*Sandra*
It had to be tonight. There was no other time, and no other way.
I looked in the mirror and straightened the dress with the too-deep plunging back and too high leg slit. The too-high heels made my ankles wobble the first half hour I’d worn them, but I’d been walking around the low-cost hotel room for hours, pacing and thinking and breaking in the shoes and my ankles.
The dress was wine red and fit my slim body well. It was tight where it needed to be and had light ruching at the neckline. The dress was spaghetti-strapped, but the neckline was just high enough to hide the scar from my port. I’d had it taken out, just in case. The pity vote might get me places, but I didn’t want to win that way. I needed to be strong for my company.
My cell phone rang, and soon I was walking out to a black town car. The driver was probably more than confused, seeing a woman in a pricey dress coming out to his town car in this neighborhood. But I needed to save money everywhere I could.
“The Ritz-Carlton, Central Park, please,” I said to the driver, further confusing the poor man.
He was professional, though, and didn’t comment other than to say, “Yes, miss.”
Miss. I looked like a sixteen-year-old girl with black hair and Elizabeth Taylor eyes. That was mostly due to my disease, which left me skinny and flat-chested. Though that could also have been genetics – my mother, who’d died of the same rare bone cancer that was killing me–had had much the same build.
In truth, twenty-three wasn’t exactly past the “miss” stage of life, but I’d been rather hoping to make it to “ma’am.”
Pushing away my melancholy thoughts, I dug in my purse for my compact to check my make-up one last time. It was as flawless as I could make it. I was no make-up artist and wasn’t going to waste the money hiring one. I hoped that hadn’t been a mistake.
“You look lovely, miss,” the driver said encouragingly from the front seat.
I smiled at him. “Was it that obvious?”
“You might as well be trembling like a leaf. Miss…?”
“Kingsley,” I provided. “But you can call me Sandra.”
“... Sandra. Whatever it is you’re out to do tonight, I’m sure you’ll accomplish it. You’re on a mission, I can tell. And I can also tell you don’t take ‘no’ for an answer. You’re going to do fine,” the driver reassured me.
“Thanks,” I replied. “Mister…?”
“Just call me Ben,” he said.
I smiled again. “I hope you’re the one picking me up again at the end of the night.”
“Sandra, you couldn’t stop me,” Ben grinned back. “And you’ll tell me all about your success.”
“I hope so,” I responded, nervousness bubbling up in my belly once more as I tapped a red-lacquered nail against my teeth.
Too soon, we were in front of the Ritz-Carlton. Ben came around the side of the vehicle to help me get out. “Knock ‘em dead,” he said to me.
I shook his hand. “I’ll see you in a few hours.”
Ben nodded and got back in his car.
I realized my mistake too late.
The old and new money rich set who were entering the Ritz-Carlton were staring at me in distaste. Clearly, one did not shake hands with the town car driver.
I sighed. Fail One.
I rolled my shoulders back and walked past the onlookers, who tsked at me under their breath and murmured about me being “trash” or “brand new money.”
In truth, Kingsley owned one of the largest manufacturing empires in Chicago. My father had been very successful, until the end. Now, Kingsley was secretly drowning in debt, and Father was gone, laid side-by-side with my mother in Rosehill Cemetery. He’d mourned her the rest of his life and hadn’t taken one girlfriend since her death. I loved that about them. A forever kind of love.
A forever kind of love. I swallowed back tears. I was never going to have that.
The main hall of the Ritz-Carlton was impeccable, beautiful, even. I wasn’t paying much attention to it, though. I had one target in mind, and this was the only place I was going to be able to find him.
At least the Kingsley name still had enough juice to get an invitation to this little soiree. Was it Save the Pandas or Save the Whales? I wasn’t sure.
American Cancer Society.
My mouth went dry, and I almost walked into a column. I really should have taken more care to ask Margie, Father’s old and aged assistant, what the event was for. I recalled her even trying to tell me. Poor dear was probably lamenting right now that she hadn’t been able to protect me from this. I’d have to get her a cheesecake before I went home.
“Need a drink, Miss...?” an obese, older gentleman with wispy gray hair asked me.
“Kingsley,” I said without thinking.
“Of the Chicago Kingsleys?” the older gentleman inferred.
