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Authors: Diana Palmer

Once in Paris

BOOK: Once in Paris
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She felt the warmth of his body at her back…

“I've been trying to forget Paris,” Pierce said after a minute.

“You and Humphrey Bogart?” Brianne replied dryly.

“What? Oh. Oh!” He chuckled, then his eyes narrowed. “Local gossip says that there's a move to involve you with your stepfather's brand-new business partner, a sort of family merger.”

She lost all color, but she didn't blink an eyelash. “Really?”

“Don't prevaricate,” he said impatiently. “I know everything that goes on in this town.”

“I can take care of myself.” She straightened her shoulders.

“At nineteen?”

“Twenty,” she corrected. “I had a birthday last week.”

He made a rough sound. “Honey, you're fighting city hall when you tangle with your stepfather, much less with his shady partners.”

“Something you know from experience?”

He smiled at Brianne. “I didn't say
I
couldn't win. I said
you
couldn't.”

 

“Nobody tops Diana Palmer…I love her stories.”

—Jayne Ann Krentz

Also by Diana Palmer

RENEGADE

LAWLESS

DIAMOND SPUR

DESPERADO

THE TEXAS RANGER

LORD OF THE DESERT

THE COWBOY AND THE LADY

MOST WANTED

FIT FOR A KING

PAPER ROSE

RAGE OF PASSION

ONCE IN PARIS

AFTER THE MUSIC

ROOMFUL OF ROSES

CHAMPAGNE GIRL

PASSION FLOWER

DIAMOND GIRL

FRIENDS AND LOVERS

CATTLEMAN'S CHOICE

LADY LOVE

THE RAWHIDE MAN

DIANA PALMER
ONCE IN PARIS

To all the wonderful people at MIRA Books,
with love.

Chapter One

A
woman in red, very blond and chic, stood before the Mona Lisa with a much taller, dark man and made a sharp comment in French. The man laughed. They seemed inclined to linger, but there was a very long line of tourists impatient to see the da Vinci masterpiece in the Louvre, and very vocal about having to wait so long for their turn. One of the visitors had a flash camera aimed at the timeless masterpiece, which had been placed behind layers of bulletproof glass, until a guard spotted him.

Brianne Martin, from her vantage point on a nearby bench, found the visitors as interesting as the works of art. In her shorts and tank top,
with her green eyes sparkling, her blond hair in a French braid and a backpack slung over one thin shoulder, she looked what she was—a student. She was almost nineteen, a pupil at an exclusive girls' school on the Left Bank in Paris. She didn't mix well with most of the other students, because her background was not one of wealth and power.

She came from middle-class parents, and only her mother's second marriage to international oil magnate Kurt Brauer had given Brianne the opportunity to sample this luxurious lifestyle. Not that it was by choice. Kurt Brauer didn't like his stepdaughter, and now that his new wife Eve was pregnant, he wanted Brianne out of the way. A boarding school in Paris seemed the ideal choice.

It had hurt that her mother hadn't protested.

“You'll enjoy it, dear,” Eve had said hopefully, smiling. “And you'll have plenty of money to spend, won't that be a change? Your father never made more than minimum wage. He really had no inclination to better himself.”

Comments like that made the strained relationship between Brianne and her petite, blond mother worse. Eve was a sweet but selfish creature, always with an eye to the main chance.
She'd gone after Brauer like a soldier on campaign, complete with frilly battle plan. To Brianne's astonishment, her mother was married and pregnant within five months of her adored father's death. From their nice but small apartment in Atlanta, the Martin women had been transplanted to a villa in Nassau.

Kurt Brauer was wealthy, although Brianne had never been able to discover the exact source of his wealth. He seemed to be involved in oil exploration, but strange, dangerous-looking men came and went at the Nassau office he infrequently occupied. He had a home in Nassau and beach houses in Barcelona and on the Riviera, and a yacht to sail between them. Chauffeur-driven limousines and meals that cost three figures were commonplace to him. Eve was in her element, rich for the first time in her life. Brianne was miserable. Very quickly Kurt sized her up as a threat and got her out of the way.

She looked around the Louvre with great interest, as always. It had been her favorite haunt since she'd arrived in Paris, and she was in love with the old converted palace. It had only just gone through a major renovation. Although some of the changes were not to her liking—especially those gigantic modern-looking pyra
mids—she loved the exhibits, and she was young enough not to mind showing her enthusiasm for new places and experiences. What she lacked in sophistication she made up for with spirited enjoyment.

