Page 3 of Tangled Innocence


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Let no one say he’s not a looker. He is—even I can’t deny that. Windswept hair, almost black but with a mesmerizing hint of auburn to it. Chin chiseled out of marble. Eyes light gray, piercing, observant, arrogant.

Unlike the stinky men on the elevator, his mint-and-cedar cologne is perfectly calibrated to seduce and intimidate—and unfortunately for me, it’s pretty good at both tasks.

Because I know he’s an egotistical maniac and yet I still find myself wondering what his body looks like beneath the Brioni suit he’s wearing.

And if I’m a sucker for it, you already know that the rest of the women in this office—or really, in this entire zip code—have been reeled in hook, line, and sinker. Half a dozen perfectly coiffed heads are popping up over the cubicles at the mere sound of Dmitri’s office door opening.

They’re all hoping for a glance, a smile, a kind word from him.

Keep on hoping, sisters, I wanna tell them. Dmitri Egorov doesn’t know the meaning of “kind.”

But my God, if there were ever a day for him to give me a break, it’d be today, right? I just don’t know how much more I can take.

The look in his eyes, though, says “mercy” is not high on his to-do list.

“Ms. Turner,” he drawls icily. He flips up his wrist and checks the gleaming Patek Philippe watch he chose today. The embroidered initials on his tailored shirt cuff—D.E. in a villainous red thread—flash at me like a wink. “I wasn’t aware that work began at 10:07 A.M. on Tuesdays.”

“And I wasn’t aware that ‘D.E.’ stood for ‘Douchebag Extraordinaire,” I mumble under my breath.

“What was that?” he asks as I get closer.

I sling my bag into the chair behind my desk and paste on a smile. “Nothing, Mr. Egorov. I’m sorry I was late this morning. I had a doctor’s appointment. I did request time off…” Peeking down at my planner, I look at the date and finish, “three and a half months ago.”

He pauses. His cologne is stronger up close. Mint and cedar, like a winter forest. I do prefer it to Dr. Saeder’s cloying aftershave, though I’d never admit that to Dmitri’s face.

“It’s a bad day to be insubordinate, Ms. Turner.”

My smile stays plastered in place. It’s one of those smiles that, if he paid any attention at all, he’d see is hiding a barely-closed box of screams and violent fantasies about wiping that smug smirk right off his face.

But luckily for me, Dmitri doesn’t care about silly things like “other people’s emotions.” That would just be a very big waste of his very important time.

“Insubordinate? Who, me? I don’t even know the meaning of the word.”

“You apparently don’t know the meaning of the word ‘timely,’ either. Should we step into my office and practice reading a clock together?”

Apropos of absolutely nothing, my mind immediately fills with images of all the things he and I could do if we “stepped into his office.”

I could plant his toned ass in his chair, wrap his tie around my fist, and shove his face up my skirt to see how well he can tell time with a face full of lady bits.

I could knock him flat on the ground, rip open that infuriatingly well-tailored button-down shirt, and graze my nails down his abs while riding him ‘til the cows come home.

I could make him devour me.

I could make him worship me.

I could make him beg me to let him finish—and beg me and beg me and beg me, just for the sheer pleasure of leaning down, brushing my glossy lips up against the shell of his ear, and whispering one of his favorite words right back to him: “No.”

“ … Ms. Turner?”

For the second time today, there’s a man snapping his fingers in my face and asking if I can hear him. Admittedly, this one is much easier on the eyes than Dr. Saeder.

But despite my little hate-crush on the bosshole from hell, I don’t intend to be any nicer to Dmitri Egorov than I was to the incompetent doctor with the nose hair of a wildebeest.

“I’m as capable of hearing you as I am of telling time, Mr. Egorov.” I throw a little extra sauciness on his title.

“Hm.” He tilts his head to the side and looks at me from a new angle. An inexplicable softness passes over his face. On anyone else, it wouldn’t even be noticeable. But it’s such a departure from his usual “hell hath no fury like mine” broodiness that it captures my attention. “Is something wrong, Wren?”

Wren. When he says it like that, with that tone and that look in his eye, I can’t help but shiver.

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