A Business Engagement

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A Business Engagement Page 14

by Merline Lovelace


  “We’ll kick off phase two,” he promised in a tone that edged toward deep and husky. “No negotiated contracts this time, no self-imposed deadlines. Just you and me, learning each other’s little idiosyncrasies. If that’s what you really want…?”

  She nodded, although the soft dance of his fingers under her chin and the proximity of his mouth made it tough to stay focused.

  “It’s what I really want.”

  “All right, I’ll call Patrick.”

  “Who? Oh, right. Your executive assistant. Excuse me for asking, but what does he have to do with this?”

  “He’s going to clear my calendar. Indefinitely. He’ll blow every one of his fuses, but he’ll get it done.”

  His fingers made another pass. Sarah’s thoughts zinged wildly between the little pinpricks of pleasure he was generating and that “indefinitely.”

  “What about your schedule?” he asked. “How much time can you devote to phase two?”

  “My calendar’s wide-open, too. I quit my job.”

  “You didn’t have to do that. I’m already past the business with the photographer.”

  “You may be,” she retorted. “I’m not.”

  He absorbed that for a moment. “All right. Here’s what we’ll do, then. We give our statements to the Brigade criminelle at nine tomorrow morning and initiate phase two immediately after. Agreed?”

  “Agreed.”

  “Good. I’ll have a car waiting at eight-thirty to take us downtown. See you down in the lobby then.”

  He leaned in and brushed his lips over hers.

  “Good night, Sarah.”

  She’d never really understood that old saying about being hoisted with your own petard. It had something to do with getting caught up in a medieval catapult, she thought. Or maybe hanging by one foot in a tangle of ropes from the mast of a fourteenth-century frigate.

  Either situation would pretty much describe her feelings when Dev crossed the room and let himself out.

  Thirteen

  Sarah spent hours tossing and turning and kicking herself for her self-imposed celibacy. As a result, she didn’t fall asleep until almost one and woke late the next morning.

  The first thing she did was roll over in bed and grab her cell phone from the nightstand to check for messages. Still nothing from Gina, dammit, but Alexis had left two voice mails apologizing for what she termed an unfortunate misunderstanding and emphatically refusing to accept her senior layout editor’s resignation.

  “Misunderstanding, my ass.”

  Her mouth set, Sarah deleted the voice mails and threw back the covers. She’d have to hustle to be ready for the car Dev had said would be waiting at eight-thirty. A quick shower eliminated most of the cobwebs from her restless night. An equally quick cup of strong brew from the little coffeemaker in her room helped with the remainder.

  Before she dressed, she stuck her nose through the balcony doors to assess the weather. No fog or drizzle, but still chilly enough to make her opt for her gray wool slacks and cherry-red sweater coat. She topped them with a scarf doubled around her throat European-style and a black beret tilted to a decidedly French angle.

  She rushed down to the lobby with two minutes to spare and saw Dev had also prepared for the chill. But in jeans, a black turtleneck and a tan cashmere coat this morning instead of his usual business suit. He greeted her with a smile and a quick kiss.

  “Bonjour, ma chérie. Sleep well?”

  She managed not to wince at his accent. “Fairly well.”

  “Did you have time for breakfast?”

  “No.”

  “I was running a little late, too, so I had the driver pick up some chocolate croissants and coffees. Shall we go?”

  He offered his arm in a gesture she was beginning to realize was as instinctive as it was courteous. When she tucked her hand in the crook of his elbow, she could feel his warmth through the soft wool. Feel, too, the ripple of hard muscle as he leaned past her to push open the hotel door.

  Traffic was its usual snarling beast, but the coffee and chocolate croissants mitigated the frustration. They were right on time when they pulled up at the block-long building overlooking the Seine that housed the headquarters of the Brigade criminelle. A lengthy sequence of security checkpoints, body scans and ID verification made them late for their appointment, however.

  Detective Inspector Marie-Renée Delacroix waved aside their apologies as unnecessary and signed them in. Short and barrel-shaped, she wore a white blouse, black slacks and rubber-soled granny shoes. The semiautomatic nested in her shoulder holster belied her otherwise unprepossessing exterior.

