by Nora Roberts
As she arranged and rearranged displays, she wracked her brains to come up with a workable concept to turn Pretenses from an intriguing little secondhand shop into a star.
When the door opened, she had a bright—and, she was afraid, desperate—smile waiting. “Mum. What are you doing here?”
“It’s my day off, isn’t it?” Ann pursed her lips as she scanned the showroom. “And I haven’t come by here since the first week you opened. It’s awful quiet.”
“I’m being punished for my sins. You always said I would be.”
“I heard of it.” She clucked her tongue. “Grown women behaving like hoydens. Though I never liked that woman, not even when she was a girl. Always with her nose in the air.”
“This time I put it out of joint. She’s managed to slice a chunk out of sales. Though Kate says it’s also part of the natural correction of a new business after its initial opening weeks.” Margo scowled at an amber globe. “You know how she talks when she’s wearing her accountant hat.”
“I do, yes. More often than not I listen to her when she’s going on about my investments, and just nod soberly without a clue as to what the devil she’s talking about.”
For the first time all day, Margo indulged in a long laugh. “I’m glad you came in. There haven’t been many friendly faces in here today.”
“Well, you’ll have to do something about that.” Out of habit, Ann checked for dust on a table, nodded in approval when she found the surface smooth and glossy. “Have a sale, give away prizes, hire a marching band.”
“A marching band—good one, Mum.”
“Well, what do I know about shopkeeping? It’s getting people in that’s the trick, isn’t it?”
Absently, Ann picked up a pretty glass bottle. Not to put things in, she mused, perplexed as always with fripperies. Just to sit about the house.
“Your uncle Johnny Ryan back in Cork had himself a pub,” she continued. “He would hire musicians now and then—the Yanks liked it especially and would come in to hear the music and buy pints while they did.”
“I don’t think an Irish jug band is the answer to traffic flow in here.”
The dismissive tone was an insult as far as Ann was concerned. “I’m speaking of fine, traditional music. You’ve never respected your heritage.”
“You never gave me the chance to,” Margo shot back. “What you’ve told me about Ireland and my family there could fit into one paragraph.”
It was true enough. Ann tightened her lips. “So, you couldn’t pick up a book, I suppose, or take a bit of a detour on your gallivanting through Europe?”
“I’ve been to Cork twice,” Margo said and had the satisfaction of seeing Ann’s mouth fall open. “Surprise. And to Dublin and Galway and Clare.” She shrugged her shoulders, annoyed with herself for admitting she had once gone searching for her roots. “It’s a pretty country, but I’m more interested in the one I’m living in now.”
“No one wrote me, told me you’d gone to see them.”
“I didn’t see anyone when I was there. What would have been the point? Even if I’d gone around digging up Ryans and Sullivans, we wouldn’t have known each other.”
Ann started to speak, then shook her head. “No, I suppose you’re right.”
For a moment she thought she saw regret in her mother’s eyes, and was sorry for it. “I have problems now, ambitions now,” she said briskly, “that have to be dealt with now. Reminiscing about pennywhistles and pints of Guiness won’t help get the business moving the way I want it to move.”
“Music and drink appeal to more than the Irish,” Ann pointed out. “What’s wrong with offering a bit of entertainment?”
“I need customers,” Margo insisted. “I need a hook to lure the platinum-card set in past Candy’s boycott and set a standard for Pretenses.”
“So, you’ll have a sale.” Suddenly Ann wanted badly to help. “You’ve pretty things in here, Margo. People want pretty things. You’ve only to get them in the door.”
“Exactly my point. What I need is . . . Wait.”
Margo pressed a hand to her head as an idea tried to form. “Music. A harpist, maybe. An Irish harpist, maybe, in traditional dress. Music and drink. A reception. Champagne and little trays of canapés like at a gallery opening. Prizes.”
