator, microwave, and toaster. There was an island bar to eat at with two stools. When Enya opened the cabinets she found red and brown dishes, silverware, pots and pans and a coffeemaker. The coffeemaker looked a little worse for the wear but other than that everything else was new. It had all obviously been decorated by a woman. Further inspection of a nearby hall closet revealed green towels, extras sheets, and pillows and blankets. Keeping with the open atmosphere the living room/study and the kitchen were separated only by a dividing wall. The whole thing was hardwood floors except for the bathroom and laundry room (she had discovered it beside the guest room), which were both tile. Enya took a fortifying breath as she reached the last door. It was in the living room and she knew it led to the rest of the house. Gavinâs house. She opened the door to see a large landing and stairs. She slowly walked down the stairs. Somewhere along the way she noticed that Gavin kept his house extremely hot. She pushed the long sleeves of her sweater up glad that her apartment had itâs own temperature control. She could tell immediately the second floor was mostly all bedrooms. She found a huge study, all walls covered with bookshelves. It was decorated old world style with an old grandfather clock in one corner, tan walls, and leather chairs. She could tell it was Gavinâs room, one he belonged in, spent time in. She left feeling like she was invading his privacy and trying to convince herself that she wasnât snooping. There was one closed door at the end of the long hallway that she assumed was Gavinâs room. She walked back down he hallway, to the next set of stairs, where sheâd started. She walked down them, and the first thing she saw was the front door, easy access. She turned right and found an open door. She pushed it wider and raised a brow when she saw the room. It was a party room. It had cream walls and huge floor space. There was a large table that you could set up a buffet on. There was a piano in one corner. It was a humongous room, taking up close to half of the first floor. It was versatile and could be used for formal, corporate gatherings, or for smaller, more casual gatherings with friends. There was another door inside, and when Enya went through it (the door was open) she realized it was a connecting door to the kitchen. The house had a huge kitchen. It was nice, with an island bar with four stools, similar to the apartment kitchen upstairs. She left the kitchen to find a dining room, very formal, but pretty, with dark wood paneling and terra cotta colored walls. She left that room and found a half bath at the next door. She noticed the whole first floor was hard wood, just like the second floor and her apartment. When she came to the last door, right beside the front door, she instinctively knew Gavin was behind it. The door was cracked a bit. She pushed it open the rest of the was and noticed it didnât even make the slightest creak when she opened it. She realized none of the doors in the house had. She quickly surveyed the room before her. She could instantly tell it was the most used room in the house. There was a large, soft couch with lots of fluffy pillows on it. There was an easy chair with an ottoman that looked wonderfully relaxing. There was a coffee table in front of the couch and than a television. It had a DVD/VCR player and she noticed a large collection of movies. There was another comfortable looking chair in another corner. Finally she looked to the last corner, knowing who would be there. Gavin was sitting in the last chair, reading a newspaper. He looked up. âWell, good morning.â âWork?â was the first thing Enya asked, concerned for her job. âI told him you were sick, and I was taking the day off, he called a temp.â âThanks.â She walked into the room and sat down on the matching chair across from his. âSo,â she began, âyou promised weâd talk prices and whatnot this morning, but first, now that I can think, I believe Iâm owed a huge explanation.â âAbout what?â Gavin asked, feigning confusion, even though he knew exactly what she meant. âAbout how an average secretary could afford a house like this. Though I have the tiniest idea and Iâm really hoping Iâm wrong. Am I wrong? Please tell me Iâm wrong.â âYouâre wrong.â Gavin said solemnly, completely straight faced. âI didnât make a fortune off modeling.â She burst out laughing, and Gavin grinned. âThe truth now, even though Iâve already guessed, and please tell me itâs not what Iâm thinking.â He sighed. âYou own the company.â she guessed flatly. âYes.â he admitted. âWow! Um, okay, wellâŚgive me a minute to let this sink in.â Finally she sighed. âThis is going to take some getting used to. So, why do you work as a âlowly secretaryâ when you own the company?â âI thought itâd be good to get to know the company before I take over.â He answered her too quickly and she could tell it was a lie. But she let it go for the moment. âTechnically, you work for me.â Gavin said off-handedly. âOh, God.â Enya groaned. âSo did you hire me?â she asked. âI read your resume, but Phillips did interview you on the phone and choose you.â She nodded, thinking back to the first day sheâd met him. âSo that first day when I met you, when I flippantly asked if you owned the company?â âI do.â She shook her head. âThis is weird.â she muttered. âOkay, letâs get down to business.â Two hours later they finally came to an agreement they could both live with. âItâs still too little,â Enya insisted. âEnya, I know what you make.â âI donât want you to know what I make and I donât want charity! I have other money besides what I make, the only reason I was having trouble was because I was having to support two people, now Iâll be absolutely fine. Besides, itâs not like this is the only work I do. I mean, I work in my chosen field too.â âYou mean, you get some acting parts, when you have the time.â Gavin said. âHow did you know Iâm an actress?â she asked. âIt was on your resume, remember?â âOh, right. Wait a minute! That time when I played Juliet, I got a delivery of red roses, the only roses I got and it didnât say who they were from. Was thatâŚ?â âThat was me.â he answered when she trailed off uncomfortably. âOh, well, thank you.â âYouâre welcome.â âSo, did you see the play?â she asked nervously, not understanding her nerves herself. He grinned. âYou were incredible.â he assured her. âIâve never seen anything like it.â She blushed. âThank youâŚWell, listen, I do get a lot of small acting jobs, so I could pay what the apartment is worth, easily.â âYou are paying what the apartment was worth, your old apartment was overpriced so youâre obviously unaware of how much you should pay. Who did you rent from before.â Enya flushed, angry. âJamieâs uncle. But listen, I should still-â âMy rent price is final.â Gavin said firmly. Enya sighed, in defeat. âFine, and Iâll leave it at the last week of every month. But listen, this is only temporary. Iâll be out and in a new apartment within a week.â -------------------------------------Scene Eleven---------------------------------- Two Months Later After the first three days Enya had started riding to work with Gavin, at his insistence. Now, Enya waited by the door, impatiently watching the time. She leaned up the stairs. âGavin!â she yelled. âCome on! We have got to go.â She checked the time again. âWeâre both gonna get fired if you donât get your butt down here and get me to work!â âThey canât fire me, I own the company, so I wonât let them fire you either. Just hold on.â Gavin yelled down to her. âThatâs unethical, I donât want you to keep them from firing me, itâs favoritism.â âIt isnât unethical, itâs me not firing you because I caused you to be late and you unwillingly went along with that.â She rolled her eyes. âOh come on! Youâre taking forever and Iâm the girl. Itâs supposed to take me forever to get ready and it didnât.â Gavin came trotting down the stairs. He grinned. âThatâs because you, my dear, are already beautiful. It doesnât have to take you forever.â He chucked her chin and grabbed his coat, then held the door open. âWell, you coming?â She rolled her eyes and dashed out the door. He threw the keys at her, âThink fast.â She caught them. âNo way, Gavin! I drove all last week, itâs your turn this week.â âCome on, Enya, I need to look over some extra, I-own-the-company-and-Iâm-your-boss papers.â She groaned even as she slid into the driverâs seat. For the most part, they stuck to taking turns driving for a week at a time. Enya didnât get another apartment, didnât even look, just because it was working out ok. Gavin didnât mention, scared if he said anything sheâd remember and start looking. He was enjoying having her live in the apartment. Heâd gotten to know her even better than he had when he was working with her. And the more he got to know her the better he liked her. He pushed his thoughts of Enya aside and focused on his work as she drove beside him, humming along with the radio. Mr. Phillips stopped at Enyaâs desk that day, after lunch break and before he left. She was finishing sorting files and Gavin was behind her searching through the cabinets. âThereâs a business party tonight, Enya. Gavin knows the details. As my two secretaries you are both, of course, invited. Itâs a formal party, at seven oâclock.â Enya glanced up. âOh, okay, thank you, Mr. Phillips.â Enya turned back to her papers. She didnât even consider going. Someone knocked on Enyaâs door at six. She opened it. Gavin looked at her. âDo you want to ride with me to the party?â he asked. âIâm not going.â she informed him. âNot going!â he raised his hand in dramatic shock. âImpossible!â âAnd yet itâs true.â Enya said dryly. âBecause Iâm not going.â âWhy not?â Gavin asked. âIâm not dressed for a party.â She said, exasperated. âGavin, look at me!â She was wearing a black tank top and matching black jogging pants. Even though she had her own controls the heat that Gavin kept on so high downstairs still made her apartment hot. Gavin looked her up and down. She raised a brow, as if to say, see. âIâm looking, Iâm looking!â he said with a boyish grin. She shut the door in his face and walked over to her desk. He opened her door and walked in. âYouâre supposed to knock first.â Enya reminded him angrily. âMy house.â He reminded her. âIâve got to get a new apartment.â she muttered under her breath. Gavin ignored her. He looked around. âSonya decorated this apartment well.â he commented. âWhoâs Sonya?â Enya asked. âMy wife.â Enya whirled to looked at him. He grinned. âLiar.â she said. âSheâs the interior decorator who did this apartment.â He told her, âSo I could rent it out.â âOh.â âSo why arenât you going?