The Price of Seduction (17 page)

BOOK: The Price of Seduction
12.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She looked him in the eye. “There’s also the sex. Don’t forget that.”

A sly smile crept across his face. “Oh, I haven’t forgotten that. We’re good together, you and I. Why change it when we’re on a winning formula?”

Their formula had a new ingredient but Bree couldn’t tell him now, not after what he’d said.
He couldn’t see past the next two months. They had no future together.

What they had was amazing, mind-blowing sex and it seemed Conrad didn’t need much more than that. He didn’t envision
a future for them together. When he had it so good, why should he?

Still, she had to tell him she wa
s pregnant but not now. She’d tell him tonight.

Her
mobile phone rang and she reached down to grab it from inside her bag at the foot of her chair. She recognised the number flashing on the screen. John Patterson from PCR in Melbourne had been phoning to try to convince her to take a position with his firm. One of his senior staff had gone into early labour and he needed someone to start work immediately but Bree hadn’t been able to give him an answer.

If the job had been in Sydney she’d have snapped it up right away
, as she’d decided she’d well and truly spent enough time with Olivia at Kelly Communications. But the job wasn’t in Sydney. It was in Melbourne.

Bree
switched off her phone and placed it on the table. Looking back up at Conrad, she tried to appear relaxed. “Sorry, I forgot to turn it off earlier. Conrad, I know we’re good together… ”

He squeezed her hand. “We’re better than that.”

“We’re still going to the ballet tonight, aren’t we? That hasn’t changed, has it?”

“Of course we’re still going. The premiere. It’s going to be a big night.”

Bigger than he knew.

*          *          *

From the moment Bree walked through the dark doorway at the front of the Surry Hills warehouse, she knew this performance by the Belvoir Ballet Company was going to be like no other she had seen.

The invited guests were ushered down a long dark hallway, up a set of stairs and through a thick velvet curtain only to be surprised at the vision that lay ahead. No effort was made to hide the
fact that this was a warehouse. It was a large barren room with hard surfaces, concrete floors, rough red brick walls and a high ceiling.

The stage lay at the far end of the room
, seats laid out in front of it in careful rows. This area was delineated from the foyer by strips of industrial chain hanging from the ceiling.

It was intermission now and Bree took careful note of the room, reminding herself she must find out who the designers were so she could use them in the future.

“They’ve outdone themselves this time.” Conrad leaned in close to Bree so she could hear him through the throng of the crowd. “This is their best production yet.”

“It’s very
avant garde
. That’s the right term for it, isn’t it?”

The choreography and dancing were as raw, passionate and unforgiving as the setting but she’d had trouble concentrating. Her mind was elsewhere.

She’d felt nauseous all afternoon, ever since lunch, and her bladder needed to be constantly emptied. It had to be psychosomatic, as it wasn’t possible for these symptoms to set in so quickly.

Nevertheless, she still needed the ladies room and excused herself to make her way through the crowd to the facilities located outside the foyer. It was quieter as soon as she walked through the velvet curtain onto the landing.

Bree felt a man’s hand on her upper arm. “Fancy seeing you here.”

She stopped and turned, her heart suddenly thumping from t
he shock of seeing him. “Trevor. I didn’t think you were interested in modern dance.”

“T
here’s a lot you don’t know about me.”

Her eyes shot down to his hand on her arm, then back up to his face. “You can take your hand away now.”
She waited until he’d done so before she continued. “I’d love to chat but I’m in a bit of a hurry.”

“Bree, don’t be like that. I haven’t seen you for months. Surely you can let the past go.”

“It’s got nothing to do with the past and a lot to do with the present. I’ve got to go to the ladies room and you’ve got to get back to Shannon, don’t you?”

Trevor shook his head slowly from side to side, his eyes burning her with the intensity of his gaze.

“You’ve broken up with her, is that it?” she asked.

“Yes
, I broke it off with her but there’s more than that. A lot more. It had something to do with you.”

“Surely you’re not going to tell me you broke up because you still have feelings for me.”

“That’s exactly what I’m going to tell you. You can read me like a book. You always could.”

She looked him in the eye. “I’ve been doing a lot of ‘reading’ lately but I’ve finished with trashy novels that promise much and g
o nowhere. I’m onto high-end literature where the characters are memorable and have morals. Something you’d know nothing about.”

“Why are you trying to be hurtful?”

All she wanted was to be rid of him, once and for all. “I’m going to tell you one last time, I’m not interested in you, Trevor. It was over a long time ago and it’s staying that way.”

“Do you really think that
rich bastard is so much better than me?”

Trevor spoke the words before she’d had time to turn away. I
nsulting her was one thing. Insulting Conrad was quite another.

Her eyes were two whips. “He’s twice the man you’ll ever be.”

“He’s a murderer.” Trevor whispered the words but she heard them clearly.

“How dare you. Don’t be ridiculous.

Bre
e spun around but he grabbed her arm again and as she pulled it from his grasp, he continued in a low voice. “Did he tell you about Rebecca? Did he tell you what he did to her?”

She couldn’t leave it there, couldn’t let him get away with this. “Of course he told me about her. What’s it got to do with you? How do you even know about it?”

This didn’t make sense. Conrad told her he’d got Rebecca pregnant but as far as she knew there was no connection with Trevor. Conrad certainly hadn’t mentioned his name in connection with her and surely he’d have told Bree if that were the case. Trevor was her ex-boyfriend, after all.

“She needed a friend and she confided in me,” Trevor explained. “With what she was going through, she needed to talk to someone and Conrad wasn’t listening to her.”

“What on earth are you talking about?”

“She was pregnant and very much alone.”

“Trevor, I really don’t care what you’ve got to say.”

