Summer Sins
Page 18
Love you heaps!
CHAPTER ONE
‘MARRIED?’ JASPER CAULFIELD almost choked on the word. ‘Are you out of your cotton-picking mind?’
Duncan Brocklehurst gave his client an empathetic look. ‘I guess it’s your father’s way of still exerting control from the other side of the grave.’
Jasper’s dark brows snapped together irritably. ‘You mean there’s no way out of it?’
The lawyer shook his head. ‘I’m afraid not, Jasper. If you want the Crickglades estate you’re going to have to fulfil the terms of the old man’s will, and soon, otherwise the whole lot is going to your brother Raymond.’
Jasper sprang to his feet and began to pace the room in agitation. ‘This is totally outrageous. Raymond’s a priest for God’s sake. What’s he going to do with a place the size of Crickglades?’
‘Look, it might not be so bad,’ Duncan consoled him. ‘All you have to do is convince Hayley Addington to be your wife and live with her for a month and the place is yours.’
Jasper turned around to glare at him. ‘Hayley Addington? Are you completely nuts? Even if I was the marrying type, which I’m very definitely not, she’s practically the last woman I would consider tying myself to, even temporarily. Besides, she hates my guts.’
‘Which is probably why Gerald constructed his will this way,’ Duncan pointed out. ‘But for all that it does seem a rather strange caveat.’
‘Strange?’ Jasper gave an incredulous snort. ‘It’s bloody ridiculous, that’s what it is. Who on earth gets married for a month?’
‘I know it’s unusual but I’d think about it very seriously if I were you,’ Duncan said. ‘This is a property developer’s dream. The land is worth a fortune in terms of redevelopment. Surely it’s worth putting up with a short term marriage?’
Jasper blew out a breath as he sat back down. He had his own reasons for wanting Crickglades—and he was damned well going to make sure he got what he wanted. He scraped a hand through his thick black hair before fixing his gaze on the document on the desk as if it were something poisonous. ‘So how am I going to convince Hayley to marry me?’
Duncan chuckled with amusement. ‘You are such a comedian.’ He leaned back in his chair, still grinning. ‘Why not use some of that lethal charm you’re so well known for? You have a veritable drove of adoring women following you about all the time if what’s reported in the press is to be believed.’
Jasper rolled his eyes. ‘Yeah, well, it’s going to take a lot more than charm to get Hayley to agree with this. Anyway, what does she get out of the deal? I was under the impression she’d sweet talked him into leaving her the lot. Did the old guy change his mind at the last minute?’
‘His previous will had been pretty straightforward but he drew up a new one a few days before he died.’ Duncan’s eyes flicked back to the legal papers in front of him. ‘This time around she gets a lump sum from Gerald’s estate, but only if she marries you and lives with you for the month as stated.’
‘How much is the lump sum?’
Duncan told him an amount that made Jasper’s dark brows shoot upwards. ‘That much, huh?’
‘Yep,’ Duncan said. ‘A nice little carrot, if you ask me.’
Jasper’s expression twisted cynically. ‘It wouldn’t matter what size carrot my father had organised, she’d never agree to marry me,’ he said, his frown deepening. ‘What was the old man thinking of?’
‘I don’t know, but your father insisted no money must change hands between you. You can’t pay Hayley to be your wife. And no pre-nup either.’
Jasper jerked upright in his chair. ‘What?’
Duncan pushed the document across the desk for him to inspect the fine print. ‘There it is in black and white. No pre-nuptial agreement.’
‘That’s just financial suicide!’ Jasper raged. ‘This is total madness, especially when you consider what happened to my father when Hayley’s bitch of a mother Eva stripped him of half his assets. Come on, surely there’s a way around this?’
Duncan shook his head. ‘Sorry, Jasper. Your father has tied this up so neatly it would take more than Houdini to get out of it. You really have no choice but to do as it says. Get Hayley Addington to be your wife, then hope and pray she doesn’t still hate you at the end of the month and take you to the cleaners.’
Jasper rubbed at his jaw for a moment. ‘Does she know the details of the will?’
