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I nodded, trying not to feel jealous that he was having lunch with someone else.

Someone else. You're his employee. Not his... anything.

But watching him leave, I realized I wanted to be.

Dangerous. So dangerous.

∞∞∞

That afternoon, we worked side-by-side for hours. Reviewing contracts, vendor relationships, schedules.

Every time he leaned close to point something out on the computer, I caught his scent. Every time our hands accidentally brushed reaching for the same document, electricity sparked.

He felt it too. I could tell by the way he'd pause. Glance at me. Look away.

This attraction was mutual.

And impossible.

Around 6 p.m., I hit a wall.

"You're done," Quentin said, closing the laptop. "I don't want to break my new employee on day one."

He pulled leftover Chinese food from a mini-fridge hidden in his bookcase, popped it in a hidden microwave.

"That's a clever setup," I observed.

"Didn't think a minifridge would look professional next to this antique desk." He knocked on the wood. "Paid a fortune for this. They don't make them like this anymore."

"You're going to live on leftover Chinese food?"

"I work late. Hate interrupting my train of thought."

I gathered my notes, stood. Started for the door.

Then turned back.

"Thank you again for hiring me, Mr. Vanetti. I'll do everything I can to exceed your expectations."

"I believe you will."

The words came out before I could stop them. "You know, you really should eat better. I could cook you something homemade sometime. Something actually nutritious."

His expression shifted. Surprise. Pleasure. Something warmer.

"I'd like that," he said softly.

What did I just do?

"Good night, Mr. Vanetti."

"Good night, Julia."

In the elevator, descending to the parking garage, reality crashed down.

I just offered to cook for him. To cook. For my target.

The man I was supposed to get close to. Potentially kill.