Read His Wedding-Night Heir Online
Authors: Sara Craven
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #General
when it came, was irresistible. The pies arrived, golden-brown
in individual earthenware pots, accompanied by dishes of veg-
etables, and were served by the waitresses onto their plates.
As the crusts broke, spilling their fragrant contents across the
porcelain, the aroma literally made her mouth water.
There was no way she could refuse to eat. Nor would she
achieve anything by starving herself, she admitted resignedly.
She was expecting a sarcastic comment from Nick as she
reached for her cutlery, but he only permitted himself a swift,
ironic glance before applying himself to his own food.
'Dessert?' he asked, when she finally put down her knife and
fork.
She said stiltedly, 'Just coffee, please. Black, no sugar.'
'I'll have the same.' Nick offered a brief smile to the girl who'd
come to clear their plates, then bent to help retrieve the cutlery
she'd instantly and blushingly dropped on the grass.
'Poor girl,' Cally commented as the waitress retreated. 'You
seem to have a devastating effect on women.'
'Not often,' Nick returned silkily. 'And certainly not on you,
my sweet.'
Ah, but that's not true, she thought. Or how did you so easily
persuade me to marry you—against all my better judgement?
I wasn't proof against your smite either—or the way you
looked at me. Or the kisses and caresses that always left me
aching for more.
'You're attracting a lot of attention yourself,' Nick added,
breaking into her reverie. 'But that's hardly surprising. In that
dress, you look like part of the sunlight.'
Cally flushed and looked away self-consciously from the
sudden intensity of his gaze. 'Please—don't say things like
that'
'I'm not even allowed to pay you a mild compliment?'
'Not,' she said, 'in our kind of bargain.'
'Yet it's no more than the truth,' Nick said. 'Just look around
you if you don't believe me.'
She said tautly, 'If people are staring, it's only to wonder what
the hell someone like me is doing with someone like you, and
we both know it.'
'I know nothing of the kind.' There was a new harshness in his
tone. 'Why do you constantly denigrate yourself, Cally?'
'I think they actually call it being aware of one's limitations,'
she said. 'I learned it quite early in life.'
'From your grandfather, I suppose,' he said with faint grim-
ness.
'You can hardly blame him.' She shrugged. 'After all, he didn't
have the grandson he'd set his heart on, so the next best thing
was a replica of the daughter he'd lost—someone beautiful,
vibrant and glamorous, with real star appeal. I—fell a long
way short of his expectations.'
He said, slowly, 'My God.'
'It's understandable.' She took a breath. 'My mother was— a
very hard act to follow. She and my father worshipped each
other. In a way, it was a blessing the accident took them both,
because they'd never have survived alone.'
'They wouldn't have been alone.' His voice was very quiet.
'They had you.'
'As it was, I was left with Grandfather. In the aftermath of it
all we were both grieving, but we couldn't seem to comfort
each other. Still, I think—eventually—he came to love me—
in his way.' She paused. 'And he wanted me to be looked after
when he'd gone. To have the financial security that he hadn't
been able to provide himself at the end.' Her voice faltered
slightly.
'Which, of course, is where I came in.' Nick ironically sup-
plied her unspoken words.
'Grandfather's final act.' She forced a smile. 'To arrange my
future. Hand me one of the glittering prizes. He even managed
to make me believe, for a while, that it was what I wanted
too.'
'And then Cinderella tried on the slipper and found it was the
wrong size,' he said softly. 'Poor Cally.'
'What does it matter?' she said. 'I won't be wearing it for long.
So there's really no need to pity me. Whatever you force me to
do, I'll survive.'
She turned deliberately in her chair and stared at the river. Its
still waters were golden-green in the brightness, shading to
oily darkness in the overhang of the willows that fringed it. A
small group of ducks was quarrelling noisily over the bread
some diners had thrown for them, and from the opposite bank
a diminutive but stately moorhen emerged from the reeds, her
brood of chicks strung out behind her, all paddling frantically
to keep up.
In spite of herself, Cally found some of the tension seeping
out of her, her lips curving with pleasure.
She said, half to herself, 'It's just so beautiful here.'
'Would you like to stay the night?' Nick asked quietly. 'They
have rooms, and it's early in the season, so there are probably
vacancies.' His smile touched her skin, warming it in spite of
herself. 'We could have a mini-honey moon.'
Cally stiffened, her heart thudding. 'No,' she stated with cool
clarity. 'I don't want to stay. Thank you.'
'As you wish,' he said equably. 'I just wanted to demonstrate
that force isn't an essential element of our time together.'
There was an odd silence that Cally hastened to fill. 'Anyway,
I thought you were desperate to get back to Wylstone.'
'Not that desperate,' he said softly. 'After all, my love, you
seem to have an affinity with the banks of rivers that might be
worth exploiting.'
Her flush deepened. 'An isolated incident,' she said grittily,
'that I'd prefer to forget.'
'And one of my most treasured memories,' he murmured. 'I've
often thought since that I should have taken you then— when
I had the chance.'
Cally sent him a fulminating glance, and was relieved to turn
her attention to the arrival of their coffee.
As she filled their cups from the cafetiere, she said stiltedly,
'Is your mother well?'
'According to her last letter, she's bursting with health,' Nick
returned drily. 'She's also planning to pay us a visit.'
Cally digested this piece of news uneasily as she passed Nick
his coffee. She had never met Cecily Tempest, who was a dis-
tinguished
archaeologist,
whose
working
life
was
concentrated in the jungles of Central America. She'd thought
that she never would.
