Читать книгу Bedroom Eyes - Sandra Chastain - Страница 9

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“THIS IS ANNE HARRIS, again,” the low, breathy voice whispered into the answering machine. “I must get in touch with the model who posed for the photograph of Mitchell Dane. I need him desperately.”

Mitchell listened to the latest message in dismay. He didn’t have to answer his sister’s phone, just check the messages and report any emergencies. In the time it had taken him to put away pancakes and scrambled eggs this morning, Anne Harris had left three messages, each more urgent than the one before. But that wasn’t what had him strung tighter than a bow. It was that the woman’s voice asked for Mitchell.

“I know it’s against your policy, Bettina, but,” she went on, trying unsuccessfully to hide the tremor in her voice with sharpness, “I simply have to reach him.”

He’d strangle Bettina when she returned. This little interlude had been only intended for picking up his mail and dropping off his latest photographs on his way to a photo shoot in North Carolina. The minute Bettina learned he was en route, she suddenly decided to visit their brother in Wyoming.

Granted, a one-woman business tied her down and he did owe her for being his clearinghouse since he didn’t keep a permanent address. But a storage locker in her basement and the occasional use of her spare bedroom didn’t quite equal the problem that seemed to be building. When he’d agreed to handle any emergency that came up, he’d assumed she meant leaking faucets or loss of electric power. What kind of emergency could you have with an imaginary lover?

The whole idea of pretend boyfriends had been crazy from the start. Five years ago, when Bettina had explained she planned a service that provided photos of imaginary lovers who sent gifts and made telephone calls to women, he and his brothers had howled.

She’d come to him because she needed photographs of attractive, sexy men. They had to be the kind of man every woman would fantasize about. Since she was just starting out and had no money to pay for professional models, her plan was to use her own brothers. They’d laughed louder and turned her down. But she was serious and, eventually, because they all lived away from the area, they’d agreed, providing Mitchell did the photography.

Photographing Jess and Ran to look sexy had been a hoot. Forcing his brothers to pose for cheesy beefcake pictures had gotten back at them for all the trouble they’d caused him as teenagers. If there had been such a thing as a catalog for Victor’s Secret, he could have made a fortune contracting out the Dane brothers as cover models. Finally, at Bettina’s insistence, he’d thrown in a couple of shots of himself made in Hawaii. Their photos were to have been temporary until she could afford to pay real models. He’d been assured they’d been retired as Bettina’s bachelors long ago.

But Anne Harris was using his name.

“Where are you, Bettina? Call me the minute you come in, or everything I’ve worked for will be lost,” she said and hung up.

Vacation or not, he didn’t care. Mitchell dialed his brother’s ranch in Wyoming and got his answering machine. “Listen, Bettina,” he snapped, “I know I swore an oath that I wouldn’t bother you unless it was a matter of life and death, but you’d better know there’s a woman named Anne Harris who sounds pretty desperate. I think you’d better call her.”

An hour passed. No Bettina. Mitchell paced the condo that served as his sister’s living quarters and her place of business, and a permanent address for Mitchell Dane as well. He considered his options. He could have called the woman himself if she’d left her number. She hadn’t. He searched for Bettina’s address book but didn’t find one.

Anne Harris was either a client of Bachelor-in-a-Box or a potential one. If she was already signed up, she knew the rules. The contracts lying on Bettina’s desk plainly said, No contact between bachelors and clients.

Mitchell propped his feet on his sister’s desk and tried not to feel responsible. Bettina was a big girl now, and this was her business. But the tight, low voice on the answering machine had imprinted itself on his mind and wouldn’t go away. Too agitated to sit still, Mitchell replayed the tape. Annoyed that he felt a responsibility toward Anne Harris, he finally decided that it wasn’t her problem that stirred him, it was her voice—intriguing, polished, with a hint of a honeyed Southern accent. The throaty whisper brought to mind visions of hot tropic nights, of moonlight and wild orchids. He tried to imagine the face that went with that voice.

Then he considered the kind of woman who went out and bought a man. She was probably shy, a woman who lived her life through the movies and resorted to an imaginary lover to convince her girlfriends that she had someone who cared. He found himself trying to fit that kind of woman to the sexy voice. They didn’t match.

Creative curiosity was part of every photographer’s psyche, though of late he’d felt less and less curious. After too many long nights, extended flights and lonely assignments, everything looked the same. He rarely remembered the country…except for the children. Their faces haunted him. He felt responsible for every one of them.

But this woman caught his interest. Mitchell leaned back in his chair, thinking about her. His analysis started with what kind of woman would pay for a pretend lover, but it ended with why his sister had given Anne Harris his name.

