HELLO GUYS THIS IS JANPA AND I AM BACK FOR YOU… AND AS YOU KNOW I AM A BIG SWASAN FAN HERE I PRESENT YOU MY FIRST OS TITLED
TRAPPED BY LOVE……
Clunk! Thud! The sound of grinding gears, then silence. Even after the elevator stopped, the
doors refused to open. Swara Galodia looked at the numbers on the panel. Both “11″ and “12″
were lit. She punched the button for the first floor several times. When nothing happened, she
turned to Sanskar Maheshwari, her boss and the only other passenger in the car.
“Are we stuck?”
“Sure looks like it. I thought they fixed this thing.” Sanskar grabbed the emergency phone and
jiggled the receiver. “What’s wrong with this phone? The darn thing won’t work.”
Swara took several deep breaths, thankful that her boss directed his attention to the elevator
panel and not to her. Maybe the car would move before he noticed her reaction. If he did notice,
he’d probably attribute her behavior to claustrophobia. Her reaction didn’t come just from being
closed up in a small space, although heaven knew that was scary enough. No, her reaction came
being closed up in a small space with Sanskar Maheshwari. She managed to focus on her job and
hide her attraction to him in the office. However, she didn’t know if she could maintain her
professional attitude stuck in an elevator alone with the only man who inspired her passion.
After jiggling the switch hook on the phone several times, Sanskar slammed down the receiver
and pushed the door of the phone cabinet shut. “Swara, do something. We’ve got to get out of
here.”
She looked at the ceiling and struggled for calm. What did he expect her to do — perform a
miracle?
“Mr.Maheshwari, we’re probably the last people in the building. It’s after eight.” They had
worked late — again.
He looked surprised when he checked his watch to confirm the time. “There’s bound to be a
security guard or the cleaning crew around.”
“The security guard is on duty, but he’ll be at his desk on the first floor now. He probably
won’t make rounds for another half hour or more.” She hoped her companion didn’t notice the
quiver in her voice. “I don’t think he can see the elevator from where he sits.”
“What about the cleaning crew?” Sanskar asked.
Swara turned away and pretended to look at the phone. She took a deep breath and clenched
her fists to hide the shaking of her hands. “They don’t start till nine o’clock.”
“Well, I don’t intend to stay stuck in here for an hour.” Sanskar banged on the walls and yelled,
“Anybody out there? We’re stuck! Get us out of here.”
His voice echoed in the small space, but they couldn’t hear any sound from outside.
He took off his coat and tossed it in the corner of the elevator on top of his briefcase. He
loosened his tie before he hit the wall and called out again.
Swara tuned out her boss’s voice. She was used to his loud and impatient ways now, but she
still remembered how terrified she’d been when she started working at Maheshwari Industries
eight months ago. She’d been hired as a clerk in the sales department. Although she didn’t work
directly with him, she quickly learned to recognize Mr.Maheshwari’s voice. Everyone in the
department took notice when he bellowed. He didn’t like to use the intercom or the phone. If he
wanted to see a salesman or one of the office staff, he simply called out from his office. And
when Mr.Maheshwari called, whoever he called came running.
In the first five months she’d worked in the department, Swara had seen four secretaries come
and go. Before they left or transferred to other departments, they all gossiped with the other
office workers about their boss. “He’s a perfectionist,” they complained. “No one can live up to
his standards.”
Swara never took part in office gossip. Thrilled and proud to have such a good job, she’d never
risk it by complaining. Besides, she had no reason to complain. She liked her job.
She filed and copied and ran errands and tried to make herself useful, but inconspicuous.
She’d been surprised when Mr.Maheshwari called her into his office after the fourth secretary left.
Surprised that he’d asked her to come into his office, she was even more surprised that he’d
walked over to her desk to speak to her.
“Boy, you must really be in trouble,” one of her co workers whispered. “I’ve been here five
years, and I’ve never seen him walk up to an employee and speak normally. If he didn’t yell,
something must be really wrong.”
Swara took a deep breath and steeled herself to face the boss. She refused to consider the
possibility that she would be fired. Whatever was wrong, she hoped he’d give her a chance to
correct it.
She quietly followed the manager into his office. He took his seat at the desk and motioned
her into a chair across from him.
“Swara, I’ve been watching you work. You’re doing an excellent job. You never need any help
to keep up with your own work, and you volunteer to help others in the department. You’re both efficient and a team player.” He leaned back in his chair and rolled a pencil in his fingers. “How would you like to make more money?”
