The helicopter swooped low over the trees and Grace felt her stomach
roll.
Beneath her lay acres and acres of lush tropical rainforest, the canopy
forming a dense green umbrella that sheltered and concealed the exotic
mysteries of the forest floor. At any other time she would have been
captivated by the wild, breathtaking beauty of her surroundings, but she
was far too tense to think about anything except the meeting that lay
ahead of her. The meeting and the man.
What on earth was she doing dressed in this ridiculously hot, scratchy
suit, flying over the top of the Brazilian rainforest to throw herself at the
mercy of a man who apparently didn’t know the meaning of the word?
Rafael Cordeiro.
Brilliant, dangerous, damaged. So many words came to mind when
thinking of him, none of them tame or soothing. Shockingly wealthy and
wielding more power than kings and presidents, he was reputedly so
clever with figures that the financial press had likened him to a walking
computer. Which didn’t bode well, Grace thought gloomily as she
clutched at her seat, given her allergy to technology.
Beneath her, the trees parted and a swollen river snaked through a
deep gorge and plunged over rocks in an explosion of white froth. ‘He has properties all over the world—’ she turned to the pilot, seeking
answers to the questions bubbling in her mind ‘—so why is he living all
the way out here?’
The pilot kept his eyes on the treetops. ‘Because the world won’t leave
the man alone. He likes his privacy.’
Which fitted with what she’d heard about him. Ruthless, unemotional,
unsentimental—the list of unflattering adjectives went on and on.
Considering the man never gave interviews, there was no shortage of
information on him. ‘He’s a loner?’
‘Well, I wouldn’t exactly call him soft and cuddly, if that’s what you’re
asking, not that women seem to mind. Being bad and dangerous just
seems to bring them flocking. That and the power. Women can sniff out
power from a hundred paces. Power and money.’ The pilot fingered the
controls and then glanced towards her. ‘You don’t look like his usual
type.’
His usual type?
Wondering how anyone could possibly mistake her for a billionaire’s
girlfriend, Grace almost laughed. ‘I have a meeting with Mr Cordeiro.
His company put up the original investment for my business.’ And that
investment had changed her life. ‘He’s what they call a business angel, but
I expect you know that, given that you work for him.’
‘Angel?’ The pilot convulsed with laughter and the helicopter swooped
alarmingly close to the treetops. ‘Rafael Cordeiro—angel?’
‘It’s an expression. It means that he invests in small businesses that
interest him.’ And he’d been interested in hers. Until recently. The sick
feeling in her stomach was suddenly back and Grace lifted her briefcase onto her lap and stroked the surface, trying to solder her fractured
confidence.
The pilot was still laughing. ‘Angel. I don’t know what he does to
make his money but I can tell you one thing,’ he fixed his gaze on the
horizon and fiddled with the controls, ‘the man is no angel.’
Refusing to let him frighten her, Grace straightened in her seat. ‘I
don’t believe everything I read in the papers.’
‘Obviously—’ he glanced towards her and the smile on his craggy,
weathered face was faintly pitying ‘—or you wouldn’t be here. I can see
you’re a gutsy girl with a mind of your own and that’s good, it will get
you a long way out here in the jungle.’
‘There’s nothing gutsy about attending a business meeting.’
‘That would depend on who you’re doing business with.’ The
mountains rose and dipped and the helicopter swooped through a green-
clad valley. ‘And where. Not many people have the courage to visit the
wolf in his lair.’
Despite her determination to keep an open mind, Grace felt her mouth
dry. ‘You call him the wolf?’
‘Not me. That’s what everyone else calls him. I just call him the boss.’
His hands shifted on the controls and the helicopter lost height.
Losing her stomach and her nerve, Grace closed her eyes briefly and
tried not to also lose her lunch. She’d never been any good on roller
coasters. ‘I’m sure Mr Cordeiro is a very reasonable man.’
‘Are you?’ He fixed his eyes on a spot far below them. ‘Then you’ve
obviously never met him. Hold on. We’re going down.’‘Going down?’ Grace stared at him in alarm, her worries about
sickness and the dangers of Rafael Cordeiro momentarily eclipsed by
that less than reassuring statement. ‘Do you mean we’re landing or we’re
crashing?’
But the pilot didn’t answer. His eyes were narrowed and his jaw
clenched as he played with the controls. For a moment it looked as
though they were going to plunge into the trees and then, at the last
minute, a small landing pad revealed itself and he lowered the machine
down, landing like a giant insect in what seemed like a ridiculously
small gap between the trees.