‘I met with her yesterday.’
‘And?’
Duncan gave him a sober look. ‘You’ve got yourself one hell of a challenge on your hands, Jasper,’ he said. ‘Not only does she hate you to hell and back, she’s currently engaged to another man.’
Jasper felt as if someone had punched him in the midsection. ‘Engaged?’
Duncan nodded. ‘You’ll have to work quickly as she plans to get married some time next month.’
Jasper’s one short, sharp curse cut the air like a knife.
Hayley engaged? How did that happen without him finding out about it? Not that it was any of his business, of course, but then again …
‘She mentioned to me you hadn’t gone to the funeral,’ Duncan interrupted Jasper’s wandering thoughts.
His eyes moved away from the lawyer’s to look at the array of graduation certificates on the wall. ‘I didn’t make it back in time,’ he said in a flat emotionless tone, which he hoped belied the truth of what he was feeling. ‘I was overseas on business.’
‘She wasn’t too happy about it, I might add,’ Duncan went on. ‘She was under the impression you were cavorting in the Caribbean with Collette or Claudia or whatever your current girlfriend’s name is.’
Jasper turned back to look at him. ‘Her name is Candice and she’s no longer current.’
‘Just as well, then,’ Duncan said in a pragmatic tone. ‘So when was the last time you saw Hayley?’
‘A few years ago at one of my father’s fund-raising garden parties for Raymond’s parish, I think,’ he said, inwardly wincing as the memory returned. ‘I made some comment about the outfit she was wearing and she threw her drink in my face. It ruined a brand-new designer shirt, I might add.’
‘Charming.’
‘Yeah, that’s Hayley, all right,’ Jasper said with a curl of his lip. ‘But it’s a pity my father couldn’t see what a little cat she was. You’d have thought he would have learned from his experience with her sluttish mother, but no—he thought Hayley was different. He thought the sun shone out of her blue-green eyes. God, it used to make me sick the way she sucked up to him all the time.’
‘You never know, she might have changed for the better,’ Duncan said. ‘She seemed all right to me when I met her yesterday. I thought she was rather sweet, actually.’
Jasper grunted. ‘You spent an hour with her. I supposedly have to spend a bloody month with her.’
‘That’s if you can convince her to marry you instead of Myles Lederman,’ Duncan reminded him.
‘Myles Lederman, eh?’ Jasper rubbed his chin thoughtfully. ‘My brother Raymond is right,’ he said with a glinting smile. ‘There must be a god after all.’
‘You know this Lederman fellow?’ Duncan asked.
‘We’ve crossed paths a couple of times.’
‘Yes, well, I still think you’ve got a bit of a fight on your hands even if you do have some convenient connections,’ Duncan said.
Jasper got to his feet and gave the lawyer a determined look as he reached for the door. ‘If I have to drag Hayley kicking and screaming to the altar I’ll damn well do it. You just watch me.’
‘Your next client is here,’ Lucy informed Hayley as she poked her head around the facial room door.
‘Thanks, Lucy,’ Hayley said as she straightened the covers on the treatment table. ‘I’ll be out in a second to get her.’
‘Erm …’ Lucy cleared her throat. ‘It’s not a her—it’s a him. A rather gorgeous him too, I might add.’
Hayley turned around with a frown. ‘But Mrs
Fairbright always comes in at this time for her eyebrow tint. Did she cancel at the last minute?’
‘Must have,’ Lucy said. ‘Anyway I’m sure you won’t be disappointed in her replacement. God, I wish I could wax his chest or whatever it is he wants done.’
‘What does he want done?’
Lucy shrugged. ‘I don’t know. I didn’t look at the appointment book. He just said he had an appointment at three p.m. with you. He was quite adamant about it, actually.’
‘Then if I’m the one he wants, then that’s who he’s going to get,’ Hayley said with pride, and began quoting her brand new mission statement. ‘That’s what Bayside Best for Beauty is all about: giving our clients, both male and female, a truly memorable beauty therapy experience.’
She smoothed down her smart pink and white uniform and pasted a bright smile on her face as she went out to Reception, only to come up short when a tall figure unfolded himself from one of the suede-covered chairs.
