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and he had little doubt his mother would show up at his door to personally escort him.

      The cause was worthy, raising funds for the area’s less fortunate. At one time Dawson had been happy to do his part by suiting up like a penguin, shaking hands and making small talk with Denver’s movers and shakers. But for the past few years he’d made excuses not to attend the event, which always fell the second Saturday after Thanksgiving. It was a bad time of the year for him. The absolute worst, in fact. He’d been grateful that his mother, who was a stickler for appearances, had been willing to let him shirk his responsibilities as a Burke. Apparently his amnesty had run out.

      And she claimed he had inherited his stubborn streak from his father.

      He consulted his watch. “My housekeeper should be in by now. Give her a call. Ingrid will see to it that the tux gets cleaned. And when you get a minute—”

      “A cup of coffee and a toasted bagel, light on the cream cheese, with a side of fresh fruit,” Rachel finished for him.

      “Please.”

      His efficient secretary could all but read his mind, whereas Eve Hawley apparently was unable to make sense of a simple list of names, even when it included particulars like sex, age and how they were acquainted with Dawson.

      “Will there be anything else?” Rachel asked.

      “Actually, yes.” He retrieved the cell phone from the inside pocket of his suit coat and handed it to her. “Call Miss Hawley back for me. Hers is the third number down. She’s the personal shopper Carole recommended. Tell her I’m too busy to see her today and, though it should be completely self-explanatory, see if you can answer the questions she claims to have about the list of names I had you e-mail her last week.”

      “Very well.”

      “Thanks.” He reached up to massage the back of his neck as he said it, grimacing when pain radiated all the way down his spine. It had been a frequent visitor for the past three years, ever since the car accident that had claimed the lives of his wife and daughter. Tension made the pain worse. This time of the year, when memories and regrets swirled their thickest, it became almost unbearable.

      “Is your back bothering you again?” Rachel inquired in a tone devoid of the syrupy concern he so detested. The last thing he wanted was to be the object of pity. Yet he knew that’s precisely what he had become in many people’s eyes.

      Poor Dawson Burke.

      “A little.”

      “I’ll call Wanda and see if she can come by for a session between your afternoon meetings today,” she said, referring to the masseuse he’d kept on retainer since leaving the hospital after the crash.

      That sounded like heaven, but he shook his head. “No time. I ran into Nick Freely on my way out last night. I promised I’d go over some stock options with him.”

      “I can call him, reschedule,” she offered.

      “No. I tell you what. Ask Wanda to come by my house this evening. That way I’ll be nice and limber for my speech.”

      When Rachel was gone, he made a mental note to increase the amount on her holiday bonus check. She had it coming.

      Eve Hawley had something coming, too, he decided later that evening. And it wasn’t monetary compensation.

      He was lying on the portable table his masseuse had set up in the center of his den, only a thin white sheet standing between him and immodesty, when his housekeeper tapped at the door.

      “Excuse me, Mr. Burke,” she said from the doorway. “There’s someone here to see you.”

      He wasn’t expecting company. He had barely an hour before he was due to leave for his speech. As Wanda kneaded his knotted muscles with hands that would have done a lumberjack proud, he asked between gritted teeth, “Who is it?”

      “Eve Hawley.”

      He lifted his face from the donut-shaped rest and gaped at the housekeeper. “She’s here now?”

      “Yes.”

      The woman was relentless and obviously incapable of doing the job if, even after talking to Rachel, she was still hounding him.

      “Tell her I’m indisposed.”

      “I did, Mr. Burke. But she’s insisting on seeing you,” Ingrid said.

      “Insisting? Well, if she’s insisting…” He figured he knew a surefire way to get rid of her. “Send her in.”

      “Right now?” The housekeeper gaped at him.

      “Yes. Right now.” If Eve Hawley wanted to see him, Dawson would give her an eyeful.

      Ingrid’s gaze cut to his bare back and the sheet that rode low across his hips, covering the essentials and then leaving his legs exposed. She was old enough to be his mother. In fact, it was at his mother’s suggestion that he’d hired her. Her pursed lips told him exactly how inappropriate she found his suggestion to be. But, like all—or at least the vast majority—of the people in his employ, she minded her own business and did as he asked.

      “Very well,” she said, withdrawing from the room without further comment.

      “Carry on,” he told Wanda, before lowering his face back into rest. The masseuse was chopping down his spine in karate fashion when he heard the door open a moment later. The person who entered sucked in a startled breath. Though it was small of him, Dawson grinned at the floor.

      “Oh. You’re…”

      “Busy,” came his muffled reply.

      Feminine laughter trilled. “Actually, I was going to say naked.”

      “Not quite.” But he frowned at the same floor he’d smiled at a moment earlier. She didn’t sound nearly as distressed by that fact as he’d hoped.

      “I’m Eve Hawley.”

      “Yes, I know,” he snapped. “Even if my housekeeper hadn’t announced your arrival, I would recognize your voice from the many messages you’ve left on my phone.”

      “Messages that went unreturned,” she had the audacity to point out.

      “They were returned. My secretary called you back,” he said.

      “Ah, yes. Mrs. Stern. If I’d wanted to talk to your secretary, Mr. Burke, I would have dialed her direct. I need to speak to you.”

      Dawson felt the muscles in his back beginning to tighten again despite Wanda’s competent ministrations. “Look, Miss Hawley, surely Carole Deming briefed you on what I’m looking for. This is gift shopping, not rocket science. If you can’t do the job—”

      “Oh, I can do the job. I just believe in doing it well,” she replied in a voice that was stiff with pride. Another place, another time, he might have admired it. He had no patience for it at the moment. “I won’t take up much of your time,” she promised.

      Dawson relented with a sigh, but he didn’t raise his head from the padded hole. He was being rude, insufferably so. But then that was the point. The woman already had strained his patience.

      “Fine. Shoot.”

      “You want to discuss this right now?” Her tone was incredulous.

      “Right now is all the time I have. My schedule is very tight and will be for the next several days.”

      “I see.” He thought she might object and leave. That had been his goal. But he heard a pair of heels click over the parquet floor. They stopped just outside his limited field of vision.

      “I have some concerns,” she said, her tone that of a professional who apparently was not the least bit concerned about discussing business with a nearly naked man. Perhaps like the housekeeper, she, too, was old enough to be his mother.

      “What are these

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