“You mean I’m getting a raise?” She tried to sound normal, even businesslike, but inside she
was shouting with excitement. As a high-school dropout, she’d resigned herself to a life of
unskilled labor. Now, she had proven her worth in an office job. Mama would have been so
proud. She’d been so unhappy when Swara dropped out of school.
“You deserve a raise, and I’ll see that you get one, whether or not you accept the challenge
I’m offering you.” He dropped the pen on the desk and leaned forward. “I’m sure you’ve heard
what a tough boss I am.”
Swara looked down at her hands folded in her lap. What could she say that was both honest
and tactful?
Sanskar Maheshwari, the terror of the sales department, suddenly smiled and Swara’s whole world lit up. She’d admired her handsome boss from afar. Now she sat in front of him, the center of his attention.
When she didn’t answer, Sanskar continued. “I’m glad you didn’t deny hearing the complaints.
If you’d said you hadn’t heard anything, I’d know you were lying. And I have to be able to trust
my secretary. As I’m sure you know, I need a new one, and you’re the perfect candidate.”
He held up his hand to stop Swara’s protest. “I don’t really expect you to be perfect, you know.
You’re competent and don’t engage in office politics.” He frowned and paused for several
seconds. “I think you’ll keep your mind on business, and I’m looking for a professional, not a
personal, relationship. The last couple of secretaries I’ve had were more interested in flirting than
filing.”
Swara’s eyes widened and she felt the heat as her face turned red. She’d heard the other women giggling and sighing over the handsome Mr.Maheshwari. She admitted to herself he was an attractive man. Okay, more than attractive — gorgeous. But there was no danger of her even considering a personal relationship with him. She came to work to work, not to play. She’d put too much time and effort into preparing for a career to risk an affair with her boss.
“Look,” he continued. “I realize it doesn’t have anything to do with me personally. They’re
attracted to the Vice President of Sales and Marketing, not to Sanskar Maheshwari.”
Swara’s confusion must have shown on her face, because he continued, “I prefer the title sales
manager, but my official title is Vice President of Sales and Marketing.” He shrugged.
Swara knew what his title was. She was confused that he would think any female would be
more attracted to the position than to the man. His longish blond hair invited a woman to run her fingers through it, and the long lashes on his green eyes were the envy of many women. In
contrast to the boyish good looks of his face, his tall, broad-shouldered body seemed to emanate power. He didn’t need a title or even his authoritative voice to draw attention.
Swaraheard enough gossip to know her heartbeat wasn’t the only one that sped up when he came near.
His voice interrupted her daydream. “Can you move to your new desk this afternoon so we
can get started in the morning?”
He didn’t seem to realize that she hadn’t answered. He obviously took her acceptance for
granted. Although she wondered how she would keep him from seeing her attraction to him, she knew she couldn’t pass up this career move. “Of course.”
On that day three months ago, she hadn’t let her new boss see how much her hands were
trembling. Today she wouldn’t let him see her fear, and she certainly wouldn’t let him see her
fascination with him.
She suddenly realized she didn’t hear his voice. He’d quit calling for help. She couldn’t hear
any sound at all. When she looked toward him, she gasped at the look in his eyes. He stared at
her as if he’d never seen her before.
“You’re scared.” She’d never heard his voice so soft.
She shook her head in denial. “No. No, I’m not scared.”
He stepped forward and took her hands in his. “Swara, your hands are shaking. Are you going
to panic on me?”
“No, I am not scared, and I am not going to panic.” She pronounced each word carefully and
distinctly. “I am the always-efficient secretary.” She didn’t feel like the always-efficient
secretary now, but she couldn’t let him know that.
Although she stood directly in front of him, she raised her voice to her boss for the first time
since she’d known him. “I don’t panic when you give me one hour to finish a three-hour job.”
Sanskar held up his hands as if to protect himself. Swara took a step back. “I don’t panic when
you forget to tell me to set up the conference room until five minutes before twenty people
arrive. I don’t panic when no one can find the file you have to have right this minute.”
She stepped back until she leaned against the wall. “So why should I panic just because we’re
trapped in an elevator between the eleventh and twelfth floors at eight o’clock at night?”
Sanskar just stood there with a look of surprise on his face. Swara went limp and slid down the
wall to sit on the floor. He sat beside her, with his back resting against the wall.
He turned to face her. “Swara, I know you don’t panic in a work situation. You’re a highly
skilled secretary. You have enough experience to handle just about anything that comes along.”
