by Jane Porter
She was his. Entirely his. He couldn’t abide the idea that she was hiding something—herself—from him. He wouldn’t allow it.
He reached forward and scooped up her panties from the floor of the car as her eyes opened and she blinked. She was bright red, and her eyes were heavy-lidded with leftover passion. He did not have to ask if she was satisfied—he could still taste the rich wine of her arousal against his tongue. She shot him a nervous sort of look, then reached out to take the panties from him.
“I think not,” he said. He smiled as her eyes widened. He took the panties—a scrap of peach-colored silk and lace that she looked at in some mixture of horror and desire—and tucked them away in the pocket of his trousers. “We can both spend the entire dinner picturing you naked beneath your clothes,” he said softly.
Her breath left her in a rush. A quick look told Luc that she was aroused as much as she was dazed, and that she didn’t quite know what to do about either.
But as long as he could read her—as long as he’d shocked her public mask from her face—he didn’t care.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
WITHIN moments of meeting Luc’s business associates—brothers from whom he had been attempting to buy a very successful chain of family-friendly hotels in various European Union countries for the past eighteen months—Gabrielle had them all eating out of her hand. Luc could not decide if it was the effortless grace of her manners, the quiet elegance of her subtly sophisticated ensemble, or some special Gabrielle mixture that only she could produce. Whatever it was, she used it well. She had the men and their wives at ease and laughing throughout the long meal in one of London’s finest restaurants, seemingly without exerting herself.
She caught his eye as he watched her across the table laden with fine linens and delicate china, and he had the pleasure of seeing her gaze warm, though she made no other outward expression. But he knew it was for him only, that private heat, and it filled him with a sense of triumph.
No masks, no shields. Not when she looked at him. Not anymore.
“Your wife is truly a gem among women,” one of the men told Luc in a besotted aside during the cheese course. He was the oldest of the three Federer brothers, and the most powerful. There would be no deal without Franz Federer’s approval—which was the only reason Luc had decided not to object to the way the man was staring at Gabrielle’s figure, which she showed to advantage tonight in a sleeveless royal-blue shift. “Who would have expected the infamous Luc Garnier to take a wife, eh?”
It was clear to Luc that it was not the fact of the wife that stunned the man—but the specific wife that Luc had procured. It was equally clear that being called the infamous Luc Garnier was not exactly a compliment. Luc remembered Gabrielle’s words about fear versus respect in his business, and wondered for the first time if she might have had a point after all. He had never cared much about the distinction. Maybe it was time he started.
“Even the mighty must fall,” Luc said, with the wry shrug that seemed to be expected. He toyed with the delicate crystal stem of his wineglass.
“And lucky is the man who falls to a princess such as yours,” Franz agreed, nodding. “Such graciousness! Such refinement!”
“I count myself lucky that I am old enough to appreciate both,” Luc replied, ignoring the distaste that he felt.
He didn’t understand it. He had wanted a wife who inspired this reaction in others—in men exactly like Franz Federer, in fact, whose well-known moral judgments about marriage applied only to others and never to himself. Luc had sought Gabrielle out for precisely this purpose. He’d found the single respectable woman alive who could inspire such raptures from usually dour businessmen. So why was he entertaining fantasies of planting his fist in the other man’s face?
“Marriage is not for young men, it is true,” Franz said, settling his considerable girth back in his chair. He patted his belly thoughtfully. His own wife, significantly and obviously younger than him, by at least two decades, had excused herself to powder her nose some time before.
Idly, Luc wondered if the woman was more interested in the waiter, who seemed closer to her in age and interests, than in her husband. She had been gone almost long enough to incite speculation.
“But it settles a man down. Even a man of your … ah … stature.”
Luc had heard this before, of course. Stature being code for reputation. The truth was, he was feared because he was utterly ruthless. He knew no other way. When he wanted something—hotels, land, existing companies that he felt he could operate better, Gabrielle—he went after it. And he always got what he went after. Sooner or later.