  “Thank you for coming in,” she said in fluent English. “I’ll try to make this as swift and painless as possible. Please, come with me.”

  She led them up a flight of stairs and down a long corridor interspersed with heavy oak doors. When Delacroix pushed through the door to her bureau, Sarah looked about with interest. The inspector’s habitat didn’t resemble the bull pens depicted on American TV police dramas. American bull pens probably didn’t, either, she acknowledged wryly.

  There were no dented metal file cabinets or half-empty cartons of doughnuts. No foam cups littering back-to-back desks or squawking phones. The area was spacious and well lit and smoke free. Soundproofing dividers offered at least the illusion of privacy, while monitors mounted high on the front wall flashed what looked like real-time updates on hot spots around Paris.

  “Would you like coffee?” Delacroix asked as she waved them to seats in front of her desk.

  Sarah looked to Dev before answering for them both. “No, thank you.”

  The inspector dropped into the chair behind the desk. Shoulders hunched, brows straight-lined, she dragged a wireless keyboard into reach and attacked it with two stubby forefingers. The assault was merciless, but for reasons known only to French computer gods, the typed versions of the statements Sarah and Dev had given to the responding officers wouldn’t spit out of the printer.

  “Merde!”

  Muttering under her breath, she jabbed at the keyboard yet again. She looked as though she’d like to whip out her weapon and deliver a lethal shot when she finally admitted defeat and slammed away from her desk.

  “Please wait. I need to find someone who can kick a report out of this piece of sh— Er, crap.”

  She returned a few moments later with a colleague in a blue-striped shirt and red suspenders. Without a word, he pressed a single key. When the printer began coughing up papers, he rolled his eyes and departed.

  “I hate these things,” Delacroix muttered as she dropped into her chair again.

  Sarah and Dev exchanged a quick look but refrained from comment. Just as well, since the inspector became all brisk efficiency once the printer had disgorged the documents she wanted. She pushed two ink pens and the printed statements in their direction.

  “Review these, please, and make any changes you feel necessary.”

  The reports were lengthy and correct. Delacroix was relieved that neither Sarah nor Dev had any changes, but consciously did her duty.

  “Are you sure, mademoiselle? With that nasty bruise, we could add assault to the kidnapping charge.”

  Sarah fingered her cheek. Much as she’d like to double the case against Lefèvre, he hadn’t directly caused the injury.

  “I’m sure.”

  “Very well. Sign here, please, and here.”

  She did as instructed and laid down her pen. “You said you were going to talk to the prosecuting attorney about whether we need to remain in Paris for the arraignment,” she reminded Delacroix.

  “Ah, yes. He feels your statements, the evidence we’ve collected and the confessions from Lefèvre and his associate are more than sufficient for the case against them. As long as we know how to contact you and Monsieur Hunter if necessary, you may depart Paris whenever you wish.”

  *

  Oddly, the knowledge that she could fly home at any time produced a contradictory desire in Sarah
to remain in Paris for the initiation of phase two. That, and the way Dev once again tucked her arm in his as they descended the broad staircase leading to the main exit. There was still so much of the city—her city—she wanted to share with him.

  The moment they stepped out into the weak sunshine, a blinding barrage of flashes sent Sarah stumbling back. Dismayed, she eyed the wolf pack crowding the front steps, their news vans parked at the curb behind them. While sound handlers thrust their boom mikes over the reporters’ heads, the questions flew at Sarah like bullets. She heard her name and Dev’s and Lefèvre’s and Elise Girault’s all seemingly in the same sentences.

  She ducked her chin into her scarf and started to scramble back into police headquarters to search out a side exit. Dev stood his ground, though, and with her arm tucked tight against his side, Sarah had no choice but to do the same.

  “Might as well give them what they want now,” he told her. “Maybe it’ll satisfy their appetites and send them chasing after their next victim.”

  Since most of the questions zinged at them were in French, Sarah found herself doing the translating and leaving the responding to Dev. He’d obviously fielded these kinds of rapid-fire questions before. He deftly avoided any that might impact the case against the kidnappers and confirmed only that he and Sarah were satisfied with the way the police were handling the matter.