Swara looked straight ahead rather than at Sanskar.
She could pretend she was having this weird conversation with a stranger as long as she
didn’t look at her boss. “I don’t have nearly enough experience to handle the job I have now.”
He turned to look at her then. “Of course, you do. You’re the most qualified secretary I’ve
ever had. How long have you been a secretary anyway?”
“Three months,” she answered in a whisper.
“That’s how long you’ve been working for me. I meant how much total experience you
have.”
“Mr.Maheshwari, you should know. My experience is listed on my employment application.”
She wouldn’t look at him, although she could feel his eyes on her.
“I’ve never looked at your application.” When she raised her head, he smiled. His smile had
lit up her world the day he asked her to be his secretary, and it continued to light her world every
time she saw it. “I knew everything I needed to know by watching you on the job. It was obvious
that you were working way below your skills as a clerk. I checked with Personnel, and they said
you were a qualified secretary.”
“Mr.Maheshwari, I’ve never worked as a secretary before. I took a secretarial course, but I
don’t have any experience.”
He slid across the floor to sit in front of her. “Are you serious? Of course, you are. You’re
always serious. Like that Mr.Maheshwari business. I told you to call me Sanskarwhen you first
started working for me.”
“I just don’t feel right calling my boss by his first name.”
“Well, I’m the boss, and I’m ordering you to call me Sanskar.” He stood and paced the tiny
elevator. “We’re trapped in this six by six box for who knows long. I think Mr.Maheshwari is just
a little too formal for the situation.”
“Okay, Mr. . . . Sanskar.”
“I’d have never guessed you didn’t have secretarial experience. It must come naturally to
you.”
She had slid to the floor because she lacked the strength to stand. But she didn’t know if she
could sit there with Mr.Maheshwari — Sanskar— towering over her. She’d called him Mr.
Maheshwari to keep some distance between them, but she always thought of him as Sanskar.
Thought of him, dreamed of him, daydreamed of him . . .
Her mind was straying into dangerous territory. She was so self-disciplined that she could
usually force her thoughts to something else, usually work. But this unmoving elevator blocked
out the rest of the world. Her mind seemed to be filled with only two topics, equally dangerous.
She could either think about being trapped in the elevator or think about Sanskar.
If she thought about being trapped, she would panic. If she thought about Sanskar, she’d
probably throw herself at him and beg him to love her as she loved him.
He’d warned her from the start that he didn’t want a personal relationship with his secretary.
She couldn’t remember when she fell in love with him. Maybe the first day she’d worked for
him, when he’d taken the time to explain exactly what he expected her to do. Maybe it was when she watched him deal with an unhappy customer or help a new salesperson practice her first presentation. He seemed impatient and demanding, but he cared so much he wanted the best for and from everyone. Maybe she’d fallen in love with him the day he’d forgotten to tell her about a meeting in the conference room. He’d charmed her with his sheepish grin when he admitted he’d made a mistake, but he trusted her to fix it for him. His complete confidence in her made her feel like she could do anything.
In one way, her love made her job easy, because making his job and life smoother brought
her great joy. In another way, though, her love made her job almost impossible. Each day it
became more difficult for her to keep their relationship professional. Sanskar, though, didn’t even recognize her as human, much less female. To him, she was just an efficient machine, robot secretary.
“How did you get to be such a good secretary if you don’t have any experience?” He stopped
pacing and sat on the floor with his back against the adjacent wall.
“I guess I’ve been taking care of people all my life. That’s all I do — take care of you.”
“And you do a wonderful job of it too.” He slid closer. “But what about the typing and
dictation?”
Time to change the subject. “How long have you been a vice-president?”
“Oh, no, you aren’t getting by with changing the subject. I just realized that you never talk
about yourself.” He shrugged. “We might as well get some good out of being stuck in an
elevator. You’re going to tell me about Swara Galodia.”
He’d never asked her about herself before. Why now, when she couldn’t escape or hide her
emotions? “There’s nothing to tell.”
He raised his arms over his head and grasped his right hand with his left hand. Then he
stretched, and stretched, and stretched. The muscles rippling under his dress shirt gave Swara a
tingling feeling in her belly.
“Of course, there’s something to tell,” he said. “You’re a mystery. How can the most
beautiful woman in the company also be the most efficient?”
Swara inched away from him. The tiny elevator seemed to be shrinking. The air seemed to be
getting thinner. She had to concentrate on her breathing.
