The Fifth Avenue Series Boxed Set (35 page)

He was patronizing her.
 
Leana felt a flash of irritation, but stilled it.
 
She smiled at him.
 
“I don’t see how I can go wrong, Mr. Anderson.
 
With you taking direction from me and doing all my leg work, how could I fail?”

Zack Anderson’s smile faded.
 
Leana squeezed his arm.
 
“I understand there are several gyms here,” she said.
 
“May I offer a tip?”

“Of course.”

“Start using them.
 
To keep up with me, you’re going to have to improve your cardio, not to mention your attitude.
 
I can’t have an assistant who can’t keep up.
 
And I won’t have an assistant whose ego is so big, it could fill this space and squeeze everyone else out of it.
 
Are we clear?”

He was about to answer when something caught his eye and he turned.
 
The smile she had wiped clean from his face resurfaced. “Well, well,” he said.
 
“So they decided to come, after all.”

Leana followed his gaze.
 
Across the room, moving leisurely in their direction, was Louis Ryan—and he was surrounded by a small group of people in business suits.

“Who are they?” she asked.

Zack Anderson looked surprised.
 
“Who are they?” he repeated.
 
“Miss Redman, just how much do you know about this job?”

“Not as much as I’d like,” she admitted.
 
“But that’s what you’re here for, Zack.
 
Now, tell me—who are they?”

“His investors,” the man said.
 
“The people you’ll be working for.”

He glanced at her scuffed shoes, at her shorts and tousled jet hair, and his smile broadened.
 
“I’ll tell Mr. Ryan that you’re here so he can make introductions.”

 

 

*
  
*
  
*

 

 

Things always had a way of falling into place for Louis Ryan.

When he asked Leana to meet him here this morning, he genuinely thought no one of any real importance would be at the hotel—certainly not at this hour of the morning.
 
And so he told her to come as she was.
 

Now, as he and his group of investors followed Zack Anderson toward the waterfall, he couldn’t have been happier that all that had changed.
 
Just seeing the embarrassment on Leana Redman’s face when he introduced her to his partners was worth whatever mistrust she undoubtedly would feel toward him.

They stopped to admire the waterfall.
 
The way it was designed, the water seemed to fall from nowhere though it flowed from a concealed location high above.
 
There was no rippling of the water, just a wide, pure band seamlessly falling into a lighted abyss.
 
As they passed the waterfall, Louis expected to see Leana waiting beyond it, but she wasn’t there.
 
He looked around him, but didn’t see her.
 
“Where is she?” he said quietly to Anderson.
 
“I thought you said she was here.”

The man looked surprised.
 
“She was,” he said.
 
“I left her just a moment ago.”

“Then where is she now?”

“I’m here,” Leana said.

Both men turned.
 

Walking swiftly in their direction, dressed in an immaculate red Dior suit and matching red shoes, was Leana, her hair tied neatly away from her face, a diamond brooch glimmering on her lapel.
 
She was coming from the direction of the Dior store, where two women stood at the doors and admired how the suit fit.

As she breezed past Louis and Zack and began introducing herself to the small group behind them, there was something in her eyes, something in the defiant way she held her head, that made each man feel as though they just lost a serious game of chess to a woman they assumed was an amateur.

Leana looked away from the group, fixed her gaze on her assistant, then at the man who had become her boss.
 
“Would everyone like coffee?” she asked

A few said they’d love coffee.

“Perfect,” she said.
 
“Zack isn’t exactly gifted behind the pot, so it’s good news that Starbucks is here.”
 
She looked at Zack.
 
“I know they have a complicated menu, but all you need to do is take their order and make sure you get it right.
 
This time, please don’t make a mistake.”
 
She turned to the group and held out her hands.
 
“Sometimes he gets ahead of himself and makes errors in judgment, especially when it comes to people.”

They chuckled.
 
And at that moment, with the heat searing between her and Zack, it was a wonder the waterfall didn’t start to boil.

When he was finished taking orders, Leana said, “How does everyone feel about a tour?
 
I’ve yet to see this place for myself and I just found out we’re opening Wednesday.
 
I’m eager to see the hotel for myself.”
 

She leveled Louis with a look.
 
“Shall we?”

 

 

*
  
*
  
*

 

 

The hotel had four restaurants, five bars, two nightclubs and a theater that seated 3,000 and rivaled anything on Broadway.

In the atrium were name-brand shops of every type, for every taste, but not necessarily for every budget.
 
There was an Olympic-size pool on the roof, a gym on every fifth floor and a small army of personal trainers who were under the advisement of the hotel’s five physicians.
 
If guests stayed a week at The Hotel Fifth, there was no reason why they couldn’t go home looking and feeling better than they had in years.

