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Page 6 of Hitched to My Enemy

"You know," I said, lowering my voice to a more intimate register, "for someone who claims to prioritize facts, you seem remarkably comfortable operating on suspicion and conjecture."

"And you seem remarkably adept at deflecting direct inquiries." She stepped closer, bringing us into each other's personal space in a maneuver that appeared flirtatious but felt like strategic warfare. "It makes me curious about what you're concealing."

"Perhaps I'm not concealing anything. Perhaps I'm simply savoring the opportunity to watch you in action." I allowed my gaze to travel deliberately from her eyes to her lips and back. "You're absolutely riveting when you're in investigator mode. All that laser-focused intensity... it's remarkably compelling."

Color bloomed in her cheeks, but her voice remained steady. "Charm won't alter my findings, Mr. Hardwick."

"I wouldn't presume to try to influence you." The lie flowed easily, wrapped in mock sincerity. "But since we're both here, and since you clearly need to evaluate our operational capabilities..."

I extended my hand, noting how her gaze immediately dropped to it with something that resembled fascination.

"Dance with me," I said suddenly, surprising both of us.

For a heartbeat, she appeared ready to refuse. I could practically watch her internal conflict—the consummate professional who needed to maintain appropriate boundaries battling the woman who had chosen to wear the dress I'd selected and jewelry that transformed her into royalty.

"One dance," she said finally, placing her hand in mine.

The instant our skin connected, electricity surged up my arm and straight to my chest. I led her onto the dance floor, hyperaware of every point of contact as I placed my hand on her waist and drew her closer.

The jazz quartet had transitioned to something slower, more intimate, and as we began to move together, I realized with startling clarity that our bodies synchronized perfectly. She followed my lead with effortless grace, as if we'd been dancing together for years instead of moments.

"You're full of revelations," I murmured against her ear, feeling her shiver in response.

"So are you." Her voice had turned breathy, and when I pulled back to study her face, her professional mask had completely dissolved. "This dress... how did you know my exact measurements?"

"I have an exceptional memory for important details." I spun her slowly, watching the silk spiral around her legs before drawing her back against me. "Especially when those details involve someone significant."

"And I'm significant?"

The question hung between us, heavy with implications neither of us was prepared to fully explore. The chemistry was undeniable—I could feel it in the way her breath caught when I held her closer, in the way her fingers tightened on my shoulder when I leaned down to speak directly into her ear.

But beneath that magnetic attraction lurked the threat we represented to each other. She possessed the power to annihilate everything I'd reconstructed. I possessed the ability to seduce her into compromising her treasured objectivity.

The question was: which of us would surrender first?

"You're more significant than you realize," I admitted, the truth escaping before I could censor it.

Around us, I was dimly aware of other couples dancing, of conversations and laughter continuing, but it felt like we existed in our own isolated sphere of tension and attraction. Her hand in mine was warm and impossibly soft, her body pressed against mine was both exquisite temptation and maddening restraint.

"Easton..." she began, but whatever confession she was about to make was interrupted by an ominous flicker of the lights overhead.

***

The lights flickered again, more dramatically this time, and I sensed rather than saw the subtle shift in the room's atmosphere. Conversations paused as guests glanced up at the chandeliers with growing concern.

Then the electrical surge struck.

Alarms began shrieking throughout the casino, and the lights died completely before emergency illumination activated, casting everything in an eerie crimson glow. Guests began to panic, voices rising in confusion and alarm as security personnel immediately mobilized to maintain order.

My crisis management instincts activated instantly. I'd spent three years preparing for every conceivable contingency, including power failures. I grasped Harlow's hand, feeling her grip tighten reflexively around mine.

"Come with me," I said, raising my voice above the cacophony. "I need to check the control room."

To my surprise, she followed without hesitation, swept up in the emergency just as I was. We pushed through the crowd toward the elevator bank, my mind already racing through emergency protocols and backup systems.

The elevator doors sealed, enclosing us together as we began ascending to the executive floors. But halfway to our destination, we lurched to a complete stop.

"Emergency lockdown," I muttered, pressing the call button. "Standard protocol during power failures."