by Joss Wood
Morgan smiled against his mouth. ‘No, you’re going to have to earn a corset. You can start by kissing me, soldier.’
‘With all my pleasure, Duchess.’
EPILOGUE
Four months later...
In a crowd of three thousand people Morgan knew exactly whose hand touched her back—recognised the gentleness in his strong touch. Morgan lifted her solid black mask and smiled at Noah, who’d refused her entreaties to wear a costume as befitting a 1920s burlesque-themed ball or a mask. Then again, nobody could quite pull off a tuxedo like her soldier.
Well, a tuxedo jacket. The lower half of his tuxedo consisted of a kilt in the Fraser tartan, complete with furry sporran.
Noah could pull off a kilt too. Not that she would ever tell him that—she was having far too much fun teasing him about his ‘Scottish skirt’.
And naked... Actually nobody could pull off naked as well as Noah could, and as soon as she was done with the ball they were headed for Stellenbosch, where she intended to devote her considerable energies to keeping him naked as much as possible.
Noah placed both his arms around her and held her as they stared down at the crowds below them. The ballroom glittered and heaved with colour, laughter rose and fell, and champagne and other fine spirits flowed. Couples whirled around the dance floor and other guests stood in front of the birdcages and looked at the beautiful pieces of jewellery art.
‘Why are you hiding up here on this little balcony by yourself?’ Noah asked.
‘I just need a break,’ Morgan answered. ‘Isn’t it spectacular, Noah?’
‘It is, and you should be proud of yourself. You did this, Duchess. This is all yours and it’s fabulous.’
‘Well, mine and Ri’s. We work well together.’
Morgan rested her head on his chest and stroked his hand with her fingertips. ‘By the way, Mum has agreed to using some of the money raised tonight to make a hefty donation to that dyslexic foundation I visited the other day. They want me to sit on their board.’
‘Are you going to tell them—tell people about your dyslexia?’ Noah asked, turning her to face him.
‘I thought...maybe. What do you think?’
‘I think that you—apart from the fact that you are the untidiest person alive—are awe-inspiring.’ Noah kissed her nose. ‘I have something for you.’
‘You do? Will I like it?’
Noah looked uncharacteristically serious. ‘I hope so. Buying a gift for the Diamond Queen’s daughter is a nightmare of epic proportions, and everyone I’ve spoken to has a different idea about what you like. Riley says one thing, James another—mostly just to take the opposite view to Riley, I think.’
‘I have to do something about those two, and soon,’ Morgan muttered, her eyes narrowing.
‘Hey, concentrate! We’re talking about your present. And the angst I’ve gone through to get it.’
Morgan grinned. ‘Sorry. So, what did I do to deserve a present?’
Noah tipped his head in thought. ‘Well, you do this little thing with your tongue...’
Morgan blushed. ‘Noah! Jeez!’
Noah touched her cheek with the back of his knuckle. ‘I love you with everything I have and the last months have been crazy exciting.’
‘Do you miss London? Your brothers? You’ve uprooted your life...’ Morgan said, a little worried. He’d made huge changes to his life to be with her and she needed to know that he had no regrets.
‘We’ve expanded Auterlochie by opening another branch in the city, and I’ve moved into a gorgeous flat with a woman who says she loves me and gives me frequent sex. Such a hard thing to do...’ Noah said, his eyes laughing at her fears.
Morgan rolled her eyes. Okay, then. ‘So, about my present...what did you buy me?’
‘Not so much buy as...’ Noah pulled a box out of his pocket and handed it over. ‘We talked about getting married at some point and I wanted to make it official. I know it’s not the fanciest or the biggest or the—’
‘Shut up, No,’ Morgan said, flipping open the lid. Inside, cleaned and sparkling, sat his mother’s red beryl ring—the one she hadn’t seen since that day in the studio.
Morgan swallowed and put her hand on her chest as she stared at the box in her hand.
He could have had a ring designed by Carl, bought her the flashiest diamond and got down on one knee in front of all these people and proposed, but nothing, Morgan knew, would have had a greater emotional impact on her than receiving his beloved mother’s ring.
Morgan pulled it out and handed it back to him.
‘You don’t want it?’ he asked quietly, disappointment in his eyes and voice.
Morgan shook her head, her eyes welling. ‘I want you to put it on me. And as you do it,’ she added, as Noah picked up her hand and held her ring finger, ‘I want to tell you that I’m honoured to wear this ring and that, like her, I will always love you.’
Noah kissed her lips and held her against him, and she felt warm and protected and so very, very loved in his arms.
After a long, emotion-soaked moment he whispered in her ear. ‘I’m loving your dress, Duchess.’
She grinned and curtsied. ‘Merci.’’