I blushed. “Yes, sir. Sorry, can we keep that quiet? I was hoping to just have a lovely even-”
“I was so sorry to hear about your father. What has it been? Less than a month, I think...” the older gentleman mused, handing me a glass of champagne.
With a polite smile, I took it but didn’t drink. God only knew what it would do when combined with the myriad of meds I was taking. “Three weeks.”
“Three weeks. Was he keeping you at home, then? Smart man. If I had a daughter who looked like you, I’d be keeping her at home as well,” the gentleman chortled.
“Oh, um. Thank you…” Then I spotted him. Tall, blond, blue-eyed, Adonis of a man who graced the covers of magazines everywhere. The figurehead for his family’s corporation. Old money.
Blake Harrington.
“I’m sorry, I really need–” I began.
“I’m Hubert Drake,” Hubert introduced himself. “And do, please, tell your new CEO that I’d love to talk business with him.”
That struck a chord, and I could feel my lips turn down in a sour expression. “Sir, I am the new President and CEO of Kingsley Manufacturing.”
“Oh!” Hubert said. Then he had the audacity to laugh at me! “A pretty little thing like you? Nonsense. You get yourself a real CEO, and let the boys talk.”
I shoved my champagne glass back into Hubert’s hand. “Excuse me,” I snapped, not caring if I was being rude. “I have an appointment.”
Hubert’s brow furrowed. “At a benefit?”
“Business never sleeps,” I responded with false sweetness. Then I booked it as fast as I could in my blasted heels to the last place I’d seen Harrington.
***
*Blake*
God, this was boring. One of the most boring benefits I’d ever been to. And didn’t the American Cancer Society have enough money already? All they ever did was walks and benefits and fund drives.
Still, it was a pet cause of my mother’s, and I thought she might have blown her top if I hadn’t gone.
I took a sip of champagne and sighed, wishing for something stronger.
Maybe Mother would forgive me if I left early.
I looked over to see the grand dame of all things cancer-related in her sparkling, peacock-patterned dress and thick, matching headband, and she gave me a sharp look, as though she’d read my mind.
All right, no leaving early, then.
I walked out onto the terrace to get some air and have a smoke. Just as I was putting a cigarillo to my lips to light up, a faerie appeared on the terrace.
I stopped, pulling the cigarillo from my lips. “Miss?” I asked, wondering where the girl’s parents were.
“Mr. Harrington,” the fey creature with glowing pale skin, long blue-black hair, and piercing – dear God, were those lavender?! – eyes stormed up to me in a burgundy dress I would never have let my own daughter leave the house in. “I have come here all the way from Chicago to talk business, and I don’t have a lot of time. Your assistant keeps putting off my phone calls and talking about making an appointment in six months. Frankly, sir, I do not have six months to wait twiddling my thumbs.”
I blinked, my brain ticking over the many messages my assistant kept giving me and landing on one persistent caller. “Miss Kingsley?”
“Yes, Mr. Harrington, I am Sandra Kingsley,” Sandra said, crossing her arms and glaring at me.
I had to say, I rather liked that glare. She would be fun to wind up, I could tell. “This is rather unorthodox...”
“You couldn’t seem to fit me into your busy schedule while I was in town, so I made a few calls and decided to meet –”
“Confront,” I corrected.
“Meet you here,” Sandra said stubbornly. “I need to discuss business with you.”
I considered her for a moment. She was beautiful, and entertaining, and I rather admired her hutzpah. On the other hand, she was interrupting a very important... boring... event.
“Alright,” I replied, deciding I might as well get dinner and a show while I was here. “What is it you wish to discuss?”
“I’m sure it’s starting to get out that Kingsley is...” Sandra cast about for the right words.
“Not doing so well these days? Drowning in debt?” I suggested quietly. Not everyone knew, but as Sandra had been calling and calling me, I did have my assistant make a few inquiries.
Sandra’s shoulders hunched, and she looked around to see if anyone had heard. But it was just us out on the terrace. “Yes,” she whispered. “My father... had dementia toward the end. He made some poor business decisions. But our people, our products, and our infrastructure are still top notch. We’ve always been at the cutting edge of the industry, and we can be again, we just need...”
“A little infusion of capital?” I said.
Sandra sighed and nodded. “I didn’t come to New York with my hat in my hand, Mr. Harrington.”
“Blake, please,” I interrupted.
