Lie to Me: A Contemporary Billionaire BWWM Romance (6 page)

BOOK: Lie to Me: A Contemporary Billionaire BWWM Romance
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* * *


A
re
you picking these things just to spite me?”

It had been a few days since the horse-riding incident, and in those few days Nick had introduced Zoe to opera (‘So it’s fat people howling in German?’), to caviar (‘I know we eat chicken eggs and duck eggs, but somehow this is weird’) and to abstract art (‘That’s a tree?! I know kids that could do better!’). Now he felt that sufficient time had passed to try something a little more active again.

And something a little riskier.

“You must have been on a boat before,” said Nick, as they looked at the sailing boat that stood at the dock.

Zoe shook her head. “I’m not falling for that again. One minute you’re saying it’s just like riding a donkey, the next I can’t sit down for a week.”

“That was less than a week ago,” Nick pointed out.

“I am well aware of that,” said Zoe, darkly. “Didn’t you notice I brought a cushion to the opera? Wish I’d brought my iPod,” she added, shaking her head.

“Sailing is easy,” lied Nick, encouragingly.

“Doesn’t this guy have like a yacht?” Zoe pointed out. “With like a crew to do the sailing for him?”

“Yes,” acknowledged Nick. “But part of being cultured is being able to do the things that other people do for you. It’s the knowledge that you
could
do them yourself, but you’re far too busy working, appreciating art, drinking fine wine, and counting your money.”

“Sounds dumb to me.”

“Can we find a word other than ‘dumb’?”

Zoe gave him a sharp smile. “I can find several, if you would like to hear them.”

Nick considered this. “Perhaps we’ll stick with ‘dumb’ for now. Get on the boat.”

Zoe sighed. “Do I have to?”

“Yes. And stop complaining.”

Sometimes, Nick was discovering, it was necessary for him to put his foot down – he was after all the one in charge here and it did not pay to let Zoe forget that. For one thing, part of her training was an understanding of the hierarchy of business and indeed of life – some people (people like Vanessa and Nick) were at the top, and others (people like Zoe) were not.

It was not prejudicial or exclusive, it was how it was meant to be, a matter of birth—and yes, money. If uncultured people like Zoe were in charge then where would the world be?

Zoe reluctantly put a foot on the sail boat. “It’s moving!”

“Of course it’s moving!” Nick snapped – there were times when she just irritated him. “It’s on the water.”

“It’s moving away from the dock!” There was no denying it, the single foot Zoe had put on the boat was pushing it away from the dock, on which her other foot remained planted, forcing her increasingly into the splits.

“Put your other foot on the boat.”

“Are you crazy?! That thing’s not safe.”

“It’s a hell of a lot safer than this.”

“Help!” Zoe was now being stretched, further than she had been since High school gym class.

“Can you get the first foot back to the dock?”

“I don’t think so!” It was far too late for that.

“Give me your hand.”

“I can do it myself!”

One thing Nick had learnt about Zoe was that she did not like to be helped – or at least not physically assisted, and certainly not by him.

As Nick watched, trying not to allow his amusement to show, Zoe’s position reached a crisis point and the situation ended as it was always destined to – with a splash.

“Watch your head against the boat,” Nick observed as Zoe bobbed back to the surface.

“You think this is funny?”

“No,” said Nick, in defiant denial of his own obvious laughter. “I think it’s an object lesson in what happens when you don’t do what I tell you to. Let me help you.”

“I can manage!”

Nick wondered if her unwillingness to be touched was just about him or if it extended to all men. He found himself oddly concerned by it, not wanting to believe that it might be about him.

Zoe lunged for the boards of the dock, grabbing hold with her hands and hauling herself up with grunts of effort and a strained look on her face. With a massive effort she managed to get her torso out onto the dock and lay there panting and gasping wetly for a while before dragging her legs up, looking like a seal trying to pull itself back onto land.

“Graceful,” commented Nick.

“Bite me.”

“If you’d done what I told you…”

“Bite me.”

“On your feet,” Nick snapped.

There was a hard edge to his voice now and Zoe obeyed it, sullenly but without question.

“Right. This time, you do exactly what I tell you. We’re spending a lot of time out on the water today and it will be more productive if you spend less time in it.”

“Wait,” Zoe looked shocked. “We’re still going sailing?!”

“Of course.”

“I’m drenched.”

“Whose fault is that?” He tossed her a towel from his bag. “Dry off, then get on the damn boat.”

“But, my hair is a disaster. And my clothes are wet. I don’t have anything to change into.”

“I refer you to all my previous answers.”

“Nick, I’m cold.” There was a plaintive tone to her voice now. Although it was a bright, sunny day, the water was freezing and Nick could her hardened nipples poking at the front of her top.

He tried not to stare.

“Well, you should have thought of that beforehand. Get in the boat.”

Zoe did as she was told.

In fact, she did exactly as she was told the whole day.

Sailing did not come naturally to her but, with Nick’s new severity, she learned quickly, seldom making the same mistake more than once (although she was repeatedly hit in the head by the swinging boom). All in all it was a very successful lesson, far more so than those of the previous few days. And yet Nick found that he took little satisfaction from it.

They docked the boat and Nick sprang out to tie it up. He offered a hand to Zoe to help her out.

She ignored it.

“Same time tomorrow.”

“Yes.” She said stiffly.

Zoe turned to leave.

“Wait.” Nick felt he couldn’t leave things like this. “I’m sorry if I was hard on you today. It’s dangerous out there and it’s really important you did what you were told or something bad might have happened.

Zoe met his gaze with a curiously blank expression on her face. “I’ll do whatever you tell me, Mr. Rothberger. You’re my boss and that was the deal we made. But that’s not reason that you behaved the way you did today. Even if you won’t admit it to me, at least have the decency to admit it to yourself.”