‘Not crashing, then.’ Grace gave a wobbly smile and let out the breath
she’d been holding. ‘I had a mental image of carnage.’
‘If you’re meeting with Cordeiro then there’s going to be carnage.’ The
pilot flicked a switch in front of him. ‘I’ve seen grown men in tears after
five minutes with him. Take my advice and fight your corner. If there’s
one thing the boss hates, it’s wimps. Welcome to the Atlantic rainforest,
Miss Thacker. One of the most endangered little ecosystems on our
planet.’
‘You’re leaving me? Here? In the middle of nowhere?’ Grace turned
her head and looked out of the window and only then did she see the
lodge—a building that seemed to consist of nothing but glass domes and
smooth, weathered wood, it blended into the forest so cleverly that it
seemed almost to have grown naturally amongst the trees. ‘Oh.’ She
looked at the walkways suspended high above the forest floor. ‘It’s
stunning. Amazing.’
The pilot was laughing to himself. ‘Rafael Cordeiro—angel.’ Still chortling, he wiped a hand over his forehead and removed the beads of
sweat. ‘Out you get and keep your head down until you’re clear of the
blades. I’m flying back to Rio to pick up a package and then back to São
Paulo.’
Grace sat glued to her seat, unwilling to abandon her last link with
civilisation. ‘You’re not waiting? He said I could only have ten minutes
…’
And it was completely ridiculous to have travelled all this way just for
ten minutes, but what choice did she have? It was that or give up and
there was no way she was giving up. Her one hope was that he’d agree
to give her more time because she knew that ten minutes was never
going to be enough time to dig herself out of the hole she’d fallen into.
‘If there’s anything left of you when he’s finished, I’ll come back and
pick up the pieces. Take the walkway over there to the left and,
whatever you do, don’t stray off the path. This is the jungle, not a theme
park. Watch out for the wildlife.’
‘Wildlife?’ She’d been too busy worrying about the meeting to even
think about wildlife. She glanced dubiously into the dense forest that
surrounded them. Some parts were in total shade whereas in others the
sun penetrated the thick canopy of trees and was channelled onto the
forest floor like spotlights. Was it her imagination or was it all moving?
‘You mean insects?’
He gave a wicked smile. ‘Over two thousand different species at the
last estimation. And they’re just the ones we know about.’
Trying not to think about all those legs scurrying towards her, Grace
smoothed her skirt over her knees and wished she’d worn trousers. ‘And snakes?’
‘Oh, yes, there are snakes—’ his grin widened as he glanced towards
her thoroughly inadequate shoes ‘—and then there are the giant
anteaters, jaguars and the—’
‘OK, I think I’ve heard enough,’ she said breathlessly, interrupting him
with a shaky smile. Any moment now she’d be clinging to his arm and
begging him to fly her home. ‘I’m sure Mr Cordeiro wouldn’t live here if it
were that dangerous.’
The pilot threw back his head and laughed. ‘You obviously don’t know
the first thing about him. He lives here because it’s that dangerous, baby
doll. He has a low boredom threshold. Likes to live life on the edge, so to
speak.’
Baby doll? The careless way he’d diminished her to nothing irritated
Grace sufficiently for her to forget her nerves. All her life she’d been
patronised and underestimated. All her life people had doubted and
dismissed her. And she’d proved them wrong, over and over again. She’d
fought against the odds and she’d succeeded.
Until now.
Now she was in danger of losing everything she’d worked for.
And she wasn’t going to let that happen.
This was probably the most important fight of her life and she was
going to win. She had to win. And to win she had to forget that she was
probably the worst person in the world to be given the responsibility of
talking numbers with the Brazilian billionaire with the computer brain.
She had to forget everything except the consequences of losing. And the people depending on her. If she failed then they lost their jobs, it was as
simple as that.
If Rafael Cordeiro called in his loan, then it was all over.
The humid, oppressive heat wrapped itself around her like a thick,
suffocating cloak and she pushed a damp strand of hair away from her
face, her eyes drawn upwards, following the straight lines of the trees
that rose to such impressive heights. It was like being in a remote, exotic
paradise and it was hard to remember that cities like London and Rio de
Janeiro even existed. ‘Isn’t he afraid, living out here?’