â He asked again, doggedly pursuing the subject. âI have nothing to wear.â She said. âWear a dress. This is neat.â He picked up a red glass dish full of green and brown marbles. She snatched it from his hands and set it back down on her desk. âI donât have a suitable dress at the moment.â He turned to her. âAre you sure?â he asked, raising a brow and giving her that know-it-all grin she knew so well. She eyed him suspiciously and walked to her closet. She opened the door and stared. Hanging there was quite possibly the most beautiful dress sheâd ever seen. It was the same color of green as her eyes. It was made out of crushed velvet. I looked like it would come down halfway below her knees. It had long tight fitting sleeves. It was v-neck with green beading along the neckline. It had a cinched waist some of the same green beads on it. It was unique and beautiful. âIâll be back in thirty minutes.â Gavin called as he left. She knew she shouldnât even try it on. She should give it back immediately. But she knew just as strongly that she couldnât make herself. She slipped it on. It looked amazing, perfect, on her. She wet her hair, then quickly blow-dried it, scrunching as she went so when it was dry it was masses of red curls. She piled it on her head with a green jeweled clip her best friend had given her and left a few ringlets handing around her face. She slipped on a pair of green velvet heels she âjust happenedâ to find in her closet. She stood in front of the floor length mirror in her bedroom, beside her closet. The finished picture was amazing. She swished the soft velvet around. It was so pretty. âCouldnât resist, could ya?â She spun around. A grinning Gavin stood behind her looking incredibly nice in a black suit with a white shirt and black tie. She hadnât even heard him come in. âWalking into my apartment is one thing, but donât just walk into my room! I could have been getting dressed!â Gavin sighed dramatically. âTo be so lucky!â âShut up.â she said, rolling her eyes and pushing past him. She stopped at her apartment door. âWell, are you coming?â she asked. They arrived at the party at 7:30. Enya looked at the large, imposing house, memories from her childhood rushing back. As she thought what she had given up she realized she didnât miss any of itâŚexcept her grandmother. And now that she was reentering that world, she was slightly nervous. âWhoâs house is this?â Gavin looked at her. âThe mayors.â âJames Meroe?â she asked miserably, praying he wouldnât remember her and ask where sheâd been all these years. âUm, Gavin, I donât knowâŚâ âOh,â Gavin shrugged. âIf youâre too afraid to go in-â She threw her door open and walked up the drive. If Mr. Meroe remembered her sheâd tell him the truth, that sheâd walked out of it all at sixteen, because her grandmother was as stubborn as she was. When they got to the door Gavin rang the bell. The doorman opened. Enya hid behind Gavin, having recognized Porter immediately. âName please.â he said in a bored sounding voice. âGavin McGivins and Enya Covington.â Gavin said. Porterâs head shot up and he looked around Gavin. âMiss Ennie?â he said in an unbelieving voice, his eyes warming. âIs that you miss?â She gave him brave smile. âHullo, Porter.â âItâs been a long time, Miss Enya. You going back in there? After all these years?â âYes, I believe I am.â âI suppose your grandmotherâs the only reason you left in the first place. You look real nice Miss Enya, I heard about your latest at LâAmore Theatre, Iâm glad things are going good for you, despite it all.â âThank you. Who allâs in there?â Enya ignored Gavinâs surprised stare. âOnly ones who knew you are Mr. Meroe and Mr. And Mrs. Rondell.â âThank you, Porter, it was good to see you.â âGo knock âem dead, Miss Enya.â She grinned and walked away. She walked forward, mentally taking in the changes to the house as she scanned the room. Porter had been right, she only recognized Mr. Meroe and the Rondellâs. She took a deep breath. Act, she told herself, itâs what you do. Just act. She followed Gavin up to greet the group with their host and the only other couple she knew in it, thankful that he hadnât asked any questions yet. âGavin,â James said, âWonderful to see you!â He looked over to her and his eyes widened. âOh my!â He looked her up and down, drawing the attention of the Rondellâs. âEnya Covington?â She smiled. âOne and the same. Hello, Mr. Meroe.â âWell, Miss Covington, Iâm amazed to see you after all these years, my you havenât changed a bit.â Enya smiled. âIâll choose to take that as a complement.â âAs well you should.â Henry Rondell said, stepping forward to take her hand. âIt is wonderful to see you Enya, you look more beautiful than before, if possible.â She smiled warmly. Sheâd always liked Henry, heâd seemed sincere ten years ago and he seemed sincere now. His wife, on the other hand, was young and, in Enyaâs opinion, evil. Fiona turned to look at Enya. âWell, dear, has it really been ten years? It feels like yesterday. I must say, I was sad to see you never re-entered our circles, even after your grandmother died. Whatever did you do with all that money your grandmother had? Did you go someplace amazing? Some other country, perhaps?â Fiona went ungraciously to the only reason sheâd even addressed Enya. Enya gave a charming smile. âI think I spent it all on this dress!â she demurred. There were chuckles throughout the group. âThis is the first time Iâve needed a dress like this in a while, and if youâll excuse me, I think Iâll start off with a drink.â She effectively dismissed herself from the conversation. But what she had feared had already occurred. Several had heard that she was Gloria Derrenâs granddaughter and the news was circulating the room fast that she was the one who was supposed to have inherited the Covington/Derren money. There were murmurs as she walked through the room, she heard them. There is no money!!! she wanted to scream. Instead she walked to where the drinks were set up. It was a do-it-yourself sort of deal. Various recipes for different drinks were listed on a board, with the ingredients spread out on a table. She knew it had to be Mr. Meroeâs idea. Heâd always liked to watch people be uncomfortable and she had no doubt that many of the people in this room had never made their own drink in their lives. She had. She choose the ingredients for a Fuzzy Navel-Vodka, peach schnapps, and orange juice. As she sifted through the ingredients for the ones the needed a man came up beside her. âCan I fix you a drink?â She smiled politely. âNo thank you, Iâm fine.â He walked away. Another man came up less than a minute later, Enya counted, estimating how long each would wait before they came up. âMay I fix you a drink?â The smile again. âNo thank you, I can do it myself.â âOh, well, my name is Joe, I donât believe weâve met.â âTen to one odds you already know my name.â Enya said, trying to hide her disgust. âI could wager a guess.â âYes, and itâd be as much a 'guess' as me 'guessing' youâre a down on your luck once was wealthynaire.â âMy, you are straightforward, arenât you?â She looked straight in his eyes. âYes, I am. Which is why I will tell you now, before you waste your time and mine that Iâm not interested.â He walked away, apparently getting the hint. The last man who came was apparently very brave or very stupid, Enya rather thought the latter. âIf I understand my friends correctly you already know how to make your own drink so perhaps I can interest you in conversation instead.â Enya decided to give him a chance. âDepends, what about?â Gavin watched and listened from a few feet away. âWell, Iâll get straight to the point, did you really inherit your grandmotherâs money?â He sounded overeager and Gavin shook his head in disgust. âAre you really that stupid?â Enya asked dryly. âWould a particular answer make you more likely to answer my question?â âNo.â âOh, well, I just thought that it might be a bit refreshing to have someone be straightforward with you.â Enya stared. âYou thought it might be refreshing for someone to let me know straight out they have no interest in me whatsoever, only my money? My word, you really are an idiot. I think youâre quite a bit younger than me too. Please go tell your friends Iâm not interested and that Iâm not fond of little boys who play gold digger.â The young man left in a huff and Enya was able to make her drink in peace. As she put the glass to her mouth someone whispered in her ear. âAre you sure you donât need a hand with that drink, Little Fire?â The nickname on the end didnât register as she turned, careful not to spill her drink. Gavin gave her that trademark know-it-all grin. âYou look cute when youâre angry.â Enya gave him what he had come to call in his mind âThe Look.â It wasnât so much a look as a whole body stance. She put one hand on her hip, cocked her head, and raised one finely arched eyebrow. Gavin chuckled. âHow about beautiful?â The other eyebrow was raised in addition to the first. âStunning? Delicious? Amazing?â Just as she opened her mouth a man came up to talk to Gavin. She let his comments slide and walked away. All through the night the only thing Enya wanted to do was sit in some corner and watch and remember. Every time she finally got alone someone else would come up to her. Women suddenly wanted to be her best friend, men flirted endlessly. Most were so transparent in their motives that she was convinced there was no one with any acting ability left in the world. She wanted to be left alone. There is no money! she wanted to scream. Finally she got an idea. Most people here knew Gavin and he was unattached for the party. She could act like she was his date for the party. It would definitely be a good test on her acting skills, she thought. Then instantly was mad with herself. What had Gavin ever done to her that she was so rude and mean to him all the time? Determinedly she walked over to Gavin. Gavin watched her walk up, thinking something must be wrong. He knew something was up when she put her left arm through his right one. She subtly eased herself into the conversation he was having. For someone smart enough to own their own company it took him long enough to figure out that she was acting like his date. There was no question in his mind as to why. Heâd watched with growing disgust as a steady stream of leeches made their way to her, hoping to find out if she really did have money. He pushed away his questions about that matter and removed his arm from her grasp. He slid it around her waist. He felt her stiffen, momentarily, but if she was going to keep the act up she couldnât pull away or seem visibly surprised that her âdateâ was touching her. Gavin let his fingers slide back and forth at her waist. He pulled her a little closer to him and she moved, grudgingly, until their sides were brushing against each other. As soon as his conversation ended he excused them both and walked over to stand in an unnoticeable corner behind some tall plants. They stood there for a moment, watching the party. Finally, Gavin leaned down and whispered in her ear. âI like the change in attitude.