A Deeper Dimension (14 page)

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Authors: Amanda Carpenter

BOOK: A Deeper Dimension
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After the first dance, Diana and Brent were heading back to the table when Alex and Vanessa appeared beside them. Alex said smoothly, “Shall we go on up to the table?”

Vanessa pouted prettily, “Oh, I would like just one more dance, Alex. Wouldn’t you?” She was looking up at Alex as she talked, but he was looking at Diana.

“I really should dance one dance with my assistant, don’t you think?” He was suave as he sidestepped Vanessa’s blatant invitation. “How rude of me if I didn’t.” A strong arm reached out and encircled her waist and they were swinging away from the Valsings before she knew it.

“You, madam, nearly got me into trouble a few minutes ago,” Alex murmured into her ear as they moved away. She leaned back against his arm to look at his face in surprise.

“What did I do?” she asked. He had his head bent close to hers and she could smell the clean scent of his aftershave. She had the strangest urge to put her face closer to his and nuzzle his chin.

“Dear Vanessa wanted to know just what I found so funny about diamonds—which was what she’d been talking about when you so comically did your thing—and I had to do a neat bit of improvising to explain.” Alex grinned as he spoke. Lights gleamed in his chestnut hair and his vivid eyes as they whirled around and around. Diana didn’t look at anything else, trusting instead to Alex’s guidance as she stared up into his face.

“I’m sure you handled things quite well,” she murmured. “I’ve heard you always handle the ladies well.”

He laughed and tightened his arm around her waist. “You’re in trouble for that statement!”

All too soon the dance ended and Alex led the way back to the table, leaving her to come down to earth by herself. She slowly became realistic; magic such as that of the dance and of the picnic many days ago was like a fantasy that had no part of the world as she knew it. Interludes were nice now and then, but she mustn’t allow them to cloud her perspective. She felt a great anger towards herself for her apparently illogical reactions to Alex. Now, in the midst of a tremendous rift between the two of them, she was attracted to him as never before. It was a contradiction and an affront to all she considered strong and unwavering in herself.

The dinner was long and very tiring for Diana. She quickly grew weary of the Valsings and their own brand of mediocrity. Vanessa had an infuriating way of either ignoring her completely or making some comment to her that was light enough on the surface, but had a dig underneath. She had a great contempt for those sort of catty remarks, and Vanessa found that most of her maliciousness bounced off a completely blank face.

Brent tended to chew his food like he talked, and all through the meal, Diana tried to look everywhere but at him, which at times was a little difficult when he directly addressed her or she him. It helped that she sat across from Alex, so for the better part of the meal she looked at him in desperation.

It was over coffee and dessert when business was finally brought into the conversation. Brent finished his pie with a final shovel towards his mouth and sat back, sighing. “Good meal,” he grunted. “But I suppose it’s time to get down to what we really came to discuss.” Vanessa, unnoticed by anyone, settled back in her own seat with a smile. “Alex, I have just one question that I’d like to get answered: why did you raise your prices again this week when you could have put Payne out of business?”

Diana began to fiddle with her napkin without looking at anybody. Alex had made his decision at the beginning of the week, and as far as she knew, everybody at the office had carefully steered clear of any mention of the subject. She wondered what Alex was going to say.

His answer was simple and unrevealing. All he said was, “I never set out to destroy anybody’s business and I won’t start now. Payne has got to make it or go under on his own steam. I don’t want anything to do with him.” And that, she judged by Alex’s closed expression, would be all that was said about
that
.
The two men went on to discuss various aspects of a possible contract deal which she had the good sense to stay out of. Vanessa, however, was a different matter. If she did not like a certain wording or a certain promise, she said so in a very pretty voice until it became apparent that Brent was going to do anything Vanessa said he should do. Diana got a clearer picture of the Valsing household as the discussion went on. Brent was in New York to conduct business and Vanessa was here to see that he did it right. She sat back in her chair and waited silently for the end of the evening.

