Read His Wedding-Night Heir Online
Authors: Sara Craven
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #General
last.
There were a lot of people present, most of them clustered
around the tables where the scale model was set up, and the
remainder hovering near the lavish buffet.
Waiters were going round with trays of champagne and heavy
platters loaded with canape's, presumably all with the
compliments of Eastern Crest. How to win friends and influ-
ence people, Cally thought cynically as she stood with Kit and
Tracy, wondering whom they should approach.
But in the end the decision was made for them when they
found themselves caught in a pincer movement by Ford on
Hartley and his younger brother Neville, their faces flushed
and inimical as they strode across the room.
'I wasn't aware anyone had asked you here.' Gordon addressed
Kit, ignoring the two girls completely. 'I'd like you to leave—
now.'
Kit held up three invitation cards. 'Someone clearly has a
different idea,' he returned coolly. "I thought we should see
what we're up against.'
'You're up against nothing,' Neville chimed in. 'You've already
lost, so what's the point in coming here, making fools of
yourselves? Our mother may have looked on you all as an act
of charily, but we don't.'
'All the same.' Kit was undeterred. 'We'd like to have a look at
the proposed development, and maybe speak to who-ever's in
charge at Eastern Crest.'
Cally found herself admiring his calmness. His refusal to be
rattled. He had 'We shall not be moved' written all over him,
in spite of the hostility he was faced with.
Goodness, she thought, if Leila had come she'd have bitten
someone in the leg by now.
'Then you're really out of luck.' Gordon was speaking again,
his tone curt, pushing his weight forward threatening ly. 'Be-
cause the chairman himself is hosting tonight's presentation,
and he plays in the big league. Get out now, before you
become a laughing stock or he has you removed.'
The brothers' raised voices were attracting attention, Cally
realised, with embarrassment. Curious glances from all over
the room were coming their way, and even some of the crowd
round the model were turning their heads to look
She realised that she wasn't just uncomfortable, she'd actually
begun to tremble inside. Even begun to be afraid in some
obscure but compelling way.
We shouldn't be here, she thought, swallowing. We may have
invitations, but there'll be an official guest list some where,
and we're still gatecrashers.
She touched Kit's sleeve. 'Listen,' she began, 'maybe we
should...'
But the sentence was never completed. Because she was sud-
denly aware that a hush had fallen. That someone was making
his way across the room towards them between groups of
people that obediently fell back at his approach.
A tall man, she saw, with a thin tanned face under fashionably
disheveled hair, dark as a raven's wing. A face marked by
high cheekbones, a nose and chin almost arrogant in their
strength, a mouth tough and unsmiling. And really
unforgettable.
The muscularity of his broad-shouldered, lean-hipped body
was emphasised by the elegance of his designer suit as he
strode towards them with powerful, determine d grace,
purpose in his every line.
He was someone, she realised, the breath catching in her
throat, that she knew. Whose reappearance in her life she "d
been dreading for over a year. And who was here now, almost
within touching distance, when there was no time to run or
place to go.
All she could do was stand her ground and pray to whatever
unseen deity protected fugitives.
But as his eyes, grey and deep as a winter ocean, met hers,
Cally felt the measure of his glance in the marrow of he r
bones, and knew dial her escape had only been an illusion all
along.
'Good evening.' The cool, crisp voice was like ice on her skin.
'Is there some problem?'
A game, Cally thought numbly. He was playing a game, with
rules that he'd invented. But no one knew it but hers elf.
'A few troublemakers have got in, Sir Nicholas,' Neville
Hartley said swiftly. 'But we're dealing with them. So if you'd
like to go back to your guests...'
'Presently,' the newcomer said quietly. He looked at Kit. 'May
I know who you are?'
Kit cleared his throat. 'I'm Christopher Matlock, and I run the
Children's Centre, and the Residents' Association d own at
Gunners Wharf. We face eviction because of your develop-
ment, but I'm still hoping some compromise can be reached,
and that you might spare me some time to discuss the matter.'
'Ah, yes.' The other man nodded. 'This has been mentioned to
me.' He turned to Tracy, whose face had been bleached with
nerves ever since their arrival. 'And this is?' His smile held a
swift charm that softened the hardness of his f
'Tracy—
Tracy Andrews,' Kit said quickly, seeing that she was beyond
speech. 'One of the residents.' He turned to Cally. 'And this is
my administrative assistant.'
'Oh, but we need no introduction,' the new arrival said with
cold mockery. 'Do we, Caroline, my love?'
Before she could move he took one long step towards her,
capturing her chin in his long fingers. He bent his head, and
for a brief, hideous second Cally felt the sear of his mouth on
hers.
He straightened, his lips twisting. 'They say absence makes
the heart grow fonder. I wonder if that’s true. Because you
don't seem very pleased to see me."
'Cally?' Kit was staring at her, lips parted in shock. 'You know
this man?’
'Yes.' She forced her lips to move to make the necessary
sounds. 'His name is Nicholas Tempest."
'I'm the chairman of Eastern Crest’ His smile did not reach his
eyes. The gaze that held hers was a challenge, and warning.
'Now, tell him the rest, darling." And from some far terrible
distance, she heard herself say with a kind of empty
helplessness, 'He's my husband.'
There was a moment when she thought she might faint. When
she would have welcomed the temporary surcease to this
intolerable moment that unconsciousness would provide.
But she wasn't that lucky.