â She leaned up to him, the smile still carefully held on her face. âIf you think itâs for real youâre an idiot.â He turned her so she was facing him. Enya was know able to glare at him without anyone seeing. He pulled her too him and kissed her neck. Enya leaned up to his ear and murmured, âYou are very close to being physically injured, and so help me, if you donât back off you will be.â He chuckled and pulled back, but kept one arm around her waist. She wished he would move it but if she wanted people to believe she was with him she could pull away. âWould you please move your arm?â She asked quietly through a polite smile. âWhy?â he asked softly into her ear. âCanât stand the temptation of being this close to me?â She shook her head and rolled her eyes. Again he rubbed his fingers slowly back and forth along her waist, just under her ribs. She shivered involuntarily. Gavin looked at her arm, she had goose bumps. âAre you cold?â he asked. She ignored his question considering that was not the reason she had goose bumps. He leaned into her ear again as the walked away from their corner. âI could give you lots of goose bumps.â he whispered. She stopped dead still. Her breathing slowed until she felt like she wasnât getting enough air. She took a deep breath and ignored him. Abruptly she said. âI believe Iâm going to go talk to Henry Rondell. I havenât seen him in so long.â She started across the room then stopped, frozen, when she saw Tommy Groban walk into the room. It made it all come rushing back, like no one else could make it come back to her. Sixteen years of memories. She stared. It seemed amazing to her that even now, ten years later, just seeing Tommy made her want to pummel him. She took a deep breath. Of all the people from her high society past he was the one sheâd like to see least. Sheâd buried family memories behind pleasant ones from high school and now they were being pulled into her mind. Endless fights with her grandmother. Wishing with all her heart her parents were there instead. Trying to tell her grandmother what a spoiled little brat Tommy was, and never getting through to her. Being thrown out, at sixteen, with her luggage, and walking away head still high, without so much as a glance behind her. Enya pushed all unpleasant memories as far away as she could, knowing an encounter with Tommy was inevitable. She decided to get the upper hand by approaching him. Gavin watched her and saw her tense when a man he didnât recognize walked into the room. He saw the stricken look on her face, watched it fade to anger and then a sort of nervous confidence. When she started towards the man he followed at a few steps behind, ready to intervene in any way possible if Enya needed him. Enya looked him straight in the eyes when she reached him. Tom looked shocked to see her, then quickly schooled his features into cool indifference, the only person in the room able to act well enough to hide his reactions. She frowned inwardly as she remembered how heâd always fooled everyone before. âHello Enya.â he said. She raised a mocking brow. âBeing civil are we? Is it possible youâve changed?â He sneered. âAbout as possible as you having changed over ten years.â He snapped. Suddenly his face smoothed out into a charming smile. âCome on now, Enya. We really did get along ok all those years ago.â She snorted. âI was always attracted to you.â he added. She put on a polite, uninterested face. âTom, I rejected your advances ten years ago and Iâd do the same now. I also rejected marriage to you, which I would imagine relieved you a bit, you never were very good at commitment. Your poor girlfriend-excuse me, girlfriends-found that out.â âI could be different now.â Tom suggested. âBull. You were a repulsive, irritating snake ten years ago and you are now. You stole from my grandmother then under everyoneâs noses but mine and youâd do it again in a heartbeat if you thought I would let you get away with it. My grandmother wanted you to marry me, you wanted her money. And you still do, particularly considering, if Iâve heard correctly, yours is about to run out. â He glared and took the first shot by saying, âSo, I understand you went all the way through high school at that public school.â He said the word like it was evil. âYou mean Briardale, the best rated performing arts high school this side of the country? Why yes, I did. Have you graduated yet?â Tom frowned in confusion. âFrom where?â Enya gave him her most innocent smile. âHigh school.â Gavin choked back a laugh from behind her. âYouâre just the same Enya. The ice princess you always were.â Gavin choose that moment to walk up. âHey Little Fire, you almost ready?â His nickname made Tomâs last comment sound ridiculous, but Enya wanted to fight her own battles. âYou are still the same, Covington.â Tom sneered, looking at her with hatred. âIf you mean Iâm still smarter, wittier, better looking, and have more class then you, why yes, youâre right. You know, Tom, Iâm glad to see thereâs still spoiled little rich kids out there who think they know everything. Good to see you, Tommy.â She backed up, ready to leave after her next parting shot. âGive my love to Marge, oh wait! Thatâs right! She divorced you.â Enya shrugged. âGuess you canât keep âem all. Right, Tommy?â She turned to Gavin, done with this game. âWould you like to leave now?â She said politely. âWhoâs he?â Tom snapped out. âJust a friend.â Enya refused to throw out Gavinâs name and position just to impress Tom. She wanted to win this on her own. âHe seems to know you pretty well.â Tommy said maliciously. Enya turned back. âBetter than you.â She said with a cold, appraising glance. Gavin stepped closer to her and looked at Tom. âMy name is Gavin McGivins. I own Givin Enterprises.â Tomâs eyes widened, but Enya didnât want to see his expression, she was to mad at Gavin to care. âIâd like to go, please.â She said politely, still putting on an act for Tommy. âOf course.â They walked past Porter at the door. âIâm sorry, Miss Enya, I didnât realized Tommy was on the guest list or I would have warned you to stay away.â She smiled at him. âNonsense, Porter. I donât run from anything, you know that.â He nodded, then said with admiration. âThatâs true, you didnât even run from your grandmother, she pretty much pushed you.â âYour supposed to be kind to the dead.â Enya said dryly. Porter paled. âIâm sorry, Enya. I didnât know she was, no one really kept up with her when she moved.â âNeither did I, Porter, I was informed in a letter from her lawyers.â âI hope you did something nice with that money, you deserved it.â he said kindly. Enya smiled and told her favorite doorman what she hadnât told anyone. âThere is no money, Porter. It was wonderful to see you again.â She walked out the door, relishing in the numbing feeling of the air on her face. She rounded on Gavin as soon as they hit the sidewalk, walking towards home. âI didnât need you to throw your name around, I wanted to handle him on my own.â âI was helping.â âWell, I donât need your help! Now or ever!â Porterâs bringing up her grandmother and thus forcing her to mention her death had bothered her greatly and she belatedly realized she was taking out stress on Gavin. âAre you incapable of being nice?â Gavin snapped out, angry sounding. Enya stopped and looked at him in the lamplight. They were in the park by his house, their feet making no noise on the fluffy new snow on the ground. âExcuse me?â she asked. âI have been trying to help you, Iâve been friendly to you for the past while, since weâre technically living under the same roof, but youâve been acting like a sulking brat.â Enya blinked, startled by his words, and how horrible they made her feel. âItâs like itâs impossible for you to be nice at all.â âHey,â she cut in. âI am too nice!â Gavin raised a brow. âYeah, right. I bet you that you couldnât be nice to me for any time at all, even if you tried." âYes, I most certainly could!â She said, rising to grab his bait. âAll right, I bet you that you couldnât be nice to me forâŚthree months.â âDone.â she said immediately. âNo being rude, no mean comments, you have to be nice, friendly even". âWhatâs the catch?â she asked warily, belatedly realizing she knew him too well to be this stupid and blindly agree. âEvery mean thing you say to me earns me a kiss.â he said implacably. She blinked in disbelief. âYou already agreed.â he reminded her, with that know-it-all grin she had learned to be wary of. âFine, it doesnât matter, because I am going to be incredibly nice.â She turned on her heel and walked toward the house. A snowball smacked the back of her legs, right by her ankles. âMan, I was hoping itâd make you fall over.â Gavin said boyishly. Enya opened her mouth to snap something to Gavin as she walked back to him, remembering just in time and snapping her mouth closed. She rolled her eyes instead. He stole a quick kiss, brushing his lips over hers before brushing past her. âI say that counts.â He called behind him as he walked on. A snowball hit the back of his legs and tripped him up. He fell into the snow beside the path. Enya laughed, she was actually having fun. She grinned as she walked past him. Gavinâs arm shot out and grabbed her ankle, pulling. She landed on her butt in the snow. She laughed. âHey! Youâll mess up my pretty new dress! And while Iâm being nice, thank you very much for the dress, itâs beautiful and I love it. I really do.â He grinned. âHmmm, well you canât keep it.â he teased. âWhat! You canât do that! Girls get very attached to clothes, trust me, I would know.â âNo you wouldnât, youâre not a girl.â He said, the old phrase all boys had some girl at some point in their childhood. âAm too.â she said with a grin. Gavin let his eyes drift to the v-neck of her dress. âWell, maybe you are.â He said. She stood up and briskly walked away. He caught up to her, thinking she was mad. She turned to him and he saw the twinkle in her eye despite her serious expression. âYou know, I think Iâm going to take some of the fabric from the bottom of this dress and have the neck of it altered to a high neck mandarin collar like is so popular right now.