See You in Hell (Mel Goes to Hell Series Book 2) (23 page)

Persi pressed some buttons, which made noise but did nothing else. "I don't know!" she squeaked. Mel's heart sank.

"Then I'll just borrow your phone," Luce purred. His voice swelled in volume as he approached Persi's desk. "You don't mind if I lean over your desk, do you?" His tone didn't change after crackling noises told Mel the phone had changed hands. "Hello, Mel."

Mel shook her head, already worrying about the younger girl. Luce was laying it on a bit thick for poor Persi, especially with her so young and inexperienced. Bikies were fluffy bunnies compared to demons. "Hi. Lili's told me you need me for tonight's meeting. It starts at four in the boardroom, right?"

Luce laughed throatily. "That's right. Did she tell you that I'd require your services afterwards, finalising the minutes from the meeting and the like?"

Mel smiled in response, even though she knew he couldn't see her. "Of course. See you at four." She carefully placed the receiver back in the cradle.

Four came around. Mel claimed the keyboard in the boardroom and time ticked away as she took the minutes for a thoroughly boring executive meeting. She kept her eyes on the screen and didn't look up, except to identify the presenter of a particular point.

"And for the very last time for a while, meeting adjourned!" she heard Luce say with some satisfaction, followed by a chorus of chairs pushing away from the table in unison. Heels and polished shoes tramped out the door to her cymbal-sigh of relief.

A pants-clad leg appeared on the table beside Mel. She sighed again and looked up as Luce beamed down at her.

"I had the girl order us dinner," he said with a wink. "I'll call the restaurant and tell them to deliver it."

Mel nodded wordlessly and returned her eyes to the screen. After one last check, she'd be done writing up the minutes, and free for the evening. She figured she might as well stay for dinner. At least until he'd reviewed the minutes so she could complete them.

She hit save as the leg returned. "Dinner's ready, dear," Luce said with a chuckle.

Mel glanced up. "I'm Mel, not Mephi or your wife. Can you check this over while I go find some cutlery?" She stood and walked out of the boardroom to the adjacent kitchen. She took her time selecting the cheapest plastic cutlery and giving it a wash first before returning to the boardroom.

Luce reclined in her still-warm seat, his eyes following her appreciatively as she entered the room. "It looks perfect to me."

"Good," Mel replied with a perfunctory smile. She held up the white plastic knives and forks. "Where's the food?"

Luce rose. "In my office, of course." He led the way out.

Mel noticed he'd removed his jacket, so she had a clear view of his well-cut shirt and pants as she followed him. She wondered if she could get pants that showed off her behind so well. Shrugging, she dismissed the idea. Hell, she probably couldn't afford them, anyway.

"Your dinner," Luce said with a smile, gesturing at the meeting table in his office.

Room service, Mel thought. Of course.

The normally naked meeting table now wore a white tablecloth and dinner service for two, and Mel recognised the plates from the Christmas party at the Hilton. Her mouth watered at the sight of the chocolate raspberry mousse. She clutched at the plastic cutlery as she took in its stainless steel cousins on the white cloth.

"You won't be needing those." Luce nodded at her clenched fist of forks and friends. Mel released them onto the table, where they blended in with the cloth. He pulled back a chair for her and gestured for her to sit, before rounding the table to seat himself across from her.

Luce offered a bottle, tilting it over Mel's glass. "Wine?"

Mel's curiosity was piqued. "What kind?"

Luce shrugged. "Some white the hotel thinks goes well with the entrée."

So much for the suave, wine connoisseur of a CEO. Mel laughed outright as she tilted her head to read the label. She recognised it as one she liked but couldn't often afford, from the winery with the beautiful gardens down in Margaret River. "Yes."

The entrée was oysters. Mel didn't touch them.

Luce slurped through his before he noticed hers were untouched. "What's wrong with your oysters?" he asked through a mouthful.

Mel's stare was as cold as the bed of ice beneath their shells. "They're still alive."

"Not for long!" Luce grinned as he swallowed the last of his. He waited, but her expression didn't defrost. "Aren't you going to eat them?"

Mel lifted her wine glass and sipped, savouring the light wine. "No."

He reached for her plate. Slurp, slurp, slurp and Luce gulped his own wine with a grin, surveying the empty shells. "Do you know why I asked you to stay back tonight?" he asked.

Mel placed her glass carefully on the table. "Of course. It's your last day, as you're flying to take up some new position in the company that involves a lot of travel, and you wanted to check over the minutes before you left for good. I'm sorry I missed your farewell morning tea – I heard your speech was quite touching."

"Oh. Yes." Luce looked miffed, as if Mel had stolen his thunder. "Do you know why I'm leaving?"

Mel gave a small smile. "I had heard it was to do with your health…" She thought there might be some truth in that particular rumour, as the dark circles beneath his eyes betrayed him. She wondered what sort of malaise a demon could possibly suffer from.

Luce coughed. "Yes. The climate here is not what I'm used to. I need somewhere warmer, drier…"

"And with more smoke and sulphur?" Mel finished for him with a smile before she could stop herself.