“My stature precedes me, does it?” Luc asked mildly. He chose not to be insulted—he wanted the hotels more than he wanted to teach Franz Federer some manners.
He kept his gaze on Gabrielle as she charmed the younger brothers and their overawed wives with her stories of growing up in a royal palace not fitted for young children.
“I can’t bring myself to tell you about the rock crystal vase I nearly destroyed one day, while playing horses in a drawing room,” she told them, shuddering theatrically. “It’s far too incriminating, and a priceless piece of art was this close to being lost forever! I would have died from the shame of it!”
She made it sound like a madcap adventure worthy of an Enid Blyton book, when, unless he missed his guess, a childhood with King Josef must have been anything but pleasant. He felt a kind of pang, trying to imagine her as a little girl, locked away in that palazzo with her grim, fault-finding father. He rather thought there had been fewer incidents of playing horses than the anecdote suggested. But her audience ate it up—captivated, no doubt, by the fantasy of a reckless young princess this close to disaster. Luc found himself no less charmed.
“I don’t mind telling you that there was some concern that you might not be the best fit for our family’s hotels,” Franz continued, forcing Luc’s attention away from Gabrielle and her past. “And with that business with the tabloids recently …” He shook his head sorrowfully, though his eyes were avid as he assessed Luc’s reaction.
Luc smiled, though that deep, abiding rage he never seemed to conquer rolled over in his gut. He hated the tabloids. He hated Silvio Domenico and his slimy brethren more than he could express. He hated even more that Gabrielle had thrown them into the frenzy of a tabloid cycle—directly into Silvio’s clutches.
But she had not planned it. She had simply run—afraid and unknowing. Luc believed her—and if he had paid closer attention to her emotional state at their wedding, and less to her father’s assurances of her obedience, the entire affair could have been avoided. He blamed himself.
“You cannot believe what you read in those rags, of course,” he said carelessly, as if it was of no matter to him. “They are writers of fiction and fantasy.”
“All civilized men must be appalled at their prominence these days,” Franz said, shaking his head in sympathy that Luc suspected was feigned. “The stalking and the lies. And yet everyone reads them!”
“They are a scourge,” Luc agreed. He gestured toward Gabrielle. “As you can see, I have caught up to my runaway bride, against all the odds. Did I not read that she was tortured, somehow, by the experience? Ravaged in some way? I don’t think she looks any the worse for her ordeal.”
“Indeed she does not,” Franz agreed. Perhaps too readily for Luc’s comfort.
“The truth is that we honeymooned in America quite without incident.” Luc sighed, sitting back in his chair and swirling the wine in his glass. “I wish I could tell you that it was scandalous, but it was not. I’m afraid my scandalous days now exist only in the imagination of the paparazzi. I cannot say that I regret it.”
“I think she is a good influence on you,” Franz said after a moment—as if Luc had asked to be patronized by a man he could buy and sell several times over.
Luc set his teeth and forced himself not to react. Every sense told him that this infernal deal was about to be closed.
>
“I would like to think so,” he said. He even thought it might be true—though he did not intend to share that with Federer, of all people.
“You seem more settled. It suits you,” Franz said.
The gall of it! As if he and Luc were intimate in some way beyond his lust for Luc’s money—and possibly Luc’s wife!
“This is good for a man as he approaches his middle years.” Franz smiled. “And it will be good, too, for our hotels.”
“I am pleased to hear it,” Luc said. He extended his hand.
When the other man took it, Luc smiled. A real smile this time.
The deal was done. And Luc had his wife to thank for it.
She met his eyes once more, that telltale color reddening her cheeks. Suddenly, Luc couldn’t wait to show her exactly how grateful he was.
London was a cold, gray slap after the sun-drenched blues and greens of the California coast. Gabrielle pulled her silk scarf tighter over her hair to ward off the wetness as she rushed through the Brompton Road crowd toward the doors of Harrods, eager to get inside and out of the rain.