Moments later, the phone rang once more. “Bettina, this is Anne again. Believe me when I tell you that I have a life-threatening situation here.” The voice was even tighter, lower. “It’s complicated, but I desperately need my pretend fiancé to become real, just for two days. It’s not just my job, but my mother’s future depends on it. You have to help me get in touch with the model who posed for my picture. I’ll pay him a thousand dollars for two days of his time.” She sighed. “Please, Bettina, you and my mother got me into this; now you have to help me.”

Bettina got Ms. Harris into a life-threatening situation that now threatened her mother? Mitchell groaned. For all he knew, this kind of thing happened all the time. But now he was worried. If Bettina was liable, some of the responsibility fell on him. He’d helped make his sister’s idiotic idea a reality. Now she’d left him in charge.

And this woman was looking for Mitchell. Why?

Why was she willing to pay a thousand dollars for two days of bachelor work? It might as well be called gigolo work—an intriguing idea. He smiled. He didn’t know what Mitchell was worth, but two days of Dane the professional photographer was a lot more expensive.

“I’ll take full responsibility for the weekend,” she promised.

She’d have to take the responsibility. Taking responsibility for someone else was a thing he knew well. When his father died, he’d turned a part-time job in a photographer’s studio into a seven-day work week while completing high school. He’d been a swimmer, with hopes of a scholarship. But as the breadwinner, swimming, dances, girls—all had to be left behind. Later, when Ran, Jess and Bettina were old enough to go out on their own, he took a gofer job with a photographer on assignment in Hawaii. For the next three years he’d lived the life of a beach bum, working only to buy film and supplies. Little by little, he learned and finally started to sell.

For Mitchell, Hawaii was freedom. Hawaii was life and beauty rejuvenating itself. Hawaii was Melia, a beautiful dark-haired native girl who became his model and his mate. They were young and reckless, drunk on moonlight and making love. Then he landed an assignment to photograph a waterfall in a wilderness area generally bypassed because native superstition warned that it was a sacred place.

A dozen times they’d gone into the rain forest, climbed rocky paths that led almost straight up, put themselves into danger to capture the beauty of the islands. But this time he’d had second thoughts about taking her. She’d begged him. “Please,” she’d said over and over, kissing him wantonly until at last he agreed. But this assignment had been different from the start. It rained nonstop. When the rain didn’t keep them away, the island gods reached down and reminded the intruders that they were unwelcome.

Melia fell to her death from the top of the falls. He didn’t know until later that she was carrying his child. Suddenly the beauty of the island was gone. He threw himself into his work, swore he’d never be responsible for another person again and began the nomad life he’d lived ever since. But he saw the face of the child he’d lost everywhere he went.

And now, he was responsible for this Anne Harris with the come-hither voice, whether he wanted to be or not. But it wasn’t personal, he told himself. He was simply helping his sister.

Then he realized that she hadn’t hung up the phone. He could hear a faint, jerky rumble, as if she’d laid the phone against her chest and he was hearing her heart beat. He thought at first that she was crying, then he realized that she was muttering to herself under her breath, cursing in a way he hadn’t heard a woman do since the breakdown of a bus hauling a group of models to a desert shoot in Arizona. The words seemed to be directed at men in general. His slumbering curiosity went up another notch.

Then her muttering softened. “Please?” she whispered, speaking into the receiver again.

An unwelcome jolt of heat hit his loins and he clenched his teeth. Not only did the woman have the sexiest voice he’d ever heard, she’d said please. She needed him. Before he realized what he was doing, he’d picked up the phone. “I’ll take the job. But you’d better know, I travel first class and I don’t do things halfway.”

There was a long silence. “What number do I have?” she asked, suddenly suspicious.

He repeated the number, adding, “You called Bettina, didn’t you? Well, she’s out of town.”

“Of course. First my mother disappears, now Bettina,” the voice said, then asked, “Who are you?”

“I’m Mitchell. Isn’t that who you wanted?”

“Yes, but you don’t understand. You have to be the right Mitchell. My associates have seen his picture. They know what he looks like. If I bring the wrong man, my career will be over.”

“I am the right Mitchell. Trust me.”

“Who am I kidding?” she said helplessly. “Without a future husband, I’m right back where I started and I have nobody but myself to blame. How could I have let this happen? I knew better.”

“Future husband?” That was not part of the plan, imaginary or not. “Tell me about Mitchell,” he said, stalling, “What does he look like?”

“In my photograph, he’s standing on a beach by a big black rock, looking back at the camera. He’s tall with tawny hair and…” she paused “…he looks a little sad.”

