
He looked to Roger for confirmation.
“Yes,” said Roger. “But if any of you have questions or concerns, you should feel free to use me as a sounding board.”
The words surprised Hunter. Was Roger telling them not to go directly to Hunter?
“We’ll try to make this transition as smooth as possible,” Roger continued in a silky voice that set Hunter’s teeth on edge. “But we understand some of you may feel challenged and unsettled.”
Oh, great little pep talk. Thanks for that, Roger.
“There’s no need for anyone to feel unsettled,” Hunter cut in. “As far as I’m concerned, it’s business as usual. And my door is always open.” Then he looked directly at Sinclair. “Come and see me.”
An hour later, Sinclair took Hunter up on his invitation. On the twentieth floor, she propped herself against the doorjamb of his airy corner office. “This,” she said, taking in the big desk, the credenza piled with books and the meeting table that sat eight, “I have got to hear.”
He straightened in his high-backed chair and glanced up from his laptop, a flash of guilt in his eyes.
Ignoring the way her heart lifted at his reaction, she took two steps inside and closed the door behind her. He cared that he’d blindsided her. At least that was something.
Not that she cared about him in any fundamental way. She couldn’t. They were a brief flash of history, and nothing more.
“It was Gramps,” answered Hunter. “He bought the company and sent me here to run it.”
“And you didn’t know about me?” she guessed.
“I didn’t know,” he confirmed.
“So, you’re not stalking me?”
He hit a key on his computer. “Right. Like any reasonable stalker, I bought your company to get close to you.”
