Citrine glanced at Weston coolly, her thoughts drifting unexpectedly to her own father.
She mused to herself, *My old man's still the best—at least he's actually likable.*
Weston, sensing a pair of eyes on him from across the room, turned and met Citrine's gaze head-on. Her eyes were steady, showing not even a hint of fear.
Most of the younger Carmichaels treated Weston like mice confronted by a cat; even Raymond, back when he was a teenager, had always been more than a little intimidated by his father.
But here was a girl, bold as brass, standing her ground without so much as flinching. Weston felt a rare flicker of interest.
"What's your name?" he asked.
"Citrine Carmichael." Citrine looked him straight in the eye, her tone poised and unflappable, every word and gesture perfectly composed—leaving no room for criticism.
"You're young, but your nerve is impressive," Weston remarked, his voice unreadable—somewhere between a compliment and a put-down.
Citrine gave a small, easy smile and replied without missing a beat, "You flatter me. I suppose I do all right."
Weston's eyes narrowed.
This girl clearly knew he didn't mean it as praise—she was being deliberately obtuse.
Anyone with half a brain could tell Weston's comment was more reproach than admiration. Yet Citrine acted as if she hadn't noticed at all, turning his words back on him and leaving him momentarily speechless.
"What school are you attending now?" Weston pressed, frowning.
"Havencrest Preparatory Academy."
"And your grades?"
Weston's career-mindedness was legendary; his standards for his children were impossibly high, and precious few ever measured up. Now, as he scrutinized the young woman before him, his tone was the same one he used when grilling subordinates.
"Dad, Citrine's not your employee," Raymond interjected, unable to keep the edge out of his voice. He'd grown up being treated like Weston's assistant, and it rubbed him the wrong way to hear his father interrogate Citrine like that.
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