Nora Roberts - Stanislaski 01 - Luring A Lady.pdf

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Luring a Lady
Prologue
The playground was full of noise, drama and politics. Even at eight, Mikhail knew about politics. He had, after all, been in America
nearly two full years.
He no longer waited for men to come drag his father away, or to wake up one morning back in the Ukraine and find the escape into
Hungary, the travel to Austria and finally to New York had all been a dream.
He lived in Brooklyn, and that was good. He was an American, and that was better. He and his big sister, his little brother went to
school—and spoke English. Most of the time. His baby sister had been born here, and would never know what it was to shiver in the
cold while hiding in a wagon, waiting, waiting for discovery.
Or freedom.
There were times he didn't think of it at all. He liked getting up in the morning and seeing the little houses that looked so much like their
house out his bedroom window. He liked smelling the breakfast his mother cooked in the kitchen, and hearing his mother's voice
murmuring, his father's booming as Papa got ready for work.
Papa had to work very hard, and sometimes he came home tired in the evening. But he had a smile in his eyes, and the lines around
them were fading.
And at night there was hot food and laughter around the dinner table.
School was not so bad, and he was learning—except his teachers said he daydreamed too much and too often.
"The girls are jumping rope." Alexi, Mikhail's little brother, plopped down beside him.
Both had dark hair and golden brown eyes, and the sharp facial bones that would make women swoon in only a few more years. Now, of
course, girls were something to be ignored. Unless they were family.
"Natasha," Alex said with smug pride in his older sister, "is the best."
"She is Stanislaski."
Alex acknowledged this with a shrug. It went without saying. His eyes scanned the playground. He liked to watch how people behaved,
what they did—and didn't do. His jacket—just a bit too big as his brother's was a bit too small—was open despite the brisk March wind.
Alex nodded toward two boys on the far end of the blacktop. "After school, we have to beat up Will and Charlie Braunstein."
Mikhail pursed his lips, scratched an itch just under his ribs. "Okay; Why?"
"Because Will said we were Russian spies and Charlie laughed and made noises like a pig. So."
"So," Mikhail agreed. And the brothers looked at each other and grinned.
* * *
They were late getting home from school, which would probably mean a punishment. Mikhail's pants were ripped at the knee and Alexi's
lip was split—which would undoubtedly mean a lecture.
But it had been worth it. The Stanislaski brothers had emerged from the battle victorious. They strolled down the sidewalk, arms slung
over each other's shoulders, book bags dragging as they recapped the combat.
"Charlie, he has a good punch," Mikhail said. "So if you fight again, you have to be fast. He has longer arms than you have."
"And he has a black eye," Alex noted with satisfaction.
"Yes." Mikhail swelled with pride over his baby brother's exploits. "This is good. When we go to school tomorrow, we… Uh-oh."
He broke off, and the fearless warrior trembled.
Nadia Stanislaski stood on the stoop outside their front door. His mama's hands were fisted on her hips, and even from half a block
away he knew her eagle eye had spotted the rip in his trousers.
"Now we're in for it," Alexi muttered.
"We're not in yet."
"No, it means…in trouble." Alexi tried his best smile, even though it caused his lip to throb. But Nadia's eyes narrowed.
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She swaggered down the walk like a gunfighter prepared to draw and fire. "You fight again?"
As the eldest, Mikhail stepped in front of his brother. "Just a little."
Her sharp eyes scanned them, top to bottom and judged the damage minor. "You fight each other again?"
"No, Mama." Alex sent her a hopeful look. "Will Braunstein said—"
"I don't want to hear what Will Braunstein said. Am I Will Braunstein's mama?"
At the tone, both boys dropped their chins to their chests and murmured: "No, Mama."
"Whose mama am I?"
Both boys sighed. Heavily. "Our mama."
"So, this is what I do when my boys make me worry and come late from school and fight like hooligans." It was a word she'd learned
from her neighbor Grace MacNamara—and one she thought, sentimentally, suited her sons so well. Her boys yelped when she grabbed
each one by the earlobe.
Before she could pull them toward the house, she heard the rattle and thump that could only be her husband Yuri's secondhand pickup
truck.
He swung to the curb, wiggled his eyebrows when he saw his wife holding each of his sons by the ear. "What have they done?"
"Fighting the Braunsteins. We go inside now to call Mrs. Braunstein and apologize."