It came fairly quickly. As soon as Alex realised what was going on, and that the conclusion of the deal depended on the approval of a rather capricious woman, he politely but firmly put an end to the discussion. “My staff will put together a contract proposal by tomorrow afternoon so that you’ll have something in writing to study,” he said with remarkable patience. He ostentatiously looked at his watch. “And now, I’m afraid, we’re going to have to leave. I still have work to do tonight and I’ll have to start it soon if I’m to be done by midnight.” After many protests and explanations, he stood up and motioned to Diana that they had to leave. The farewells were pleasant enough, and the walk out of the restaurant was even more pleasant. She settled back in the seat of the car with a huge sigh of relief.

He asked sympathetically, “Was the evening as bad as all that?”

Shaking her head, she said with a chuckle, “No, it would have been worse if the evening had been longer.”

He laughingly agreed. “The worst part had to be the dancing!” he exclaimed. “If Vanessa had put on any more perfume, I think I’d have suffocated!”

“And Brent with his rubber lips,” she began to giggle again as she pictured in her mind his face. “And who in the world are the Strattons from Kentucky?”

Alex shook his head and his shoulders shook with mirth, “I don’t know! Some aristocratic horse nuts, I guess!”

“Oh, Alex dear, you must dance one more dance with me, or I’ll be terribly hurt, simply terribly!” she trebled in a falsetto mimicry of Vanessa’s particular brand of charm. Alex had tears in his eyes from laughing so hard.

The drive back to the Mason parking lot where Diana’s car was parked was accomplished in an amazingly short time. She looked around as Alex pulled up the car beside hers and thought, It’s been too short. Tomorrow we go back to all the strains and tensions that were there before tonight, and it will be as if this pleasant comradeship had never been. Tomorrow. She turned her head to look at him as he switched off the car.

He felt it too, and when he spoke there was a tone of formality in his voice that seemed to put a barrier between them. “I never thanked you for rearranging your schedule so that you could come tonight,” he told her quietly. “You helped carry things beautifully during the evening.”

Diana gave a little shrug and spoke diffidently. “I rather thought I was the cause of tension tonight, for some reason. Vanessa didn’t appear to—well, she probably would have been happier—that is, I’m sure you could have handled things very well on your own.”

He looked at the steering wheel in front of him. “She wasn’t exactly affectionate towards you tonight, was she?”

She gave a little laugh. “No, I don’t think affectionate was quite the word for how she felt towards me!”

“Envy would be more like it, wouldn’t it?” Alex still didn’t look at her.

She frowned. “I don’t quite follow you.” Jealousy would have been the word that she would have chosen. An ill-founded, irrational jealousy a married woman had no right to feel, just because an available and attractive male showed a little attention to someone else beside her. Diana pictured the narrow, cat eyes again when Alex put his arm across her shoulders.

“I think that it’s very understandable,” he continued. “Here you have a very insecure woman who’s trying desperately to hold on to what good looks she has, while she knows deep down that whatever attractiveness she had any claim to is rapidly fading into plump middle age. She looks at you, with your tall slimness and beautifully proportioned body, and your vibrant colouring, and feels drab. Even her husband pays attention to you. No wonder she feels the need to alternately strike out at you, who threatens her, or woo every man in reach—who happened to be me. She was trying to establish her own worth.”

“I never thought of it like that,” Diana murmured, taken aback. Someone actually feeling threatened by her!

“No,” he agreed with a strange tightness to his voice. “No, you wouldn’t, would you? You only think of yourself in terms of logic and reason. You never leave any room for the irrational or the emotional. You have it all figured out.”

“I never said that!” She swung her head as she snapped.
 

“You wouldn’t know what it would be like to need others’ approval or acceptance,” he continued relentlessly. There was a deep glow of what looked like anger in his eyes and she wondered why in the world he would be angry with her. “You don’t understand people like Vanessa who want to be attractive to others.”

“Will you just shut up!” Diana hissed, her lips tight across her teeth. “What reason do you have for talking to me like this? I didn’t ask for it!”