â Enya said as they walked up the front steps. Gavin went in front of her and shut the door in her face to show what he thought of that idea. Enya stopped laughing when she tried to turn the doorknob. It was locked. ------------------------------------Scene Twelve---------------------------------- The next day Enya and Gavin rode to work in silence. Enya assumed that maybe Gavin just didnât care about her past, and that was why they werenât discussing everything that happened the night before. Part of her didnât think that was it though. And it wasnât. The truth was that Gavin was absolutely dying of curiosity. However, he could tell this all meant a lot to Enya and he wanted her to tell him on her own. As for his bet with her, that had been a split-second inspiration. He didnât know if Enya would be able to bite her tounge or not, but it was going to be interesting finding out. The first several months heâd known her Gavin had been so hostile because heâd liked her. The intensity of how much heâd liked her had scared him, and heâd fought it. He knew that was what Enya was doing know, fighting it-fighting him. But Gavin had finally given up on fighting, because it didnât work. He thought that maybe he could love her, that she might be it. Now, he was embracing the feelings he had for her. He was ready to try to win her, and excited about the challenge. And Enya, he knew, would be a huge challenge. Mr. Phillips said that since there wasnât a lot to do later that afternoon Gavin and Enya could both take an hour for lunch. He asked Gavin to stay for a moment to discuss something in his office. Enya took this opportunity to grab her purse and dash out of the building before Gavin came out. With a happy sigh at having evaded Gavin (the less time she spent around him the less she had to bite her tounge) she walked down the nearly deserted street. When someone from behind threw one hand over her mouth and one around her waist she rolled her eyes. She knew exactly who it was but she acted like she didnât. She screamed into his hand and tried to run, despite the arm clenched around her waist. She flung her arms around as much as she could. She could feel Gavin laughing, silently, behind her. She allowed herself a small smile as she thought about the laugh she was going to have later. Gavin took his hand from her waist for less then a second and clamped it expertly around her again, pining her arms to her side. Shoot! Sheâd missed her chance to get away in that half second and now she was really trapped. She kicked her feet, then lifted them off the ground, thinking maybe Gavin would drop her, but he easily held her in one arm off the ground until she put her feet back down. She was about to bite her âattackerâsâ hand when Gavin leaned forward and whispered, âMy, my, my, you are a Little Fire.â Enya stopped fighting, pretending she was just now realizing who he was. She was already irritated by his little practical joke so it didnât take much to make her truly angry. âGavin!â She snapped out. âYes?â he cut her off in a sweet voice that reminded her of her bet. She took a deep breath, as deep as she could with his arm restricting her lungs and let it out slowly, calming herself down. âFunny.â she said insincerely. Okay, so it had been a good idea if she hadnât already known him enough to guess it was him. She waited for him to take his arm from her waist, where it was pining her arms to her sides, but he didnât. âHello.â he whispered. She held as still as she could, willing her heart to stop beating so fast. It felt as if there was no way he couldnât hear it. Abruptly he let her go and stood beside her. He started talking to her and, as it always did, it threw her off guard when he simply acted as if nothing had happened. âWhere are you going?â he asked in a curious tone. âOut to lunch.â âYou always eat in.â he informed her, as if she didnât already know. âI know that, today I decided to go out.â she told him, in as friendly a tone as she could. âWhat, you have enough money to afford that now?â he asked, trying to joke about it. She gave him her patented look, but he saw the hurt behind it before she walked away. She pushed past him to walk away. He grabbed her arm. âEnya wait! Iâm sorry.â he said sincerely. âI went to far that time, way to far. Can I please go to lunch with you?â Enya looked at him, he had never really asked something like that before, he usually just did what he wanted without asking her. Before he would have just joined her without asking. She smiled, a real smile this time, not fake. âOkay.â He noticed the effect his asking and his sincere apology had had on her and filed the information away in his mind. They went to a little diner style restaraunt that sold mostly sandwiches and ice cream. They finished their food when a waitress brought over a small bowl of Strawberry ice cream and set in front of Enya. It was her favorite flavor, but she hadnât ordered it. âOh, I didnât orderâŚâ she started. âFrom the man in the booth in the back.â Enya looked around Gavin to see a man sitting in a booth watching her. He smiled and the first thing Enya noticed was how handsome he was. She didnât recognize him at all though, and she thought surely sheâd remember a man who looked like that. She smiled back at the man and took a bite of her ice cream. The man got up and started to her table. He was tall, with blond hair and golden brown eyes. He also had a dazzling smile. âHello.â he said, extending a hand to her. She smiled and shook his hand. His voice sounded unbelievably familiar. âHave I met you before?â she asked. âJamie introduced us at a party.â She dropped his hand, for two reasons. The first was a reaction to Jamieâs name. This was probably one of Jamieâs friends and she didnât know if he was aware that she had broken up with Jamie. The second was she knew what heâd just said was a lie. She could swear she had never seen this man before. But his voice did sound familiar. âOh.â she said. He chuckled. âSorry I mentioned him.â âSo, umâŚâ Enya tried to think of a way to ask. âHow do you know Jamie?â She stared with that, hoping she could figure out along the way if he knew about Jamie and her. âYou mean am I one of his cronies or am I one of the people who knows what a piece of scum he is?â Lionel âLyonâ Hadley watched as Enya Covington laughed with relief. He wanted to tell her he was both, an unwilling helper for Jamie who knew just how awful he was. But he couldnât. Silently Lyon cursed the one trait in him that everyone loved. He wouldnât break his word, once given. Heâd met Jamie years before. Jamie was still just a rich kid then, and heâd helped Lyon out of a messy legal situation. Lyon hadnât seen Jamie for what he was then, and in a rash act had sworn to help him, to be his sort of personal bodyguard/chauffeur. Jamie didnât have the money or the limo now, but heâd still gotten Lyon to help him on many occasions. Lyon didnât want to have to spy on Enya, heâd liked her so much. Now he looked at her. âGlad you got free.â he said sincerely. Enya smiled, then looked down at her ice cream that was already almost gone. âThank you. Strawberry is my favorite flavor.â âI know.â Lyon told her, before he thought. Enya blinked at him, confused, and he inwardly cringed at his blunder. âYou mentioned it, at the party.â she smiled, âOh, okay. I donât really remember what party it was, Iâm sorry.â Of course not, Lyon thought dryly, because there was no party. But he just smiled. âYou were absolutely charming, in case you were worried.â Enya laughed at that. She hadnât been worried, just confused. She was, however, aware of Gavinâs glare, which made her perfectly happy to continue the conversation. People didnât usually overlook Gavin, but this man hadnât so much as acknowledged him. She was enjoying Gavinâs irritated glare when the man looked at his watch. âI have to go.â He told her, and there was something in his voice that confused her. Lyon had just made a decision. He would try to explain to Enya later, but not yet. He was going to do something heâd never done before, he was going to break his word. And as he looked at Enya, and remembered all the long, delightful conversations theyâd had over the phone, when heâd called to talk to Jamie and gotten her instead, he knew it was worth it. âI have something that requires my attention. It was wonderful meeting you again.â âYou too, and thank you again for the ice cream.â The handsome man nodded at Enya and left. Enya smiled triumphantly, he hadnât said so much as a word to Gavin the whole time. âYou ready?â she asked him. They picked up their checks from the from the waitress and went to the front to pay. Enya let Gavin go in front of her, hiding a grin. It took all of Enyaâs willpower to keep herself from laughing out loud already. The cashier rung up Gavinâs check. He reached into his front pocket, but his wallet wasnât there. He checked his other pocket. âNeed to borrow some money?â Enya asked with a sweet smile. He didnât say anything. He checked all his other pockets, nothing. Finally he looked at Enya. She was hiding a grin. It was almost worth him forgetting his wallet just to see her. He, of course, didnât know the real reason for that grin. With a sigh he pushed away his pride and looked at her. âYes, may I borrow some money?â âOh, of course.â She stepped forward, obviously pleased. âPut his with mine.â she told the young cashier. When the cashier told Enya the total she pulled Gavinâs wallet out of her purse. Sheâd managed to snag it when heâd snuck up on her. A handy trick sheâd learned from someone sheâd worked with in a play. She felt rather than saw Gavinâs shock. She took cash out of the wallet and gave it to the cashier. After she had paid-with Gavinâs money-Enya pulled Gavinâs arm and led him outside. Once they got outside Enya stopped n the sidewalk and pulled the wallet out of her purse. It was engraved with the initials G.M. She handed the wallet over with a grin. He grabbed it and opened looking at the driverâs license. It was his. He stared at her, confused. âHow in the world did you?â It was the first time Enya had seen the infallible Gavin McGivins look shocked. She loved every minute of it. âActing attracts all sorts of people who know all sorts of tricks, and sometimes theyâll pass some of those tricks off to other people. I rather like this one, though I suppose the people who had it used on them by the young man who taught me probably didnât like it as much as I do. Did you seriously think I didnât realize it was you? Give me some credit, I know you better than that.â So he was making headway, that was good at least. She had after all, just admitted that she knew him well. Finally Gavin smiled softly. âTouche.â he conceded victory to her. They slowly started walking back to the office. Enya started thinking about the man sheâd just met. That led to her thinking about the jealous way Gavin had acted. It had felt good. Jamie had never been jealous when another man acted interested in her. At the time sheâd always assumed that he just trusted her, but now she knew he just hadnât cared. Enya watched Gavin out of the corner of her eye. âThat man was very nice.