As Leana followed Louis and his investors through those rooms he chose to show, even she, a woman who had spent time in some of the world’s great luxury hotels, was impressed.
 
Each room offered spectacular views of the city.

“Obviously we’re targeting an upscale market,” Louis said.
 
“And so each guest will be pampered.
 
Fresh flowers when they arrive in their rooms, an assortment of fruit, a complimentary bottle of champagne.
 
Transportation by our suite of limousines and Bentleys will be available on a first-come, first-served basis.
 
For our business guests, we have everything they need—wireless, printers and fax machines, and a spacious, well-lit writing area.
 
For those seeking computer equipment, laptops are available at no cost.
 
For those on vacation, we’ve provided stylists for the women, tailors for the men.
 
The spa here will be noted as one of New York’s best—I can promise you that.”
 

He was beginning to sound more like a well-rehearsed PR person than the chairman of a multi-billion dollar corporation.

Leana stepped onto the terrace, lifted a hand to shield her eyes from the sun and wondered again why Ryan had taken the risk of asking her to run such a hotel.
 
More than once it had occurred to her that he might be using her to anger her father, and while Leana didn’t like the feeling, she accepted it because she, too, took the job for the same reason—sticking it to George.
 

She sensed someone standing behind her.
 
It was Louis.
 
He was standing in the doorway, hands clasped behind him, the sun reflecting off his glasses, making his eyes seem like gleaming spheres.
 
“Pretty boring stuff, huh?”

Leana smiled.

“You won’t have to hear more,” he said.
 
“We’re alone now.
 
Zack’s going to finish the rest of the tour.”

“That’s good,” she said.
 
“Zack is so…capable.”

“He’s an arrogant prick,” Louis said.
 
“But he’s the best at what he does.
 
When you’re in a pinch, he’ll have your back.
 
That’s why I keep him.
 
That’s why you’ll come to like him.”

“We’ll see.”

He moved to the railing she was standing at and leaned against it.
 
They were on the fortieth floor and the city stretched out before them.
 
“So, what’s the problem?” he asked.
 
“You’re quiet.”

Leana decided that if she was going to work for this man, she was going to be honest with him.

“I got this job because you wanted to piss off my father, didn’t I?”

“Now what makes you think that?”

Leana raised a hand.
 
“Look,” she said.
 
“Can we just cut the bullshit?
 
We both know that you and my father would prefer to see each other dead.
 
We both know that my father is going to be furious when he learns I’ve taken this job.
 
That’ll make you happy.
 
Frankly, it also will make me happy.
 
Very happy.
 
Do you understand what I’m saying?”

Louis lifted his head.
  
Behind his glasses, his eyes narrowed slightly, almost as if he were seeing her in a different light, putting her in a different league.
 
“I do,” he said.

“I just don’t want you to think that I don’t know what’s going on here,” Leana said. “Because I do.
 
But I promise you this, Louis—this hotel will become a success under my leadership.
 
It will become the only hotel to stay at in this city.
 
I know the right people to ask for help when I need it.
 
And I also know when to trust my gut when they aren’t available.
 
Are we clear on that?”

“Perfectly.”

“Good,” Leana said.
 
“So, if there’s nothing more, I have to return this outfit to the boutique on the first floor.
 
Before I was ambushed by your group of investors, I told the manager she’d have it back within the hour.”
 
She clicked her tongue.
 
“And to think you said it was going to be just the two of us this morning.”

“I thought it was going to be,” he said truthfully.
 
“Seeing them here was as much a surprise to you as it was to me.”
 
He nodded at the brooch.
 
“What are you going to do with that?”

Leana lifted her lapel and looked down at the dazzling swirl of diamonds.
 
“Oh, this?
 
This is going to be charged to you.
 
So is the suit.
 
J’adore Dior.
 
The car’s nice, Louis, and I appreciate it.
 
But now that we’ve come to a mutual understanding about why I’m really here, I think you’ll agree they’re worth it when my father learns that the car, the suit and this brooch came from you.”
 

As she moved past him, she leaned into him.
 
“You want me to play dirty?
 
It comes at a cost.
 
But you can afford it.
 
See you.”

 

 

*
  
*
  
*

 

 

On the drive back to her apartment, Leana allowed herself a well-deserved smile.
 
She had been put on the spot and she handled herself well.
 
She doubted whether her sister could have done better.

Other books

Hitmen Triumph by Sigmund Brouwer
I Too Had a Love Story by Ravinder Singh
Safe With You by Sophie Lira
Bright Eyes by Catherine Anderson
White Shadows by Susan Edwards
Bóvedas de acero by Isaac Asimov
Tangled in Chains by SavaStorm Savage
Empire Of The Undead by Ahimsa Kerp