Read The Paris Connection Online

Authors: Cerella Sechrist

The Paris Connection (20 page)

“Not at first. She asked me about the candidates and made me promise I wouldn’t use any more names from the list. Later, she caught Henri trying to get more names from her computer.”

Cole felt a rush of anger. “Why?” he demanded. “Why did Henri do this? Was it simply greed?”

Solene sighed. “He is in the midst of an ugly custody battle with his wife. The lawyer fees were mounting up, and he needed a way to pay for them. When Emma learned the truth about what had happened, she didn’t turn him in because she wanted to give him the chance he needed to maintain ties to his children. He said he would turn himself in after the custody hearing. She would have reported him at that point otherwise. And he made her a promise—we both did—that it would never happen again. But I...broke that vow.”

Of course. It all made sense to Cole now. This was what Emma had kept from him, fearing what it would do to Henri’s custody case if she admitted what she knew. He wished she had confided in him, though he couldn’t really blame her for not telling him, especially after how they had argued. And now that Julien knew she hadn’t been involved and would have turned Henri in if he didn’t come forward on his own, maybe she could come back. Perhaps Lillian would let her return to her job.

“Emma’s only crime is that she is unfailingly loyal. She does not betray others.” Solene looked to Julien. “Unlike you and me, I suppose.”

“Why come here and tell us this?” Julien demanded. “Since I know you to be as disloyal as you say, why try to undo what’s happened?”

It was then that Cole saw Solene for what she really was. Beneath the layers of makeup and careful styling, she looked far older than he had initially assumed her to be. She seemed weary as she rubbed the side of her temple with a manicured hand.

“It was not easy for me to come here. You have to know that.”

Julien’s tone was soft when he replied. “I do. That is why I want to know what you’re up to.”

She sighed and dropped her hand back to her lap. “I have not had many friends in my life. I am a woman who collects only people she can use. I’m sure you will not argue with me, Julien, when I say that I do not know how to be a good friend. I know what I am. Ambitious. Selfish. Morally questionable, if you must know the truth.” She straightened in her seat and placed her hands on the conference table, folding them in front of her.

“When I first befriended Emma, I had every intention of using her. She was brilliant, hardworking and perhaps had a touch of the romantic in her.”

This observation caused Cole to stifle a smile. Emma the romantic. He had recognized that trait in her practically from the beginning.

“But that girl.” She shook her head. “She liked me. She was nice to me. She got under my skin, and somehow, we became friends.” She turned her attention to Cole. “When Julien and I began to disagree about recruiting tactics, she concurred with him, but never once did she make me feel as though she had chosen sides. When I was dismissed from Aquitaine, she did not cut off all ties with me as I expected her to.”

Her gaze swiveled back in Julien’s direction. “She was the only person from this company to offer me condolences for the loss of my job. Did you know that? She came to see me in the weeks afterward. She asked if I had enough money to get by. When my savings ran out, she offered for me to sleep on her couch. She would take me to the Rue Cler, pretending she wanted company while shopping, and fill up a basket with a week’s worth of groceries, paying for them, and then insisting she had changed her mind and didn’t want anything she’d purchased so that I would take the food home with me.”

Solene swallowed. “She has been the best, perhaps the only real friend I’ve ever had, and I vowed I would one day return the favor of her kindness to me. That is why I tried to get her an interview at Léon. I wanted to give her something back for all the tiny things she has given me over the years. But in my selfishness, I still forged ahead with my own plans, rather than considering how they might affect her.” She squared her shoulders. “And because of that, I fear I have lost her friendship forever.”

Cole felt a swell of shame as Solene related all this. Why hadn’t he taken Emma at her word? Did he really have to know all the details in order to believe her? Or should it have been enough to know
her?
To know that she was dedicated to Aquitaine, that she loved her job, that she loved...him.

“Julien.” She faced her former boss once more. “You and I have certainly had our differences, but there was one thing we always seemed to agree on, and that was Emma. We both knew she was something special, that she had the skills to go far in this company. I still disagree with your decision to give her promotion to him—” she inclined her head in Cole’s direction “—but I think we can agree that Emma has been a valuable part of Aquitaine for a very long time.

“I am not the president of a company. Perhaps you have had the experience of knowing many employees like Emma, and therefore, her loss is not significant to you. But I can tell you that as a friend, I feel qualified to let you know she is priceless.” Solene pushed back and got to her feet.