â she started. Gavinâs jaw tightened. âHandsome too.â she pressed. âAnd charming. I think he was very polite too.â âPolite?â Gavin finally said, gritting his teeth. âHe didnât even acknowledge my existence, just stared at you.â âJealous?â Enya fired off. She was walking in front of him, so she didnât see the understanding light his face as Gavin understood what she was doing. âNo, I donât care.â âOh really?â Enya said, trying to sound uninterested. âYes, I donât want you, so it doesnât bother me.â She stopped walking. He stepped close behind her, and leaned forward and put his mouth right by her ear. They were cutting through a deserted parking lot and no one was around. âIf I want something I go after it until I get it. If I wanted you Iâd find ways to get you. Iâd run my hands through your hair.â He let his fingers just barely brush over her hair. âIâ d kiss you.â Enya closed her eyes. He put his hands on her shoulders. âIâd kiss your eyes, your neck, your nose, your hands. Your lips and your ears." He let his lips just barely brush her ear with a feather light kiss. She shivered under his hands. âIâd buy you things and talk to you. Iâd make you laugh.â He could have sworn sheâd stopped breathing as his hands slowly caressed her bare arms. âIâd make you crazy.â He whispered. Suddenly he stepped back. âGood thing I donât want you, I think I put you to sleep.â he said offhandedly. Her eyes fluttered open. She took a deep breath. His games were confusing her, his contradicting words and actions. âI have to drop by one of the companyâs other offices for a meeting. You, however, only have 4 minutes left until your hour is up.â âWhat?â She cried. She checked her own watch. âShoot!â she said as she took off running across the parking lot. The only thing she could think on her way back to work is, You are driving me crazy! She made the five minute trip in three. ------------------------------------Scene Thirteen-------------------------------- Later that evening Enya was sitting in Gavinâs study reading a script for a play she was considering auditioning for. She had asked if she could use his computer to do some research and after she had ended up just staying there with him to read the script. Gavin had sat in one of the large leather chairs across from her, telling himself he was reading a book while he really just watched her. When she was completely occupied by the script he asked her. âDo you know the name of that man?â âHmm?â she murmured distractedly. âWhat man?â âThat we met at lunch, you know, handsome, politeâŚâ âHe wasnât that polite.â She replied absentmindedly. âHe ignored you altogether, which is pretty hard to do.â Gavin had thought that Enya would be the type of person to be completely engrossed in what she was reading and he was right. She could become intensely focused on something at work and she wouldnât notice anything going on around her. One day on their lunch break Mr. Phillips had thrown someone out of the office. There was yelling and arguing. But Enya never even glanced up from the book she was reading while she ate. Gavin had noticed the way she became so focused on things and was now taking advantage of it. âSo, whatâs his name? He was decent looking.â âI donât know his name. And I donât really care. He was more than 'decent looking', he was drop dead gorgeous, I have a friend who would have been drooling. But I prefer darker looks-hair and eyes and all." âIâve got dark hair and dark eyes.â he informed her. âTrust me, I know.â He bit back a laugh. âYou acted funny around that man.â âI liked watching you. You looked jealous, Iâve never had anyone act jealous over me.â He smiled and sat back. âBesides,â she continued. âThere was something weird about him. His voice was familiar. But I didnât recognize him. And he would be hard to forget. That dark gold colored hair and golden eyes. He reminded me of aâŚâ Enya stopped mid-sentence and held completely still. Gavin watched with growing alarm while her face turned pale. âLion.â She whispered. Gavin blinked, confused. âOh, God!â Enya threw down the papers and bolted out of her chair. She looked around wildly and spotted her purse in the corner. She grabbed her cell out. âPlease still be in here.â she mumbled as she searched her phone book. She was furious. âI canât believe it. He sent Lyon after me. I canât believe he went! Ugh!â She finally found Lyonâs number. She tapped her fingers impatiently while it rang. âHello.â âWhere is he?â âEnya, wait, please.â âTell me where he is!â âPlease, youâve got to let me explain first.â She listened for a moment as he gave a quick recap of his decision to break his word to Jamie, and from all their hours of phone conversation she knew how important that was to him. She sighed. âWeâll talk later. Now, where is he?â âI, uh, I donât know.â âDonât lie to me, Lyon! Tell me where he is.â With a sigh he gave an address. Gavin listened to her side of the conversation and then watched as she hung up the phone. He was right behind her with his keys when she dashed out of the room. âIâm driving.â he told her as she slammed out of the house. She didnât even argue. He watched her nervously as she bit out directions. Slowly she calmed down, but he could see the embers burning dimly in her eyes, just waiting to flair up again. âI canât believe he sent Lyon after me. I canât believe Lyon went!â She was quiet a moment then sighed. âYes, I can.â âWhoâs Lyon?â Gavin finally dared to ask. âA friend. He was a friend of Jamieâs first. Well, not so much a friend, more that he owed Jamie. His name is Lionel, but everyone calls him Lyon because he looks like one. At least, thatâs what heâd told me. I had never seen him before. He called to talk to Jamie one day when I was at Jamieâs apartment and he wasnât. He ended up talking to me for several hours. We had a lot in common and he was full of interesting stories. We talked about acting, musicals, all kinds of things. We ended up talking pretty regularly after that. Thatâs why I had his number. I like him a lot, I think you would too. I canât believe Jamie sent Lyon to spy on me! Lyonâs like, his bodyguard, for heavenâs sake!â She fell silent as she thought of Jamie and her anger boiled. âTurn here.â she said abruptly. Gavin turned into a driveway of a house. âGuess this is the house Daddy bought him.â Enya said scornfully as she threw her door opened and jumped out. âEnya, wait a minute now, what are you-â She slammed the door. He jumped out of the car and ran up the walkway after her. She was impatiently ringing the doorbell for the second time. She pushed it again and held down. âCome on, youâre not out. I know youâre home.â She pushed it again. Finally Jamie threw the door open. âWhat the-â âYou sent Lyon after me?â Enya cut him off. âWell, I-I meanâŚâ âUnbelievable! I didnât think even you would stoop so low as to spy on me! Weâre over Jamie, you get that, right? And youâve already had your petty little revenge so back off!â âIâm not an enemy you want to make, Enya.â He warned her. âNeither am I!â She shouted. At that moment Lyon walked in. What he saw was Enya looking ready to take a swing at Jamie, and the man with her, who he recognized as the jealous one from the diner, looking ready to take it a step further and murder Jamie. âWhat are you doing back here?â Jamie spat out at him. Lyon watched the dark man take a deep breath, then say, âEnya, go outside and talk to Lyon.â She opened her mouth to argue. âYour friendship with Lionelâs more important then hurling words at Jamie.â She had been planning to do more than hurl words at him. But she wanted to clear things up with Lyon. She sent a murderous look to Jamie. âStay out of my life.â And she stormed out the door, Lyon following. Five minutes later heâd explained things better to Enya and patched things up. âWhy donât you wait in the car for Gavin?â He told her. Sheâd mentioned Gavin, and given a sketchy outline of their landlord/tenant/co-workerâs situation. But Lyon had seen through that to what Gavin was really doing. When he walked back into the house Gavin was waiting by the front door. âWhereâs Jamie?â âGetting ice.â âFor what?â Lyon asked. âEither the black eye or the swollen lip.â Gavin said. Lyon grinned. âYouâve been busy.â âAny chance I could convince you not to tell Enya about this?â Lyon grinned. âNot a chance, but I think Iâll wait till youâre married.â Gavin was unperturbed. âEnya thinks highly of you.â Gavin said. On impulse he added, âWill you be my best man?â Lyon was slightly touched. Enya meant a lot to him, and heâd instantly liked Gavin a lot. The feeling was mutual, obviously. âIâd be honored.â he said softly. âGreat, now all I have to do is convince Enya.â Gavin said dryly. âHowâs that going?â Lionel asked sympathetically. Gavin shrugged noncommittally. âIâm working on it. Feels like itâs going slow, but thereâs nothing I can do about it. I might lose her if I go to fast.â He looked at Lyon. "Think I have a chance?â Lyon was glad that heâd asked his opinion, and he considered him for a moment before he smiled slightly and said with absolute confidence. âYouâll win. Thereâs no point in me even trying.â âYou so much as touch her and youâre dead.â Gavin said in a friendly voice. Lionel shrugged. âSheâs not your wife.â he pointed out. âIn fact, sheâs not even your girlfriend.â âYet.â Gavin said. Lyon chuckled as they walked out the door. ------------------------------------Scene Fourteen-------------------------------- The next morning Enya was glad it was Saturday and she didnât have to work. She slept in, trying to block out the party and then everything that had happened last night between her and Gavin and Jamie and Lyon. âToo much drama!â she groaned aloud into her pillow. Sighing she got up and changed into a pair of jeans and a tee. She trudged downstairs to get coffee. She mumbled a incoherent hello to Gavin, who was sitting at the bar and poured herself a cup of coffee. âNeed. Coffee. Me.â She said. âWhy donât you get coffee from your apartment?â Gavin asked her. âThe coffee makerâs broken. Youâre my landlord, youâre supposed to buy me a new one.â âNo Iâm not.â Enya groaned. âPlease, no arguments âtil Iâve had at least one cup of coffee.â She took a huge gulp and sighed. âCoffeeâs not good for you.â Gavin told her, even as he drank some of his own. Enya raised a brow, a gesture he often made, and looked pointedly at his mug. âDo as I say, not as I do.â He said with a shrug. She smiled and shook her head. She plunked down into the chair beside him. âLong past two days.