  The questions soon veered from the official to the personal. To Sarah’s surprise, Dev shelved his instinctive dislike of the media and didn’t cut them off at the knees. His responses were concise and to the point.

  Yes, he and Lady Sarah had only recently become engaged. Yes, they’d known each other only a short time. No, they hadn’t yet set a date for the wedding.

  “Although,” he added with a sideways glance at Sarah, “her grandmother has voiced some thoughts in that regard.”

  “Speaking of the duchess,” a sharp-featured reporter commented as she thrust her mike almost in Sarah’s face, “Charlotte St. Sebastian was once the toast of Paris and New York. From all reports, she’s now penniless. Have you insisted Monsieur Hunter include provisions for her maintenance in your prenup agreement?”

  Distaste curled Sarah’s lip but she refused to give the vulture any flesh to feed on. “As my fiancé has just stated,” she said with a dismissive smile, “we’ve only recently become engaged. And what better place to celebrate that engagement than Paris, the City of Lights and Love? So now you must excuse us, as that’s what we intend to do.”

  She tugged on Dev’s arm and he took the hint. When they cleared the mob and started for the limo waiting a half block away, he gave her a curious look.

  “What was that all about?”

  She hadn’t translated the last question and would prefer not to now. Their engagement had been tumultuous enough. Despite her grandmother’s insistence on booking the Plaza, Sarah hadn’t really thought as far ahead as marriage. Certainly not as far as a prenup.

  They stopped beside the limo. The driver had the door open and waiting but Dev waved him back inside the car.

  “Give us a minute here, Andre.”

  “Oui, monsieur.”

  While the driver slid into the front seat, Dev angled Sarah to face him. Her shoulders rested against the rear door frame. Reluctantly, she tipped up her gaze to meet his.

  “You might as well tell me,” he said. “I’d rather not be blindsided by hearing whatever it was play on the five-o’clock news.”

  “The reporter wanted details on our prenup.” She hunched her shoulders, feeling awkward and embarrassed. “I told her to get stuffed.”

  His grin broke out, quick and slashing. “In your usual elegant manner, of course.”

  “Of course.”

  Still grinning, he studied her face. It must have reflected her acute discomfort because he stooped to speak to the driver.

  “We’ve decided to walk, Andre. We won’t need you anymore today.”

  When the limo eased away from the curb, he hooked Sarah’s arm through his again and steered her into the stream of pedestrians.

  “I know how prickly you are about the subject of finances, so we won’t go there until we’ve settled more important matters, like whether you’re a dog or cat person. Which are you, by the way?”

  “Dog,” she replied, relaxing for the first time that morning. “The bigger the better, although the only one we’ve ever owned was the Pomeranian that Gina brought home one day. She was eight or nine at the time and all indignant because someone had left it leashed outside a coffee shop in one-hundred-degree heat.”

  Too late she realized she might have opened the door for Dev to suggest Gina had developed kleptomaniac tendencies early. She glanced up, met his carefully neutral look and hurried on with her tale.

  “We went back and tried to find the owner, but no one would claim it. We soon found out why. Talk about biting the hand that feeds you! The nasty little beast snapped and snarled and wouldn’t let anyone pet him except Grandmama.”

  “No surprise there. The duchess has a way about her. She certainly cowed me.”

  “Right,” Sarah scoffed. “I saw how you positively quaked in her presence.”

  “I’m still quaking. Finish the story. What happened to the beast?”

  “Grandmama finally palmed him off on an acquaintance of hers. What about you?” she asked, glancing up at him again. “Do you prefer dogs or cats?”

  “Bluetick coonhounds,” he answered without hesitation. “Best hunters in the world. We had a slew of barn cats, though. My sisters were always trying to palm their litters off on friends, too.”

  Intrigued, Sarah pumped him for more details about his family. “I know you grew up on a ranch. In Nebraska, wasn’t it?”

  “New Mexico, but it was more like a hardscrabble farm than a ranch.”

  “Do your parents still work the farm?”

  “They do. They like the old place and have no desire to leave it, although they did let me make a few improvements.”