She said, 'I thought she was in Guatemala.'
'It seems the present excavations need a new injection of
funding. She's coming back to do a series of lectures, and
raise some more cash.' He paused. 'And, at some point, meet
her new daughter-in-law.'
'I see,' Cally said slowly. 'Yet another reason for you to need
my urgent return.' She swallowed some hot coffee. 'Have you
told her that we've been living apart?'
'I decided against that. After all, I'd only just told her that we
were getting married. The news that I was a bachelor again so
soon might have aroused her latent maternal instinct and
brought her hurrying home to investigate, so I thought it best
not to burden her.'
'Of course.' Her voice was tight. 'And now there's no necessity
for embarrassing explanations. Because I'm back.' She paused.
'I presume I'm required to play the part of the loving and
dutiful wife?'
'I certainly hope so,' he said silkily. 'But she's not arriving
immediately, so you'll have plenty of time to rehearse. And
you'll need it. When it comes to digging, my mother isn't
solely interested in Mayan artefacts.'
Cally bit her lip. 'You certainly have everything worked out in
advance.'
'If I had,' Nick said tersely, 'I would not have spent my
wedding night alone last year.'
'I've only your word for it that you did,' Cally fired back
without thinking, and paused, appalled at her own
indiscretion. Remembering too late that she'd forbidden
herself any reference to Nick's infidelity with Vanessa Layton.
Oh, God, she groaned inwardly. I've just broken my own
taboo. Now he's going to ask what I mean—and I don't know
what to say. How to find an explanation that doesn't make me
sound like some pathetic, jealous idiot.
'Are you crazy?' The grey eyes were like steel. 'My attention
was fully occupied in looking for you, darling, not choosing a
substitute bedmate. Besides, you're going to atone fully for
any previous disappointment you caused me,' he added
harshly.
Cally drank the rest of her coffee and put down the cup. She
said, 'I—really don't need any further reminders.'
His smile was as hard as his gaze. 'In that case, shall we be
leaving?'
As he pushed back his chair and rose she said bitterly, 'And
let's not pretend I have a choice.'
She was aware of the envious glances following her as she
walked at his side back to the inn to pay the bill.
She thought if you knew—if you only knew... And could have
wept.
They travelled in silence. Cally sat with her hands folded in
her lap, staring sightlessly through the windscreen, her
thoughts caught on the same weary treadmill.
The car was her cage. The motorway her path to her own
personal hell. And there was nothing more she could do. No
argument—no appeal she could offer—carried any weight
with him, as he'd made mockingly clear from the beginning.
Nick had bought her, and now he expected to see a return on
his investment—however temporary.
She leaned back in her seat, closing her eyes, listening to the
smooth hum of the motor, images from the past dissolving
and reforming as the edges of her consciousness started to
blur.
‘I suppose you know that you're trespassing?'
And her own reply, made defensive by guilt, as she stared
down from the back of her horse at the tall young man
confronting her on the path. I was just taking a shortcut across
the edge of the wood. Sir Ranald never objected.'
'Unfortunately Sir Ranald's no longer around to express an
opinion either way,' he said. 'But I am, and I came out after
pigeon.' He indicated the gun he was carrying. 'Supposing I'd
accidentally winged you instead? Or your horse? In future,
sweetheart, take the long way round.' The strange silver-grey
eyes flickered over her, absorbing the damp cotton shirt out-
lining her small breasts, her slender denim-clad thighs. He
added quietly, 'You'll find it safer.'
And with another long, considering look he turned and van-
ished as abruptly as he 'd appeared, leaving Cally to lean for-
ward on Baz's neck, gasping as if she'd been winded after a
gallop, instead of merely taking a gentle hack across someone
else's land as she 'd done so often before.
But never again, she swore as she clicked her tongue to Baz
and they set off again. In future she'd give the Wylstone
estate, and its new owner, a very wide berth.
And she'd meant it, Cally thought. From then on she'd scru-
pulously avoided any diversions through the dappled shade of
the Home Wood.
And then she'd come in from shopping one day to find her
grandfather entertaining a visitor in the drawing room.
'Ah, come in, my dear,' Robert Naylor had hailed her. 'Tem-
pest, I don't think you've met my granddaughter, Caroline.
Cally—this is poor Ranald's cousin. Sir Nicholas Tempest. He
plans to live at Wylstone, so the rumours were wrong. We're
going to have neighbours after all.'
'No, we haven't been formally introduced.' Nicholas Tempest's
mouth was solemn as he shook hands with her, but the grey
eyes were sparking with amusement. 'I came to ask your
grandfather to dine with me next week,' he went on, his
fingers still holding hers. 'I hope you'll be able to accompany
him.'
'Of course she will,' Robert said robustly. 'She must find life
damned slow down here, spending her time with an old fellow
like me.'
Nicholas Tempest's brows lifted. 'Then we shall have to find
some means of keeping her entertained,' he said softly.
Cally freed herself hastily, murmured something about un-
packing the groceries, and escaped. But even as she busied
herself, stowing things away in the larder and the big old-
fashioned refrigerator, she found herself assailed by the mem-
ory of the touch of his hand on hers. And scared by it too, in a
way that was both unfamiliar and totally unwelcome.
And that, she thought tiredly, was how it had begun. Meeting
him socially at dinners and parties in the locality, and when he