It was nothing personal, just a business arrangement. Ryan McKay is a multi-millionaire with a problem. He needs a bride to fulfill the terms of his grandfather's will. Unfortunately, the one he chose just bailed on him and he's hours away from losing his company.
Enter Faith Lewis, his demure, devoted assistant. Ryan convinces Faith to step in and marry him, assuring her their marriage is merely a business deal. Ryan is certain he can keep this strictly impersonal. After all, he's the product of a loveless marriage and for years has sealed his own heart in an icy stone. Despite Faith's warmth, compassion and allure, he's convinced he's immune to her charms.
Faith will do anything for her boss, but marry him? The shy virgin sees herself as plain and unattractive, a product of a bitter mother who drummed into her head that she wasn't worthy of a man's love. But she agrees to help Ryan fulfill the terms of his grandfather's will, hoping she doesn't lose her heart to him in the process. But love rarely listens to logic, and what follows is anything but business.
I enjoy marriage of convenience books, so this was enjoyable. Nothing earth shattering new in this plot but a nice read. I would have liked to have seen a longer book and an epilogue a year or two later would have been the whipped cream on the top.
A CEO of a family company, Ryan McCay, must marry or lose his company. His executive assistant, Faith Lewis, has quietly loved him for years. Now she is asked to be his wife. And not in name only. The terms of his grandfather's will is that Ryan's wife must become pregnant within a certain time.