Once through the grand doors, Gabrielle pulled her scarf away from her face and shook it out slightly, damp all over, though she found it a bit exhilarating after all the sunshine she’d gotten over the previous weeks. She had thrown a light trenchcoat over a pale yellow Chanel suit better suited to California than England, and was convinced she’d landed in a puddle the depth of the Thames in her rush to get from the car into the famous department store. She felt the wet and the London grime all the way up the backs of her legs. She was cold and soaked. And she didn’t care in the slightest, because Harrods worked its usual magic on her the moment she stepped inside.
Gabrielle shook the water from her scarf and tucked it in the pocket of her coat, then unbuttoned the trench as she walked through the grand rooms she’d seen so many times before. She knew it was touristy at best, and sentimental at worst, but she had never been able to shake her abiding love for the British institution that was Harrods. Whenever she visited London she made a point to visit the store, to wander through the gilt-edged displays and marvel at the soaring ceilings and marble floors. Every now and again, when she knew her father would not be around to judge her, she brought home one of their gourmet hampers, always wishing she could take it on the perfect picnic somewhere, but making do with her private rooms. Being in the bustling, lavish rooms at Harrods reminded her of being a young girl, dispatched to the nearby store with her governess du jour while her father tended to affairs of state. Her father would have his privacy while Gabrielle enjoyed herself wandering about Harrods, then followed it up with an afternoon cream tea. Few things had ever made her happier.
“If it isn’t the delightful Mrs. Garnier,” a sly voice drawled in Italian from behind her, causing Gabrielle to start, and drop the leather gloves she’d absently picked up.
She recognized the man immediately—it was the paparazzo who had so angered Luc in Los Angeles. Silvio. He leaned close, his beard grizzled and the smell of old cigarettes wafting up from his damp jeans and tracksuit top. Gabrielle forced herself not to recoil—anything she did would be held up to scrutiny and twisted into the most negative light possible. It was best to do very little.
“My apologies, Your Royal Highness,” the man continued, his voice suggestive, his eyes hard, “if I’ve interrupted. You looked so sad just then. So alone.”
“Not at all,” Gabrielle said easily, finding her public smile harder to come by than usual. “I was daydreaming quite happily, I assure you. I used to come here quite often as a girl.” She swept him with a quizzical look. “Have we met?”
“Your husband did not introduce us when we ran into each other in Los Angeles,” Silvio replied, shifting his weight to move even further into Gabrielle’s space, water glistening in his shaggy salt-and-pepper curls. “But I’m sure you remember the occasion—outside a restaurant, just a few days after he chased you to the States? I think maybe he had something to hide that night, yes?”
“Something to hide?” Gabrielle echoed. The man obviously loathed Luc. It was etched into every line on his weathered face. She found she felt much the same about him. She forced a light trill of laughter. “I think you misunderstand him. My husband is a private man and we were on our honeymoon. No need to read anything into it but that.”
“Private people don’t spend their honeymoons having dinner at the Ivy, Your Royal Highness, do they?” Silvio retorted, so close now that Gabrielle could see the brown and yellow nicotine stains on his teeth.
She was forced to shift back against the display table to put an appropriate distance between them, and her skin crawled when he smirked.
“Not if they want it to stay private.”
“You still haven’t told me your name,” Gabrielle replied, buying time and scraping together every little bit of manners she’d ever been taught, determined to remain polite even when she wanted to run, screaming, into the streets of Knightsbridge to get away from the man. “I am afraid you have me at a disadvantage.”
“I am Silvio Domenico,” he said aggressively, and made a lazy sort of gesture with his hand, approximating a bow. He eyed her as he leaned against the display table, his cold gaze repellent. Gabrielle merely straightened her spine and waited. “I feel sorry for you,” he said after a moment.