‘You!’ she gasped in shock.
‘Nice to see you too, Hayley,’ Jasper drawled. ‘How’s tricks?’
She clenched her teeth and stamped her foot. ‘Get out of my salon. Now.’
He rocked back on his heels in an indolent manner as he looked around the plush reception area of the salon. ‘Your salon, huh?’ He whistled through his teeth and brought his dark brown eyes back to her flashing blue-green ones. ‘What a pity you won’t be able to keep it.’
She looked at him through narrowed eyes. ‘What did you say?’
He smiled one of his lazy smiles. ‘I’ve just purchased some real estate on this block. It was an absolute bargain. A steal, you could say.’
She felt a sudden chugging in her chest as if her heart were trying to decide whether to beat harder or stop altogether. ‘So?’
‘So …’ he said, deliberately pausing over the word, ‘as of today I am your new landlord.’
Hayley gaped at him. ‘But … but that’s impossible!’
He folded his arms across his broad chest, his dark gaze gleaming with satisfaction. ‘The legal work was finalised this morning,’ he said. ‘That’s why I am here.’
The front door pinged cheerily as another client came in. Hayley gave the woman a quick smile of greeting and mumbled something about Lucy attending to her shortly, before she turned back to Jasper. ‘We can’t discuss this out here,’ she said in a stiff undertone. ‘You’d better come to my office out the back.’
She led the way on leaden legs, her stomach feeling as if someone were twisting her insides into hard little knots. Every time she saw Jasper Caulfield she felt anger charging through her system like high voltage electricity. She hadn’t seen him in three years and yet nothing had changed.
She still hated him with a vengeance.
She pushed open her office door and took refuge behind her desk, but it wasn’t much of a barrier. As soon as he came in the room it seemed to shrink to half its size, and when he took the chair opposite she felt the brush of his long legs against hers under the desk. She clamped her thighs together and hastily repositioned her legs as she sent him another gimlet glare.
‘I suppose you’re going to charge me an outrageous rent or something,’ she bit out resentfully.
‘That depends,’ he said, his dark inscrutable eyes running over her taut features.
‘On what?’
‘Your cooperation.’
She grasped the edge of the desk with both hands. ‘Why don’t you get straight to the point?’ she asked. ‘If you’re here to try and intimidate me, then you can leave right now. It won’t work.’
‘Actually I’m here on another matter.’
‘Oh?’ She gave him a scornful look. ‘So you want a deluxe facial after all, do you?’
‘I want you to be my wife.’
Hayley blinked at him. ‘Your what?’
‘I want you to marry me,’ he said, his darker-than-night gaze still holding hers.
‘You have got to be joking.’
‘I’m not.’
She got to her feet and slammed her chair back into the desk. ‘How dare you come here and waste my time?’ she railed at him. ‘I know it’s a hackneyed cliché, but I told Gerald’s lawyer yesterday I wouldn’t marry you if you were the last man on earth and you damn well know it.’
‘Don’t tell me I have to eradicate every other man on earth to see if you’re really telling the truth,’ he remarked dryly.
She blew out a furious breath and pointed to the door with a rigid arm. ‘Get out!’
He leaned back in his chair and crossed one ankle over his knee, his casual pose infuriating her even further.
‘Make me,’ he said.
Hayley felt a fluttery sensation in the pit of her stomach at the glinting challenge in his eyes. Her heart began to thump erratically and her legs were quivering and shaking as if they had just run a marathon without the benefit of training. Being in Jasper Caulfield’s presence always had that effect on her. She didn’t understand how someone she hated so much could make her feel so angry and yet so nervous and unsure of herself at the same time.
‘I’m going to ask you one more time to leave and then I’m going to call the police,’ she said, trying to make her voice sound firm.
He got to his feet and came to stand right in front of her. She took a step backwards but her office was too small for it to make much difference.
‘G-get away from me,’ she said with an edge of desperation in her voice.
He took another step, his eyes locking on hers. ‘What are you frightened of, Hayley?’ he asked. ‘That I might kiss you like you begged me to all those years ago?’
