sighed. âHe may be great to look at, but the earl has an ego the size of Mount Rushmore and a pompous attitude that would put the British monarchy to shame. No way would I ever consider getting involved with him.â
âRight,â Dee muttered, plucking a turquoise silk sheath from the bed. âGo with this one.â
âAre you sure?â More to the point, was she sure? Did she really want to step out of her safe, simple world to sip cocktails and swap market savvy with people whose incomes were tenâ¦maybe a hundred times hers?
Then she remembered Smytheâs powerful presence, the way heâd physically blocked her retreat from the reception room until sheâd agreed to return. He might as well have handcuffed her to the furniture! Oddly enough, his aggressiveness had excited her at the time. Now, she wondered if it was wise to let a few pleasant chills overwhelm good judgment.
There was still time to back out. She didnât owe the man a thing, she told herself. She could simply retreat into the safe niche sheâd carved for herself at the little neighborhood shop two blocks from the campus.
But something beckoned to her from the fifteenth-floor suite overlooking exclusive Lake Shore Drive and the steely waters of Lake Michigan. She knew in the space of one breath that she would go to him.
Â
She wasnât coming. Matthew could feel it in his bones. She had promised, but the nervous little mouse had succumbed to cold feet. He should have offered her more money, Matthew thought as he paced the carpeted hallway and, on every pass, glared at the polished brass elevator doors. He had already welcomed two of his guests and their companions, and ushered them into the reception room.
The elevator dinged; doors slid open. He looked up out of his black mood, a tight smile ready for his remaining guests. Prepared to take a firm forward step to greet them, he faltered at the vision before him.
Abigail had worn no wrap, the night being warm. Her shoulders, lightly freckled with burgundy-wine specks, were bare and as creamy as fresh milk. The dress was strapless, clinging to her as if by sheer will-power. It molded her body, yet didnât seem slinky or cheap. Its lines were too simple to be couturier; the garment might have been home-sewn. But the exquisite shade of turquoise complimented beautifully the waves of rusty-red hair that spilled over her shoulders and curved round her delicate chin. He liked everything he saw. And everything he imagined hidden by everything he saw.
She stepped off the elevator and looked up at him with a raised brow as if to say, Big deal, so Iâm here.
âYouâre late,â he said gruffly. âFour of my guests are already inside.â
âThen what are you doing out here?â
Waiting for you! he nearly snapped, but held back. He didnât want her thinking he doubted she would show. Stepping around to her side, he lifted her handand slipped it through the crook in his arm. She tensed.
âRelax,â he said, âthis is for the sake of appearances.â
âAppearances?â She slanted him a look drenched with suspicion.
âItâs easier for me if my guests assume my hostess is alsoâ¦â My lover. Why had those words popped into his head when others less suggestive would have done just as well? âThat weâreââ
âA couple?â she supplied demurely.
âExactly. I like to be free to talk business without feeling obligated to flirt.â
âThis is a major problem for you?â She flashed him a wicked little grin. âFending off smitten clients or their girlfriends?â
Coming from her and said in that way, it did sound ridiculous. But yes, occasionally, the overtly sensual way in which women reacted to him had put him in some tight spots. Business was business. Sex had its own time and place in his life but, so far as he was concerned, the two had never been meant