"Aw. Ow!" Mikhail's protest turned into a muffled yip as Nadia expertly twisted his earlobe.
"This can wait, yes? I have something." Yuri clambered out of the truck, and held up a little gray pup. "This is Sasha, your new brother."
Both boys shouted with delight and, released, sprang forward. Sasha responded with licks and nips and wriggles until Yuri bundled the
pup into Mikhail's arms.
"He is for you and Alexi and Tasha and Rachel to take care. Not for your mama," he said even as Nadia rolled her eyes. "This is
understood?"
"We'll take good care of him, Papa. Let me hold him, Mik!" Alex demanded and tried to elbow Mikhail aside.
"I'm the oldest. I hold him first."
"Everybody will hold. Go. Go show your sisters." Yuri waved his hands. Before scrambling away, both boys pressed against him.
"Thank you, Papa." Mikhail turned to kiss his mother's cheek. "We'll call Mrs. Braunstein, Mama."
"Yes, you will." Nadia shook her head as they ran into the house, calling for their sisters. "Hooligans," she said, relishing the word.
"Boys will be what boys will be." Yuri lifted her off her feet, laughed long and deep. "We are an American family." He set her down, but
kept his arm around her waist as they started into the house. "What's for dinner?"
LURING A LADY
To my nephew Kenni, my second favorite carpenter
Chapter 1
Contents - Prev/Next
She wasn't a patient woman. Delays and excuses were barely tolerated, and never tolerated well. Waiting—and she was waiting
now—had her temper dropping degree by degree toward ice. With Sydney Hayward icy anger was a great deal more dangerous than
boiling rage. One frigid glance, one frosty phrase could make the recipient quake. And she knew it.
Now she paced her new office, ten stories up in midtown Manhattan. She swept from corner to corner over the deep oatmeal-colored
carpet. Everything was perfectly in place, papers, files, coordinated appointment and address books. Even her brass-and-ebony desk
set was perfectly aligned, the pens and pencils marching in a straight row across the polished mahogany, the notepads carefully placed
beside the phone.
Her appearance mirrored the meticulous precision and tasteful elegance of the office. Her crisp beige suit was all straight lines and
starch, but didn't disguise the fact that there was a great pair of legs striding across the carpet.
With it she wore a single strand of pearls, earrings to match and a slim gold watch, all very discreet and exclusive. As a Hayward, she'd
been raised to be both.
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Her dark auburn hair was swept off her neck and secured with a gold clip. The pale freckles that went with the hair were nearly invisible
after a light dusting of powder. Sydney felt they made her look too young and too vulnerable. At twenty-eight she had a face that
reflected her breeding. High, slashing cheekbones, the strong, slightly pointed chin, the small straight nose. An aristocratic face, it was
pale as porcelain, with a softly shaped mouth she knew could sulk too easily, and large smoky-blue eyes that people often mistook for
guileless.
Sydney glanced at her watch again, let out a little hiss of breath, then marched over to her desk. Before she could pick up the phone,
her intercom buzzed.
"Yes."
"Ms. Hayward. There's a man here who insists on seeing the person in charge of the Soho project. And your four-o'clock
appointment—"
"It's now four-fifteen," Sydney cut in, her voice low and smooth and final. "Send him in."
"Yes, ma'am, but he's not Mr. Howington."
So Howington had sent an underling. Annoyance hiked Sydney's chin up another fraction. "Send him in," she repeated, and flicked off
the intercom with one frosted pink nail. So, they thought she'd be pacified with a junior executive. Sydney took a deep breath and
prepared to kill the messenger.
It was years of training that prevented her mouth from dropping open when the man walked in. No, not walked, she corrected.
Swaggered. Like a black-patched pirate over the rolling deck of a boarded ship.
She wished she'd had the foresight to have fired a warning shot over his bow.
Her initial shock had nothing to do with the fact that he was wildly handsome, though the adjective suited perfectly. A mane of thick,
curling black hair flowed just beyond the nape of his neck, to be caught by a leather thong in a short ponytail that did nothing to detract
from rampant masculinity. His face was rawboned and lean, with skin the color of an old gold coin. Hooded eyes were nearly as black
as his hair. His full lips were shadowed by a day or two's growth of beard that gave him a rough and dangerous look.
Though he skimmed under six foot and was leanly built, he made her delicately furnished office resemble a doll's house.