“That would be an interesting combination if it existed.” Swarareached for her purse to have
something to do with her hands. “No one’s ever accused Kavitha of being efficient.” Kavitha was the beautiful, but thoroughly disorganized, receptionist.
Sanskar slid closer and took the purse from her hands. He pushed it along the floor to the
corner with his briefcase. “I can’t positively say no one has, but I’ve certainly never accused
Kavitha of being either the most beautiful or the most efficient. The most beautiful
woman in the company has silky brown hair that’s probably long when it’s down. She usually
has a serious expression on her face, but it’s worth waiting for one of her smiles. Her hazel eyes
show there’s more going on besides the steel control she shows to the world. She’s the perfect
size, and she sits just outside my office.”
Swara stood in one swift motion. “Don’t be ridiculous.” She couldn’t stop the quiver in her
voice.
He rose from the floor. “Okay, we’ll stick to business. Tell me how you came to be a
secretary.” He stood, put his hands on her shoulders, and guided her to a sitting position. Then he
sat beside her. “You really are the best, you know.”
Swara had never told anyone outside her family about herself. She’d been too busy to make
close friends or have a serious romance. She didn’t want Sanskar, or anyone else, to know her
secrets, but sharing secrets was better than thinking about being trapped or taking the risk of
saying something that would cause Sanskar to realize how much she fantasized about him.
“I dropped out of school in the tenth grade.” She saw Sanskar raise his eyebrows, but he didn’t
say anything. “My mother had cancer and needed someone to take care of her.”
Sanskar slid closer and took her hands in his. “And, of course, my loyal Swara volunteered.”
She pulled her hands back and looked away from him. “My mother needed me. What did you
expect me to do — tell her to die alone?” She hadn’t meant to sound so angry.
“I would expect you to do exactly what you did — sacrifice some of your own dreams to
meet your mother’s needs. You should be very proud of yourself.”
“Proud of being a dropout?” She couldn’t keep the resentment out of her voice. She’d always
been ashamed that she hadn’t finished school.
“Proud of doing what was right for your family. And proud of getting an education, some
way, some time.” He took her chin in his right hand and turned her face so she was looking at
him. “Tell me how you did it.”
She wasn’t sure what she saw in his eyes, but whatever she saw seemed to loosen her tongue.
“I stayed with my mom during the day while my dad worked. She wasn’t a complete invalid
until the last few weeks.” Swara’s voice broke, but she kept talking. How could she be so sensitive to his touch as she recalled those bleak days?
“That must have been hard.”
“At first, I mainly just needed to be with Mom so she wouldn’t be alone. I took care of the
house and cooked for the family. I have a brother a couple of years younger than me. I’d give
Mom her medicine and take her to her medical appointments.”
Sanskar had dropped his hand from her face, but he sat so close she could feel the warmth from his body. “And then . . .” he prompted.
“And then the bills kept piling up. So I went to work as a waitress at an all-night cafe. I
stayed with Mom during the day while Dad worked and he stayed with her at night while I
worked.” She sat up straighter and lifted her chin. “As Mom got worse, I had to nurse her.”
“I’ll bet you were a good nurse,” Sanskar said.
“Unfortunately, not good enough. Mom died.” She couldn’t choke back the tears.
He pulled her to his side and put his arm around her shoulders. “I’m sorry, Swara.” He reached
over and wiped a tear from her face. “I understand the pain of losing someone you love. I lost my father a few years ago.”
Swara’s eyes overflowed with tears. She sniffed and wiped them away. Sanskar pulled her head
down to his shoulder. She wasn’t sure if he was saying words or just making soothing sounds,
but his gentle voice comforted her and his arm around her shoulder felt just right. He pulled his
shirt out of his pants and wiped her eyes with his shirttail.
She didn’t know how long they sat like that, but finally she had no more tears to shed.
Sanskar said, “I’m glad to see you’re human. You’re always in such control I’ve wondered if
you have any feelings at all.”
Did she have feelings? Right now, she felt a warm tingle everywhere Sanskar touched her. Her
stomach felt fluttery. She wondered if her heart would beat right out of her body. Oh, she had
feelings, all right — feelings that a secretary shouldn’t feel for a boss who’d already warned her
he didn’t want a personal relationship.
She’d managed to hide these feelings for months on the job, but she couldn’t control her
emotions in this situation. The two of them seemed to be alone in the world. There were no
sounds except the sound of their voices. There was no motion except their own limited
movements. There were no other people and no other activities. Nothing to do but think and feel.
