Pleased with his reaction, and feeling better about this job by the moment, I shift my briefcase on my shoulder and head toward the main lobby. Tall and broad, he falls into step beside me, and I am still far too aware of him. It’s a problem I will need to fix, and quickly. Which is exactly why, when we enter the lobby, I do not look at Dana. I don’t need her, or anyone else, reading my attraction to Mr. Ward before I can get a grip on it. Both he and the staff need to trust that I’m competent and professional if I am going to be his right-hand person.
I punch the elevator button. While Mr. Ward lingers behind to instruct Dana to leave his messages on his voice mail, the scent of him seems to chase me. It’s spicy and wintery, stirring the oddest memory of a candle my mom used to burn during the holidays.
A second nervous jab of the elevator button and, with Mr. Ward on my heels, we step into the car, that cursed cologne of his suffocating me with its deliciousness. I face forward. He does not, and I’m quite aware of him leaning on the wall, inspecting me with more nerve-racking intensity. I think he’s doing this intentionally, playing a game, continuing to test me.
Steeling myself for the impact that is this man, I slowly turn to face him, and find that only a few steps separate us. Against my natural instinct, which tells me that we are too close, and my feminine instinct, which says we are not close enough, I settle on standing my ground. Besides, moving away would come with the risk of showing weakness.
He doesn’t speak, and I can’t fight the need to fill the empty space. “I have a good memory, so if you want to start running through important information, I’m all ears.”
His eyes light with more of that challenge I’d seen in his office. “Why do you want this job?”
My not-so-far-gone post-college interview speech flows automatically from my lips. “To be a valuable asset to your company and build a career.”
“I value honesty, not politically correct answers you think I want to hear. Why do you want this job?”
Honesty. There’s a unique concept, which I think is more myth than reality, but I cannot deny him what I so crave in my own life. “Security,” I say. “Stability. Pride in my success that lets me pay my bills.”
He does more of that intense staring of his, and several seconds tick by in which I do not dare breathe, before he approvingly says, “That’s more like it.” Then he tosses me another abrupt change of topic. This one more sensitive than the last. “I understand you moved here from Texas for a job that was eliminated.”
“That’s right.” While I am pleased with my immediate response, I do not succeed at keeping the tightness from my voice.
“How do I know you won’t haul it back home while I’m gone?”
“I’m not going back.”
“Now or ever?”
Knots form in my stomach. “Ever.”
“You can’t be sure of that.”
“You can’t be sure,” I say precisely. “But I can and I am.”
His head tilts thoughtfully, my direct answer giving him pause. “Do you have family here?”
My reply is instant, my defenses impossible to shackle. “Is that a job requirement?”
Several beats tick by before he asks, “Are you alone?”
I’m not sure what he means by “alone,” but he’s on a roll that I don’t like. First he carved me up, and now he’s punched me in the gut. “What I am,” I say, a hint of tartness I do not intend slipping into my voice, “is here to stay. I’m also a damn good employee.” I don’t give him time to question my reply. “Where are you headed?”
I think he will push me harder, but he doesn’t. “New York.”
“When will you be back?”
“Monday.”
Relief washes over me, and his glower is instant. “Hoping for an easy first week?” he asks, his tone dry, hard.
“No.” I clearly need to work on my poker face. “That’s not the case.”
“Then what is the case, Ms. Miller?”
I hope he really does like honesty, because that’s what he’s getting. “Your absence gives me a week to organize whatever that explosion is on my new desk and to get a general footing in the office. That includes sizing up the staff to work with them most effectively, which is important since they appear quite intimidated by you.”
“The staff? You’ve only met Dana, who barely has contact with me and is so insecure that she was afraid to even fill in as my secretary.”
“Even the staffing agency seemed intimidated by you.”