“That’s right. You don’t need other people, their criticism or caring. You’re a totally self-sufficient entity, aren’t you? Just like a machine, Diana.” His voice had risen and she found herself shouting back.

“And don’t you forget it!” she yelled. They glared at each other for a moment. Diana straightened her shoulders and withdrew perceptibly. She spoke and her voice was very cold. “I don’t need this conversation, I don’t need other people, and I certainly don’t need you.” She fumbled for the door latch, her face turned away from him.

Suddenly she was jerked back around to face him and she stared up into his white face and glowing eyes. Good lord, is he in a rage, she thought dazedly to herself, and then he was speaking. “…never need anybody, do you? I just wonder if you know how to want somebody.” He started to lower his head towards hers and she felt a sudden panic when she realised his intention. She pushed him as hard as she could with both hands against his shoulders, but it was like pushing a granite wall as she felt the latent strength of his body. “My God,” he breathed, “I bet you’ve never even been kissed!” He held her head firmly with one hand behind it, and then his mouth was on hers. She was very shocked at the primitive feelings that Alex aroused in her, feelings she had never experienced before. She had a dazed impression of a hard pressure on her lips that slowly started to ease and soften, and a large looming bulk of strength that was huge before her, and as Alex’s arms slid to hold her, around her. She didn’t even try to think, for she was too busy experiencing the fascinating realm of feeling when Alex jerked back. His breathing was harsh as he stared down into her widened eyes and at her tumbled hair. Then he set her roughly back on the seat and snapped hardly, “That’s what it’s like to want somebody!”

She sat a moment, holding herself very still. Then without a word, she quietly opened her car door and got out. There was really nothing to say. Alex started his car, not waiting to see if she got in her car safely, backing away as soon as she had closed the passenger door.

When she was at home and in bed, Alex’s words kept tumbling over and over again in her mind, like a broken record. Wanting? There was no question of wanting him. She had wanted him since the first time she looked at the length of his body. She had just been ignorant of what to name it. As she lay in bed, she could again feel the pressure on her lips, and the impression of hard arms around her body. It was almost as if he was here, in the room, and all she had to do was to reach out across the pillow…damn! She cursed at her own imagination. Then, with a violent shudder, she put a hard discipline on her thoughts. She might want him, but she sure as hell did not need him. Sleep came fitfully for Diana that night.

The next morning when she reached the office, she had barely stepped inside the door when Alex snapped at her. Outraged and furious, she retaliated. All morning long they were like two animals, continually snapping and snarling. This time, even Carrie was drawn into the mood when Alex nearly reduced her to tears over a mistake she had made over the phone to a client.

When Carrie had left the room, Diana rounded on him. “There was no good reason for you to upset her so much over a simple mistake!” she spat at him angrily. He stared back at her with a stony expression on his face.

“I don’t see that it’s any of your business what I do,” he spoke, emphasising each word. There was a tautness in the way he held himself, an anger that was controlled in every movement.

“I don’t give a damn what you do,” she retorted, her eyes flashing. “But you know and I know that your temper had nothing to do with Carrie herself, but it was an outlet for some stupid sort of anger you’re feeling towards me. Well, don’t take it out on other people, because it’s none of their business! If you can’t take it out on me then keep it to yourself!” She turned away from him, her face hard.

Suddenly her shoulders were grabbed in a bruising grip and she found herself twirled around and shaken hard. She held herself rigid, refusing to relax or give way under the hardness of Alex’s hands. He stopped as quickly as he started and they stared at each other for a moment. He thrust her away from himself and turned to pace the room in jerky movements, unlike his usual coordinated grace.

Diana also moved unsteadily as she groped for her chair, unable to see through eyes blinded with tears. Her shoulders were throbbing where Alex had gripped them so hard, but she hardly noticed the pain aside from a fleeting thought of what marks she might find tomorrow. A drop of wetness spilled over and on to her hands as she gripped them together on her desk top. She didn’t pay any attention.

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