A man caught her eye. He was staring at one of the Italian paintings, but not with much enthusiasm. In fact, he didn't seem to see it. His eyes were dark and quiet and his face was heavily lined, as if he were in pain.

There was something very familiar about him. He had thick, dark wavy hair with threads of silver in it. He was a big man, broad in the shoulders and narrow-hipped. She noticed that he was holding a cigar in one hand, even though it wasn't lit. Perhaps he knew better than to smoke in here with all these exquisite treasures but couldn't do without something in his hand. She often picked at her fingernails, sometimes tearing them off at the quick when she was upset. Maybe the cigar kept him from biting his nails.

The thought amused her and she smiled. He looked very prosperous. He was wearing a cream-striped sport coat with white slacks and a beige shirt. No tie. He had a thin gold watch on his right wrist and a wedding ring on his left
ring finger. He was holding the cigar in his left hand, so presumably he was left-handed.

He turned, and she got a glimpse of a broad, darkly tanned face. His mouth was firm and thin and wide, and his nose had a crook in it. There was a faint cleft in his chin. He had heavy dark eyebrows over large black eyes. He looked fascinating. He also looked familiar. She couldn't quite remember…oh,
yes.
Her stepfather had given a party after the wedding for some business associates, and this man had been there. He was something big in construction. Hutton. That was it. L. Pierce Hutton. He headed up Hutton Construction Corporation, which specialized in building transatlantic oil drilling platforms and also high-rise, high-tech buildings. He was an architect of some note, especially in ecological circles, and conservative politicians didn't like him because he opposed slipshod conservation methods. Yes. She remembered him. His wife had just died. That was three months ago, but he didn't look as if he'd done much healing.

She approached him, drawn by the look of him. He was still staring at the painting as if he'd like to set a match to it.

“It's very famous. Don't you like it?” she
asked at his side, fascinated by his height. She only came to his shoulder, and she was fairly tall.

He looked down at her with narrow, cold eyes.
“Je ne parle pas anglais,”
he said in a voice that chilled.

“Yes, you do speak English,” she countered. “You don't remember me, I know, but you were at the reception when my mother married Kurt Brauer in Nassau.”

“My condolences to your mother,” he said in English. “What do you want?”

Her pale green eyes searched his dark ones. “I wanted to say that I'm sorry about your wife. Nobody even mentioned her at the reception. I suppose they were afraid. People are, aren't they, when you lose someone. They try to pretend it hasn't happened or they get red in the face and mutter something under their breath. That's how it was when my father died,” she recalled somberly. “I only wanted someone to put their arms around me and let me cry.” She managed a smile. “That never occurs to most people, I guess.”

He hadn't thawed a bit. His eyes swept over her face and lingered on her straight, freckled
nose. “What are you doing in France? Is Brauer working out of Paris now?”

She shook her head. “My mother's pregnant,” she said. “I'm in the way, so they sent me over here to school.”

His eyebrows jerked together. “Then why aren't you in it?”

She made a face. “I'm cutting home economics. I don't want to learn how to sew and make pillows. I want to learn how to do accounts and balance spreadsheets.”

He made a sound in his throat. “At your age?”

“I'm almost nineteen,” she informed him. “I'm great in math. I make straight A's.” She grinned at him. “Someday I'll come and pester you for a job, when I get my degree. I swear, I'm going to escape from this ruffled prison one day and get into university.”

He actually smiled, even if it was reluctantly. “Then I wish you luck.”

She glanced down the way toward the Mona Lisa, where the line was still just as long, and the murmurs were louder and gruffer. “They're all impatient to see it, and then they're shocked that it's so small and behind so much glass,” she confided. “I've been eavesdropping. They
all expect to see some huge painting. I imagine they're disappointed to have waited so long in line, and not to find it covering a whole wall.”

“Life is full of disappointments.”

She turned back to him and searched his eyes. “I'm really sorry about your wife, Mr. Hutton. They said you were married for ten years and devoted to each other. It must be hell.”

He closed up like a sensitive plant. “I don't talk about private things—”

“Yes, I know,” she interrupted. “It needs time, that's all. But you shouldn't be alone. She wouldn't want that.”

His jaw twitched, as if he was exercising a lot of restraint to keep his expression under control. “Miss…?”

“Martin. Brianne Martin.”

“You'll find as you get older that it's best not to be so outspoken with strangers,” he continued.