“Talk to me, Swara. Tell me how you went from being the caretaker for your family to being
the caretaker of this disorganized sales manager.” He squeezed her shoulder.
“After Mom died, there were still a lot of bills to pay.” She sighed and sniffed. “So I kept my
waitress job at night and got a job as a nurse’s aid during the day. My dad also took a second job, and my little brother even got a job delivering pizzas. It took us over three years, but we finally paid off all the bills.”
“Did you work both jobs all that time?”
He looked at her like … like she didn’t know what. She did know that look made her feel all
fluttery inside.
“Of course. We’d never have paid the bills otherwise.”
“But you were on your feet all the time on both jobs. How could you keep doing it year after
year?” Sanskar asked.
Swara shrugged and looked at the closed door. “I didn’t have any choice.”
“Of course, you had a choice. Many people would have just declared bankruptcy. You
weren’t responsible for your mother’s bills,” Sanskar said.
“My family was responsible for the bills, and I’m part of my family. We believe in paying
our debts.” She tried to pull away from Sanskar’s light embrace, but his arm tightened on her
shoulder.
He said, “You are the most remarkable woman I’ve ever met.”
“I just did what I had to do,” Swara said. His praise embarrassed her.
“Well, don’t leave me in suspense. How did you finish your education and get your
secretarial training?” he asked.
Swara took a deep breath and pulled away. This time Sanskar dropped his arm from her shoulder
and leaned back against the wall.
“After we paid the bills, I gave up the hospital job and kept waitressing.”
Sanskar interrupted. “Why did you give up the full-time job and keep the part-time job?”
“With tips, I could make more in thirty hours as a waitress than I could in forty hours as an
aid. And that left me time to take GED classes,” she added.
“So you got your GED and went on to secretarial school.” Sanskar shook his head. “You’re so
good I thought you must have taken office classes in high school and worked in offices ever
since high school.”
“That’s why I was so scared . . .” She didn’t mean to tell Sanskar she had been afraid to go to
work for Maheshwari Industries. She’d felt like an outsider. Everyone else had probably
graduated from high school on a normal schedule and worked in an office for years.
“Why you were so scared about what?” Sanskar asked.
“Never mind.” She shook her head.
“Oh, no. You’re not stopping now. Keep talking,” Sanskar said. “You said, ‘That’s why I was
so scared . . . ‘”
She couldn’t believe she’d already told him so much about herself. He probably couldn’t
think any worse of her than he did already. “Why I was so scared when I got my first office job,
when I started as a clerk in the sales department.” She reached for her purse again and twisted the strap.
Sanskar set the purse aside and took her hands. “That was your first office job?” He grinned. “I
thought you were an old pro. I wondered why you’d been hired as a file clerk instead of a
secretary right from the beginning.”
“You could have checked my personnel file if you were interested.”
“Oh, I was interested.” That usually authoritative voice sounded very different. He shook his
head. “Never mind about that. I didn’t need to read your personnel file. I knew everything I
needed to know just from watching you work.”
“I’m surprised you even noticed me in that sea of faces in the clerical pool.”
“Your face never blends into a sea. I noticed you, all right.”
That almost sounded like he noticed her face, but he’d already made it clear that it was her
work he noticed. She couldn’t let herself even think about her romantic dreams.
Sanskar kept talking. “I don’t care about your experience. You’re the best secretary I’ve ever
had. In fact the best secretary I could ever want.” He squeezed her hands.
Swara looked down at their joined hands — his so large and strong, hers so dainty but just as
strong. “I guess we make a good team. You’re a great boss.”
He laughed. “Don’t let anyone else in the office hear you say that. You’ll ruin my reputation.
I’ve heard them call me the tyrant of sales and Sanskar the Devil before.”
“They just don’t know you. You’re not a tyrant or a devil.” She raised her head and looked
him in the eyes. “You’re very good at your job, and you expect everyone else to be as good at
theirs.” Her voice dropped. “I try my best to be good enough for you.”
Sanskar’s face turned serious. “You’re probably better at your job than I am at mine, and I’m
much better at mine because you’re so good at yours.” Then he smiled again. “Just don’t let
anybody else find that out.”
He was still holding her hands. She pulled away and stood up. “Okay, turn about is fair play.
You have to tell me about yourself now.”
“There’s nothing to tell,” he said as he stood. Then he grinned. “I didn’t let you get by with
that, and I’m sure you won’t let me get by with it either.”
