by Lucy Gordon;Sarah Morgan;Robyn Donald;Lucy Monroe;Lee Wilkinson;Kate Walker
The Devil’s Bargain
Robyn Donald
Robyn Donald can’t remember not being able to read and will be eternally grateful to the local farmers who carefully avoided her on a dusty country road as she read her way to and from school, transported to places and times far away from her small village in Northland, New Zealand. Growing up fed her habit; as well as training as a teacher, marrying and raising two children, she discovered the delights of romances and read them voraciously, especially enjoying the ones written by New Zealand writers. So much so, that one day she decided to write one herself. Writing soon grew to be as much of a delight as reading – although infinitely more challenging – and when eventually her first book was accepted by Mills & Boon she felt she’d arrived home. She still lives in a small town in Northland with her family close by, using the landscape as a setting for much of her work. Her life is enriched by the friends she’s made among writers and readers and complicated by a determined corgi called Buster, who is convinced that blackbirds are evil entities. Her greatest hobby is still reading, with travelling a very close second.
Don’t miss your next great read from Robyn Donald!
Brooding Billionaire, Impoverished Princess is available in April 2010.
Prologue
SHE huddled out on the tiny ornamental balcony, unable to move, unable to force the hands covering her face to block her ears. Darkness and the chill of an autumn evening in New Zealand pressed onto her, but the slow shivers that shook her slender body came from her heart.
Echoes of her father’s words tumbled around her head, monstrous, shameful. ‘Come to some agreement with me and you can have Hope,’ he’d said, as though his daughter were a stock option. ‘Try a hostile takeover, and you can say goodbye to any chance with her.’ His voice had altered. ‘If I forbid her to go out with you, she’ll obey. You can bet money on that.’
Humiliation swept over the listener in disgusting waves as she waited for Keir’s scornful response.
But when his voice came it was almost amused. ‘What makes you think I want to marry Hope? I can see the advantage for you, but what’s in it for me?’
Hope moaned silently as her father gave a disbelieving laugh. ‘Come on, Carmichael, you want her—you’ve been escorting her for the past two months. Men of your stamp don’t sleep with kids—your other women have known what they were doing, whereas Hope’s a complete innocent. So it’s got to be marriage. Makes sense—she’d be a good, docile wife, and she knows everyone who’s anyone in New Zealand. And she gets everything when I die.’
There was a long silence. Tension screwed through Hope, tightening into pain as she held her breath.
Eventually Keir said in a reflective voice, ‘All right, let’s deal.’
Hope’s heart missed a couple of beats; desperately she longed for it stop so she could die. But it began again, relentlessly forcing her to participate in the degradation of all her fragile, precious hopes.
Her father said heartily, ‘Marry her, and you’ll get the firm without this undignified fight for it. I’ll sign it over to you legally; all I want is to run it until I’m ready to retire.’ He paused significantly, before continuing in deliberately weighted words, ‘Otherwise you’re going to have a fight on your hands. I know a lot of tricks and some very important people; if I have to, I’ll drag your little merchant bank down into the gutter.’
Locked in a nightmare, Hope pressed her closed fist against her mouth, forcing back the choked agony that lodged there.
Perhaps it was a nightmare—perhaps she was dreaming this…
Keir’s icy, contemptuous voice shattered that illusion. ‘Offering a daughter as a sacrifice to stave off ruin died out a couple of hundred years ago. Why would I want an eighteen-year-old wife? Try all your tricks, call up as many debts and favours as you can, but I’ll take over your business one way or another.’
There was a charged silence.
‘All right,’ her father said sullenly, ‘forget marriage. You want her—take her, then. She’s pretty enough, God knows, to keep you happy until you get tired of her.’
‘You want to sell her to me?’ Keir sounded coolly incredulous—but not, the listener realised with a despairing sob, either surprised or disgusted. ‘You must be desperate. Apart from anything else, she might have other ideas.’
A note she recognised hardened her father’s voice as he said, ‘She’ll do as she’s told.’
‘You know the trick?’ Keir sounded amused.
