‘Good. Some colour in your cheeks.’
She felt herself flush. She supposed those cool, insolent words were intended to convey his macho self-possession. But to the sensitive ears of the guilt-ridden woman, the slightly thickened texture of his voice was a welcome giveaway. Luc Valentin was affected by her. Strongly affected.
‘That was hardly appropriate,’ she said breathlessly, patting down her suit and adjusting her hat. ‘Now. Of all times. Aren’t you ashamed?’
‘No. I would say—triumphant.’
Too shocked for words, she stared speechlessly at him, and he laughed and kissed her again. She was struggling for more words to express her discomfort at this bold exploitation of her weakened state, when the limo noticeably slowed.
Paris in all its glory had been flowing by—cafés, bridges, palaces, La Seine—and she’d barely had a chance to take in a thing. Now here they were at the city’s throbbing heart. Even as she looked they drew up before a palace with ivory awnings over its several entrances.
‘Where is this? Where are you taking me?’ Straining, she narrowed her eyes to read the inscription on the nearest.
‘To breakfast.’
A single word, emblazoned in a flowing script, adorned the graceful awning.
Ritz.
THE Ritz was the perfect antidote to an ordeal. The beauty, the food, the luscious notes of a string ensemble wafting on the air … Even the silk-festooned windows in their own lavish way declared the hotel’s sincere desire to swaddle the emotionally gouged woman in loving and soul-restoring luxury.
There was a placard in the reception area announcing that the hotel was soon to close its doors for a major renovation and refurbishment. Shari prayed fervently they wouldn’t change a thing.
The bathroom alone was an oasis of tranquillity, though she nearly freaked when she saw herself in the mirrors. Her face was blotchy, the tip of her nose red from all the bawling, and her mascara reminiscent of a bad Hallowe’en hangover. She looked a fright. How could Luc have wanted to kiss her?
She repaired the damage with the emergency kit at the bottom of her bag. Then, refreshed and reconstituted, she floated to join him in the restaurant. After all the emotion, she’d arrived on a tremulous smiley plateau where everything looked hazily beautiful. Especially the dark-eyed man drinking coffee and texting someone on his mobile.
Kill that thought. After all she’d gone through over him, was she to just fall into his arms? Was it always to be the same old thing? Shari Lacey, unable to resist a handsome Frenchman? Another one she knew little about and would be insane to trust?
He glanced up as she approached and his eyes shimmered, inciting an excited clench in her insides. Then, just to mess with her defences, he rose and pulled out a chair for her.
She sat down, that car kiss still tingling through her nerve sockets. Somehow she would have to take a stand. Lay her position on the line before events rocketed out of control. Before she did.
He resumed his chair, his long lanky posture so relaxed and unbothered by anything he’d done to her in that limo it was a damned disgrace.
She steeled herself not to be affected, weakened or seduced.
‘It’s very good of you to bring me here, Luc. Very generous, but …’ His brows twitched up. ‘I—I—I think I should make it clear to you that anything of a-a sexual nature that may have happened between us in Sydney was a one-off. We agreed then it was a mistake, and … Well, so much has happened, and … As far as I’m concerned the whole thing should be wiped from our minds.’
He nodded along with her words as she spoke, though she noticed a certain tension infuse his gorgeous limbs. Then he lifted one quizzical brow. ‘Ah. You think I should forget about meeting you at Emilie’s?’
‘I do. We should both forget it.’
‘So then …’ His black lashes flicked tauntingly downwards. A silky note entered his voice. ‘You wish me to forget Emilie’s garden?’
She eyed him carefully. What in particular might he be remembering about the garden? The last thing she needed to be reminded of was how easily she’d succumbed to that dark stroll into the shrubbery. ‘I’m—surprised you even remember the garden.’
His eyes gleamed in reminiscence. ‘Are you? But it was so pleasant, d’accord? In the dark, with all the fragrances and the moonlight.’ His long fingers toyed idly with his spoon. The same fingers that had recently toyed with parts of her. ‘You must remember the moonlight.’ Her nerve jumped. ‘The harbour lights.’
‘Where are we going with this?’ Although she knew where he was headed with it, all right.
He leaned forward, a lazy smile playing on his sexy mouth. ‘I think you know where. Where else but to the boathouse? You’re not expecting me to forget the boathouse, chérie, n’est-ce pas?’
‘Well, I’ve forgotten it. As far as I’m concerned, nothing about it was very memorable.’
He threw back his head and laughed. He looked so handsome, with amusement illuminating his face and the light dancing in his eyes, a wave of hot and bitter frustration swept her. He had no right to be so attractive and to mock her. He was the one who’d found the magic moments shameful and made her feel like a disgrace to womanhood.
Luckily the waiter arrived just then, or she might have snatched up the coffee pot and whacked Luc over the head with it.
Controlling her annoyance, she turned her full attention to the menu, consulting earnestly with the waiter, feeling Luc’s lazy glance scorch her face, throat and hands.
Everything enshrined on the list sounded delicious, but in the end she confined herself to ordering a spoonful of gentle, soothing yoghurt, along with some strawberries claimed to have been washed in morning dew. To follow she requested the buttery scrambled eggs, waiving both the caviar garnish and the champagne to wash them down.
Well, she had to show some respect for her stomach. It felt fine now, but who knew when it might rear up again in revolt?
While she enjoyed her yoghurt, Luc reflected on the effect their encounter had left on him. He still thought of it. No wonder he’d followed her home like a madman. Nom de Dieu, he was only flesh and blood. Would he ever forget holding her in his arms in that dark, sea-salty place? Her throaty little cries as he buried himself in her moist heat?
As he watched her soft lips close over a strawberry his blood stirred unbearably.
His underclothes tightened and he had to exert careful control over his voice. ‘How—long do you plan to stay?’
‘A couple of days. Tomorrow I thought I might visit the Musée D’Orsay. I fly home the day after that.’
Every sinew in his body tensed in utter rejection of that ludicrous plan. But outwardly he controlled the reaction. ‘But how will you see Paris?’
‘Well, I—I haven’t come for a sightseeing tour, have I?’
She raised her glass to her lips. As she swallowed he noticed the muscles contract in her satin throat. Without warning a rush of hot turgid blood raced to his groin. He forced himself to shift his agonised gaze to the wall, the window, the orchid in its vase. Everywhere, anywhere until he could trust his voice.
‘That’s—a very brief visit. Surely … you can transfer your flight to a future date?’