The Cinderella Mission

The Cinderella Mission by Catherine Mann Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: The Cinderella Mission by Catherine Mann Read Free Book Online
Authors: Catherine Mann
main house. First, we’re going to head upstairs to the apartment.”
    “Where I’m staying?”
    “No.”
    “Your Aunt Eugenie has a suite over the garage?”
    “No. I do.” The surprised lift to her brow brought a rush of victory. He’d find his footing with this complex woman yet. “I thought you could use the time to ask any more questions before you meet everyone.”
    “You mean questions about how you set me up.” Her eyes probed him with quiet censure.
    She couldn’t have already figured out why he needed her here, could she? Heaven help him if he’d been too obvious about the socialite polish.
    He reached behind the seat for her laptop computer to give himself a reason to look away. “Set you up?”
    “By not telling me about the real reason for coming here.”
    He twisted forward with her laptop and lapsed into the foolproof method of answering questions with questions.“Suppose you tell me since you do such a good job at spelling things out.”
    “Because even with everything I said yesterday, you still don’t trust that I can keep my head on straight while posing as a couple. So you’ve planned this ‘lover practice’ in front of your servants for the next two weeks.”
    Lover-practice. Now that had a tempting ring to it. “Kelly, I’m not doing anything more than I said. We’re here to work through leads in hopes of finding Alex Morrow before someone tortures him to death. And maybe we’ll be able to stop the whole heist attempt before the summit so a room full of people won’t be in danger. And if that doesn’t work, we’re going to make damned sure we both have every tool available so no one gets hurt.”
    So Kelly wasn’t hurt.
    He ignored the nagging voice that insisted he was already hurting her by not being honest. But he’d abandoned scruples long ago in favor of winning, and he wanted that thirty-year-old file on his parents.
    Kelly threw her door open. “Then let’s get started.”
    Ethan led her up the stairs, punching in the alarm code onto the pad outside his door before pushing inside. As always, he made a quick sweep through his barnlike studio apartment. He held up a hand for Kelly to stop while he took the six steps in three strides up to his loft bedroom. Closing the door behind him, he jogged up another half set of stairs to the open gallery computer area. Loping back down, he nodded. “All clear.”
    “Do you always check your own house this thoroughly?”
    She thought that was thorough?
    “Yes.” He tucked his hands in his back pockets and cruised to a stop in the seldom-used kitchen area.
    Kelly trailed a hand along the back of a gray leather sofa, her gaze sweeping the sparse furnishings. “So you brought me to your bachelor pad, after all.”
    “I’ve never brought anyone outside of family here.”
    Her gaze snapped up to meet his. Solemn brown eyesstudied him with confusion and an odd sort of expectation he knew he couldn’t fulfill.
    Ethan turned his back on eyes that threatened to become as tempting as her voice. “If we’re going to work together, this is the only truly secure place.” He swept an empty pizza box off the kitchenette table. “You can set up your laptop here today. I’ll arrange something better by tomorrow.”
    Shrugging out of her coat, she strolled through the cavernous room. Her tennis shoes squeaked on the bright tiles his Aunt Eugenie had ordered from Italy. She’d insisted he needed something lively in his dark world.
    “There’s certainly plenty of space. My apartment would fit in here twice.”
    “I like how open it is.” Easier to watch. Even at home, he never relaxed his guard, probably hadn’t slept through the night since he was five.
    Ethan pitched his jacket over a kitchen chair. He opened the refrigerator and pulled out a can of orange juice for himself. “Want one? Or something more substantial—like a two-day-old burrito?”
    He earned her genuine smile for the first time in twenty-four hours, a heady

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