Frozen, sick to her soul, Hope felt her heart crack as she waited for the man she loved to reject her father’s obscene offer.
‘I know the trick,’ James Sanderson said, something like a gloating pleasure showing through his tone.
‘She’s pretty and sweet and charming enough,’ Keir agreed thoughtfully. ‘Unfortunately I don’t have time to teach an innocent all the things a woman needs to know to keep a man satisfied. I expect my money’s worth from the women I support, and Hope doesn’t know the first thing about sensuality. Besides, as you say, she’s besotted. I could have had her any time this last month, just by snapping my fingers.’
Another long silence. Then her father said in a low, furious voice, ‘I see. You’ve been playing a double game all along—trotting her out so that you can pump her about me.’
‘Why else would I take out a child straight from school? Not that she was particularly profitable—she doesn’t know anything about your business.’ His voice changed into hard ruthlessness. ‘Accept it, Sanderson, you’re in an untenable position. Your business is going down the drain because you’re a greedy fool who hasn’t bothered to adapt over the past forty years. If you want to deal, make it something that works for me as well as you. Otherwise you’re wasting my time.’
At long last Hope managed to wrench her hands up to cover her ears, to block out betrayal. Through the roaring in her head she heard her heart break.
Chapter One
KEIR CARMICHAEL?
‘Thank you, madam.’ Hope waited until the customer began to sign the credit card slip before letting her amber-gold gaze drift furtively the length of the shop to the man waiting inside the door—if waiting it could be called when his impatience iced the interior of the glitzy shop.
It was Keir Carmichael.
Blinking, Hope jerked her attention back to the counter, but in spite of herself she sneaked another glance at Keir, now frowning at an ornate diamond necklace that made up in tastelessness what it lacked in beauty.
Outside in the bright Australian sunlight people in holiday mood called out and waved, their voices lifting into laughter—an ironic background to the panic that kicked her in the stomach. In spite of clothes crafted for him by a master tailor there was nothing elegantly refined about Keir. Six foot three of broad-shouldered, long-legged, lean-hipped masculinity, he projected raw, uncompromising dominance.
‘There you are.’ The customer’s patrician accent didn’t hide her impatience, or the trace of New Zealand beneath the vowels.
‘Thank you.’ Forcing the words past her constricted throat, Hope pushed the platinum credit card back across the counter.
Slender, pampered fingers picked it up and stowed it into an expensive leather billfold which was then slid into a Prada bag. No rings, Hope noted compulsively. So the woman who’d bought the clever goanna clip, its sinuous lines perfect for a lapel or a scarf, wasn’t married to—anyone.
Matching Hope’s smile, the woman took the small parcel and turned towards the door. When she reached Keir she said in a voice just loud enough for Hope to hear, ‘There, that didn’t take long, did it?’
The man she’d kept waiting gave her a cool, considering look. Hope controlled the curl of her lip, but perhaps he sensed her scorn because he lifted his head abruptly and flicked a glance her way.
It was like being lashed by hailstones. Although Keir Carmichael was dark—sable hair, black brows and lashes, olive skin—his eyes blazed the frigid, colourless grey of the sky on
a frosty dawn; they swept her face with a biting indifference that ached right down to her bones.
He really didn’t recognise her. Instead of overpowering relief she felt shattered, hollowed out by tension and a bitter, furious disappointment.
Killing her first response—a glare—Hope set her lips into a stiff little smile. One of Keir’s dark brows lifted in a movement as insulting as it was deliberate before he turned and walked out the door, the woman clinging happily to his arm.
Hope’s breath hissed through her teeth. You don’t have to run from him ever again, she told herself, trying to rein in her crazy pulse by putting away the exquisitely made pins, each one worth more than she’d earn in a month. Her long fingers shook as she replaced the gold koala with smoky Argyle diamonds for eyes, a sterling silver cluster of gumnuts, a spray of wildflowers in the subtly hued sapphires of southern Queensland—frivolous, costly toys a rich man might buy his mistress or wife as a souvenir.
