Bound for Me (Be for Me #4)(44)



“Come on.” He took her hand. “I’ll take you to the offices. You can see command central.”

“The seat of power? I can hardly wait.”

It was a normal boring office space really, just with an exceptional view and neatly and discreetly attired staff who knew to steer clear. As Savannah took in the gleaming screens and paperless desks, Connor took the chance to check through the zillion messages that had landed in the hour he’d been with her.

Nothing too major. Nothing that couldn’t wait another few minutes.

“Is this your desk?” She gestured at the empty desk that stood in the most private corner of the large room.

“No. One of our assistants finished with us recently,” he said uncomfortably. Cynthia had been his father’s latest. His messiest affair. In the end she’d resigned, but Connor had managed to get her a large final pay packet. Poor woman had believed she truly loved Rex. She so hadn’t grasped the rules of the game his father played. “I’ve yet to recruit a replacement but my managers are coping.”

“So where’s your office?” Savannah looked about. “Through there?” She pointed at the door to the office that was so conveniently near Cynthia’s old desk.

His father’s office. Now also empty.

“No” He walked away from the scene of so many infidelities. “I’m upstairs.”

“Away from everyone?”

“I like my space.”

“Show me.”

Oh that little purr deserved a reward. “I’ll take you the secret way.”

“Another ‘secret’ passage that all the tourists love?” she mocked him.

“No this one really is a secret. Though actually, you’ve been up there before.”



Savannah followed him up the narrow, never-ending spiral staircase. “You’re right up in the attic?”

“Yeah, it has the best view.”

“It’s your eyrie.” His eagle’s nest. So appropriate for him. A solitary predator who liked to see all of his world at once. Make sure everything was just perfect.

He flashed her a gorgeous wide smile. “Exactly.”

It was a beautiful suite. There was none of the over the top ornate opulence of the ballroom, or the mountain lodge grandeur of the great hall. This was minimal in its decor and not ridiculous in its size either.

The whole effect was calming. Quietening.

There were the cozy fireplaces but that was it. Because you didn’t need anything to detract from the view.

She looked out the window on the side that showed the slopes. The first ski-lift operated almost from the door of the larger lodge.

“What did your father want, really?” Connor’s soft question broke into her thoughts.

“Success.” She shrugged. “He thought he could model himself on the great Rex Hughes. But your family had such an advantage. You already had money. Already had status. Already had this mountain. The ordinary guy can’t compete with this. Can’t ever achieve it.”

“Maybe not on this scale, but you owned a hotel, right? He wanted more?”

Her father had wanted his wife back. His dignity. Wanted measurable, recognisable success. And then he’d thought he’d be happy. “He wanted to make our hotel this successful. He wanted to be the big man in town.”

“Why?”

“Why does anyone want that? But it doesn’t matter. He’s lost it all.” She turned and caught Connor’s frown, but she was thinking about something else now. Needed to think about something else. “I slept up here the other night, didn’t I?”

“There’s a guest room on the other side of a small lounge through that door, yes.”

Desire flamed through her. She turned back to the view.

“Savannah?” He sounded as edgy as she felt.

“I hate it,” she whispered.

“What?” Now he sounded stunned.

“It’s so gorgeous. I hate it.” She didn’t want to like it. Didn’t want to accept that it was every bit as amazing as the damn promotional material stated. More amazing. It was perfect. “The whole place is so smooth. Everything runs like clockwork. So elite. So exclusive. And that’s just the hotel itself. Because then there’s that.” She pointed to that mountain and it’s unbelievable beauty.

“So Rex wasn’t full of lies?”

“Not about Summerhill, no.” She turned back to face him. “There’s no need to look so smug.”

“I’m not.” He strolled towards her. “You’re not happy, Sugar? You’ve seen it all but you’re not happy? You can’t let it go?”

“I haven’t seen it all. Not yet.”

“What haven’t you seen?”

“Your room.” She watched the arrogance in his expression burn up as desire flared.

Good. She needed him to help her forget what it was he reminded her of.

He walked to the double doors on the farthest wall, turned both handles and pushed. Then he stood back and waited.

Savannah walked until she stood just inside the doorway. The bed, like everything else in the building, was big, expensive, beautiful. And not what she wanted right now.

She turned her back on the bed and reached up to pull him to her.

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