‘Cordeiro?’ The pilot chewed on a piece of gum and gave a grim smile.
‘He isn’t afraid of anything.’
Knowing that if she heard any more about the man she wouldn’t have
the courage to face him, let alone fight her corner, Grace stumbled out of
the helicopter and discovered that her legs were shaking. At that precise
moment she would have been hard pressed to say whether she was more
afraid of the jungle or Rafael Cordeiro.
In a world obsessed with celebrity and image, he treated the notion of
both with something approaching contempt, rejecting every invitation to
talk about himself. And he didn’t need to, because everyone else did the
talking for him. The papers were full of curvaceous blondes who’d been
persuaded to ‘tell all’ for the right amount of money. And so the whole
world knew about his relentless pursuit of his billions, his prowess as a
lover and his determined refusal to indulge in ‘happy ever after'.
Once. Once he’d done that and the news of his glamorous wife’s
departure from his life after less than three months of wedded bliss had
filled the newspapers with stories that had lasted longer than the marriage.
He’d been impossible to live with.
He’d ended their relationship by email.
He was only interested in making money. And more money.
The speculation had been endless but if any of it was to be believed
then Rafael Cordeiro was little more than a machine and she knew, she
just knew, even before she had to fight for her business, that he was
going to be just the sort of man that brought out the worst in her.
She wouldn’t look at him, she promised herself. If she didn’t look at him
she wouldn’t become tongue-tied or stammer. She’d just pretend that she
was in her small sitting room at home, talking to the mirror as she
always did when she had an important presentation to memorise.
Grace felt her stomach lurch again and this time the feeling of sickness
that enveloped her had nothing to do with the helicopter and everything
to do with her past. At times like this—times that really mattered—the
memories rolled up behind her like a giant wave, waiting to engulf her.
For her this was the ultimate test. And she wouldn’t fail. She just
couldn’t.
Too much was at stake.
There was no reason to be afraid of Rafael Cordeiro, she assured
herself as she stroked a hand over her straight, formal skirt and forced
herself to move forward onto the wooden walkway that was suspended
above the forest floor.
His personal life, no matter how dark, wasn’t her concern. This
meeting was about business and, whatever murk hovered around the man, he was a businessman, like her father. When she showed him her
plans for taking the business into profit, he’d be positive. He’d change
his mind about calling in the loan. She would save everyone’s job and
then she could fly home and leave the jaguars, the snakes and the
billionaire Brazilian businessman to their jungle hideaway.
The tropical heat made her suit stick to her body and suddenly she
realised just how woefully ill-prepared she was to meet this man. She
wasn’t even comfortable in her clothes. Stooping to free the spindly heel
of her shoe from the careless bite of the wooden planks beneath her feet,
Grace clutched the briefcase in her hand and suddenly wished she’d
gone over the figures one more time in the helicopter.
But what difference would that have made? With the help of her
father, she’d committed them to memory. There was nothing in her
briefcase that wasn’t already fixed in her mind.
Jerking her shoe from the jaws of the walkway, she regained her
balance and straightened.
And saw him.
He stood directly in front of her, as dark and dangerous as anything
that might have prowled out of the jungle, his body completely still, his
eyes watchful.
And he was watching her.
Entirely unprepared for the physical impact of the man, Grace ceased
to breathe. The helicopter, the rainforest and all her problems just
seemed to melt into the background and she was conscious only of him.
His tarnished reputation had caused her mind to conjure up physical images that were so far removed from reality that for a moment Grace
couldn’t do anything except stare, as hundreds of women had
undoubtedly stared before her.
His eyes locked on hers with the lethal accuracy of a deadly weapon
and the breath left her body and every thought was sucked from her
mind. For a wildly unsettling moment she couldn’t remember anything
about herself. She couldn’t remember what she was doing here. Her
body felt strangely lethargic and warmth as thick as treacle spread
slowly through her limbs.
‘Miss Thacker?’ The hard bite of his deep, masculine voice was
sufficient to wake her from her dreamy contemplation of his manly
attributes and she gave a little start, desperately hoping that he hadn’t
noticed her embarrassing reaction.
So much for being cool and businesslike, she thought. And so much for
her plan not to look at him. His physical presence and his film-star looks
demanded attention. As she stood there gaping, it was a struggle to
remind herself that this man was said to be ruthless and cold-hearted.
For her, that wasn’t a winning combination of character traits.