“If I have lost her friendship forever, then I have no one to blame but myself. And I’m here not for you, Julien, because I don’t feel I owe you anything. But I do owe her something, and it’s to tell you this. Emma did not betray you. She wouldn’t, not if she was offered the entire Palace of Versailles. You would be a fool to make the same mistake that I did and not see her true worth.”

She moved away from the table and toward the door but not before stopping before Cole.

“And you.”

He waited.

“You would be wise to take that advice, also.”

She left them then, and Cole moved around the table to take the seat she had vacated. Julien stared at the floor, lost in thought. Silence permeated the room for several long minutes before Cole cleared his throat.

“You know, I think that deep down, she likes you more than she lets on.”

This statement caused Julien’s fixed stare to falter, and he jerked his head up. When he saw Cole’s smile, he seemed to be unable to resist a small one of his own.

“I doubt it,” he replied, “but for once, she makes a good point.”

“Yes, she does,” Cole agreed. “Perhaps Lillian acted too hastily.”

Julien didn’t respond, and Cole feared he would not take Solene’s words to heart.

“Bring her back, Julien. We need her. She makes this company better.”

She makes me better.

“I’ll consider it.”

Cole shook his head. “Don’t consider it. Do it. Solene was right. You never should have let Lillian demand for me to have this position. Emma earned it, and it was promised to her. It was wrong of you to let me take it.”

Julien blinked, as though stunned by this declaration.

“She could have gone to Léon at any time. It sounds as though Solene was practically begging her to. And she stayed right here. For you, most likely.”

“Yes. Perhaps...perhaps you’re right.”

“Convince Lillian to bring her back. If you don’t, then you’ll lose me, too. I can’t work for someone who doesn’t know the value of loyalty.”

Julien nodded. “I will consult with Lillian and see what she has to say.”

“Why don’t I go with you?”

Julien appeared skeptical. “Are you sure you want a piece of that battle?”

“You may not realize it, but I know Lillian pretty well. I think the two of us against the one of her might even the odds a bit.”

Despite the challenge still facing them, Julien laughed at that.

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

L
ILLIAN
COULDN

T
UNDERSTAND
what had gotten into Cole. She had always admired how reasonable he could be. It didn’t usually take any great effort to convince him to see her point of view. But since Emma’s dismissal, he had become far more stubborn than she liked. And now, after this Solene person had stopped by the office, both he and Julien were suddenly determined to absolve Emma Brooks of any wrongdoing. It took more than a friend’s heartfelt plea to change Lillian’s mind, however. Emma had likely put the other woman up to it, trying to play on their male sympathies. She suppressed a sigh.

“If this was such an eye-opening exchange, I’d like to know why I was left out of it,” she remarked.

These words brought the two men up short.

“It wasn’t consciously done,” Cole finally said. “Solene took us by surprise. We certainly didn’t intend for you not to be there.”

Lillian looked to Julien, who frowned apologetically. “Solene came to speak with Cole, and I just happened to be there when she arrived. It was not an intentional exclusion, I assure you.”

“Even so, it must have been quite a performance. I’m sorry to have missed it.” She turned her attention to Julien’s desk. She didn’t have her own office in Paris yet but, rather, shared one with Julien while she was in town. She sensed the two men exchanging glances while she looked away, and when she quickly lifted her head, their guilty expressions confirmed it.

“Emma Brooks no longer works for this company,” she declared.

“But that’s the point,” Cole said. “She was unjustly dismissed. We need to get her back.”

“We
need
to?” Lillian tried to temper her tone, but Cole was becoming almost obsessive on this tiring point. “I hardly think we need Ms. Brooks to help run this company.”

Cole fell silent, but he turned his gaze to Julien, who leaned forward, drawing her attention.

“Lillian, Emma has been invaluable to me the past few years. It was foolish of me to so hastily dismiss her without delving further into matters.”

“All the evidence pointed to her,” Lillian reminded him. She couldn’t believe she was having this discussion. The two of them had been privy to the same information she had, proof enough that Emma was responsible for the leaked files that had threatened the company’s credibility.

“She didn’t do it.”

Lillian’s head swiveled back toward Cole. His face was hard with determination, and she couldn’t remember ever seeing such an expression on him before.

“She didn’t do it, Lillian,” he repeated. “At most, she’s culpable for finding the cause of the theft, Henri, and then not bringing it to my attention immediately. Nothing else was her fault.”

“And how do you suppose we can trust her after that, after keeping such crucial information to herself?”

He leaned forward in his seat. “Because
I
trust her,” he said. “She has been instrumental in assisting my transition to this office. She may not have approved of the merger initially, but she has committed herself to its success. She has worked as tirelessly as you would have to be sure the Reid and Aquitaine name is the first on everyone’s lips when it comes to executive recruiting. And if she can place so much faith in us, even after her promotion was taken away, and she had her doubts about this move, then can’t we afford to place just a little bit more in her?”