She grabbed her mother’s shoulders, surprising Ann with the quick hug. “A prize, just one. It’s more alluring to have just one. No, no, no, not a prize,” Margo continued, circling the shop. “An auction, on one piece. The diamond brooch. No, no, the pearl choker. Proceeds to charity. What’s a good charity? Oh, Laura will know. A charity reception, Mum, it’ll get them in here.”
The girl’s mind whirled like a dervish, Ann thought, running and spinning from one point to the next. That, she saw, hadn’t changed a wit. “Well, then, you’d better get to it.”
She got to it with a vengeance. Within a week, invitations to the charity reception and auction benefiting Wednesday’s Child, a program for handicapped and underprivileged children, were being printed. Laura was delegated to handle interviews, and Margo went to work trying to charm liquor distributors into donating cases of champagne.
She auditioned harpists, begged Josh to select waiters from Templeton staff to serve, and flattered Mrs. Williamson into making the canapés.
It was just the beginning.
When Josh came back to the penthouse after a long day trip to San Francisco, he found his lover in bed. But she wasn’t alone.
“What the hell is this?”
Margo tossed back her hair, turned on a smile. Creamy curves of white breasts rose above glossy red-satin sheets. Those same slick sheets were artfully twisted to showcase a long, shapely leg.
The camera flashed.
“Hello, darling. We’re nearly done here.”
“Hold the sheet between your breasts,” the photographer ordered, crouching at the foot of the bed on which Margo was sprawled seductively. “A little lower. Now tilt your head. That’s it, that’s it. You’re still the best, baby. Let’s sell the goods.”
Josh set down his briefcase, stepped over a cable, and earned a mutter from the photographer’s assistant. “What are you wearing?”
“Pearls.” She skimmed her fingers down them, ran her tongue invitingly over her lips as the camera clicked. “The choker we’re auctioning off. I thought photos would help bump up the bids.”
Since she appeared to be wearing nothing else, Josh had to agree with her.
“Just a couple more. Give me the look. Oh, yeah, that’s the one. Got it.” He stood, an agile, sharp-eyed man with a flowing red ponytail. “Great working with you again, Margo.”
“I owe you, Zack.”
“Not a thing.” He handed off his camera to his assistant, then leaned over the bed to kiss Margo warmly. “I’ve missed seeing that billion-dollar face in my viewfinder. Glad I could help.” He glanced at Josh. “Be out of your way in a shake.”
“Josh, be a doll and get Zack and Bob a couple of beers.” Without a flicker, she dropped the sheet, then reached for a robe to cover her lovely breasts.
“A couple of beers.” His smile was quick and feral. “Sure, why not?”
“We met before.” Leaving his assistant to pack up, Zack followed Josh back into the office. “In Paris—no, no, Rome. You dropped by one of Margo’s shoots.”
The green lights of jealousy faded a bit. It was hard to forget a man with a foot-long red ponytail. “Yeah. I think she was dressed at the time.”
Zack took the beer. “Just to clear the air here, I’ve seen more naked women than a bouncer in a strip joint. It’s just part of the job.”
“Not that you enjoy it.”
“I’m willing to sacrifice for my art.” He grinned winningly. “Pal, I fucking love it. But it’s still part of the job. If you want a professional’s opinion, you’ve got yourself the top of the line. Some women you have to know how to shoot, what angle, what lighting, so the camera’ll love them. Doesn’t matter if they
’re beautiful—the camera’s fickle, and it’s picky.” He took a long, satisfying gulp of beer. “It don’t matter a damn how you shoot Margo Sullivan. It just don’t matter a damn. The camera fucking worships her.”
He looked toward the bedroom as her warm, throaty laugh flowed out. “And I’ll tell you, if she wasn’t set on running this store of hers, I’d talk her into coming back to L.A. with me and giving fashion photography a try.”
“Then I’d have to break all the bones in your fingers.”
Zack nodded. “I thought you might. And since you’re bigger than me, I think I’ll take Bob his beer to go.”
“Good choice.” Josh decided a beer might go down well and was just tipping a bottle back when Margo came into the room.