She hoped he didn’t notice that she had a hard time breathing when he grinned. “You’re
right. I won’t.”
He stood so close to her she wondered if he could hear her heartbeat. She couldn’t step away
without bumping into the pile of coat, briefcase, and purse. Talking about being on her feet all
the time in her former jobs reminded her how uncomfortable she was after a full day of wearing heels. She leaned against the elevator wall, took off her shoes, and added them to the pile. She curled her toes in the plush carpet to ease her aching feet.
Sanskar reached out to her and pulled her to him. His hand on her head guided it down to his
chest. Without her heels, he could rest his chin on top of her head. Only a few seconds passed
before he seemed to realize what he was doing. He dropped his arms and stepped back at the
same time she pulled away.
“I’m afraid my story isn’t as dramatic as yours,” he said. “My life has been pretty boring. I
grew up in a family with an older brother and younger sister. Dad was a salesman, and Mom
stayed home with the kids.”
She’d hardly been in his arms long enough to feel it, but she felt alone now that he was a few
inches away. “So, you decided to become a salesman like your dad?” she asked.
“I’m sure that’s part of the reason. I’ve always looked up to Dad. I started selling early.
Every year, I sold the most tickets in our troop to the Boy Scouts’ Jamboree. Later, it was the
most candy for the band and the most calendars for the student council,” he said.
Swara wished she could put more distance between them. If she continued to feel the warmth
from his body and breathe his scent, she’d never want to leave. She said, “So you’ve been a
smooth talker all your life.”
Sanskar let her pull away slightly, but he gripped her arms above the elbows with his hands. “I
don’t think I’m a ’smooth talker.’ I’m a professional. I know my products, and I believe it’s my
job to help a client solve a problem. If our product isn’t the solution, I won’t sell it to him. And
as sales manager, I expect the same from the salesmen I supervise.”
“That’s one thing everyone agrees on. Even those who call you Sanskarthe Devil admit you
put the client first,” Swara said.
Sanskar smiled and dropped his hands from her arms. “So you admit you’ve heard the names
I’ve been called.”
“I never said I haven’t heard things.” She turned around to keep from looking at his lips and
imagining what they would feel like if he kissed her. She’d also heard women’s reactions to him
as a man. She wasn’t the only one who wanted to run her fingers through that thick mass of
blond hair.
“But my loyal Swara never gossips about me, does she?” he asked.
“No,” she answered. She doesn’t gossip, but she dreams, and daydreams, and fantasizes.
“Have you always worked at Maheshwari Industries?”
“No, I’ve worked for several other companies.” He told her about his previous jobs, starting
out after college as a sales trainee at a restaurant supply company. He had worked his way up the
ladder at two other businesses before coming to Maheshwari Industries as a salesman four
years ago. He’d been named sales manager only a year later.
“You’ve done a lot since you’ve been sales manager. You have the respect of the clients and
the staff,” Swara told him. “I’m proud to work for you.”
“Thank you, Swara. I’m proud of what I’ve done,” Sanskar said. “But I haven’t succeeded as
much as you have because I didn’t have as many obstacles to overcome to get where I am. I’m so proud of you for getting your GED and learning a skill after what you went through.”
She’d spent so many years feeling ashamed of her lack of education she didn’t know how to
respond to praise for what she’d done. She would never have told Sanskar any of this if she hadn’t
been trying to keep from thinking about being alone with him, trapped in the elevator.
Now that she let herself think about it again, she started to panic. “What time is it now?” she
asked.
Sanskar looked at his watch. “It’s nine-fifteen. The cleaning crew should be here by now.”
Swara found it hard to breathe again. She didn’t know whether it was Sanskar’s closeness or her
rising panic. “They should have done something by now. What if they don’t realize we’re here?”
Sanskar placed his hands on her shoulders and eased her down to the floor again. He sat with
his back against the adjacent wall. “I’m sure someone will discover the elevator’s stuck when
they’re ready to go to another floor.”
“But what if they don’t?” She couldn’t control her rising voice.
“Is this my always-efficient Swara-who-never-panics?”
She breathed deeply. “I’m not going to panic. I just want someone to find us and get us out of
here.”
“What about your fiance?” Sanskar asked. “Won’t he figure out something’s wrong when you
don’t get home soon?”
Her mouth opened in shock. “What fiance?”
“How many fiances do you have?” Sanskar asked with a frown.