â She said with a sigh. Gavin nodded. Enya opened her mouth to say something more just as the doorbell rang. âWho on earth comes by this early?â She groaned. âEnya, itâs ten-thirty.â Gavin said, as they both got up. She followed him to the door. When he pulled it open she looked around him. A tall man of about sixty stood at the door in a suit. âIâm looking for Enya Covington.â he said. Enya stepped forward carefully. âThat would be me.â The man looked relieved. âOh, thank goodness! You are incredibly hard to track down.â Enya narrowed her eyes warily. âMy name is Ronald Morris. I was a lawyer for Gloria Derren, your grandmotherâŚâ His voice trailed on but Enya didnât hear a word after the name. Her name. She bolted. She didnât think, didnât reason, just pushed past the man and ran, as hard and fast as she could. She couldnât think straight and what thoughts she did have tumbled through her mind in a scattered way. All she knew was she had to get out of there, right that moment. She ran into the park across the street. Gavin watched her run, then turned to the man. âIâll give the letter to her.â Mr. Morris frowned. âI had very specific instructions to make sure I gave it to Miss Covington. Mrs. Derren herself made sure I knew to do that.â âI will make sure she gets it. Iâm going after her now.â Gavin assured him. âWell, all right. Make sure she knows to contact my office, hereâs my card, and then we can work out the legal matters.â âI will.â Gavin assured him. As soon as Mr. Morris left Gavin jogged across the street and started searching. He found her sitting in a more secluded area of the park, her head between her knees. He sat down beside her. She pulled her head up and sat back. Gavin silently handed her the letter. Enya stared at it a long time before she finally reached out and took it with shaking hands. She ripped it open and pulled it out. With a deep breath she began to read. Dear Enya, If youâve gotten this then I am no longer alive. I am going to be completely honest in this letter. I am just as stubborn as you and, again just like you, I am full of pride. Too full of it to find you while Iâm alive and tell you this. I was wrong. I am not going to lie and say I tried to find you while I was here, I didnât. I donât want you to have any false ideas about me. I am too full of pride and too stubborn to step forward and forgive you. And you too, are too stubborn to step forward and forgive me. Yes, I admit it now, I did something that would warrant me being forgiven. Iâve already said Iâm wrong once, and I donât fancy saying it again, so youâll have to make do with just once. I will admit, I never did things right with you. Your parents death affected me more than you ever knew. You looked so much like your mother, every time I saw you it broke my heart. Later, when you grew up to be a teenager, you were so much like me we didnât get along. You were always so full of spirit. But you were also all I had left. The idea of you going off and doing something like acting terrified me. I wanted to hold you back from the world. To keep you right there with me. I only agreed to send you to Briardale because I thought I could convince you to leave before you would graduate and we could hustle you into a nice private school. I was wrong. There, I said it again. I am so sorry Enya, and I was wrong. I wish I had the strength to thrust away all else and contact you now, but I donât. We all have our weaknesses and pride is mine. So be it. But I wonât die without making sure there are things you will know after Iâm gone. I made arrangements for Ronald, my lawyer, to sell the house and all my assets after my death. I also told him to deliver this letter to you after you turned twenty-six, and you will inherit everything after that time. The money, all of it. Until then it will be safe with Ronald. The doctors do not think I will make it another month, which is when you turn twenty-four. This is my goodbye, and my way of clearing my conscience. I am sorry I couldnât contact you while I was alive. Use the money, use it to act, use it for anything you want. Anything within reason, that is. Donât get caught up with that crowd you grew up with. Theyâre stuffy and greedy, I donât want you around people like that. You were right about Tommy, Iâm sorry about that too. And remember, Enya, darling, I love you. I always have, no matter what. And I always will. Grandmother Enya pressed both fists to her mouth and fought it, fought it hard. The tears won out. She pressed her hands to her face and sobbed. Without a word Gavin pulled her to face him, and put his arms around her. Enya turned and buried her face in his chest, sobbing. Gavin closed his eyes, wishing he could do something more to help her. Quicker than Gavin would have guessed Enya stopped and pulled herself together. âLook at me, Iâm a mess. I hear just my grandmotherâs name and I freak out on you, run away, leaving you to get the letter then go and break down on you when you find me. Iâm sorry.â Gavin shook his head. âHush, itâs okay.â Enya took a deep breath, then handed him the letter. Gavin looked up at her, surprised. She cast her eyes down and nodded. He read the letter, then gave it back to her. Enya took a deep breath. âI lived with my grandmother from the time I was twelve. She was my motherâs mother, my fatherâs parents died before I was born. My parents died, thatâs why I was living with her. We were so alike, we got along horribly. I wanted to act, even then. She was appalled by the idea. I went to Briardale, against her wishes. I didnât like the high society crowd. That would include Mr. Meroe. I did like Henry Rondell. I was better friends with the servants though. The maids and butlers and chauffeurs. People like Porter. And then there was Tommy. I met him when I was fifteen. Everyone thought he was wonderful but I saw him for what he was.â Enya sighed and looked at the letter. âMy grandmother believed in planning my life out for me. She wanted to make plans for me to marry Tommy when I turned 19. Ha! They still do stuff like that in those crowds. You would know, I guess. Anyways, Tommy was after money, that was all. He stole from my grandmother and I caught him, but my grandmother wouldnât believe me. All the arguments came to a head one day. I was sixteen and I refused to quit Briardale. I told my grandmother there was nothing she could do to make me quit pursuing acting. She told me to pack.â Enya looked off in the distance, silent for a moment. âI think she truly thought that would break me, I donât know if she really meant for me to leave. But I went upstairs, packed my most useful clothes, and left. I didnât have a car, or a job, or anything. The clothes werenât even mine, but I took them. I took the bus to my best friend Paigeâs house and her parents let me stay. I got a job after school and bought a car. I finally settled down into doing bookwork for Paigeâs father and was able to manage a bit of a social life, school, and the bookwork. As soon as I got out of high school I got a big acting part. I did a few more after that, and then when I turned twenty-four I got word that my grandmother had died. She had moved away years before. I didnât go to the funeral and I never heard anything about an inheritance. I assumed the money was gone or else sheâd left it to someone else.â Enya took a deep breath. âWhen I was twenty-five I met Jamie, and you know most of the rest.â Gavin was silent for a moment, watching her stare off into the distance. âThereâs no way Iâm buying you a coffee maker.â he joked, âYou can buy your own now.â He was rewarded with a laugh from Enya. âI guess youâre right. I wonder how much money she left me. Itâd be so nice to be able to quit my job at your company. This is a huge city and there are lots of acting opportunities if you just have the time to become well known.â Enya thought back over what she had said. âOh! Iâm sorry, that sounded horrible. I didnât mean anything against your company or the way you run it or anything like that. Iâm just not interested in that kind of work, you know?â Gavin laughed. âThatâs fine.â Enya nodded. âIâll work a little while longer though, until I find out how much she left and what the stipulations are and everything.â âAlright.â Gavin said, âLetâs go back home. Then you are going to shower and put something nice on and I am going to take you to lunch.â âBut-â She started to protest. âNo.â he interrupted, holding up a hand. âThatâs final, now come on.â He hauled her up off the bench and walked her back to the house. âI was serious about that coffee maker, you know. Do you know how much money you cost me in coffee?â Enya just laughed and shook her head. -----------------------------------Scene Fifteen---------------------------------- Two days later it was the end of the month and Enya picked a time in the morning when Gavin wasnât there to leave her check. She put more money in the envelope than the cost of her rent was. Because she wanted to pay him back for everything, and because she knew her rent was less then it should be. She had already seen her grandmotherâs lawyer and worked out the details of her inheritance with surprising speed. Everything had been sold, and all Enya had to do was collect the money. The high six figure number had had her eyes bugging out when she first saw it. She had it transferred straight to her own account. Today was also her first day of not working for Gavinâs company. Sheâd quit the day before when heâd found a replacement. She was enjoying her first day off, but she decided that she would go out and talk to some directors she knew the next day, to find out if they had any productions coming up that they were planning on doing. That decided she left the house to spend a day shopping and in the park. Gavin walked up to his front door that evening after a long day at work trying to train a secretary to replace Enya. The new secretary seemed incompetent to him but he wanted to give her a chance. He hoped that once he was done training her he could move on to inspect another of his companyâs offices. This time, he decided, he wouldnât go as a secretary, heâd go as the companyâs owner. In a few weeks he would finally own all of Givin Enterprises. He already ran it, but his fatherâs will had been very specific that Gavin would not be sole owner until halfway through his 27th year. If his father could have seen what Gavin had done with the company in the years since his death he would have been amazed. His thoughts were interrupted when he reached for the door knob and the door opened before he could turn it. âHi!â Enya said, standing in the doorway. âHi.