Dating the Rebel Tycoon
wouldn’t have all been on the phone to him, telling him to get his butt over there.
    Her brow furrowed as she tried to fit that piece into the puzzle. But all she said was, ‘And your dad? Have you asked him straight out?’
    Cameron breathed deep through his nose. In for a penny in for a pound… ‘That’s a tad difficult, considering we haven’t spoken in about fifteen years.’
    One edge of her bottom lip began getting an extreme workout by way of her top teeth. His physical reaction made him feel all too human.
    Eventually she asked, ‘On purpose?’
    How the hell did she know that was exactly the right question to ask? That no living soul knew how hard he worked to keep clear of the man in question without letting his family know why?
    Slowly, he nodded.
    ‘Then why did I think you worked for him?’
    ‘Brendan does. Dylan does. I never have.’ Never will.
    ‘But you were planning to, right? Economics degree here, then Harvard Business School?’ Her mouth snapped shut and her cheeks pinked. Then her mouth drew up into a half-smile. ‘My turn again. I confess I overheard you talking to Callum Tucker about it once in the canteen. Of course, it only stuck with me because he said he was going to become a roadie for a rock band.’
    Her smile was infectious. A bubble of laughter lodged in his throat. ‘Callum is an orthodontist. And I didn’t go to business school. I became a structural engineer. After several years in the field, I moved into property development.’
    ‘Impressive.’ She blinked prettily. ‘Callum Tucker’s an orthodontist.’
    The bubble burst, and Cameron’s laughter spilled out intothe night. Her half-smile bloomed, full and pink and blushing. And, while her hair still whipped lightly about her face in the wind, it had been some time since he felt the cold.
    She asked, ‘What is a structural engineer, exactly?’
    ‘I warn you, most people tend to go cross-eyed when I start talking structural systems, lateral forces and the supporting and resistance of various loads.’
    ‘Like I don’t get blank faces when I get excited about the chemical composition of celestial objects?’
    ‘Sorry,’ he said after a pause. ‘Did you say something?’
    She lifted a hand and slapped him hard across the arm. ‘Not funny.’
    ‘Come on, it was a little bit funny.’
    She snuck her foot out from under her and placed it next to the other one on the ground, facing him. ‘Why not just stick with the engineering?’
    ‘Ego.’
    She shot him a blank stare.
    ‘The more things we Kellys see with our name upon them, the happier we are. It comes from having been born out of abject poverty. Generations ago, mind you.’
    ‘How’s that? No freshly churned butter on your crust-free organic toast-fingers every second Sunday?’
    Cameron grinned. ‘Something like that. Ironically, business school would have saved me half the time it took to become profitable when I went out on my own.’
    ‘Nah,’ she said, flapping a hand across her face. ‘School can only get you so far. In the end you have to throw yourself at the mercy of the universe and take pride in your own ride.’
    Cameron let that idea sink in. He was a meticulous planner, demanding control, assurance and perfection from himself and every employee he had. Then again, as a seventeen-year-old kid, he had broken free of the only world he’d ever known. If he hadn’t done so he would not be the self-made man he was today.
    He nodded. ‘I’m damn proud of my ride.’
    ‘Well, then, good for you.’
    Her eyes softened, and her smile made him feel like he’d been covered with a warm blanket.
    The need to touch her again was overwhelming. Pushing aside her hair would not be enough. He wanted so badly to sink his hand into the mass, pull her in and kiss her until he could taste cinnamon. So, what the hell was stopping him?
    The fact that she knew the worst about him certainly didn’t help.
    Rosalind broke eye contact to eat another mouthful

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