“None. Whatever gave you the idea I had a fiance?” Why were they having this ridiculous
conversation when they should be trying to get out of a stuck elevator?
Sanskar arched his right eyebrow. “He told me when he came to pick you up for lunch the first
day you started at the company.”
Swara frowned in confusion as she tried to make sense of what he was saying. She thought
back to her first day on the job. Her neighbor had asked her out several times. The only invitation
she’d ever accepted was the one lunch date, and she’d come to regret that.
“Ashutosh’s my next door neighbor. He took me to lunch to celebrate my new job. But I’ve never
even dated him, much less been engaged to him.”
Sanskarstood and stared down at her. “If you’re not engaged to him, why did he tell me you
were?”
“I have no idea. He’d asked me out several times, but I’d never gone. Maybe . . . well, he
apparently had ideas that had no basis in reality.” Could he have fantasized about her the way she fantasized about Sanskar?
“I didn’t know he told you we were engaged. But I guarantee you it’s
not true.”
“I even asked him why you weren’t wearing a ring.”
“What did he say?”
Sanskar rolled his shoulders as if to release tension. “He said he was having his late mother’s
ring redesigned for you and would give it to you at Christmas.”
“Good grief. That’s really carrying the lie to the limit.” Swarafelt at a disadvantage sitting on
the floor with Sanskar standing over her. “I wonder what his very much alive mother would think of being called his ‘late mother.’”
“He even told me you got engaged this past Valentine’s Day and were getting married next
Valentine’s Day.” On Sanskar’s face, Swara saw confusion, frustration, and some other emotion she couldn’t identify.
“I can’t believe he said all that.” She rose. “Why would he make up a story like that?”
“He told me so many details I had to believe him.”
“When did you have this conversation? I don’t even remember seeing you that day.”
“You might not have seen me,” Sanskar said. “But I certainly saw you. I talked to this Romeo
while you went to wash your hands.”
“Well, regardless of what he said, we are not engaged. We are not dating. We are not even
friends anymore.”
Sanskar frowned. “Did something happen?”
“He came on pretty strong over lunch. I thought we were just going for a casual, friendly
meal. But he tried to pressure me into spending time with him, and he walked out on me when I told him I only wanted to be friends.”
“That jerk! No wonder you looked unhappy when you got back to the office.”
Unhappy was too mild a word to describe her emotions after resisting Ashutosh’s crude advances
and having to spend two weeks of bus fare on a lunch that gave her indigestion. However, she
thought she’d hid her anger and frustration from her co-workers. Learning that her boss had
noticed shocked her.
“Well, at least Ashutosh never asked me out again. In fact, I haven’t even run into him in the
hallway anymore.”
“Okay, then, Ashutosh’s out of the picture. Are you involved with anyone else?” he asked.
“How could I be involved with anyone? I just spent an hour telling you my life story. When
have I had time for romance–hurrying from the hospital to the restaurant? Or maybe between
waiting tables and GED classes?”
“Swara, you’re a beautiful woman — inside and out. You’ve worked for Consolidated
Electronics for months, plenty of time for romance then,” Sanskarsaid.
“Well, I haven’t been interested in anyone but . . .” Swaracaught herself before she said
‘anyone but you.’ “I haven’t been interested in anyone.”
“You mean I’ve wasted all this time?” Sanskar stepped closer and pulled her into a standing
position. “All these months I’ve wanted to do this . . . ”
Swara forgot elevators and neighbors and everything else as Sanskar wrapped her in his arms
and drew her close. She reached up to meet his kiss. She didn’t have to wonder how his lips
would feel any more. They felt warm, and moist, and soft, and loving. Did they really feel
loving?
She didn’t have much experience with men, but she’d listened to other women and she’d read
books. She knew a man could feel passion without feeling love. Sanskarhad never noticed her
before. He pAshutoshably had a hot date planned tonight and getting stuck in the elevator with her ruined his plans. He’d said she was beautiful. Maybe he was attracted to her because he liked the way she looked and because they were stuck here in this tiny space. How would he feel when, if, they were finally released?
He deepened the kiss and pulled her closer. Her br*asts were crushed against his chest and
their bodies touched from head to toe. Heat seemed to be radiating from his body. Her insides
melted. Could he be feeling anything like she was?
Slowly he ended the kiss, but his lips returned to her again and again for tiny nips and
butterfly kisses. He put his hand on the back of her head and drew it down to his chest. He had
held her in this position earlier to comfort her. This felt the same, but different — comforting but exciting, secure but dangerous.