Keir Carmichael turning up on the morning of her twentythird birthday—oh, what a dirty, cynical little trick for fate to play! Yet Hope was humiliatingly glad she’d worn a creamy silk blouse that set off her skin, and a black skirt short enough to reveal excellent legs.
‘Ah…miss?’ Sweating slightly, a young man accosted her with a tentative smile, his blond hair tangled around deeply tanned shoulders. Eyeing her with an assumed cockiness that didn’t hide his lack of confidence, he visibly relaxed in the warmth of her smile. ‘That necklace in the window—the pearl beads—how much are they?’
‘They’re not beads,’ Hope warned him gently. ‘I’m afraid they’re the real thing.’ She told him the price.
Blenching, he muttered, ‘Out of my range. Thank you.’
Outside in the street a girl stared at the pearls, sunbleached hair almost hiding her yearning eyes.
Hope said, ‘Would your friend like to try them on?’
‘I can’t afford them,’ he said, backing away.
Hope grinned. ‘So? Memories don’t have to cost anything.’
He frowned, then gave a quick nod and loped through the doors into the blazing sunlight. As the girl looked up eagerly Hope felt an odd little catch of pain. Had she ever been that young? Never, not even as a child.
Chloe, the other shop assistant, commented in a low voice, ‘Those kids can’t even afford the dust on the floor here.’
‘She’ll always remember what she looked like in them.’ Hope took the cabinet key from beneath the counter. ‘And one day she might become a tycoon and make a sentimental pilgrimage here to buy some.’
‘She’s not tycoon material if she goes around with surfies,’ Chloe responded with sour pessimism.
The two youngsters came in and Hope went over to unlock the window case. With the shimmering rope of moonlight in her hands she turned—and met the frozen glance of the man who had so comprehensively snubbed her only a few minutes previously.
Except that now the aloof indifference in his eyes had been replaced by speculation.
Terror stabbed through her—stupid, baseless terror, because she was no longer a foolish, romantic adolescent drowning in the throes of her first love affair.
Pinning her rescued smile more tightly to her lips, she took the pearls to the counter. Over the shuddering tattoo of her heartbeats she murmured, ‘Here you are,’ and laid the pearls onto a pad of black velvet. ‘They’re called Broome blues because they come from Broome in Western Australia and they have a faint bluish sheen. Let’s see how they look on you.’
Five endless minutes later, after the girl had gazed at her reflection with a solemn, almost bewildered awe, the two kids smiled at Hope and said together, ‘Thanks a lot.’ Laughing at each other, they linked little fingers and walked out of the shop and into the sunlight outside, young, carefree, confidently in love—enviable.
‘Could you bring those here, please?’ Chloe’s abrupt request forced Hope to turn.
Stiff-backed, her expression rigidly controlled, she walked across the shop floor with the heavy, warm pearls in her hand. Keir watched her with hooded, unreadable eyes, no recognition relaxing his hard, authoritative face or softening the mouth that had once possessed hers in a dark, mindless enchantment.
‘Mr Carmichael would like to see the pearl string,’ Chloe said, looking from one to the other. ‘Perhaps you could show him?’
With elaborate care Hope set the necklace down. Crisply, keeping her eyes on the pearls, she said, ‘They’re a matched string, sir. They’ve taken over ten years to find, and—’
‘I’d like to see them on,’ he interrupted.
Four years ago he’d been twenty-six, and well aware of the impact of his low, textured voice, its confidence emphasised by a thread of sensuality that charged it with untamed danger, like the glimpse of a wolf in an arctic landscape. Now that potent male sexuality was underpinned by an authority as relentless as a blizzard.
The harshly angular framework of his face proclaimed a man in complete control of himself and the kingdom he’d carved out, a man whose ruthlessness made him feared as well as respected.
‘On?’ The word splintered in Hope’s mouth.
‘Yes.’ Keir flicked another of those icy glances at Chloe, waiting until she moved discreetly away before transferring his crystalline gaze back to Hope. ‘Put them on.’
Everything in her rose up in outraged rebellion at the unemphatic command. For a furiously reckless moment she toyed with the idea of flinging the pearls at him and telling him to try them on himself; fortunately, common sense shrieked a warning.