Lillian stared. She had never seen this side of him before. What had caused such passionate eloquence? What had the loss of Ophelia done to him? It was almost as if he... She leaned back.

It was almost as if he were in love with this Emma. Her eyes narrowed.

“Cole, you wouldn’t be letting any personal affection you might have for this woman color your decision, would you?”

“I would,” he fired back without hesitation. “It’s because of those affections that I know her better than you do. If you let her go, Lillian, you’ll be making a mistake. You asked me— No, you insisted I take over this company in your name, that I become your CEO in Paris. If you trusted me in that, you’re going to have to trust me in this. You want Emma on your team.”

“Because you want her,” Lillian replied, rankled that he was defending the woman so zealously.

“Because I want what’s best for this company.”

She scoffed. When had her best employee become so blinded by emotion?

Julien cleared his throat. “Cole, perhaps you could give Lillian and me a moment alone?”

Cole hesitated and then slowly nodded, getting to his feet and leaving the room. Julien stood and held out his hand. She resisted him; she was in no mood to be wooed at the moment, but he insisted. She placed her hand in his and allowed him to lead her to the small leather couch in a corner of the room.

“It is difficult, is it not? After a time, you begin to feel responsible for them, as though their feelings and choices are something you can control.”

“Julien, I don’t have a single idea what you mean by that.”

He enveloped her hands in his larger ones, and she allowed herself to look at him. He wasn’t a very handsome man. His face was too fleshy, his stomach too wide. But he had a presence that couldn’t be denied. She had noted it from the moment she met him, how he exuded an air of capability. Perhaps that was what had initially attracted her. Maybe, despite all her beliefs to the contrary, she really did want someone who would take charge, or at least, share the burden. She wondered if that was why this merger had held so much appeal—she wanted a partner, both in business and now, it seemed, in life. She had come to rely on him, on his steadiness, and though she couldn’t remember feeling such things in a long time, she suspected she might be very much in love with this man.

“Lillian, when will you learn to trust the people you’ve chosen?”

She shifted, trying to remove her fingers from his embrace. “Trust is one thing, naïveté is another.”

“Why would taking Cole’s advice make you naive? You placed him in this position because you believed he would make the choices you would want him to make. If he feels Emma should be given her job back—”

“He’s speaking from infatuation. Can’t you see he’s in love with her?”

“And what is so wrong with that?” Julien pressed, his fingers still holding hers. “I am in love with you, after all.”

She went still and stared at him. He had never said those words before. Out of dozens of conversations, during hours of being in each other’s company the past few weeks, he had never spoken them out loud. She suddenly realized how much she’d longed to hear them.

“Are you?”


Oui.
Madly in love with you.”

Her heart fluttered in a way she hadn’t experienced since she was much younger. “And if our roles were reversed, and I was in Cole’s position and you were in Emma’s, I would fight with everything I had to keep you in this company. It is because I love you that I know you, that I see what the rest do not always see.”

“And what do you see?” she asked, feeling just a little breathless.

“I see an extraordinary woman, dedicated to her job and her company, but perhaps a bit vulnerable, as well.”

She shifted uncomfortably. “I’m hardly vulnerable.”

“But you are,
chérie.
You are proud and vulnerable. It is, somehow, an intriguing combination.”

She couldn’t understand how he made such traits sound like something he cherished.

“Do you really believe she’s innocent in all this?” she asked him. “Even if we brought her back, how do we know she wouldn’t betray us, just out of spite?”

“Because I know her. And Cole knows her. And we both believe in her. And because you know us and trust our judgment.... You do trust our judgment, don’t you, Lillian?”

She considered this and then nodded.

“Then you can trust her, too.”

Perhaps he had a point.

“Is she really as invaluable as Cole claims?”

Julien brought her hand to his mouth, his lips hovering over her fingers. “Why don’t you give her another chance and find out?”

