lips. âI think you need food. Plus, I owe you, big time. Letâs do dinnerâ¦my treat.â
Lacey laughed with delight. âWhere?â
âYour choice.â
âReckless. Definitely reckless.â Lacey allowed a few secondsâ deliberation. âItalian. Thereâs this little restaurant that serves divine pasta to die for. Itâs the other side of town.â
Alesha rose to her feet and paid the tab. âLetâs go.â
It became a wonderfully relaxing few hours as they enjoyed fine food, a glass of wine, reminisced and laughed.
True friendship was something to be treasured, and Alesha entered her apartment at eveningâs end with a lighter heart.
The familiar nightmare came out of nowhere in the early pre-dawn hours, vivid, almost live in its intensity, and she woke breathing hard, her body soaked with sweat.
She reached for the bedside lamp and the room glowed with light.
Dear God.
She lifted a hand to her face, almost expecting in that instant to feel the heat, the swelling, the pain . Except her cheeks were cool, and for several long moments she worked at slowing her breathing, her rapidly beating pulse.
A silent voice prompted⦠Youâre fine.
In the here and now â¦and alone.
With one smooth movement she cast aside the covers and padded out to the kitchen, brewed tea, then she subsided into a comfortable chair and channel-surfed until she found a comedy and didnât move until the dawn gradually lightened the sky from indigo to pearl grey.
Then she hit the shower and dressed. Breakfast was yoghurt and fruit with a reviving shot of caffeine, before she fixed her make-up, gathered her laptop, bag, keys, and drove into the city.
Focus, concentrate on the day, Alesha urged as she rode the lift to the high floor housing Karsouli.
As days went, this one soon became a doozy, with her PA calling in sick, the replacement hesitant to take any initiative, minor delays resulting therefrom, and a laptop that decided to crash at a crucial moment. Fortunately the auto-save function ensured only a small amount of data was lost, but it took time to get the system up and running againâ¦time that became increasingly scarce as the day progressed.
Consequently she skipped lunch, alternated coffee with bottled water, and made do with a banana mid-afternoon.
Running on empty was not advisable, and coupled with loss of sleep it tipped her into headache territory with increasing intensity.
At five she was tempted to give up, except another hourâtwo, topsâand sheâd put the dayâs work to bed. Given international time-zones, the data would be accessible, and any delay minimal.
She was almost done when her cellphone buzzed, and she automatically picked upâ¦something she rarely did without first checking caller ID.
âAlesha.â
There was no mistaking that deep, faintly accented voice. âHi.â As a greeting, it was sadly lacking.
âIâm on my way up.â
So he was backâ¦and here . Heâd said heâd call, but she hadnât counted on seeing him. Nor did she expect the slow curling sensation to begin deep within.
She wasnât alone in the building⦠There would be others staying back catching up on work, the cleaning staff.
Minutes later he was there, his tall frame filling the aperture, and unbidden her pulse kicked into a faster beat as he moved into her office.
âWorking late?â
His voice was deceptively mild, his eyes faintly hooded as he took in her pale features, the dark circles beneath her eyes. She looked beat, almost fragile, and at a guess she was harbouring a headache.
Alesha deliberately focused her attention on the computer screen. âAnd youâre hereâ¦why?â
âI need to collect a file which hasnât been uploaded into the computer system.â
A mark against Dimitriâs recently reassigned PA?
Her father had expected efficiencyâ¦but not to the