“B-Blake,” Sandra stuttered. Then she rallied, and though slight and small, I knew she was a force to be reckoned with. “I have a proposal that will allow you to take over Kingsley Manufacturing within six months.”
My eyebrows must have hit my hairline because she quickly continued, “I’d give it to you now, only I don’t want you to take it at a loss, and I don’t want the government taking their chunk along with the debt Kingsley already has...”
“So... there’s some time in the future you’re going to be able to give me the company when the government isn’t going to take their share, and you won’t be in debt?” I asked, incredulous.
“No.” Sandra took another deep breath. “The company will be in debt. But I’m not asking you to buy it from me. I want you to take it, provided you can keep my employees in their jobs.”
Now, I was pretty sure this little elf had lost her damn mind. Maybe dementia ran in the family? “Miss Kingsley...”
“Sandra.”
“Sandra, I don’t think there’s a way for you to give your company to me with all those terms met,” I said slowly. “I mean, the transfer of assets alone is going to cost-”
“It won’t cost anything,” Sandra replied.
“Oh? And how’s that?” I asked.
“Because you’re going to marry me,” Sandra said.
*Sandra*I’d expected many different reactions to my proposal. Anger, insult, incredulity. But I hadn’t expected laughter.Blake Harrington of Harrington Corporation let out a long, loud laugh.“You… you can’t be serious,” he gasped between bouts.I knew I wasn’t much to look at, but his reaction was insulting. “I’m dead serious,” I replied flatly, a bit proud of my private joke. I was dead. And I was serious.“Oh… oh wow. Oh, I needed this tonight. Thank you,” Blake laughed, putting a hand on my shoulder.Right over my port scar.I flinched, since it was still raw.Blake frowned and took his hand away. He searched my eyes. “You are actually serious.”“Yes. I believe a marriage of six months will be sufficient for a transfer of assets without government interference,” I said primly.“Just six months.” Blake’s lips twitched. He was trying not to laugh again.At least he hadn’t walked off and was taking me somewhat seriously now. “Yes, just six months.”“And after six months, you what,
*Sandra*“Mr. Harrington will see you now.” Ashley, the assistant who had deflected me so skillfully these last few weeks, gave me a tight smile. She wasn’t any happier to see me than I was to see her.“Thank you,” I replied with a polite smile of my own. I’d often thought of strangling this woman with her hair extensions, but she wasn’t that kind of assistant at all. Her hair was clipped short to her head in a kind of 1920s bob. She was possibly in her forties, and she had on a white blouse and black pencil skirt, much like mine.This time, I’d only been kept waiting ten minutes.I smoothed my hands over my own lilac blouse and stepped through the frosted glass doors into Blake’s office.Blake was on the phone and held up one finger to stop me from saying anything. He gestured for me to sit instead and turned around to face the window.“Yes. All the shares that are being sold. I mean it. I know it’s tanking, but it won’t be for long,” Blake was saying to whoever was on the other end
*Sandra*Mirabel was a popular luncheon destination for the New York elite, allowing its patrons to sit inside or al fresco. Since I was dying, I liked to spend as many days in the sun as I could. So I waited outside at a table under a sun umbrella for Dahlia Harrington to arrive.I was compulsively early, so I’d been there half an hour before our twelve-thirty lunch appointment. Which was probably why Dahlia looked so surprised to see me when she showed up fifteen minutes early herself.“You’re a force to be reckoned with, Sandra Kingsley,” Dahlia chuckled as she sat down beside me.“The early bird catches the worm and all that,” I replied tiredly. “As we both know, I don’t have much time. But I like you, so I’ve decided to hear you out.”Dahlia reached across the table and laid her hand over mine. “I don’t just want you to marry my son so that we can take care of your company for you,” she said, not beating around the bush. “I also want you to marry him because I think it will be go