â Gavin replied. She pulled him inside and took off his coat, then hung it in the closet for him. âHow was your day?â she asked with a bright smile. Gavin watched her suspiciously. âFrustrating.â he said with a sigh. âI was trying to train the new secretary and itâs frustrating. Especially when I want to get out of that office and move on.â âOh.â Enya looked worried for a moment, then flashed him a huge smile, as she led him into the living room. âWell, then it should be better now that youâre off work. Youâll own the company soon, right? I think youâll do a really great job running it-you basically do already.â Gavin stared at her. âIf youâre trying to be overly nice because of our bet you donât have to worry about it because Iâm too tired to be interested in you right now anyways.â Enya blinked in surprise, then chuckled. âGee, thanks.â she said dryly. âBut that wasnât what I was worried about. Why donât you sit down, you look horribly tired.â âGee thanks.â he echoed her earlier sarcastic comment. Gavin heard a dog bark that sounded close. Close enough to have come from his own backyard. âWhat was that?â âI didnât hear anything.â Enya said slowly, careful to sound uninterested. She cocked her head to the side, pretending to listen while she prayed there wouldnât be anymore noise. There were a few seconds of silence. âYou must have imagined it.â she said with a seemingly careless shrug, even as her mind raced ahead. âYouâve had a long day.â She pulled him out of the seat sheâd sat him down in only moments before. âLetâs go out. Iâll buy you dinner.â She offered, pulling him to the front door. Gavin heard another bark, and this time he was positive it came from his own backyard. âWhat was that?â he asked again, already heading for the back door. âGavin, wait now! I think I should talk to you for a second.â Ignoring her Gavin walked to the back of his house and out the back door. He stopped and stared at an excited golden retriever puppy. He had oversized paws and huge brown eyes. Enya pushed past him and scooped the puppy up. âHey, sweetie. You were supposed to be quiet for a while.â She crooned. The puppy licked her face and she laughed. Gavin crossed his arms and leaned back against his house. âEnya, you remember when you insisted that we draw up a contract before you started to rent from me?â âMmm-hmmâ She nodded, distracted by the puppy. âAnd I finally decided it was a good idea?â he continued. âOf course.â âDo you also remember the part of the contract that specified no pets?â He asked. âI remember no such thing!â she argued. âProbably because you didnât even read the contract.â he murmured distractedly. He was charmed in spite of himself by the sight of her laughing with the puppy in her arms. âProbably.â she agreed with a grin. âGavin, I am incredibly stubborn and obstinate. I also have a very selective memory and if you tell me to get rid of this poor, helpless, homeless, little puppy I will probably forget.â Gavin laughed and shook his head. âWhatâs his name?â he asked her. âI figured Iâd wait and let you name him.â She said with a sly smile. Gavin groaned. He stared at her, then at the puppy. Enya bit her lip, waiting for an answer. âWell?â she finally asked, impatiently. âAbbot.â He said. âWhat?â âHis name is Abbot.â Gavin repeated slowly. Enya grinned, and hugged the puppy. âYou hear that Abbot? You have a name, yes you do!â She bent down to set the puppy down, then scratched him behind his ears, talking excitedly to him the whole time. Gavin walked over and pulled her up off the ground. He kissed her, long and sweet and slow. âHey, Iâve been very nice.â Enya said with a smile. âThat had absolutely nothing to do with our bet.â he told her with a smile. âThat was just because I wanted to.â He threw an arm around her shoulders. âI seem to remember you offering to buy me dinner.â he said. âThat was before you let me keep the puppy.â âAh, you were trying to bribe me.â âOh yes,â she grinned. âBut we can go to dinner anyways.â She added. Gavin shook his head and laughed. âYouâre still paying.â âFine, just give me money for your meal before we go.â She said, still laughing as they walked out the door. -------------------------------------Scene Sixteen-------------------------------- The next night Enya was awake reading, curled up in one of the large chairs in her living room. She kept thinking she heard muted voices on the first floor. She checked the clock, it was midnight. Assuming she was imagining it she turned back to her book. Suddenly she heard someoneâs voice yelling, followed by a bark from Abbot. She started in her chair, she knew she had heard it that time. It was loud enough to carry up two flights of stairs. Quietly Enya set her book down and walked out of her apartment to the top of the stairs. She heard an unfamiliar voice talking, but not yelling. She crept down to the second floor, then slowly walked across the hall to the top of the last flight of stairs. She peeked down and saw Gavin standing by the front door with another man she didnât recognize. The man was speaking furiously to Gavin, who replied in a calm enough voice but sounded irritated himself. Enya could just tell the man was dangerous. There was almost an aura about him that screamed danger. She shivered slightly at the manâs strong presence even as she tried to convince herself it was just because she was cold. Which was a lie considering Gavin always kept his house extremely warm. Something Gavin said next made the man furious and he started yelling again. Enya couldnât make it all out but she caught snatches of conversation. âmoneyâŚyou wouldnât dareâŚthink you canâŚhave no idea what I can do.â Enya had no doubt he was threatening Gavin is some way. Gavin said something back at a half-shout and the man bristled more. Her mind formed a quick plan. She started to go down the stairs then stopped short when she remembered what she was wearing. It was a cotton sleep outfit she loved, but wasnât about to walk downstairs in. It consisted of a pair of tiny shorts and a camisole. The hem of the cami just barely met the top of the shorts and every time she moved it rode up, showing her midriff. It was pale blue with dark blue lace trimming the shorts and cami. She quickly glanced behind her and spotted a white dress shirt of Gavinâs hanging on the door knob of his laundry room. A better plan formed in her mind and Enya slipped the shirt on, buttoning it. It fell to about halfway down her thigh. She took her hair out of itâs neat, smoothed down ponytail and shook it out. Finally she took a deep breath and started down the stairs. It had all taken a matter of seconds but the man had finished yelling and looked like he was about to take a swing at Gavin. âGavin.â Enya called in a soft, gentle voice as she came down the last few stairs. âAre you coming to bed yet?â The man looked surprised and Gavin jerked around to stair at her. Enya forced her gaze past him to the man by the door and acted as if she hadnât known he was there. She tried to quickly set her thinking as if she were young and bubbly, very talkative, sweet, and slightly dumb. Her mind immediately registered the stereotype of a blond cheerleader. âOh! Hello. I donât believe I know you. You must be one of Gavieâs many friends, I swear Iâll never get to meet them all! Did you just get in from being gone or something? A vacation maybe? Oh! I bet you just couldnât wait to see Gavin. I know I wouldnât be able to.â After this rapid-fire delivery she turned adoring eyes on Gavin, her ever present smile brightening purposely the moment her eyes hit his. He stared at her with a kind of stunned disbelief. âAnd who are you?â As fast as heâd gotten angry the man had cooled off and now looked at her with a bemused smile. âOh, Iâm Gavieâs wife, of course!â She lied beautifully, never blinking an eye. âHis wife?â the man asked, with a mixture of confusion and amusement. âOh, yes. Didnât he tell you? Iâm sure he did. Gavin would never forget something like that.â Gavin turned to the man. âWeâll finish our discussion later.â he said, finally able to speak again. âOh!â Enya chimed in. âWe simply must have you and your wife over for dinner sometime soon. What kinds of food does she like?â âIâm not married.â âOh, then we must introduce you to my sister. Sheâs single and Iâm sure youâd just adore her! Weâll have to have you both here sometime.â she pushed, playing her part to the full. âIt was simply wonderful meeting you!â She finished. âYes, you too.â The man said slowly. âIâll talk to you later,âŚGavie.â he added with a smirk. As soon as the door shut Gavin turned to Enya. âWife?â he taunted with a grin. âGavie.â She shot back. He cringed visibly. Enya sighed, tired suddenly. âIâm going to bed. But tomorrow you and I are going to have a long talk. An honest talk about who that man was, what he wanted, and what the real reason is that youâre working as a secretary when you own the company.â Gavin didnât bother to argue, he had something else in mind. âFine. But I want my shirt back.â âYou can have it back tomorrow.â she said. âI want it back now.â he said. He was blocking her way up the stairs. He took the lapelâs of the shirt in his hands and pulled her closer. She slapped his hands away and unbuttoned the shirt, glaring at him. She pulled it off and threw it in his face. He stared at her. His face was slightly pale. Enya gave the tiniest of smiles suddenly. âSomehow I think I ended up winning that round.â she said softly. She pushed to go around him. Gavin gathered her to him in one swoop. All thoughts were driven out of her mind as he drove his tongue into her mouth. There was only now and him. He kissed her senseless then let her go abruptly. She stumbled backward. âNot quite.â He told her then turned and walked up the stairs. She was still standing there when she heard his door shut, her trembling fingers pressed to her lips. -------------------------------------Scene Seventeen----------------------------- The next morning Gavin woke to the smells of bacon and eggs. Following his nose blindly he made his way to the kitchen before his eyes had even truly cleared of sleep. âPlease, dear God, tell me thatâs bacon and eggs I smell.â Enya smiled slightly. Gavin looked around. There was bacon, still sizzling, on a plate and Enya stood at his glass stovetop scrambling eggs. I could get used to this he thought. âCoffeeâs made.â she told him. He poured himself a glass and made to snag a piece of bacon. Enya slapped his hand away. âThereâs a price.â she told him. He groaned. âCome on!â She shook her head. âNo negotiations.â she told him. He sighed. âYou tell me everything in exchange for breakfast.â she demanded. âThatâs negotiating, honey.â Gavin said, using the endearment with careless ease. Enya tried to ignore it. âWhatever. Deal?