* * *

E
MMA
WRAPPED
HER
sweater a bit more tightly around her frame. The weather was turning cooler by the day. She kept a watchful eye on Avery and wondered if she should have insisted her daughter wear more layers for this afternoon outing to the park. She couldn’t bear to suggest they go back to the apartment, not yet anyway. She had just been reviewing her finances last night and decided that she and Avery would have to move within the next month or two. While her apartment in Batignolles was not as expensive as most in the seventeenth
arrondissement,
it was still more than she could afford without her wages from Aquitaine. So she decided to let Avery enjoy the park for as long as possible. After all, she would likely be saying goodbye to Melanie this week, as well. The au pair agency was already working on finding another family for the young woman. Once she left them, Brice had offered to help out however he could, by watching Avery if Emma had a job interview or if she just needed time to sort through things. She was still a little skeptical of her ex-husband’s desire to get to know his daughter, but she had to admit that so far he seemed committed. Upon his return from Le Mans, they had arranged for him to spend a weekend with Avery, who was, Emma could tell, both wary and excited at the idea.

Emma didn’t even want to consider how she would feel when that weekend rolled around. She found herself missing Cole more and more, but somehow managed to stave off the worst of the longing by lavishing attention on Avery. She feared these attempts at distraction were slowly wearing her daughter down. Last night, when Emma had suggested they bake cookies, Avery refused, saying she was sick of cookies. Belatedly, Emma realized that this had been her standard suggestion for several nights in a row. They had so many cookies piling up that, instead, she’d decided they should offer them to their neighbors in the building. That idea had been met with more enthusiasm, but she knew she couldn’t rely on Avery to distract her forever.

She might have talked to Solene about things, but of course, they still hadn’t spoken since the day she’d been fired from Aquitaine.

She regretted telling Cole they shouldn’t speak to each other for a while. She missed him and wished he were around to cheer her up and make her laugh. She wanted to tell him about Brice and hear his thoughts. She wondered how things were going at the office and what sorts of new positions needed filling with their clients. She pictured Julien and pondered whether he ever thought about her at all since her dismissal. His opinion had meant so much to her over the years, and it felt strange to know she would probably never speak to him again.

And then, as if this very consideration had summoned him, he appeared, stepping up to the bench where she sat. She could only blink at his arrival, speechless.

“She is growing up fast,” Julien remarked, looking toward Avery as she ran circles around the playground. Emma watched in surprise as he settled himself on the seat next to her.

“Your au pair, Melanie—such a lovely girl—told me you were here.”

She was too flabbergasted to respond. Why had he come?

“The weather is turning cooler so quickly. I fear we will have snow on the ground well before Christmas.” He shifted his gaze around the park. “You know, I don’t think I have ever seen the Square des Batignolles when it is covered in snow. It must be a delightful sight.”

By this time, she had regained some of her composure. “Julien...what are you doing here?”

He shifted his rather hefty weight, and the bench squeaked in protest.

“I came to apologize.”

She felt another ripple of shock. “Apologize?”

He nodded. “I did not give you enough credit, Emma. You are not Solene. I forgot that. You must forgive me.”

She turned away from him, keeping one eye on Avery as she held out her arms and pretended to flap them like a bird.

“What are you trying to say? That you realize I’m innocent?” She could only wonder how Julien had come to that conclusion. Had Cole been involved?

“Solene came to see us.”

Her head jerked around. It seemed this conversation was going to stun her at every turn. “Solene? She came to Aquitaine?”

“She did, to proclaim your innocence. And I have to admit, she must feel quite strongly about your friendship to have entered those doors again. She made it plain that there is still no love lost between the two of us.”

Emma gaped at him. “You and Solene were in the same room together? And you both walked out alive?”

He laughed at this, and the sound warmed her. “Cole was there as a witness, if you do not believe me.”

Cole. She felt her nerve endings come alive at the sound of his name. “So then...Cole was there, to hear her say I wasn’t responsible for those leaked files?”

Julien eyed her speculatively. “You are as in love with him as he is with you, aren’t you?”

This pointed question caused her to turn away. She didn’t want Julien to see how much she wanted this to be true.

“I thought as much,” he said.

“How is he?” she questioned, unable to resist asking about him.

“Much better, now that Lillian and I have decided to ask you back. I fear he was at loose ends without you, quite distracted. How he managed before he met you, I have no idea.”

Though all of these words caused a lightening in her spirit, she chose to focus on only the first few. “You’re asking me back to Aquitaine?”

He looked down. “I am ashamed I let you go at all, Emma. I was perhaps not as understanding as I should have been. You have proven your dedication to this company a thousand times over, especially when I denied you the promotion I had promised and worsened the blow by assigning you as Cole’s liaison.”

She was quick to reassure him on that score. “That’s okay. I enjoyed assisting with Cole’s transition.”

A faint smile tugged at Julien’s lips. “Yes, I daresay you did.”

She fought the blush she felt heating her cheeks and looked for Avery once more. Her daughter was oblivious to the conversation taking place several yards away.

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