*Blake*I choked on my wine. “Pardon?! A billion dollars?!”“You could keep your voice down. It’s rude to discuss money in public,” Sandra said, sipping her water and setting the glass back down next to her untouched wine.“I can’t believe... There’s no way–” I stuttered.“Do you need to call your mother?” Sandra asked calmly.I pressed my lips into a thin line. “You’ll find there are some things I can do without my mother.”“All evidence points to the contrary,” Sandra muttered.In my mind, I tried calling her a bitch, but she wasn’t. She was betrayed, and desperate, and… something else.It was the “something else” that kept my temper in check. “If Mother promised you a billion dollars of her own money just to marry me…”“She didn’t say where the money was coming from,” Sandra said. “Just that she would give it to the foundation.”“The Adriana Kingsley Foundation,” I assumed.“Yes,” Sandra replied.I snorted. “I don’t know what Mother’s game is, but fine. I’ll play. So, I suppose a m
*Sandra*“Open your legs a little more,” Blake whispered, nuzzling my ear as he rubbed me intimately. “I need to get my fingers in.”I swallowed and parted my thighs more for Blake. He gently pushed two fingers into my unused body and moved them as I expected he’d be moving his cock in me shortly. In and out. In and out. Still thumbing my clit.I made a sound in my throat I didn’t recognize. The fingers were a little uncomfortable, but also felt really, really good.“Shh, sweet girl. I’ve got you,” Blake said. Then he kissed me.And I came.Blake saw me through that first orgasm, kissing me languidly while working my nethers until he’d wrung out the last possible shudder.“Fuck,” Blake groaned as he pulled his wet fingers out of me.Then while I stared, dumbfounded, he put them in his mouth.“Mmm, you taste good,” Blake grinned at me.“You… you just…” I gaped.“Gave you a mindblowing orgasm? Yes I did,” Blake said smugly. “And I’m going to give you more before tonight is over.”I pant
*Sandra*“How are you doing, little flower?” Blake asked, coming up behind me and wrapping his arms around me as I leaned against the yacht rail.Tearing my eyes away from the dolphins who’d come to play by the yacht, I looked back at Blake. It still surprised me how freely he’d touch me after we had sex. Also, the pet names. Was that how sex worked? You let a man shove his dick inside you, and then suddenly, you’re in some strange land of couple-hood?But then, we were engaged, and I had the ring to prove it. “Just watching the dolphins.”Blake smiled and kissed my nose. “I suppose you haven’t spent a lot of time just watching dolphins.”“In Chicago? No, not really,” I laughed.“It’s good to hear you laugh.” Blake looked around then smoothed one hand up my sundress to caress my breast through the fabric.“Blake!” I hissed, even as delicious tingles began to spread all over my body.“Hush. No one’s watching.” He kissed my neck and pushed himself flush against me so I could feel his ha
*Sandra*“How are you doing, little flower?” Blake asked, coming up behind me and wrapping his arms around me as I leaned against the yacht rail.Tearing my eyes away from the dolphins who’d come to play by the yacht, I looked back at Blake. It still surprised me how freely he’d touch me after we had sex. Also, the pet names. Was that how sex worked? You let a man shove his dick inside you, and then suddenly, you’re in some strange land of couple-hood?But then, we were engaged, and I had the ring to prove it. “Just watching the dolphins.”Blake smiled and kissed my nose. “I suppose you haven’t spent a lot of time just watching dolphins.”“In Chicago? No, not really,” I laughed.“It’s good to hear you laugh.” Blake looked around then smoothed one hand up my sundress to caress my breast through the fabric.“Blake!” I hissed, even as delicious tingles began to spread all over my body.“Hush. No one’s watching.” He kissed my neck and pushed himself flush against me so I could feel his ha
*Sandra*“Open your legs a little more,” Blake whispered, nuzzling my ear as he rubbed me intimately. “I need to get my fingers in.”I swallowed and parted my thighs more for Blake. He gently pushed two fingers into my unused body and moved them as I expected he’d be moving his cock in me shortly. In and out. In and out. Still thumbing my clit.I made a sound in my throat I didn’t recognize. The fingers were a little uncomfortable, but also felt really, really good.“Shh, sweet girl. I’ve got you,” Blake said. Then he kissed me.And I came.Blake saw me through that first orgasm, kissing me languidly while working my nethers until he’d wrung out the last possible shudder.“Fuck,” Blake groaned as he pulled his wet fingers out of me.Then while I stared, dumbfounded, he put them in his mouth.“Mmm, you taste good,” Blake grinned at me.“You… you just…” I gaped.“Gave you a mindblowing orgasm? Yes I did,” Blake said smugly. “And I’m going to give you more before tonight is over.”I pant