Looking into his deep-set, cynical eyes, she decided that there was
something about his cool scrutiny that made him more menacing and
intimidating than all the jungle predators put together and she knew in
an instant that his pilot had been telling the truth about one thing—this
man was no angel.
Forcing her legs to move, she walked towards him, her briefcase in
one hand, the other seeking the reassurance of the rough rope handrail.
Even without the benefit of billions of dollars, Rafael Cordeiro would have attracted women. His hair was blue-black and swept back from a
face that was as hard as it was handsome. The golden sheen of his
bronzed skin betrayed his Brazilian heritage and the soft fabric of his
casual shirt clung to shoulders that were wide and powerful.
She watched for his reaction to her arrival but he revealed nothing.
His mouth didn’t shift into a smile and his eyes, so dark and brooding,
showed no sign of welcome. It seemed that he was as unfriendly as he
was handsome and the way he was looking at her made her want to
sprint back up the walkway and leap into the departing helicopter.
If she hadn’t known better she would have thought she’d upset him in
some way but she knew that wasn’t possible. How could she possibly
have upset him? He’d never even met her before. His animosity was a
reflection of his personality, rather than their relationship. He just wasn’t
a people person. And clearly he wasn’t about to make an exception for
her.
And it didn’t matter, she told herself firmly.
She didn’t need him to like her. She just needed him to agree not to
withdraw his finance. Keeping that in mind, she took the last few steps
until she was standing directly in front of him. ‘It’s a pleasure to meet
you, Mr Cordeiro.’
His mouth tightened and his eyes gleamed with impatience. ‘This isn’t
a social visit or a children’s party, Miss Thacker. I don’t want or expect
polite. I don’t do small talk or pleasantries. I don’t care about the
weather or the nature of your journey. If you find that approach to
business challenging, then you’d better leave now.’
And a good afternoon to you, too, she thought, trying to hide her mounting dismay.
Suddenly she wanted to do precisely as he suggested. Staring into
those deadly, dark eyes, she really, really wanted to leave. But the
helicopter was already far above them and the reason for her visit was
still safely stowed away in her briefcase. She couldn’t leave. She had a
job to do.
People depending on her.
‘I can do facts and figures,’ she said quickly, hoping that he couldn’t
see that her legs were shaking. ‘I have all the documents in my briefcase.
Everything you’ll need to help you make a decision.’
‘I’ve already made a decision. My answer is no.’ His jaw was
roughened by dark stubble and she watched as a muscle flickered in his
lean cheek.
‘But you made that decision before you had a chance to talk to me.’
She wiped a damp hand over her skirt, refusing to allow him to squash
her natural optimism. ‘I’m hoping that once I’ve explained what’s
happening, you might rethink.’ ‘Why would I do that?’
Unease blossomed to life inside her. ‘Once you see the figures and our
plans for the future, I thought you might change your mind about
withdrawing the finance.’ She watched his face hopefully, searching for
something—anything—that might indicate that he was receptive to
further negotiation on the topic. Anything that might indicate that she
hadn’t wasted her time coming here.
But he didn’t answer. He gave her no reassurance or encouragement.
No hope at all. He just watched her and from behind her in the trees
came a sharp wail, followed by what sounded like maniacal laughter.Grace turned her head and squinted into the dense forest that
surrounded them. With the helicopter gone she was suddenly aware of
the constant background noise that enveloped them. Jungle sounds.
Yelps, calls, shrieks, chirping and warbling. It was as if the whole forest
was alive. ‘It sounds as though someone is being murdered out there.’
Laughter in her eyes, she looked back at him, seeking to build an
emotional connection and falling at the first hurdle.
There was no connection. No answering smile. And it was impossible
to know what he was thinking because his face revealed none of his
thoughts.
‘You’re afraid of the jungle, Miss Thacker?’ His tone was less than
encouraging. ‘Or is it something else that is making you nervous?’
Something else? Like the fact that her whole life was on the verge of
being ground into the dust, perhaps, or the fact that she was alone in the
rainforest with a man who obviously disliked the entire human race?
There were so many things to make her nervous she wouldn’t have
known where to begin her list, but he wasn’t exactly a man who invited
confidences so Grace pushed away the mental image of the jaguars,
snakes and two thousand species of insect. ‘I’m not nervous—’
‘Is that right?’ He watched her for a few moments and then narrowed
his eyes. ‘Then let me give you a few more hints on how to do business
with me. Don’t waste my time, don’t lie to me and most of all, don’t
cheat. They’re the three things guaranteed to irritate me and I never say
yes to anything when I’m irritated.’