"Where smoking is far less frowned upon than here, certainly," Luce replied uncertainly. It appeared Mel had stolen not just his thunder but his entire storm. "Shall we have the main course?"

"Sure. I'm starving," Mel said as she uncovered her plate. She thought longingly of the steak she had at home, but the one before her was seared and saucy, reclining on a bed of vegetables and crowned with a baby carrot. She tried not to laugh – he'd evidently asked the chef to make the meal as suggestive as possible, and so it was.

"More wine?" Luce said suddenly, grabbing a bottle of red and sloshing it into his own empty glass.

Mel drank the dregs of her white before tilting her glass toward him. "Please." The red ran smoothly into her glass, almost as dark as the steak. More Margaret River wine, but this time it was from Devil's Lair, Mel thought as she glanced at the label, tasting the unmistakeable shiraz.

Luce emptied his glass before Mel had set hers down, so he refilled it before tackling his meal. Mel smothered a smile and started slicing her steak into small pieces.

Mel kept her eyes down and Luce seemed to need to slurp his shiraz courage with increasing frequency. When she was sated, Mel carefully placed her cutlery side by side on the plate. She carefully wiped her parted lips with her cloth napkin before delicately taking another sip of wine.

"I want you to come with me. I need you," Luce blurted out. His knuckles were white as he clutched the empty wine bottle.

Mel touched her wineglass to her lips once more, holding the rich red in her mouth for a few moments before swallowing. "I'm needed here."

Luce swallowed and tried again with some difficulty. Mel wondered if he'd had too much wine. "I need a personal assistant in my new job and I want you. I'll be travelling a lot, incorporating new acquisitions into the HELL Corporation. I'll need an absolute angel who can do anything to be my assistant – an angel like you."

Mel smiled. "Like me? Would another angel do?" Her heart went out to the demon, but she knew this was the perfect opportunity to replace herself in his affections or whatever his feelings for her were.

Luce looked uncertain. "What do you mean?"

Mel tried to keep the wickedness from her smile. "Well, only half-angel, really. Your new PA, Persephone, is perfect for what you need. She's far more helpful than I could ever be. She'll keep everything in order to the last detail – she'll be able to tell if you're missing a pomegranate seed from your breakfast."

"You mean the girl with the glasses? A half-angel, really? What's the other half?" Luce looked stunned. Perhaps it was the wine.

Mel permitted herself to laugh. "My cousin – her mother – insisted that he was some sort of Greek god, but he was about as much use as a marble statue. I didn't enquire further." Her smile turned prim. "You might want to ask Persephone about her halo."

"But you said your cousin isn't a full angel. How can she have a real halo on her head?" Luce asked, laughing.

"Ah, no, not on her head," Mel replied, biting her lip so she didn't say any more. He evidently hadn't persuaded Persi onto his desk yet, or he'd know exactly what she was referring to. "She's even a fan of unusual art, like the pictures on your wall. You'll like Persephone." And she might like him, if his tongue was smoother than it was tonight. Mel reached for her dish of mousse and dipped her spoon. Heavenly, as before. She resolved to learn to make this, for she could hardly afford dessert from the Hilton every day.

"Are you sure you want to refuse my offer?" Luce watched Mel.

She felt sorry for him, but she'd promised Raphael and Persephone that she'd leave him to them. Her sympathy for the demon was clouding her judgement. Time to make good on her word.

Mel dropped her spoon in her dish. "Yes. My place is here." She wiped her lips with the soft cloth once more before dropping that, too. Mel stood and Luce mirrored her movement. He looked so forlorn; she pitied the demon more than she thought possible. Perhaps it was best that Persi would be his downfall and not her. She didn't have the heart to rip out his.

Mel rounded the table to his side. On impulse, she kissed his ruddy cheek. "Farewell, Luce. Thank you for the lovely dinner and the orchids you sent me secretly for Valentine's Day. I wish you the best, both in your new job and your health. If your travels bring you back to my city, I'd love to catch up again for dinner and drinks. Persi will know how to get into contact with me." She stepped away from him. "Now, I must go home to get some sleep."

"I have a couch here. We could share!" Luce shouted after her, more than an edge of desperation in his tone.

No, Persi would not share. Even a prince of darkness would be putty in her pretty hands in this state. And her halo…oh Hell!

"Goodnight, Luce."

Mel fought her laughter as she left the building, laughing so loud and hard on the train that the other passengers gave her a wide berth, which was just as well. If she stopped laughing, she'd cry. The lost, lonely look on his face as she left had smote her heart. She hadn't even been able to say her final goodbye.

She hated to admit it, but the office was dull without Luce. The work was the same, but it seemed to lack a vibrancy that she now thought had stemmed from his presence. It wasn't that she missed him – all the demons seemed to be more somnolent. Of course, that could be partly because there'd been some incident with the delivery truck so that there weren't any coffee beans left – and there wouldn't be any more until the following Tuesday.

Lili seemed to ask less of her, while she spent longer and longer at lunch or generally away from the office. More than once, there were new shopping bags on Lili's filing cabinet in the afternoons. Perhaps there was some truth in the rumour that Lili was Luce's mistress, for she definitely seemed to be pining away for something.

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