Still holding her to him, he stepped back and leaned against the wall. He slid down to the
floor and pulled her onto his lap. He kissed her neck and nibbled her earlobe.
“Wow,” he said.
“Wow is right.”
“Do you know I’ve been crazy about you since the day you first walked into the office?” he
asked. “I was ready to throw that Ashutoshguy out my window when he told me you were engaged.”
Swara laughed at the image of Sanskar throwing Ashutosh out the window. “I’ve never seen you
resort to physical violence. Well, nothing more violent than slamming down the receiver on the
phone.”
“But you’ve never seen me stake my claim on the woman I love,” he said.
“No, I haven’t. As a matter of fact, I don’t recall any broken windows or injured neighbors,”
she teased. “So I guess there’s been no claim staked.”
“The claim is being staked right now.” He shifted her position on his outstretched legs and
hugged her even tighter. “I controlled myself and didn’t toss that idiot out the window only
because I love you so much.”
“You love me so much you didn’t stake your claim?” Swara asked in confusion.
“That’s right,” he answered. “I knew you wouldn’t be engaged to him unless you really loved
him.” His eyes seemed to blaze with the intensity of his feelings. “And as much as I want to be
with you, I want more for you to be happy.”
“You’d have given me up?” she asked.
“I told myself I could, but I don’t think I believed it.” He moved her off his lap to the floor
beside him and drew her to his side. “I’ve been planning the most important sales campaign of
my career. Haven’t you noticed how often we’ve been working late?”
She snuggled against him and answered, “Of course, I’ve noticed. I notice every minute I’m
with you. But we’ve been working on the Lawton contract.”
“That was a convenient excuse. If it hadn’t been the Lawton contract, I’d have found some
other reason to spend time with you.” His smile warmed her heart. “I’ve been practicing my
’smooth talking.’ How am I doing?”
“You’re doing wonderful. But I don’t want you to be a smooth talker. I just want you to
mean what you’re saying.” She took a deep breath before she continued. “Maybe you’re just
reacting to the situation of being locked up together in this tiny elevator. You told me one of the reasons you wanted me to be your secretary was that I’d keep my mind on business.”
Sanskar framed her face with his hands. “I expected you to tell me you were already engaged. I
hoped you’d tell me you’d just ended a relationship and weren’t ready for another one. That
would have given me hope that I could win you over.”
Swara shook her head. “I can’t believe it. You won me over a long time ago. But no one would
have guessed you wanted to.”
“Oh, people could guess, all right, but they didn’t have to. Ask Personnel. Ask my boss. Ask
any man who’s flirted with you at the office.”
“What do any of them have to do with us?”
“I’ve reminded every Romeo who’s tried to get your attention of the company s*xual
harassment policy. Then I went to Personnel and to my boss three months ago to be sure it
wouldn’t be a violation of the policy for me to date you and eventually marry you.”
Swara’s eyes widened and her mouth opened into a surprised O. “What did they say?”
“They said there was no p Ashutosh lem as long as we were both interested in a relationship.” He looked deeply into her eyes and into her soul. “Do you want a relationship with me, Swara?”
“What kind of a relationship are you talking about?”
“The only kind that matters. I want to marry you and show you how much I love you for the
rest of our lives.”
Swara snuggled against him and wrapped her arms around his chest. “Then, Mr.Maheshwari, we want the same thing. My dream is to be Mrs. Sanskar Maheshwari.”
He lifted her onto his outstretched legs again and soon she was lost in his kisses. Neither felt
it when the elevator jerked into motion and slowly lowered to the first floor. They drew apart
only when they heard laughter and loud voices. They hadn’t even realized the elevator had
stopped and the door had opened.
Two men stood in front of them, one in the uniform of a security company and the other in
the uniform of the elevator company.
“Well, I guess you’re safe from a lawsuit,” the security guard said to the other man.
“Doesn’t
look to me like these folks went through any trauma.”
Sanskar flashed a smile that warmed Swara from head to toe. He held her close by his side.
“Getting trapped in that elevator was the best thing that ever happened to us. Thanks. Now we’re trapped by love, and I can’t think of anything better. We’ll invite you to the wedding, which willbe . . . ” He turned to Swara. “Please say soon, darling. I’ve waited too long already.”
“Soon. Very soon.” Then she was in his arms again. Those lips she’d dreamed about so often
were touching hers, and she was lost in the sensations of love.
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