What was worse was the fact that he wore work clothes. Dusty jeans and a sweaty T-shirt with a pair of scarred boots that left a trail of
dirt across her pale carpet. They hadn't even bothered with the junior executive, she thought as her lips firmed, but had sent along a
common laborer who hadn't had the sense to clean up before the interview.
"You're Hayward?" The insolence in the tone and the slight hint of a Slavic accent had her imagining him striding up to a camp fire with
a whip tucked in his belt.
The misty romance of the image made her tone unnecessarily sharp. "Yes, and you're late."
His eyes narrowed fractionally as they studied each other across the desk. "Am I?"
"Yes. You might find it helpful to wear a watch. My time is valuable if yours is not. Mr…"
"Stanislaski," He hooked his thumbs in the belt loops of his jeans, shifting his weight easily, arrogantly onto one hip. "Sydney's a man's
name."
She arched a brow. "Obviously you're mistaken."
He skimmed his gaze over her slowly, with as much interest as annoyance. She was pretty as a frosted cake, but he hadn't come
straight and sweaty from a job to waste time with a female. "Obviously. I thought Hayward was an old man with a bald head and a white
mustache."
"You're thinking of my grandfather."
"Ah, then it's your grandfather I want to see."
"That won't be possible, Mr. Stanislaski, as my grandfather's been dead for nearly two months."
The arrogance in his eyes turned quickly to compassion. "I'm sorry. It hurts to lose family."
She couldn't say why, of all the condolences she had received, these few words from a stranger touched her. "Yes, it does. Now, if
you'll take a seat, we can get down to business."
Cold, hard and distant as the moon. Just as well, he thought. It would keep him from thinking of her in more personal ways—at least
until he got what he wanted.
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"I have sent your grandfather letters," he began as he settled into one of the trim Queen Anne chairs in front of the desk. "Perhaps the
last were misplaced during the confusion of death."
An odd way to put it, Sydney thought, but apt. Her life had certainly been turned upside down in the past few months. "Correspondence
should be addressed to me." She sat, folding her hands on the desk. "As you know Hayward Enterprises is considering several firms—"
"For what?"
She struggled to shrug off the irritation of being interrupted. "I beg your pardon?"
"For what are you considering several firms?"
If she had been alone, she would have sighed and shut her eyes. Instead, she drummed her fingers on the desk. "What position do you
hold, Mr. Stanislaski?"
"Position?"
"Yes, yes, what is it you do?"
The impatience in her voice made him grin. His teeth were very white, and not quite straight. "You mean; what is it I do? I work with
wood."
"You're a carpenter?"
"Sometimes."
"Sometimes," she repeated, and sat back. Behind her, buildings punched into a hard blue sky. "Perhaps you can tell me why
Howington Construction sent a sometimes carpenter to represent them in this interview."
The room smelled of lemon and rosemary and only reminded him that he was hot, thirsty and as impatient as she. "I could—if they had
sent me."
It took her a moment to realize he wasn't being deliberately obtuse. "You're not from Howington?"
"No. I'm Mikhail Stanislaski, and I live in one of your buildings." He propped a dirty boot on a dusty knee. "If you're thinking of hiring
Howington, I would think again. I once worked for them, but they cut too many comers."
"Excuse me." Sydney gave the intercom a sharp jab. "Janine, did Mr. Stanislaski tell you he represented Howington?"
"Oh, no, ma'am. He just asked to see you. Howington called about ten minutes ago to reschedule. If you—" . "Never mind." Sitting back
again, she studied the man who was grinning at her. "Apparently I've been laboring under a misconception."
"If you mean you made a mistake, yes. I'm here to talk to you about your apartment building in Soho."
She wanted, badly, to drag her hands through her hair. "You're here with a tenant complaint."
"I'm here with many tenants' complaints," he corrected.
"You should be aware that there's a certain procedure one follows in this kind of matter."
He lifted one black brow. "You own the building, yes?"
"Yes, but—"
"Then it's your responsibility."
She stiffened. "I'm perfectly aware of my responsibilities, Mr. Stanislaski. And now…" .
He rose as she did, and didn't budge an inch. "Your grandfather made promises. To honor him, you must keep them."
"What I must do," she said in a frigid voice, "is run my business." And she was trying desperately to learn how. "You may tell the other
tenants that Hayward is at the point of hiring a contractor as we're quite aware that many of our properties are in need of repair or
renovation. The apartments in Soho will be dealt with in turn."