“I can’t imagine why,” she said crisply. Repulsive man! “But I must excuse myself. I have a great many—”
“I don’t think you’ll want to run off just yet,” the odious man interrupted, with a smile that chilled Gabrielle to the bone. “Not if you want your so-called private husband’s life to stay that way.”
“What on earth are you talking about?” Gabrielle asked, letting her impatience show.
Sensing that he might be losing his audience, Silvio shifted closer, his gaze alight with an excitement that Gabrielle instinctively knew could not bode well for her. Or for Luc.
“It turns out that Luc’s last mistress wasn’t as discreet as she was supposed to be,” Silvio told her with evident delight. He paused deliberately. “You do know that Luc is famous for his confidentiality agreements, right? No roll in the hay with Luc Garnier unless you promise not to talk about it. That’s the rule. He makes them all sign.” He waited for her reaction with obvious enjoyment—he wanted to feed on it, Gabrielle could tell. He wanted her to react badly—to hurt.
So she refused to show him anything, however little she might personally like to hear about the women who’d come before her. Much less any documents Luc might have had those women sign—which she very much doubted was true. Who would dare sell Luc out to the press? She merely arched an eyebrow.
“That seems quite sensible, given the fact you and your colleagues follow him around the planet digging for every detail,” she replied crisply.
“What surprises me is that there are always so many takers,” Silvio said, with that nasty edge to his voice. “Don’t see the attraction myself.” Gabrielle stared at him. He laughed. “You, too? I thought he bought you?”
“This conversation is over,” Gabrielle replied icily, turning to go, but his hand on her arm stopped her. She stared at it, then up at him in outrage. How dared he touch her? “Remove your hand! At once!”
“You know about La Rosalinda, of course?” Silvio continued, but he dropped his hand. His voice lowered, becoming even more intimate and disgusting. “The toast of Italy. What an uproar Luc caused when he dismissed her!”
Rosalinda Jaccino was an Italian film star. She was a world-renowned beauty—all flowing black tresses, mysterious eyes and sexy curves. The sight of her breasts supposedly caused riots. She also happened to be Luc’s most recent ex-lover. Gabrielle had read all about her while researching Luc in the weeks before their marriage. She certainly didn’t want to hear what this repulsive toad of a man so clearly wanted to tell her about the other woman. Just as she really, truly did not want to picture that bombshell with her husband.
In bed with he
r husband. That sinuous, famously curvy body wrapped around his—
Those are not helpful images, she told herself dryly. And if Luc had wished to marry La Rosalinda he would have done so. Instead he had looked the world over and chosen Gabrielle.
But there was no time to ruminate on her marriage—she was trapped in the leather goods section of Harrods unless she wanted to cause a scene. Which she did not. She knew, somehow, that Silvio would stop at nothing to tell her whatever it was he had clearly tracked her down to tell her. She would just as soon he did not share whatever it was with half of London.
“What is it you want?” she asked with great patience, wishing she could escape into the Egyptian Hall next door. If this awful little man tainted her Harrods experience—one of the few truly happy memories of her childhood—she didn’t know how she would stand it.
“It is not what I want,” Silvio said. “It is what I think you will want—once you know what I know about La Rosalinda and your husband.”
He made the word husband sound like a particularly filthy curse.
“Surely you did not come to talk to me about my husband’s former lovers?” Gabrielle asked, with as much dignity as she could muster. “I must confess that I am not interested in them.” She shrugged. “I am sorry if that disappoints you. And, while this has been a charming interlude, I really must—”
“Don’t dismiss me, Your Royal Highness.” The man’s voice went cold. Brutish. His eyes were flat. “I don’t think you’ll be quite so high and mighty if I go straight to the papers with what I have, will you?”
“What do you have?” Gabrielle asked, fighting to keep her voice even. A trickle of foreboding ran through her, making her skin feel itchy.
“I have a tape.” He laughed, still so close that Gabrielle could smell the tobacco on his breath, along with a hefty hint of onions. “Well, not exactly a tape. More digital than that—but the end result is the same, isn’t it?”