With that, she turned on her heel and strode away, leaving Nick alone on the dock.

What had she meant by that?

Why else would he have snapped at her and forced her to continue in wet clothes? It was for her safety. Well… not the wet clothes, that hadn’t served any safety purpose at all. So why had he done it?

This self-questioning made Nick feel uncomfortable.

He seemed to be lifting the lid on a closed part of his mind that made him his skin hot and prickly. Unwelcome thoughts and images sleeted through his mind. He dismissed them. The bet was what mattered – that was what he had to focus on and that meant training Zoe, no matter how unpleasant it might be. That was why he had done all he had done; to get some obedience out of her.

They weren’t friends, bantering back and forth, they were employee and employer and it was about time she started acting like it.

That was why he had treated her like shit.

That seemed like a satisfying reason and it answered the questions in his head. But deep down, in a part of his mind he was not yet ready to address, Nick worried that was not the whole story.

* * *

W
eek
one of Zoe’s training ended with an evening at the ballet. Nick had been putting this one off. Not because he had known that Zoe would hate it, but because he hated it. There were certain things that a man of his education and upbringing was supposed to like, and most of them he genuinely did.

He liked good food and wine (which did not mean that he did not also like a burger and a beer), he liked opera and classical music (which did not mean that he did not also enjoy rock and the guilty pleasure of ABBA), he liked the films of Truffaut, Dreyer, and Bergman (and laughed his ass off at movies like Airplane and Austin Powers).

But ballet?

Nick had a theory that no one liked ballet any more. Perhaps there had been a time in history when people had genuinely enjoyed it, before the invention of television, books and every other form of entertainment, but that time had long since passed and now people only went to the ballet because they were supposed to. Nick went about once a year with family and, for reasons he could not adequately explain to himself, he
still
pretended to enjoy it.

Why could he not be honest about it? He had no idea, but it was probably too late to start now. It was not that he could not appreciate it – ballet was obviously very hard to do, but then again it would be hard to make a glass sledgehammer, which did not mean that it was worth doing. Given the choice, he would, therefore, have happily left ballet off the list of cultural activities to teach to Zoe, but Vanessa (damn her!) had made particular mention of ballet in a couple of her emails to Jacques Jourdan. It was a passion the pair shared and so it was necessary for Zoe to know about it.

Of course, if Nick was correct, then neither Vanessa nor Jacques, actually enjoyed it, they were just showing off to each other. And so the horrible cycle of ballet continued – as long as people thought it was culturally impressive to know about it, then people would keep going to see it, and the dancers would continue to inflict it on the world.

“You’ll love it,” enthused Nick, lying through his teeth. “It’s just like going to the theatre.”

“I’m sure it’ll be great,” said Zoe, blandly.

Nick had expected, or more accurately hoped, to get a snapped response along the lines of ‘That’s what you said about Opera’. Since the sailing lesson the attractively acerbic side of Zoe had gone AWOL.

Which was worrying for two reasons: firstly, that side of her had been far more like Vanessa Reese, which was rather the point of the whole exercise. Secondly, it seemed that he had hurt her. He had taken the fight out of her and turned her into an obedient and characterless automaton. That second point ought not have mattered and Nick strove hard not to let it, but it did. She was easier to control now, easier to mold to suit his purpose, she did as she was told, and yet Nick hated himself for this development.

They made their way to their exclusive box, giving them a wide view of the assembled great and good of high society, who were using this pre-show opportunity to be seen and to be fabulous. It seemed that a night at the ballet was the price you had to pay to appear in public in your best clothes, your best jewels and with your best supercilious sneer on your face. Seats were taken, the lights dimmed, the music began, and Nick took a deep breath and prepared to be bored.

The lights rose again after what seemed like an eon, for the interval. Nick glanced at Zoe and was disappointed to see again, that blank, characterless façade that she had been wearing since the sailing trip. Then, as she turned to him, he saw the façade crack and split, revealing the woman beneath.

“What - in the name of all things holy –
what
the sweet, merciful crap was that?!”

“Ballet?” ventured Nick.

“Bullshit is more like it!”

“Some people like it.” Nick was now trying hard not smile.

“Some people like having stuff shoved in weird places! Doesn’t mean we should indulge their idiocy by joining in!” It was safe to say at this point, that Zoe had not enjoyed the ballet. “You really like this shit?!”

“No.”

“I mean, what was that? Nineteen emaciated girls (with weirdly muscular legs) bouncing up and down on their toes, and one man in tights with his penis strapped down – and that’s entertainment?! What could you possibly see in this?!”

“I don’t like it either.”

“If the point is storytelling then why don’t they just tell the damn story without all this jumping about? What does it add? Why does watching two dozen idiots cripple themselves for life make a story better? It doesn’t!”

“I agree.”

“Would The Godfather be a better movie if Marlon Brando broke his toes halfway through?”

“No.”

“Would Pride and Prejudice be a better book if Mr. Darcy made Elisabeth jump everywhere for no earthly reason?”

“No.”

“Just cause something is difficult and painful, doesn’t mean it’s worthwhile.”

“I agree.”

“I mean it would be difficult and painful to tell the story of Cinderella while simultaneously having a colonoscopy but that doesn’t make it entertaining. I don’t see people flocking to see that! How can you possibly pay money for this? How can you possibly enjoy it?”

“I don’t.”

“How can you… what?” Zoe finally heard what Nick had been saying throughout her rant. “You don’t like ballet either?”

“No,” said Nick, simply. It occurred to him fleetingly that she was awfully pretty when she was angry.

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