His expression didn't change at the dismissal, nor did the tone of his voice or the spread-legged, feet-planted stance. "We're tired of
waiting for our turn. We want what was promised to us, now."
"If you'll send me a list of your demands—"
"We have."
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She set her teeth. "Then I'll look over the files this evening."
"Files aren't people. You take the rent money every month, but you don't think of the people." He placed his hands on the desk and
leaned forward. Sydney caught a wisp of sawdust and sweat that was uncomfortably appealing. "Have you seen the building, or the
people who live in it?"
"I have reports," she began.
"Reports." He swore—it wasn't in a language she understood, but she was certain it was an oath. "You have your accountants and your
lawyers, and you sit up here in your pretty office and look through papers." With one quick slash of the hand, he dismissed her office
and herself. "But you know nothing. It's not you who's cold when the heat doesn't work, or who must climb five flights of stairs when the
elevator is broken. You don't worry that the water won't get hot or that the wiring is too old to be safe."
No one spoke to her that way. No one. Her own temper was making her heart beat too fast. It made her forget that she was facing a
very dangerous man. "You're wrong. I'm very concerned about all of those things. And I intend to correct them as soon as possible."
His eyes flashed and narrowed, like a sword raised and turned on its edge. "This is a promise we've heard before."
"Now, it's my promise, and you haven't had that before."
"And we're supposed to trust you. You, who are too lazy or too afraid to even go see what she owns."
Her face went dead white, the only outward sign of fury. "I've had enough of your insults for one afternoon, Mr. Stanislaski. Now, you can
either find your way out, or I'll call security to help you find it."
"I know my way," he said evenly. "I'll tell you this, Miss Sydney Hayward, you will begin to keep those promises within two days, or
we'll go to the building commissioner, and the press."
Sydney waited until he had stalked out before she sat again. Slowly she took a sheet of stationery from the drawer then methodically
tore it into shreds. She stared at the smudges his big wide-palmed hands had left on her glossy desk and chose and shredded another
sheet. Calmer, she punched the intercom, "Janine, bring me everything you've got on the Soho project."
An hour later, Sydney pushed the files aside and made two calls. The first was to cancel her dinner plans for the evening. The second
was to Lloyd Bingham, her grandfather's—now her—executive assistant.
"You just caught me," Lloyd told her as he walked into Sydney's office. "I was on my way out. What can I do for you?"
Sydney shot him a brief glance. He was a handsome, ambitious man who preferred Italian tailors and French food. Not yet forty, he was
on his second divorce and liked to escort society women who were attracted to his smooth blond looks and polished manners. Sydney
knew that he had worked hard and long to gain his position with Hay-ward and that he had taken over the reins during her grandfather's
illness the past year.
She also knew that he resented her because she was sitting behind a desk he considered rightfully his.
"For starters, you can explain why nothing has been done about the Soho apartments."
"The unit in Soho?" Lloyd took a cigarette from a slim gold case. "It's on the agenda."
"It's been on the agenda for nearly eighteen months. The first letter in the file, signed by the tenants, was dated almost two years ago
and lists twenty-seven specific complaints."
"And I believe you'll also see in the file that a number of them were addressed." He blew out a thin stream of smoke as he made himself
comfortable on one of the chairs.
"A number of them," Sydney repeated. "Such as the furnace repairs. The tenants seemed to think a new furnace was required."
Lloyd made a vague gesture. "You're new to the game, Sydney. You'll find that tenants always want new, better and more."
"That may be. However, it hardly seems cost-effective to me to repair a thirty-year-old furnace and have it break down again two months
later." She held up a finger before he could speak. "Broken railings in stairwells, peeling paint, an insufficient water heater, a defective
elevator, cracked porcelain…" She glanced up. "I could go on, but it doesn't seem necessary. There's a memo here, from my
grandfather to you, requesting that you take over the repairs and maintenance of this building."
"Which I did," Lloyd said stiffly. "You know very well that your grandfather's health turned this company upside down over the last year.
That apartment complex is only one of several buildings he owned."
"You're absolutely right." Her voice was quiet but without warmth. "I also know that we have a responsibility, a legal and a moral
responsibility to our tenants, whether the building is in Soho or on Central Park West." She closed the folder, linked her hands over it
and, in that gesture, stated ownership. "I don't want to antagonize you, Lloyd, but I want you to understand that I've decided to handle
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