She clenched her teeth, her face flaming with remembered shame of her one lapse of self-control. ‘You wouldn’t dare.’
‘Oh, I dare all right,’ he said smoothly, reaching out to capture a lock of her dark curly hair and slowly coiling it around his finger.
Hayley swallowed as the hairs on her scalp responded to the tether of his touch, her stomach folding over itself as his chest moved close enough to brush against her breasts. She was deeply ashamed of how her body responded to the closeness of his. She could feel the subtle tightening of her nipples against the lace of her bra, her body weakening as a silky ribbon of traitorous desire began to unfurl deep inside her.
‘Aren’t you f-forgetting something?’ she asked somewhat breathlessly. ‘I’m already engaged to be married.’
‘Call it off.’
‘No, I will not call it off!’
‘He’s having an affair, you know,’ he said.
‘That’s a slanderous lie!’
‘I have proof.’
‘I don’t believe you,’ she said, but the niggling doubts she had been pushing away for the last few days began to nudge her yet again.
‘I have photos if you want to see them,’ he said into the silence. ‘Her name is Serena Wiltshire. Tall, leggy blonde, big boobs and a killer smile.’
Hayley felt a wave of nausea flow over her. How could Myles have done this to her? They were getting married next month. She’d just paid for the honeymoon during her lunch break. He’d told her he loved her. He was the first man in fact who had ever done so. He had promised her the world, marriage and babies and a house in a harbourside suburb.
Security.
And she loved him.
Of course she loved him; she shoved the creeping doubt back beneath the bolted door inside her head.
‘So how about it, Hayley?’ Jasper said, his breath whispering over the surface of her lips. ‘Do you fancy being my wife for a month?’
‘I can’t think of anything worse,’ she scratched out.
His dark eyes twinkled. ‘I don’t know about that,’ he said. ‘What if I took your salon away from you? Wouldn’t that be far worse?’
‘You wouldn’t d—’
He blocked the rest of her sentence with the warm pad of his index finger on the soft cushion of her lips. ‘Oh, I dare all right,’ he repeated his previous w
ords with chilling determination. ‘You just watch me, sweetheart.’
Hayley gulped back her rising panic. She was only just managing to meet the rent now; how much worse would it be if he decided to charge her an exorbitant sum? The business loan she’d taken out recently for the refurbishment of the salon had stretched her to the limit, and, although the salon was doing well, any extra financial pressure right now would be nothing short of disastrous.
‘When you think about it, Hayley, this is a perfect chance for you to get revenge on your cheating fiancé,’ he said, dropping his hand from her mouth. ‘Tell Lederman you’ve fallen in love with me. It will really get to him that you’ve chosen me over him.’
‘No one would ever believe me if I told them I was in love with you,’ she said, injecting her tone with scorn even as her lips continued to buzz with the sensation of his touch. ‘They’ll think I was marrying you for your money.’
‘I guess we’ll both have to brush up on our acting skills,’ he returned. ‘You’re not exactly the woman of my dreams either. I wouldn’t go as far as saying you’re the last woman on the earth and all that, but you’re way down on that list somewhere.’
She glared up at him. ‘I see you failed the entrance exam to charm school again.’
He laughed and stepped back from her, the deep rich sound sending a shock wave of reaction through her stomach.
She watched as he wandered over to her desk and picked up a recent photo of his father she had taken a few days before he died. He stood looking down at it for a long time before he put it back on the desk, his expression when he turned to face her once more devoid of emotion.
‘I’ll give you a call in a couple of days,’ he said. ‘In the meantime don’t do anything I wouldn’t do.’
She gave a cynical little grunt. ‘That certainly leaves the field wild open. It seems to me there’s very little you wouldn’t do to get your own way.’
He blew her a kiss across the flat of his extended palm. ‘Love you too, Hayley.’
Hayley felt a tiny shiver of apprehension run up her spine as the door closed on his exit. There was something about Jasper Caulfield that had always signalled danger. She had never felt entirely safe around him in all the years she’d known him.