Читать книгу Waiting Game - Diana Hamilton - Страница 7
CHAPTER THREE
ОглавлениеSAUL didn’t touch her as he walked her back to the party, not even a hand beneath her elbow as they mounted the flight of stone steps that led up from the lower walkway to the pool and terrace level.
Which didn’t mean a thing. Because Fen couldn’t have been more aware of him if his hands had been all over her. Her body was burning, her mouth suddenly dry, her breath thick in her lungs. Yet she was shivering, quivering all over like a startled mare. But that was just a symptom of the tension she’d been under ever since she and Alex had started out on this mad charade, she informed herself tartly, trying to wipe away the memory of being pinned beneath Saul Ackerman’s hard male body, the way his hand had felt on the soft warm flesh of her thigh.
But the memory wouldn’t go away and she had never been as pleased to see anyone in her life as she was to see Alex when he met them at the end of the now almost deserted terrace.
‘So there you are!’ His face lit up with relief. ‘I thought you’d run out on me, sweetheart.’
‘Never!’ In her eagerness to reach him and the safe normality he represented, one of her spindly heels twisted beneath her and only Saul’s lightning-fast reactions, the hand that snaked out to steady her, prevented her from falling in a heap and saying goodbye to what little was left of her dwindling composure. ‘If you’re this eager in bed I can understand why he hates you to be out of his sight,’ Saul murmured close to her ear, his breath fanning her thick honey-gold fringe beneath the dipping, rose-laden brim of her hat.
Fen shuddered with scalding outrage. She wanted to tell him to shut his insulting mouth but the words wouldn’t come. Her tongue was stuck to the roof of her mouth. And the hand that had steadied her relaxed, just a little, his thumb making lazy circles on the inside of her arm, scorching her through the thin silk sleeve. And the most bewildering, the most horrible thing of all was the way she was just standing there as if turned to stone, letting him do it. Enjoying—
No! Never!
She slapped that thought away smartly then went hot all over as he released her arm, his hand brushing her silk-clad bottom as it fell back to his side, brushing against her so lightly that she could almost have imagined it.
‘Excuse me for a moment; there’s someone I must have a brief word with,’ Saul said, turning away, his movements very fluid for a man whose body packed so much power. And Fen gave him a sourly reluctant ten out of ten for urbanity, for behaving as if nothing had happened, as if he hadn’t foully insulted her with both word and touch!
‘Can we go now?’ Fen glared at her uncle, unfazed by the way his eyebrows shot up to his hairline at her tone. He hadn’t been close enough to catch Saul’s lowvoiced insult, and the touching had gone on out of sight!
‘Not yet.’ Alex pulled her out of the way of the waiters who were already dismantling the buffet tables. The party was long over. She must have slept for longer than she’d thought. ‘Listen,’ he began in a rush, his flushed face close to hers, ‘while you were missing I had a word with Laurence Meek—he’s the director of programmes, the man who can put ‘em on and take ‘em off. And the only living soul who can sway the decisions he makes is—’
‘Saul Ackerman,’ Fen put in drily, hatred bubbling up inside her all over again at the mere thought of him.
‘Dead right. Anyway, Laurence gave me a very strong hint that, after all, my show mightn’t get the shove. His actual words were, “Don’t go anywhere else with your c.v., old man. There’s a big decision in the offing and I think it will go your way.”’
‘That’s great news!’ Fen’s golden eyes shone, her bad mood disappearing like mist in the summer sunshine. She was really pleased for him. His own show meant a lot to him—his pride, his self-respect, his sense of worth. Slowly, she walked over to the stone balustrading that edged the terrace and gazed out over the now deserted gardens, Alex at her side. His good news meant that soon they would be able to stop the pretence of a torrid, adulterous relationship. She had never been wildly ecstatic about the idea but she hadn’t foreseen how tawdry and besmirched it would make her feel. The relief was heady.
The Ackerman monster certainly had a beautiful home, she decided, the tranquillity of the scene soothing her. She could almost imagine herself putting down roots if she owned something like this. Almost. She sighed. No, she couldn’t see herself putting roots down anywhere, any time. She couldn’t really see the point. There was always something new over the horizon, something to draw her wandering feet onwards…
‘And when’s this big decision to be taken?’ she asked.
‘I’m not sure. But soon. And when it’s made, either way, we can drop this act.’
‘But it can’t have had anything to do with their change of mind, surely?’ Fen looked at him worriedly. ‘One scandalous story in print…’ Her voice trailed away. From what she’d gathered, the viewing figures for Alex’s show had been falling steadily for some time, and dropping like a stone just recently. Could their altered decision be based on what was, after all, simply a piece of sleazy journalism and salacious speculation? It didn’t make a whole lot of sense.
But Alex didn’t care why he had been offered a reprieve, only that it seemed that he had. He was smiling expansively, his face too flushed. Fen suspected he’d been celebrating ever since he’d had that talk with the director of programmes. The champagne had been flowing like water, after all!
‘Shall I drive us home?’ She didn’t want to offend his male pride by suggesting he might be over the legal limit—well over!—but it was time they made a move. She didn’t want to face Saul again, not after what he had said and done. Especially not after what he had said and done!
‘We’ll see. Later. Saul’s asked us to stay to dinner—I’ve been trying to tell you.’
‘What?’ Fen shook her head decisively. ‘No. Oh, no!’ She had had more than enough of his company. Several others would have been invited, too, she was sure of that. A select few. Definitely including the lovely Vesta Faine! But she had no wish whatsoever to be part of the élite around Saul Ackerman’s dinnertable tonight.
‘Fen!’ Alex looked pole-axed. ‘Don’t be like that! I know it’s been difficult—being taken for my mistress, and everything. But it won’t be for much longer, I promise, and then we can come clean. And it’s important to me; you must see that. We got away with refusing his invitation once; do it twice and I can kiss all hopes of a change of mind goodbye!’ He put his hand over hers as it clenched and curled around the sun-warmed stone. ‘I can’t afford to ruffle his feathers, at least not until that decision’s been made. And he might want to discuss it over dinner. Please, sweetheart, try to endure it. For me?’
It was emotional blackmail and she knew she had no choice. But, just to get her own back, she snapped out, ‘Couldn’t we just tell him we can’t wait to get back to your place and dive into bed?’ Saul would understand something like that—the arrogant, insulting, over-sexed monster…!
She saw Alex’s face go purple, and knew why when, from just behind her, that hated voice said, in a tone like steel cutting through stone, ‘Shall we go in? We’ve time for a drink before dinner. And perhaps your niece…’ his voice hovered damningly over that word ‘…would like to freshen up before we eat?’
He had heard what she had said; no doubt about it. Trying to hide her flaming face beneath the brim of her hat, she had no other option but to keep pace with the two men as they walked towards the house. But once inside she could have wept with relief as he introduced his housekeeper, Mrs Pringle.