Instead she heard Nick drawl, 'Will someone fetch a chair for
my wife? She's had a shock.'
It was exactly the challenge she needed. I am not—not —
going to fall apart, she told herself, her body stiffening. At
least not now.
She made her tone crisp. 'Thank you, but I'm perfectly all
right.'
She turned to Kit, who was looking poleaxed, while Tracy
was standing with her mouth open and her eyes out on s talks.
'But please get Tracy a drink,' she added. 'She really needs
one.' She look a deep breath. 'I think it's best if I leave’
'Not yet, darling.' Nick's voice was silky, but the fingers that
closed on her wrist felt like iron. 'After all, you went to the
trouble of seeking me out tonight. So why don't you say what
you came to say?'
Cally bit her lip. It was her left hand that he'd imprisoned. The
hand that had once, for a few hours, worn his ring but was
now bare—a fact, she could tell, that wasn't lost on him.
She wanted to pull free, but feared an undignified struggle
which she might lose. She said brusquely, 'Kit's our
spokesman. Perhaps he could make an appointment to see you
tomorrow.'
'Unfortunately I shall be leaving after breakfast.' He paused.
'But I could spare you all some time later, when tonight's
presentation is over.'
'But we're going out for a meal.' The champagne she was
sipping seemed lo have loosened Tracy's tongue. 'An Italian
meal. My neighbour's looking after the baby,' she added
beaming.
'Then why don't I join you?' Nick suggested, smoothly and
unanswerably. 'You can put forward your point of view’
Tracy stared at him. 'But I was going to have lasagne.'
'Then of course you shall.' He was smiling again, using that
charm of his like a weapon. Controlling the tense silence that
had descended. 'While you tell me all about Gunners Terrace.'
'It was an idea of our late mother's,' Gordon Hartley butted in,
almost desperately. 'Sadly, she died while the scheme was in
its infancy, so most of the houses are still untouched. They're
dangerous and insanitary, and they should b e pulled down.'
In spite of her mental and emotional turmoil Cally managed to
give him a steady look. 'That isn't altogether true, and you
know it. Half the terrace has been completed, and work has
started on the others.'
'But we won't talk about it here and now,' Nick cut in de-
cisively. He'd released Cally's wrist, but the pressure of his
fingers seemed to linger like a bruise. 'I still have things lo do,
so we'll have lo postpone the discussion.'
'There's really nothing to talk about. Sir Nicholas,' Neville
Hartley blustered. 'I think we've made the position quite clear
already.'
'One side of it, certainly,' Nick agreed. He looked at Kit.
'What's the name of the restaurant you're using?"
'The Toscana,' Kit muttered awkwardly. 'In the High Street.'
Nick looked at his watch. "Then I'll meet you there in an
hour's time.' He paused. 'All of you," he added softly, hi s
gaze resting briefly on Cally. 'I hope that's clearly understood.'
Another swift, hard smile and he was gone, and the crowd
seemed to close round him.
There was a taut silence, and Cally could see the Hartley
brothers exchanging wary glances.
She could understand their problem, she thought wryly.
Young Lady Tempest, wife of Eastern Crest's dynamic man,
would have been an honoured guest, overwhelmed with
obsequious attention. Nick Tempest's clearly estranged wife
was a horse of a different colour, and they weren't sure quite
how to deal with her.
To be civil to someone who'd encouraged Genevieve Hartley
in her reckless foolishness and battled with them openly after
her death would be analhema, but neither could they throw
her bodily into the street with her companions, a s they
obviously wished.
After all, Gunners Terrace was supposed to be down and out,
just waiting for the bulldozers to arrive. Now the residents had
an unsuspected ace up their sleeve, and for the moment the
Hartteys didn't have a strategy to deal with it.
In the end Neville Hartley said thickly, 'You haven't heard the
last of this.' And they stalked furiously away.
'Perhaps that should be our line,' Cally called after them, her
voice inimical.
Then suddenly the tension went out of her, and she was
gasping as if she'd been winded.
Kit was staring at her as if she was a stranger. 'I can't believe
this,' he said. 'You are married— to him? It can't be true.'
'It's perfectly true.' Her voice was raw. 'But not for much
longer, I assure you. Once I've been separated from hi m—
from Nick—for two years, divorce should be easy.'
'Is that how he sees it?' Kit asked sombrely.
'What do you mean?'
'You were the surprised one just now,' he said. 'If you ask me,
your husband knew you were going to be here tonight, and he
was waiting for you.'
'He's very dishy,' Tracy said on a note of envy. 'I wouldn't
mind him waiting for me.'
Cally gave a taut smile. 'Well, at the restaurant you can have
him all to yourself. I've had enough surprises for one day, and
I'm going home.'
'But you can't," Kit said, dismayed. 'You heard him. He's
willing to listen to what we have to say—something we hardly
dared hope for. But it has to be all of us or it'll be no dice.
Cally, you can't walk away—not when we actually have a
chance to put our case.'
She looked down at the floor. 'I think I'd be more likely to
damage your cause than help it.'
I should have listened lo that dream the other night, she
thought. Accepted it as a warning and gone while the going
was good. But I was too complacent. I let myself think that
he'd have stopped searching by now— if he'd ever begun.
Unless, of course, this is all one sick coincidence. But
somehow I don't think so.
'If you're not with us, I don't think we'll have a cause,' Kit told
her grimly. 'You can't give up on it all now. Besides, what