When she’d been three she’d climbed up on the kitchen steps, opened the lid of the deep freeze and reached into its forbidden depths; discovering her there, her father had deliberately pressed her small, starfish hand against the side, holding it in place until ice burned the skin.
The same powerlessness and bewilderment and outrage imprisoned her now. Dry-mouthed, as shamed as though she’d been ordered to strip, she picked up the string with shaky hands and ignored the catch to drop them over her head. Her breath locked in her lungs as she met his eyes with a steady, stony stare.
In an indifferent tone Keir said, ‘They’re the wrong shade. You need pearls with a touch of warmth to go with that skin and hair.’
A terrifying sensual heat—relic of the time when the slightest look from this man had stirred her body to turmoil—warred with anger and pride. Returning the string to the velvet pad, she said curtly, ‘Pearls need to be tried on by the woman you plan to buy them for.’
‘Thank you,’ he said, and added, ‘Hope.’
Her heart gave an enormous thump. After a shocked second she lifted her lashes and strove for an ironic note, settling instead for deadpan calmness. ‘You always were good at mind games, Keir, but what was the purpose of this one?’
‘You pretended not to recognise me.’
He waited with devastating courtesy while she discarded meaningless responses. After a moment that stretched tautly into discomfort, he finished, ‘So who was playing the game, Hope?’
His gaze moved with leisurely thoroughness across her face, took in the long, slender line of her throat and the swell of her breasts below the cream silk.
It was a purely male assessment, appreciative and primally charged. To her intense chagrin Hope’s body responded with a wild urgency so that she had to stiffen her disintegrating spine as her fingers clenched onto the black velvet pad.
Jerking her hands from the counter, she hid them behind her. ‘I thought you might not want to be recognised,’ she said, hoping she sounded worldly and sophisticated. She added, ‘You might be on a—private—holiday.’
A smile—equivocal, enigmatic—lifted the corners of his mouth. ‘You can do better than that. Why wouldn’t I want to be recognised by a beautiful woman?’
Hope sent desperate thought-waves at the other assistant, but with studious detachment Chloe went on tidying gold chains.
Outside people and cars eased down the narrow street and a warm w
ind rustled the palms. Inside it was so quiet Hope could hear the blood quicken through her body, the taut urgency of instinct warning her to get out of there.
Keir said, ‘You’ve changed, of course. That rather touching childish fairness has mellowed into a sunlit beauty—your hair’s the smoky, dusky gold of manuka honey, almost the same colour as your eyes.’ Once more he subjected her to a slow, sensually loaded scrutiny, and once more her body hummed in blind, mindless, humiliating response.
‘You’ve changed, too,’ she said crisply.
His smile dismissed this. ‘Four years ago you were lovely, Hope, but now you glow. Even your skin is like pale honey-coloured silk. Perhaps it’s the Australian sun. Or is it a man?’
The question—delivered without inflection—slid so smoothly through her defences that she answered without thinking, ‘No.’ No men, ever; somehow Keir had killed the normal responses in her, imprinted her so that she froze when any other man touched her.
Perhaps because she’d been so young when she’d fallen in love—perhaps because that love had been cruelly betrayed—she’d been programmed to find only arrogantly angular features sexy, to thrill only when ice-coloured eyes met hers, to want only a tall man with broad shoulders and long legs and an effortless, formidable air of command.
‘Do you plan to live in Noosa permanently?’
‘As long as I work here.’ Did the cool, almost amused tone successfully disguise her churning emotions? ‘I assume you are on holiday?’
‘For a week. We must get together and catch up on the past four years.’ Ice-clear eyes examined her face with the keen concentration of a diamond cutter about to tap a stone worth a million dollars.
Hope’s heart lurched, missed several beats, then struggled into an uneven canter. Why, oh, why hadn’t she chosen to work in a busy café? Here, in this calm, quiet shop, she was a sitting duck. Chloe wasn’t going to come near her, and even if her boss looked in he’d assume she was selling the pearls and leave her to it.