What did women see in him? He was wrapped in a cloak of cynicism so
thick that it didn’t allow even the faintest c***k of light to pass through and his eyes shimmered with an impatience that he didn’t bother to
mask with the usual social pleasantries.
‘I won’t lie to you. I don’t lie to anyone.’
But she hadn’t been absolutely honest with him either, had she? She hadn’t
revealed everything about herself when she’d taken up his loan.
Discomfort and guilt slithered down her spine and she quickly reminded
herself that there was nothing in the contract that stipulated that she tell
everything about herself. And none of her personal history had any
relevance to her ability to run her company—she’d made sure of it.
Nevertheless she felt betraying colour touch her cheeks and saw him
smile.
Just a flicker and not a particularly nice smile, but a definite
indication that he’d seen her blush and filed it away as a point against
her. ‘You’re a woman, Miss Thacker. Lying and cheating is welded into
your DNA and you can’t change that. The best we can hope for is that
you endeavour to fight against thousands of years of evolution when
you’re in my company.’ He pulled open the door and stood to one side so
that she could pass through.
For a moment she just stood there, looking at him. ‘Don’t bully me, Mr
Cordeiro.’ Her voice was husky and shook slightly but she forced herself
to carry on speaking. ‘My business isn’t doing well and I know we have
things to discuss, but don’t try and intimidate me.’
Never again was she allowing that to happen. ‘Do I intimidate you?’
She was willing to bet he scared everyone he met. ‘I think you could at
least try to be a little more friendly.’
‘Friendly?’ His voice was faintly mocking. ‘You want me to be friendly?’
She forced herself to hold his gaze. ‘I just don’t see why a business
meeting always has to be cold and impersonal.’
He moved towards her and she took an instinctive step backwards.
‘You want to get personal with me, Miss Thacker?’ His lashes lowered,
his eyes grazed hers and the heat and the humidity in the air rose to
stifling proportions. ‘How personal?’ He moved closer still and she found
it suddenly hard to breathe.
He wasn’t touching her and yet her body was overwhelmingly
conscious of every inch of his, as if it had been sleeping for the past
twenty-three years and had suddenly been brought to life. ‘I’m just
trying to say that I’ve always felt that business can be fun as well as hard
work.’
‘Is that right?’ He studied her for a long moment. ‘Well, your attitude
explains a great deal about the current state of your company accounts.’
He moved away but it took a few moments for her breathing to
normalise and her heart rate to slow to something approximating its
normal rhythm.
She wanted to respond to his less than flattering comment about her
company, but he didn’t give her the opportunity. Instead he strolled
through the open door, leaving her to follow.
No wonder his wife left him, she thought miserably as she followed him,
carefully closing the door between her and the jungle. Or was he
arrogant and cynical because his wife had left?
As she pondered that question, it took her a moment to be aware of her surroundings but when she finally glanced around her she realised
with a jolt of surprise that they hadn’t left the rainforest outside at all. It
was part of the lodge.
Following him through a huge glass dome, she glanced left and right,
her attention caught by the profusion of huge, exotic plants that turned
his home from amazing to spectacular. And through the glass, the
rainforest, so close that inside and outside appeared to merge in perfect
harmony.
At any other time she would have been fascinated, but it was obvious
from his less than encouraging body language that Rafael Cordeiro had
absolutely no interest in her opinion on his choice of home.
Making no attempt to put her at her ease, he led her into another large
room and waved a hand towards a large round table that housed a state-
of-the-art computer and several screens. Two phones were ringing but
they both suddenly stopped, as if they’d been answered elsewhere. ‘Sit
down.’
Technology, Grace thought, eyeing the phones. He clearly wasn’t as
alone as he appeared to be.
She sank onto the nearest chair and glanced around her in awe.
Through giant hexagonal panes of glass, the lush, dense greenery of the
jungle pressed in on them.
‘It’s amazing,’ she breathed, genuinely taken aback by the unusual
nature of their surroundings. ‘It’s like sitting in a greenhouse in the
middle of the forest.’ Her eyes slid to a patch of fern that she saw
moving. ‘Do the animals come close? Do they know you’re here?’
‘Predators always sense their prey, Miss Thacker.’ Rafael Cordeiro