The beach by the black rock—he remembered it well. He and Melia had shared some special moments there. After she died, he’d gone back to that beach a lot. The photograph was one of those he’d given to Bettina, taken by an acquaintance. The memory of that beach sucker-punched him in the gut. He’d thought he’d put it behind him but he obviously hadn’t. He’d seen that expression in his mirror every time he shaved.

“Mitchell, do you know the photograph I mean?”

“I do,” he said, a sudden attack of regret causing him to backpedal on his rash offer. “I don’t know what kind of trouble you’re in, but I think you’d better wait for Bettina to handle it.”

“Normally, I’d agree with you. Waiting would be wise. But this time I can’t wait. If I can produce the real Mitchell, I stand a chance at getting a promotion. With a promotion I can afford to look after my mother.”

Her mother. She must be ill. That would explain Ms. Harris’s desperation. “I really am Mitchell. I promise you, I’m the guy you’re looking for.”

“I hope you are.” Her resignation clearly voiced her doubt. “I’ve arranged for us to use a friend’s cabin up by the lake, near Mr. Jacobs’s house for the afternoon. I thought it would be better if we had a private place where you and I could rehearse the story of our relationship before I introduce you to my employer.”

“Rehearse?” He couldn’t see her, but his mind didn’t care. It went into erotic overtime. “That sounds—interesting.”

“It’s business,” she said. “This is serious. Don’t worry. Just keep an open mind. I have everything all worked out.”

Mitchell tried to open his mind but it refused, choosing instead to imagine what his “fiancée” meant by rehearsing. “I’m pretty much a fly-by-the-seat-of-my-pants kind of guy. You might want to reconsider your plan.”

“It’s too late for that, Mitchell.”

It was too late. Bettina always said he lived his life as if it was a James Bond adventure, but this time he felt as if he’d just stepped into Alice’s rabbit hole—except this rabbit hole had nothing to do with tea parties and chess games. And the “off with their heads” line ran eerily through his mind. Once he’d admitted to being Mitchell, he’d sealed his fate. Short of hanging up, he had to follow through. It was a matter of honor. If he said he’d do something, he did it. Besides, he told himself, it was only for a weekend. And she’d probably be as plain as dry toast.

“Bring casual clothes for the lake and a dress suit for the wedding,” she went on, more confidently now. “I don’t know why people have to get married in June. It’s too hot. By the way, I don’t want to know who you really are. Bettina called you Mitchell Dane, and that’s who my co-workers are expecting. At least she gives her men last names, even if she keeps her own a secret.”

“Mitchell Dane?” Bettina gave Anne Harris his last name but kept hers a secret? What was she thinking of? Then it hit him—using his photograph…her sudden need for a vacation… This entire weekend was a setup. “Just look after the office for three days, Mitchell, in case of an emergency. Please?” She was getting even for all the high-handed rules he’d imposed on her when she was growing up.

She hadn’t appreciated the early curfews he’d set, when her friends had more freedom. He hadn’t handled his responsibility well. He was still a teenager with raging hormones and thwarted dreams. And he might have gone too far while he forced her to study business instead of art, but he’d tried to make sure she could take care of herself. Now she was either getting even or returning the favor. She thought it was time for him to settle down. The last time he was in town and she’d invited one of her clients to dinner, he’d hightailed it out of town a day early. This latest incident proved she hadn’t given up. She’d turned him into Anne Harris’s future husband. He wondered if Anne was even a real client or not, and if Jess and Ran were in on her plan. If not, they’d better get ready. They’d be next.

Anne interrupted his thoughts. “I’m already packed.” She gave him her address, then added, “Please hurry, Mitchell. We need to get going,” and hung up before he could back out. And he still didn’t have her telephone number.

Mitchell sat for a minute, considering his next move.

He had let a hoarse, sexy voice and a woman in trouble get to him. Bettina had counted on that; his past had made him a caretaker. He couldn’t fight the guilt for Melia’s death or the need to help any woman or child in distress. He’d never admit it but he was a romantic. He’d watched Casablanca on every black-and-white television set in every language in the world. He would never have let Ingrid Bergman’s plane leave without him.

But that was a movie, and he had to assume Anne Harris was truly one of his sister’s clients. If this was a setup, well, maybe he’d turn it around and the joke would be on Bettina. He had a couple of weeks between assignments… Anne Harris wanted to rehearse… He was beginning to warm to the idea. She needed a lover who would play his role to the hilt. He’d give her what Bettina had promised. He just had to dust off his hilt a bit.

Bedroom Eyes

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