“God, it was good to see Zack again. Is there a split of champagne in there? I’m parched. I’d forgotten how hot you get under the lights.”
Her face was glowing as she tilted her head back and ran her fingers through her hair. She’d done something curling and sexy with it, he noted, so that it spiraled wildly.
“And how much I love it,” she went on. “There’s just something about the whole process. Looking into the camera, the way it looks at you. The lights, the sound of the shutter.”
When she let her hair fall and opened her eyes, he was staring at her in a way that made her heart stutter. “What is it?”
“Nothing.” His eyes never left hers as he held out the glass of wine he’d poured. “I didn’t realize you were thinking of going back to it.”
“I’m not.” But she sipped, knowing that for a moment it had been a tantalizing thought. “I don’t mean I’d never pose again or take an intriguing offer, but the shop’s my priority now and making it a success is number one on my list.”
“Number one.” Had he carried this mood back with him from San Francisco, he wondered, or had it dropped on him like a cloud when he’d walked into the suite and seen her? “Tell me, duchess, just what position do you and I rate on that list?”
“I don’t know what you mean.”
“Simple question. Are we five, seven? Have we even made it to the list yet?”
She looked into her glass, watched the wine bubble like dreams. “Are you asking me for something?”
“I think it’s about time I did. And that, I imagine, is your cue to exit stage right.” When she said nothing, he set down his beer. “Why don’t we try something different? You stay and I’ll go.”
“Don’t.” She still didn’t look at him, but kept staring at the bubbles rising and dancing in her glass. “Please don’t. I know you don’t think much of me. You care about me, but you don’t think much of me. And maybe I deserve that.”
“We’re even there, aren’t we? You don’t think much of me either.”
How could she answer when she wasn’t at all sure just what she thought of Joshua Templeton? She turned then. He was waiting, and she was grateful for that. Halfway across the room, but waiting.
“You’re important to me,” she told him. “More important than I expected or wanted you to be. Isn’t that enough?”
“I don’t know, Margo. I just don’t know.”
Why was her hand shaking? It was civilized, wasn’t it? Just as it was supposed to be. “If you’re . . . if this has run its course for you, I’ll understand.” She set her glass down. “But I don’t want to lose you altogether. I don’t know what I’d do if you weren’t in my life.”
This wasn’t what he wanted, this calm, gentle understanding. He wanted her to rage, to throw the wine at his head, to scream at him for having the nerve to think he could walk out on her.
“So if I walk out, we’ll be friends again?”
“Yes.” She squeezed her eyes shut as her heart contracted. “No.”
Relieved, he crossed back to her. “You’ll hate me if I go.” Gathering her hair in his hand, he drew her head back until their eyes met. “You need me. I want to hear you say it.”
“I’ll hate you if you go.” She reached up, framed his face with her hands. “I need you.” She pulled his mouth to hers. “Come to bed.” It was the best way to show him, the only way.
“The easy answer,” he murmured.
“Yes, it should be easy. Let’s make it easy.” The moment he lifted her into his arms, she tugged at his jacket, whispered hot promises in his ear.
But he didn’t intend to make it easy this time, for either of them. He stood her next to the bed, let her undress him with quick, eager hands. When she would have pulled him down with her to the sheets still warm from the lights and her body, he gathered her close and began his assault.
One long, lazy meeting of lips that spun out and trembled and shimmered with something new. Simple tenderness. He took her hands, drew them down to her side, behind her back, and cuffed them there so that his free hand could stroke over her face, down her throat, into her hair while his mouth continued to seduce.
“Josh.” Her heartbeat echoed slow and thick in her head. “Touch me.”
“I am.” He feathered kisses over her cheeks, her jaw. “Maybe for the first time I’m touching you. It’s hard to feel when there’s only heat. But you’re feeling now, aren’t you?” When her head fell weakly back, he nuzzled her throat. “No one’s ever made you feel what I’m going to make you feel.”
