outâanything, in fact, but request coffee for them both. She found she badly wanted to smooth her hair but restrained the impulse to fiddle with the thick shining braid coiled tightly on top of her head, knowing the intuitive, razor-sharp mind on the other side of the desk would recognise the nervousness behind such a gesture.
âOr perhaps you would prefer tea?â The brilliant gaze had fastened on her again after the brief respite.
âCoffee will be fine, thank you,â she answered carefully, keeping her voice in neutral.
âSo, Mrs Allenâ¦â
His voice was very distinctive, she thought shakily as she watched him settle himself comfortably in the vast leather chair and lean back slightly, crossing one long leg over the other knee as he surveyed her unblinkingly. Deep and ever so slightly husky, with the merest trace of an accent she couldnât quite place.
âAre you a career woman?â he asked softly.
There was only one answer she could possibly give to such a leading question, given the circumstances; a reply in the affirmative was what he was expecting and what she must makeâthe knowledge was screamingly obvious. âMy work is very important to me, Mr Kane, yes,â Kim said quickly. But not necessarily for the reasons he supposed, she added silently.
âAnd I see you got a First at university. That must mean you worked hard but had a natural aptitude for the subject too?â he commented thoughtfully.
She couldnât read anything from either his tone or his face but somehow she felt a punchline was on the way, and she couldnât quite keep the wariness out of her voice when she said, âYes, I suppose so.â
She saw the firm hard mouth twitch slightly, as though he was enjoying some private joke of his own, but his voice was still very evenâalmost expressionlessâas he continued, âSo why did you get married immediately on graduating from university, and moreover start a family within months, if you intended to make the most of your excellent qualifications and carve a career for yourself? It doesnât quite seem to add up, Mrs Allen.â
Flipping cheek! She thought about making some facetious reply and passing off what she considered an extremely intrusive question, but he had hit her on the rawâpossibly because she had had cause to bitterly regret the marriage almost immediatelyâso her voice was cold whenshe replied, âWhether it adds up or not, that is what happened, Mr Kane, and it is my business, no one elseâs.â Okay, so sheâd blown it good and proper, she thought sickly, but she didnât want his rotten job anyway!
She expected a cutting retort, something stinging to put her in her place, but even as she had started speaking he had straightened in his seat and was bending over the papers again, his voice businesslike as he said, âDid you meet your husband at university?â
âYes.â It was succinct in the extreme but he didnât look up.
âAnd I see you were widowed barely three years later. That must have been hard for you.â
There was nothing she could say to that and so she kept quiet, but he obviously didnât expect a comment as he continued immediately, âThat would have meant your daughter was two years of age when you became a single-parent family?â
âYes.â
âTough break.â
There was a smokier quality to his voice as he spoke, a trace of warmth evident in the deep husky tones for the first time, and it unnerved her. Kim didnât know why it bothered her but it did, and she suddenly found she was acutely aware of the formidable breadth of his shoulders and the muscled strength evident beneath the superficial veneer of expensive cloth.
It took all coherent thought clean away, and in the pause which followed Lucas Kane raised his dark head, his piercing eyes narrowing on her troubled face. âYou find it painful to talk