“I know. I always rush in where angels fear to tread.” Her pale eyes were smiling gently as she looked up at him. “You're a strong man. You must be, to have accomplished so much in life already, when you're not even forty yet. Everybody has bad times, and dark places. But
there's always a little light, even at midnight.” She held up a hand when he started to speak again. “I won't say another word. Do you think he's exactly in proportion?” she wondered, nodding toward the explicit painting of a man and a woman that he'd been looking through. “He seems a bit, well, stunted, don't you think, for his size? And she's exaggerated, but then, the artist was something of a connoisseur of plump nudes.” She let out a long sigh. “What I wouldn't give to have her attributes,” she added. “I'm going to be two walnuts for the rest of my life.” She checked her watch, unaware of his start and the strange, reluctant smile that touched his eyes. “Gosh, I'll be late for math class, and that's the one I don't want to cut! Goodbye, Mr. Hutton!”

She ran toward the steps that led down to street level without looking back, her braid flying like her long, thin legs. She was gangly and inelegant. But Hutton had found her a delightful diversion.

She'd thought he was displeased with the painting. He laughed shortly as his eyes fell to the cigar, unlit, in his left hand. He hadn't come here to look at paintings, but to consider a plunge into the Seine after dark. Margo was
gone and he'd tried and tried, but he couldn't face the future without her. He wouldn't see her blue eyes light up with laughter, hear her soft, French-accented voice as she teased him about his work. He wouldn't feel her soft body writhing in ecstasy under his in the darkness of their bedroom, hear her pleas, feel her nails biting hungrily into his body as he brought her to fulfillment again and again.

He felt tears sting his eyes and blinked them away. There was a hole in his heart. Nobody had dared approach him since her funeral. He forbade the mention of her name in the quiet, empty mansion in Nassau. At the office, he was tireless, ruthless. They understood. But he was so alone. He had no family, no children, to console him. The greatest pain of all had been Margo's inability to conceive after her tragic miscarriage. It didn't matter. It had never mattered. Margo was everything to him, and he to her. Children would have been wonderful, but they weren't an obsession. He and Margo had lived life to the fullest, always together, always in love, right until the very end. By her bedside, as she wasted away to a pale white skeleton before his anguished eyes, Margo had thought always of him. Was he eating properly, was he
getting enough sleep? She even thought of the time afterward, when she wouldn't be there to take care of him.

“You never wear a coat when it snows,” she complained weakly, “or use an umbrella in the rain. You don't change your socks when they get wet. I worry so,
mon cher
. You must take care of yourself,
tu comprends?

And he'd promised, and wept, and she'd cradled him on her thin breasts and held him while he cried, unashamedly, there in the bedroom they'd shared.

“God!” he cried aloud as the memories rushed at him.

A couple of tourists glanced at him warily, and as if he'd only become aware of where he was, he shook his head as if to clear it, turned and walked down the steps and out into the hot Paris sunshine.

The routine sounds of traffic and horns and conversation restored him to some sense of normality. The noise and pollution in downtown Paris had made a high-strung population even more nervous, but the noise didn't bother him. He clenched his big fist in his pocket, then relaxed and searched for a lighter. He took it out, looked at it there on the stone steps that led to
the sidewalk. Margo had given it to him on their tenth wedding anniversary. It was gold-cased, inscribed with his initials. He carried it always. His thumb smoothed over it and the pain hit him right in the heart.

He lit the cigar, puffed on it, felt the smoke choking him for an instant, and then calming him. He took a breath and looked around at the glut of tourists on their way into the Louvre. Having holiday fun, he thought, glaring at them. He was hurting right down to his toes, and they were all smiles and laughter.

He thought then of the girl, Brianne, and what she'd said to him. How odd, to have a total stranger come up out of nowhere and lecture him on the healing of his broken heart. He smiled despite his irritation. She was a nice child. He should have been less curt to her. He remembered that her mother had married Brauer and become pregnant. Brianne had mentioned the painful loss of her father and her mother's immediate remarriage and pregnancy. She'd know about pain, all right. She was in the way, she'd said, so they'd sent her over here. He shook his head. It seemed that everyone had problems of some sort. But that was life. He glanced at the Rolex on his wrist with
a rueful smile. He had a meeting with some cabinet ministers in thirty minutes, and in the maddening traffic through the city at this hour he'd be lucky if he was only thirty minutes overdue. He walked to the curb and hailed a cab, resigned to being late.

BOOK: Once in Paris
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