It was frightening, this weakness weighing down her limbs, clouding her brain. She wanted the flash, the fire. There was simplicity in that. And even in dangerous heat, safety. But mixed with the fear was the dark, dizzying thrill of being taken slowly, so slowly that each touch, each brush of lips lasted eons.
He could swear he felt her bones melting inside that sleek, pampered flesh. The drum of her turgid pulse thudded against his fingers. Low, baffled whimpers sounded in her throat where pearls glowed against her skin. He slid the robe aside so she wore nothing but them, luminous white orbs circling a long, slim neck.
“Lie down with me.” She lifted her arm to take him. “Lie down on me.”
Her voice alone, that husky flow of it, could have brought a man to his knees. And had, he thought, too often. He stroked his hands down her back, up, a teasing fingertip caress that had her shuddering, had her lips parting on what might have been a plea before his closed over them and swallowed it.
When she was limp against him, when her hands slid weakly back to her sides, he lay her on the bed, on the slick, slippery satin. But he didn’t cover her. Again, he braceleted her wrists, lifted them above her head. Sigh layered over sigh as he began a slow, thorough trail down her body.
She thought the air had turned gold. How else could every breath she took be so rich? His mouth was so gentle, yet it exploited weaknesses she hadn’t known were hidden inside her. His hands were impossibly tender and patient, yet they made her burn. And they made her weep.
It was more than pleasure. She had no words for it. It was soft, stronger than lust, and lovelier than any dream she’d ever held in her heart. Her body simply wasn’t hers any longer, not hers alone.
He could feel her opening for him, that pliant surrender that was beyond passion and more exciting. Her skin hummed as his tongue teased over it, her muscles tensed in anticipation of climax. Lazily he backed off and left them quivering.
And when he met her lips with his again, emotions poured like wine. He slipped inside her like a wish.
“No.” He used his weight to pin her as she moved restlessly. “It won’t be fast this time.” Even as the blood pounded in his brain, he nipped at her mouth in small, torturous bites. “It’s me who’s filling you, Margo. As no one else has. No one else could.” He moved in her, long, slow strokes. Shattering.
She could see nothing but his face, feel nothing but that glorious friction. Then the gradual, the delicious, the aching build of luxurious orgasm.
Her hands slid bonelessly off his shoulders.
“No one knows you like I do. No one can love you like I do.”
But she was beyond words.
She was afraid of him
. It was a staggering realization, especially in the middle of the night when she lay wakeful beside him. He’d changed something between them, Margo thought. Shifted the balance so that she felt vulnerable.
And he’d done it by showing her what it was like to feel cherished.
Cautious and quiet, she slipped out of bed, left him sleeping. The champagne was still on the table. Flat now, but she drank it just the same. She found a cigarette, lit it, and told herself to calm down.
She was terrified.
It had been a risk, certainly, to sleep with him. But one she’d been willing to take. But she’d never counted on falling in love with him. That was a dare she would have turned down cold.
Still could, she assured herself and drew deep on the cigarette. Her emotions were still her own. No matter how often or how quickly her life seemed to be changing, she was still in charge of her emotions.
She wasn’t going to be in love with anyone, most particularly Josh. She didn’t know anything about love, not this kind. And didn’t want to.
Pressing a hand to her head, she let out a quiet laugh. Of course—that was it. She didn’t know anything about love, so why was she so sure that was what she was feeling? More than likely it was just surprise that he could be so sweet and that she could be so susceptible to sweetness.
And it was the first time she’d been involved with a man she’d cared for as deeply as she did Josh. The closely twined history they shared, the memories, the affection.
It was easy, and foolish of her, to twist that all up inside and come out with love. More settled, she crushed out the cigarette, took a deep breath.
“Can’t sleep?”
She jumped like a cat, made him laugh.
“Sorry, didn’t mean to startle you.” The light from the bedroom pooled behind him as he stepped closer. She stepped back. “Problem?”
“No.”
He cocked his head and, as his eyes adjusted, got a good look at her face. His smile spread, arrogant and male. “Nervous?”