â Gavin nodded. She picked up a piece of bacon and handed it to him. He took a bite. âMmmâŚâ he closed his eyes. Enya shook her head at him. âInsane.â she muttered as she turned back to the eggs. Gavin watched as she turned off the burner, then opened his cabinet to pull out two plates. He smiled at the way she moved around his kitchen, knowing exactly where things were without having to ask. Did she even realize how at home she acted here? he wondered. She set the plates and silverwear at the bar, then sat down with a cup of coffee. Enya looked up to find Gavin staring at her. âAre you gonna sit down? A moment ago you were acting like you were starving.â âHmm? Oh, yeah.â Gavin piled eggs and bacon on his plate then sat down with his coffee. They ate in silence for a moment. Enya heard Abbot whining from outside. She got up and walked to the back of the house, letting him in. He raced beside her into the kitchen, where he planted himself down in front of Gavin and watched him eat. Enya sat down and Gavin raised a brow at her. âOh relax,â she said. âIâll put him back out after weâre done eating.â She broke a small piece of bacon off and fed it to Abbot. She barely heard Gavin mutter something about âspoiling the stupid dog.â Enya laughed out loud and went back to her food. âYou know you love him.â she said with a grin. She bent down and put her nose to Abbotâs. She turned her face and Abbotâs to Gavin and grinned. âNow look, how can you resist a face like that?â Gavin knew she was referring to Abbot. But it wasnât the dogâs face he was thinking was beautiful as he smiled softly and said, âI canât.â Enya shifted, uncomfortable suddenly because she had the feeling she and Gavin werenât on the same page. âSo talk.â she said straightening and going back to her food. Gavin took a breath. âSomeoneâs been stealing from my company. The man you met last night was a private detective whoâs been on the case for a while. He wanted more money to continue his investigation and a price had already been settled on. Normally I wouldnât have a problem with giving him more but I donât believe heâs still investigating. I think heâs cooling his heels and telling us he canât find anything.â He paused for a moment and Enya leaped in. âYou mean stealingâŚlike how?â she asked. âTheyâve set up phony companies. We invest in them and it turns out theyâre not real. We sponsor so many companies a year, some come out on top, some fizzle out. Over the past year there have been a handful of companies that Iâve found that we invested in that arenât going anywhere. On closer inspection it turns out they were never real companies. But I canât find the source. Thatâs why Iâve been working in this building. Mr. Phillips has been with this company since my father started it, heâs been trying to help me find out who it is thatâs doing this.â Enya let it settle in her mind, then thought on it more. âYou said this has been going on for the past year, right?â she asked. Gavin nodded. âAnd whoeverâs been doing this must have a lot of power in the company, right? I mean, wouldnât more than one person have to be in on this?â âNot necessarily, no. It could just be one person, theyâd just have to be able to cover their tracks well. Whoeverâs behind this has put a lot of time into this. They doctored the companies up well, came up with names for them and everything. Then they let funds slip into them but never showed any progress reports or anything after that. Iâd say whoeverâs behind this has a bank account in another country with all this money just waiting for when they can get away.â Something pricked at the back of Enyaâs mind and she tried to remember what it was. She had a feeling it was something important. âWait a minute. You said Phillips was helping you look, right?â âYes, heâs known about the investigation since the beginning. He helped my father start this company. Heâs been putting in a lot of extra time to help me investigate. Heâs actually up for retirement within the next year.â âDid you investigate him?â she asked. Gavin laughed. âEnya, he may not be my favorite person but I trust him. He wouldnât do something like this. Anyways, donât worry about it, Iâm sure Iâll work it out soon.â Gavin got up and put the plates in the sink. Enya idly stroked Abbotâs fur, thinking. Something wasnât right. There was something right on the tip of her memory that she couldnât quite pull out. âAre you going in to work today?â Enya asked Gavin. He looked up. âIn just an hour or so, yeah. Why?â âHmm? Oh, nothing. Um,âŚIâm going to go work on some stuff. Iâll see you later.â She got up and walked up the two flights of stairs to her apartment. She rummaged through her purse and finally found her cell phone. She chewed her bottom lip as it rang. âHello.â âHey, Lyon. This is Enya.â âOh, hey Enya. How are you?â âIâm fine. Listen, you busy?â Lyonâs voice turned wary. âThat depends. Why?â âI got a quick job for you.â âOh boy. I guessâŚI guess I might have some time.â Enya grinned. âThanks, Lyon, I owe you. Look, letâs have lunch today and Iâll fill you in on what I want you to check out for me. Or who rather.â âOkay. Lunch is on you though. I heard youâre rich now.â Enya laughed as she hung up. She started downstairs, then paused. On second thought she went back into her apartment, deciding to keep her plans secret from Gavin. Sheâd let him know if she found out what she was looking for. ----------------------------------Scene Eighteen---------------------------------- Three days later Gavin sat in his office. It was the one heâd used before heâd decided to play secretary and see if he could find anything out for himself. It was decorated much like his office at home. Camel colored walls. Thick aged brown leather furnature. His desk was an antique heâd picked up himself at an auction. It was comfortable and made him feel like he could have been at home working. His phone rang and his next appointment canceled. He was considering going out for lunch now that he had a free hour when his door opened. He looked up to see Enya slipping inside. âEnya. What are you doing here?â âWell, hello to you too.â She glanced around his office. âLooks just like your office at home, but without all the books.â âDid my secretary let you in?â Gavin asked. âHmm? Oh, yeah, I convinced her I was your next appointment, you might want to clear that up.â âWell, my next appointment just canceled so your in luck. Why are you here? Iâm really sort of busy right now and-â âShut-up.â She interrupted. She slapped two manila envelopes onto Gavinâs desk. He frowned. âWhatâs this?â He asked. She pulled up and chair in front of his desk, sat down and opened the first envelope. âFirst off, your private investigator hasnât been working on your case for the past month. He closed his office a month ago and has been continuing to collect money from you and a handful of others since then.â Gavin shifted through the papers, surprised at what he saw. Enya opened the next envelope and handed him the papers. âMr. Phillips.â She said. âWhat about him?â Gavin asked, frowning. âSix hundred thousand dollars.â âEnya what are you talking about?â Gavin asked. âSomething wasnât sitting right with me. I finally remembered the other day why I donât like Mr. Phillips. When I was first working as his secretary, before I knew you owned the company, a file on one of the companies disappeared. I told Phillips and he didnât want me to tell you. Did a bunch of beating around the bush about how it would look bad for me since I was the last one to handle the file. I had put it out of my mind. But then yesterday I remembered and I remembered the name of the company. On a hunch I had Lyon look into it, along with Mr. Phillips. It seems he made some bad investments about five years back. Heâs flat broke for four years, then all the sudden he buys a new car for his kid. Heâs got a bank account in Switzerland-why is it always Switzerland?-and itâs got your money in it. Any evidence youâd need is in that folder.â She sat back in her chair. Gavin stared at her. âHow?â âIt was all Lyon. This is the kind of stuff he does. If he canât find it, itâs not there to be found. It was just a lucky coincidence that I happened to notice that file was missing.â Gavin stared at the papers in front of him and let it settle in his mind. Mr. Phillips. Under the dull shock he was aware of a fury pulsing and just waiting to surface. He wasnât one to give his trust easily and all he could think was that Mr. Phillips had been with the company forever. Had supported Gavin when he made decisions. Had stole from him. Enya watched Gavin work to get his anger under control and took a deep breath. âIâm sorry. I know this has got to be hard.â âAnd what gives you the right to go and do this?â Gavin voice was quiet laced with steel. Enya frowned. âWhat? I thought youâd want to know, I mean-â âThis wasnât any of your business.â Enyaâs quick temper flared. âWell, excuse me, but I think it kind of became my business when your angry P.I., who was cheating you, by the by, disturbed my sleep!â âThat wasnât the point and it still wasnât your business!â âGavin! You told me that someone was stealing from your company!â âYou wouldnât let me eat!â âOh my God! I canât believe this! I canât believe youâre acting this way. This is ridiculous! I know Mr. Phillips has been with your company forever, but for Godâs sakes he was stealing from you and thereâs nothing you can do to change that fact! Thatâs not my fault or anyone elseâs but his own. You know what I think? I think youâre just too upset to handle the truth and you canât fess up to the fact that you trusted the wrong person!â âApparently I did, though I think Iâm thinking of someone different than you.â Enya took a step back. She felt like sheâd been slapped, and it took the wind out of her sails. She pushed her chair back and stood up, fighting to get the anger back. âThis is crazy. I thought youâd want to know. I guess I was wrong.â She threw up her hands. âWhatever. Now I know how you feel. You know, I didnât think youâd be the type of person who wouldnât be able to handle something like this.â Gavin stood up also and stood in front of her. âYou should know better than to go poking around in other peopleâs business. You donât work for this company anymore, remember?â âYou were absolutely fine with me quitting, and you understood the reasons behind it!â She shouted back, furious. âThe reasons? Oh, thatâs right, so you can go off looking for the acting job you think you can get. Ha! Because you have money now, well, money canât buy talent.â â You jerk! Iâve got the talent! And I donât have to prove that to you!â She turned then and walked out the door, letting it slam behind her. |