  More than a few, Sarah guessed.

  “What about your sisters?”

  He had four, she remembered, none of whom had agreed to be interviewed for the Beguile article. The feeling that their business was nobody else’s ran deep in the Hunter clan.

  “All married, all comfortable, all happy. You hungry?”

  The abrupt change of subject threw Sarah off until she saw what had captured his attention. They’d reached the Pont de l’Alma, which gave a bird’s-eye view of the glass-roofed barges docked on the north side of the Seine. One boat was obviously set for a lunch cruise. Its linen-draped tables were set with gleaming silver and crystal.

  “Have you ever taken one of these Seine river cruises?” Dev asked.

  “No.”

  “Why not?”

  “They’re, uh, a little touristy.”

  “This is Paris. Everyone’s a tourist, even the Parisians.”

  “Good God, don’t let a native hear you say that!”

  “What do you say? Want to mingle with the masses for a few hours?”

  She threw a glance at a tour bus disgorging its load of passengers and swallowed her doubts.

  “I’m game if you are.”

  He steered her to the steps that led down to the quay. Sarah fully expected them to be turned away at the ticket office. While a good number of boats cruised the Seine, picking up or letting off passengers at various stops, tour agencies tended to book these lunch and dinner cruises for large groups months in advance.

  Whatever Dev said—or paid—at the ticket booth not only got them on the boat, it garnered a prime table for two beside the window. Their server introduced herself and filled their aperitif glasses with kir. A smile in his eyes, Dev raised his glass.

  “To us.”

  “To us,” Sarah echoed softly.

  The cocktail went down with velvet smoothness. She savored the intertwined flavors while Dev gave his glass a respectful glance.

  “What’s in this?”

&
nbsp; “Crème de cassis—black-currant liqueur—topped with white wine. It’s named for Félix Kir, the mayor of Dijon, who popularized the drink after World War II.”

  “Well, it doesn’t have the same wallop as your grandmother’s Žuta Osa but it’s good.”

  “’Scuse me.”

  The interruption came from the fortyish brunette at the next table. She beamed Sarah a friendly smile.

  “Y’all are Americans, aren’t you?”

  “Yes, we are.”

  “So are we. We’re the Parkers. Evelyn and Duane Parker, from Mobile.”

  Sarah hesitated. She hated to be rude, but Evelyn’s leopard-print Versace jacket and jewel-toed boots indicated she kept up with the latest styles. If she read Beguile, she would probably recognize Number Three from the Sexiest Singles article. Or from the recent news coverage.

  Dev solved her dilemma by gesturing to the cell phone Evelyn clutched in one hand. “I’m Dev and this is my fiancée, Sarah. Would you like me to take a picture of you and your husband?”

  “Please. And I’ll do one of y’all.”

  The accordion player began strolling the aisle while cell phones were still being exchanged and photos posed for. When he broke into a beautiful baritone, all conversation on the boat ceased and Sarah breathed easy again.

  Moments later, they pulled away from the dock and glided under the first of a dozen or more bridges yet to come. Meal service began then. Sarah wasn’t surprised at the quality of the food. This was Paris, after all. She and Dev sampled each of the starters: foie gras on a toasted baguette; Provençal smoked salmon and shallots; duck magret salad with cubes of crusty goat cheese; tiny vegetable egg rolls fried to a pale golden brown. Sarah chose honey-and-sesame-seed pork tenderloin for her main dish. Dev went with the veal blanquette. With each course, their server poured a different wine. Crisp, chilled whites. Medium reds. Brandy with the rum baba they each selected for dessert.

  Meanwhile, Paris’s most famous monuments were framed in the windows. The Louvre. La Conciergerie. Notre Dame. The Eiffel Tower.

  The boat made a U-turn while Sarah and Dev lingered over coffee, sharing more of their pasts. She listened wide-eyed to the stories Dev told of his Air Force days. She suspected he edited them to minimize the danger and maximize the role played by others on his crew. Still, the war-torn countries he’d flown into and the horrific disasters he’d helped provide lifesaving relief for made her world seem frivolous by comparison.

 

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