She’d had a steam punk green and black corset designed for the evening and teamed it with a black tulle and organza skirt that rode low on her hips and exposed a strip of her belly. It had been worth every penny to see Noah’s eyes bug when he’d first caught sight of it.
‘I can’t wait to get you alone,’ Noah said, nuzzling her neck. ‘I’m going to have so much fun taking it off you.’
Morgan bent her knees, dipped her hand under his kilt and touched his warm thigh. Her eyes sparkled as she looked up into his face. ‘And I’m going to have lots of fun taking your skirt off you.’
‘It’s a kilt!’ Noah howled for the umpteenth time that night. ‘Respect the kilt!’
Morgan grinned, knowing that her happiness was echoed in his eyes. ‘I deeply respect what’s under the—’
‘Don’t say skirt.’
Noah captured her face in his hands and kissed her lips as her hand danced up his thigh.
‘Duchess?’
‘Yes, soldier?’
‘Behave.’
Morgan’s eyes laughed at him. ‘Absolutely...not.’
* * * * *
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ONE
Rob Beresford stepped out of the black stretch limo onto the red carpet outside London’s newest and most prestigious art gallery, slowly rolled back his shoulders, and stretched out to his full height.
Rob ran the fingers of his right hand through his mane of collar-length dark wavy hair in a move he had perfected to draw attention to what, according to the Beresford hotel group marketing department, was his best feature.
‘Make sure that your fans see that fantastic head and shoulders shot,’ his agent, Sally, kept telling him. ‘That’s what your millions of lady followers will be looking for. Make the most of it while you can!’
Ah. The joys of self-promotion.
After twenty years in the hotel business Rob knew the drill inside out.
He gave the press what they wanted and they loved him for it. They had seen him on good and bad nights and both sides played the game when it suited them.
It was a pity that the paparazzi made more money when he was playing the bad-boy celebrity chef than on all of the other countless occasions when he was working in the kitchens creating the award-winning recipes for the Beresford hotel restaurants.
They wanted him to misbehave and throw a tantrum and grab a camera. Punch someone out because of a careless remark or lose his temper over an insult to his family or food.
The Rob Beresford they wanted to see was the young chef who had become notorious after he physically lifted the most famous restaurant critic in Chicago out of his chair and threw him out of the Beresford hotel restaurant when he dared to criticise the way his steak had been cooked.
And sometimes he was tired enough or bored enough to let them goad him and provoke him into a stupid response, which he instantly regretted.
Press the red button and watch the fireworks. Oh, yes!
But not tonight.
For once he was not here to celebrate the Beresford name or promote his TV show or best-selling cookery books. Tonight was all about someone else’s success. Not his. And if that meant that he had to act out his part in public yet again, then so be it.
He was wearing the costume; he had rehearsed his script. Now it was time to act out his part until the star of the show arrived.
Tonight he needed the crowd to love him and play up the success of the art gallery. And the artist whose work had been chosen to be exhibited for their prestigious grand opening event. Adele Forrester. Fine Art Painter. And his mother.
But inside his designer clothing? Inside, he was a wreck.
Even the photographers in the front row only a few feet away could not see the prickle of sweat on his brow on this cool June evening and he quickly covered up the tenseness in his mouth with a broad smile so that no one would ever know that, for once, Rob Beresford was more than just nervous.
He was dreading every second of the next few hours and would only be able to relax when he was safe back in the hotel room with his mother, congratulating her on a stunning exhibition that was bound to sell out fast.
The plan had been simple. They would arrive together, his mother would smile and wave a couple of times and Rob would escort her sedately into the exhibition to the sound of applause from her faithful fans and art lovers. Proud son. Star mother. Winner all the way.
So much for that plan.
The past week had been a blur of rushed last-minute arrangements and then a twenty-four-hour cold virus, which had been going the rounds in California, had knocked her out for most of the day. Followed by a serious attack of first-night nerves.
Until an hour ago he’d thought that he had succeeded and his mother was dressed, made up and ready to go, smiling and happy that after eight years of preparation her work was going to be shown in public.
But then she had made the mistake of peeking out of the hotel front entrance, seen the press pack and scurried back into the room, white-faced and breathing hard. Trying to control her panic while pretending that it was about time that she walked down the red carpet on her own. After all, this was her special night. No need to wait. She would make her own grand entrance. Why did she need her handsome son stealing her spotlight?
Right. She was forgetting that he knew her. Only too well.
So the limo had driven around the corner with him inside alone. While she cowered inside her hotel room, going through the relaxation exercises one more time. Afraid to come out and walk a few steps down a carpet and have her photo taken.
And just the thought that his beautiful mother did not think she was ready or good enough for this crowd was enough to make his blood boil.
