His appearance was certainly much less formal than it had been on Saturday evening, and his hair was hopelessly windswept, not with that deliberate casualness that was so much in fashion nowadays, but actually blown in complete disarray by the breeze.
A fact he seemed to become conscious of as she continued to look at him silently, putting up an impatient hand to smooth the errant dark blond locks from his brow. ‘I really am sorry I’m late for our date, Cyn,’ he told her with a rueful grimace. ‘But I— Well, I got caught up in work, and—’
‘You work on a Sunday?’ She couldn’t help her surprise.
He grinned at her reaction. ‘I work every day, Cyn.’ He took a firm grasp of one of her arms. ‘Let’s go and eat—we can talk over our meal,’ he suggested cajolingly.
He thought she was going to refuse to have dinner with him at all because he was over ten minutes late! Cyn realised dazedly. She hadn’t been very happy about having to stand in such a conspicuous place as she waited for him, she admitted—and, now that he had arrived, Ron, the doorman, was completely agog at just who had turned up to meet her, obviously recognising Wolf from last night!—but she was far too curious about this enigmatic man to change her mind about having dinner with him just because of that. And from Ron’s almost stunned expression, the sooner they moved away from the hotel the better!
‘I thought you might have already eaten...?’ She frowned up at Wolf as she moved with him to the taxi he had signalled to come over to them.
Wolf gave the driver an address before joining Cyn in the back of the taxi, looking puzzled as he turned to look at her. ‘What on earth gave you that—? This isn’t food,’ he dismissed with a laugh as he saw the direction her gaze had taken, putting up a self-conscious hand to the marks on his shirt. ‘I should have changed before coming to meet you,’ he acknowledged with a grimace. ‘But I was so caught up in what I was doing, it was almost seven-thirty before I even remembered our date—I didn’t put that very well, did I?’ He winced as he saw her mockingly raised brows.
She laughed softly, starting to relax now that they were away from the hotel; it was the worst possible place they could have agreed to meet, although she acknowledged that, at the time, they hadn’t had much time to think of another location. ‘It wasn’t the most flattering thing you could have said,’ she shook her head with a rueful smile.
Wolf’s hands moved to clasp one of hers. ‘Once you’ve known me for a while, you’ll realise that flattery is one thing I never give,’ he told her with intensity. ‘In fact, I’ve been accused of the opposite on more than one occasion.’ He seemed to deliberately lighten the conversation. ‘I hope you don’t mind, but I’ve asked the driver to take us to my flat; I really should change before taking you out to dinner!’
Cyn didn’t care where they went; her body was doing strange things just at the touch of his hand on hers, and she could see that awareness reflecting in the warm amber of Wolf’s eyes as they made the journey to his flat.
The flat, as she should have guessed, was in Mayfair, and Wolf took her up in the almost silent lift to the penthouse apartment at the top of the building. But the furniture, she saw as they stepped straight into the luxurious lounge, ebony and chrome, the suite of dark brown leather, somehow didn’t look like Wolf at all. Which was a ridiculous thing for her to think. What did she know of this man’s tastes in—?
‘Barbara’s idea of what my apartment should be furnished like,’ Wolf told her with a dismissive grimace as he seemed to guess her thoughts.
Barbara again. Cyn couldn’t help wondering exactly where the other woman fitted into his life—because she obviously did fit into it somewhere. Somehow that knowledge made her feel strangely depressed.
Wolf seemed unaware of her feelings this time. ‘Give me a few minutes to change and I’ll be with you,’ he promised lightly. ‘Help yourself to a drink,’ he waved vaguely in the direction of the drinks cabinet across the room. ‘And feel free to peruse the bookshelves,’ he added before hurrying from the room, already unbuttoning his shirt as he went.
Cyn took a few minutes to catch her breath before taking him up on either of those offers; being in the company of Wolf Thornton was a little like being ushered along by an express train!
But when she did finally look at the extensive bookshelves along one wall of the room—she wasn’t interested in the drink, she rarely drank alcohol anyway, and never on an empty stomach—she found Wolf’s taste in books as lively as his mind, the subject matter ranging from poetry, autobiographies, both historic and fairly recent, to art and history. His taste in fiction was almost as varied; thrillers, fantasy, mysteries, even the occasional novel which she would have classed as romance. Admittedly the latter were usually the classics, but nevertheless Cyn still thought it would be difficult to tell the nature of the man from his taste in books. And even in the short time she had known him, it had become very important to her that she should come to know more about him, much more about him.
But Wolf’s ‘few minutes’ stretched into much longer than that, until a glance at her wristwatch told her he had been gone at least half an hour. Surely it didn’t take him this long to change his clothes? Even if, at the last minute, he had decided to shower and shave before he put on fresh clothes, it surely wouldn’t have taken him as long as this?
‘Wolf?’ she called out tentatively. ‘Wolf!’ she said more firmly when she received no answer to her first call. Still no answer. What on earth was the man doing?
She didn’t exactly feel comfortable with the idea of going into his bedroom, but if he wasn’t going to answer her when she called...! Besides, for all she knew, he might have fallen or something, and be unable to answer her. It wasn’t very likely, she admitted, but something had to be delaying him.
The ‘something’ turned out to be a total surprise. Cyn had had no idea...!
Wolf’s bedroom—another room she would say hadn’t been decorated or furnished by him, the cool blues and heavy ornate furniture not suiting him at all—was empty of the man himself, as was the adjoining bathroom. But the other adjoining door she discovered across the room proved more fruitful.
She entered the room slowly, tentatively, her eyes widening as she found herself in a studio, an artist’s studio. Paintings finished and half finished, leant against every bit of wall-space. The roof of the room was mainly glass, to allow the maximum of light, Cyn would guess, light needed to paint the vivid scenes that assaulted all the senses, not just the optical ones, as she gazed around the room at them in increasing wonder. The paintings were good, very good, even to her untutored eye. And Wolf had painted them...
The man himself sat with his back towards her, obviously totally engrossed in the half-completed canvas in front of him, the woman in the picture lying like a siren across the grey rocks as the even greyer sea thundered around her, trying to tear her into its silky depths. Silver-blond hair swirled in the savage wind, the woman’s pale blue dress clung wetly to the sensual curves outlined beneath. Cyn’s gaze returned to the woman’s face, to the serene expression, the elfin face dominated by deeply violet-coloured eyes... There was something familiar about the woman, something— My God, she thought, it was her!
She must have gasped out loud at the realisation, because Wolf turned sharply, his gaze glazed and unseeing for a few brief seconds, and then he seemed to focus on her, shaking his head self-disgustedly. ‘My God, I’ve done it again, haven’t I?’ He stood up abruptly, wiping paint from his hands on to a cloth that looked as if it wasn’t the first time he had done so today, what had once been a white cloth now covered in— It was paint Wolf had on his shirt too, Cyn suddenly realised; he must have been working on this painting before he came to meet her. This was the reason he had forgotten their date.
And the woman in the painting was her, she was sure of it...
Wolf saw the puzzlement in her face, as he crossed the room to stand in front of her. ‘Yes, it’s