“Because you won’t like it. Because you know he’s been hiding it from you.”

She was riveted to the spot, unable to turn away.

Trevor continued. “She was pregnant. You know that much, I’m sure. But he wanted her to get rid of it. He didn’t want that baby and he didn’t care what he had to do to make it go away.”

“She miscarried,” Bree said weakly. “He told me she miscarried.”

“That’s what he told you, is it? He
forced
her to have an abortion. He didn’t care that there was a baby inside her and she wanted to keep it.”

“What do you mean he forced her? She could have said no.”

“He’s not the kind of man you say no to. He has money to buy whatever he wants. I don’t know what he threatened her with but she was scared. Scared for her life perhaps.”

Bree thought of the child inside her and her face scrunched up into a contorted frown. “What kind of doctor would perform the procedure if the woman didn’t want it done? That just doesn’t sound right to me.”

“Doctors are just people, you know. They can be bought, especially with the kind of money he’s got.”

Sh
e remembered the ultrasound picture in Conrad’s wallet. She believed he kept that picture to remind him of the child he lost and loved. Was it possible he kept it as a reminder of a mistake he planned never to make again?

“Then why didn’t he make her terminate the pregnancy sooner?”
she asked.

“She didn’t tell him. She kept it a secret. I told you. He’s a murderer.”

When he used that word again, his accusations struck her as completely unbelievable. She knew Trevor had no integrity, would stoop at nothing. He was making it up.

“Trevor
, I know why you’re here,” she said. “I know why you’re saying these things, making this all up. Yesterday was settlement day for Il Bosco. Conrad won the deal you wanted to seal for your client. You couldn’t stop him from winning that deal and when you saw me you thought you’d take revenge. You can’t have Il Bosco but you have the last word. And I
know
your client has been charged with stealing the rock art. Everyone knows. You said I could read you like a book and I can.”

“I’m not going to tell you there are no hard feelings about that deal but just think about it for a minute. How can I possibly be making it all up? How can I possibly know Rebecca was pregnant and then lost the child?”

Bree’s mouth fell open. “Someone told you. You worked it out.”

“Someone did tell me. Rebecca. Because she was desperate and didn’t know what to do. I’m sure neither of them told anyone else.”

Taking a step back, Bree’s eyes fell to the floor in front of her. Trevor couldn’t be making this up. How else could he know about Rebecca’s pregnancy? They would hardly have advertised the fact.

Bile rose in Bree’s
throat, nausea sizzling in her stomach, as she pushed her way into the ladies room and tried to pull herself together.

What kind of man was Conrad Savage?

She had to think. She had to clear her head, work out what to do. She wanted to run down the stairs and fly out of the door, have the whole world disappear, but running would do her no good.

She could run all she liked and the child inside would go with her wherever she went.

Bree had to find out the truth.

Until then, she would tell Conrad nothing.

*          *          *

“You haven’t seemed at all yourself tonight,” Conrad said as they left the building after the performance. “Come to think of it, you seemed a bit out of sorts at lunch today too. Are you okay?”

“Fine,” Bree replied as they strode in the direction of his car. “Maybe I’m coming down with something. I don’t know.”

They walked in silence, the crowd thinning the further t
hey got from the warehouse. Suddenly Conrad sensed something was wrong. There were still a few people around but there was a distinct set of footsteps behind them. Despite their own brisk pace, these footsteps were getting louder and faster.

He
touched Bree’s arm gently, then stopped and turned.

“Daniels.” He spat the name out. “You’re not following us
, are you? I didn’t think even you’d be that tacky.”

“I
just wanted a word, that’s all,” Trevor Daniels said.

Conrad passed Bree the car keys from his pocket. “Get in the car and stay there.”

If he’d had more time, he’d have phrased his words more carefully. She took the keys without question and moved away. He kept his eye on her until she safely reached the car at the far end of the street.

“Okay, Daniels,” he said. “Y
ou’re probably in a bad mood because you lost the Il Bosco deal so just come out with it. Whatever you’ve got on your mind, spit it out.”

His
lips curled to a sneer. “Do you think I’m angry because we lost that deal? You don’t know me very well.”

“Actually there’s a lot more to it than that. Your client is out on bail, isn’t he? He wanted to buy Il Bosco for the rock art but he couldn’t pull together his finances. Still, he had enough money to get in the blasting experts and steal the rock art. Pity he couldn’t get away with it.”

“He was just a client. Do you think I give a toss about him?”

“No, but you care about yourself. You
tried to make sure you kept your hands clean, didn’t you? You’ll be disbarred for this. You know that, don’t you?”

“We’ll just have to wait and see about that.”

Conrad’s mind flicked back to the past. To Rebecca. To the child she carried.

To Trevor Daniels driving her to the abortion clinic.

“I know you better than you think, Daniels,” he said.

The man
’s eyes narrowed. “There’s something you never worked out. You think you’re so smart but you couldn’t work it out. All those years ago. It was
my
baby.”

“What are you talking about?”

“The child Rebecca was carrying. You knew it wasn’t yours. You worked that out eventually. I’m sure you’ve wondered whose baby it was. Don’t try to tell me you haven’t.”

His words were a knife to his stomach. Conrad grabbed
the lapels of Daniels’ jacket. “You’d better make this good.”

Other books

As It Is in Heaven by Niall Williams
What a Trip! by Tony Abbott
The Best Defense by Kate Wilhelm
Pieces of Me by Garner, Ann
The Guardian by Katie Klein
There Comes A Prophet by Litwack, David
Girl in the Beaded Mask by Amanda McCabe
Tough Cookie by Diane Mott Davidson
Oceanborne by Irons, Katherine