They had no idea how far she had come over the past few years to get to the point where she could even think about turning up in person to an exhibition of her paintings.
And they never would.
Fifteen years ago he had made his mother a promise.
He had given her his word that he would protect her and take care of her, and keep her secret, no matter what. And he had kept that promise and would go on keeping that promise, no matter how much it had impacted his life and the decisions that he had been forced to take to keep her safe.
He had stayed in Beresford hotels in cities close to the major psychiatric specialist units and turned down gigs in restaurants other chefs would kill to have worked in, just to make sure that his mother had a stable environment when she needed one.
Not that she liked cities. Far from it. He had lost count of the times he had made mad dashes to airports wearing his chef’s clothes so that he could keep her company on a long flight to the latest new creative retreat that she had heard about, that afternoon. And suddenly it was the only thing she needed to complete her work and she had to go that day or the rest of her life would be in ruins.
No time to pack or organise anything. Then she was on her way, usually without the things she needed, but it had to be done now.
So he had to drop everything and go with her to keep her safe. Because when she was manic she was amazing, but there was one universal truth: whatever soared high had to come back down to earth. Fast. And hard. Sometimes very hard.
Walking down a red carpet and smiling was a small price to pay for being able to support his mother financially and emotionally.
Rob scanned the rows of photographers lined up behind the mesh barriers on either side of the narrow entrance and acknowledged some of the familiar paparazzi that followed him from event to event whenever he was in London with a quick nod and a wave.
The rest of the pack jostled for position at the barricade, calling out his name, demanding pose after pose.
Fans held up signs with his name on them. Cameras flashed wildly. All desperate to capture a rare evening appearance from the chef who had just been shortlisted for Chef of the Year. Again.
Spotlights hit him from every angle.
He turned slowly from side to side in front of the floor-to-ceiling poster for the gala exhibition of new work from Adele Forrester, making sure that her official photograph and the poster would always be the background to any of his photos.
One hand plunged into his left trouser pocket. One hand raised towards the crowd. Wearing his trademark pristine white shirt and dark designer suit. No tie. That would be too conventional. A call to look this way then that was answered with a swagger. He rolled back his shoulders, lifted his chin and went to work the crowd.
It had taken him every day of the past ten years to create an image and a brand that served him and the Beresford family well and now was his chance to use it to help his mum.
A pretty brunette in her twenties held out one of his recipe books, stretching towards him, her stomach pressed against the metal barrier and shoulders so low that he had a perfect view down her deep V-necked top into a very generous cleavage.
Rob quickly stepped forwards, grin locked in place, his pen already in his hand, and signed a flourish of his name on the cover page while the crowd went mad behind her, screaming and calling out his name at ear-damaging volume.
He walked slowly down the line, signing yet another recipe book—one of his early ones—then a poster from his restaurant-makeover show.
And then the questions started. One male voice and then another.
‘Is Adele turning up in person tonight for the show or has she done a runner like last time?’
‘Where have you hidden your mum, Rob?’
‘Have you left her behind in that treatment centre? Is that the only kind of artist retreat she knows these days?’
‘Are the rumours true about her retiring after this show?’
> Louder and louder, closer and closer, the questions came from every direction, more pointed and all demanding to know where his mother was.
They were goading him. Pushing him harder and harder, desperate for a reaction.
They wanted him to explode. To push the camera down someone’s throat or, even better, give one of them a black eye.
A few years ago? He would have done it and taken the consequences. But tonight was not about him and he refused to let the press win, so he pretended to have developed sudden hearing loss and politely ignored them. This of course made them goad him even more.
Nine minutes later he had walked the whole of the line, smiling and laughing towards the waiting crowd, leaning in for the compulsory mobile phone shots.
Then just like that the press turned away as the next limo pulled up and, without waiting for permission or a good-behaviour pass, Rob turned his back on the crowd and photographers and strode purposefully down the last few feet of red carpet, through the open door of the art gallery and into the relative calm of the marble atrium where the other specially invited guests were already assembled.
This preview show was the one exclusive opportunity for the art critics to admire and study his mother’s work without having to share the gallery with the general public. That was the good news. The less-good news was that it had been the art critics who had descended on his mother like a pack of rabid wolves when she had imploded at her last exhibition in Toronto.
Having a screaming and crying nervous breakdown in public was bad enough, but for her tormented and terrified face to be captured for ever by the press had made it worse.
Instead of defending her for her fragile creativity, they had condemned her for being a bad example to young artists for her excessive lifestyle.
But that was eight years ago.
Different world. Different faces. Different approach to mental illness. Surely?
Rob paused long enough to take a flute of chilled champagne from a passing waiter and was just about to launch into the media crew clustered around the gallery owner when he caught sight of his reflection in the installation light feature.