*Blake*I choked on my wine. “Pardon?! A billion dollars?!”“You could keep your voice down. It’s rude to discuss money in public,” Sandra said, sipping her water and setting the glass back down next to her untouched wine.“I can’t believe... There’s no way–” I stuttered.“Do you need to call your mother?” Sandra asked calmly.I pressed my lips into a thin line. “You’ll find there are some things I can do without my mother.”“All evidence points to the contrary,” Sandra muttered.In my mind, I tried calling her a bitch, but she wasn’t. She was betrayed, and desperate, and… something else.It was the “something else” that kept my temper in check. “If Mother promised you a billion dollars of her own money just to marry me…”“She didn’t say where the money was coming from,” Sandra said. “Just that she would give it to the foundation.”“The Adriana Kingsley Foundation,” I assumed.“Yes,” Sandra replied.I snorted. “I don’t know what Mother’s game is, but fine. I’ll play. So, I suppose a m
*Sandra*Mirabel was a popular luncheon destination for the New York elite, allowing its patrons to sit inside or al fresco. Since I was dying, I liked to spend as many days in the sun as I could. So I waited outside at a table under a sun umbrella for Dahlia Harrington to arrive.I was compulsively early, so I’d been there half an hour before our twelve-thirty lunch appointment. Which was probably why Dahlia looked so surprised to see me when she showed up fifteen minutes early herself.“You’re a force to be reckoned with, Sandra Kingsley,” Dahlia chuckled as she sat down beside me.“The early bird catches the worm and all that,” I replied tiredly. “As we both know, I don’t have much time. But I like you, so I’ve decided to hear you out.”Dahlia reached across the table and laid her hand over mine. “I don’t just want you to marry my son so that we can take care of your company for you,” she said, not beating around the bush. “I also want you to marry him because I think it will be go
*Sandra*“Mr. Harrington will see you now.” Ashley, the assistant who had deflected me so skillfully these last few weeks, gave me a tight smile. She wasn’t any happier to see me than I was to see her.“Thank you,” I replied with a polite smile of my own. I’d often thought of strangling this woman with her hair extensions, but she wasn’t that kind of assistant at all. Her hair was clipped short to her head in a kind of 1920s bob. She was possibly in her forties, and she had on a white blouse and black pencil skirt, much like mine.This time, I’d only been kept waiting ten minutes.I smoothed my hands over my own lilac blouse and stepped through the frosted glass doors into Blake’s office.Blake was on the phone and held up one finger to stop me from saying anything. He gestured for me to sit instead and turned around to face the window.“Yes. All the shares that are being sold. I mean it. I know it’s tanking, but it won’t be for long,” Blake was saying to whoever was on the other end
*Sandra*I’d expected many different reactions to my proposal. Anger, insult, incredulity. But I hadn’t expected laughter.Blake Harrington of Harrington Corporation let out a long, loud laugh.“You… you can’t be serious,” he gasped between bouts.I knew I wasn’t much to look at, but his reaction was insulting. “I’m dead serious,” I replied flatly, a bit proud of my private joke. I was dead. And I was serious.“Oh… oh wow. Oh, I needed this tonight. Thank you,” Blake laughed, putting a hand on my shoulder.Right over my port scar.I flinched, since it was still raw.Blake frowned and took his hand away. He searched my eyes. “You are actually serious.”“Yes. I believe a marriage of six months will be sufficient for a transfer of assets without government interference,” I said primly.“Just six months.” Blake’s lips twitched. He was trying not to laugh again.At least he hadn’t walked off and was taking me somewhat seriously now. “Yes, just six months.”“And after six months, you what,
*Sandra*It had to be tonight. There was no other time, and no other way.I looked in the mirror and straightened the dress with the too-deep plunging back and too high leg slit. The too-high heels made my ankles wobble the first half hour I’d worn them, but I’d been walking around the low-cost hotel room for hours, pacing and thinking and breaking in the shoes and my ankles.The dress was wine red and fit my slim body well. It was tight where it needed to be and had light ruching at the neckline. The dress was spaghetti-strapped, but the neckline was just high enough to hide the scar from my port. I’d had it taken out, just in case. The pity vote might get me places, but I didn’t want to win that way. I needed to be strong for my company.My cell phone rang, and soon I was walking out to a black town car. The driver was probably more than confused, seeing a woman in a pricey dress coming out to his town car in this neighborhood. But I needed to save money everywhere I could.“The Rit