Authors: Amanda Carpenter
while she laughed, pondered, expostulated, and tripped through every
other mood he inspired, he always kept her guessing.
Soon it was time to change for the theatre, and after agreeing upon a
system in which the girls shared the bathroom off Matthew's
bedroom, and the men shared the other bath in the hall, they
dispersed to their various rooms.
Sian savoured the privacy of the study as she drew a dark grey dress
from her case. It was very plain, made of an uncrushable jersey that
looked good no matter how she abused it. It moulded to the figure
with length at mid-thigh, was sleeveless and had a scooped neck and
padded shoulders. It looked severe and sexy, and almost conventional
until one caught a glimpse of the backless plunge to the waist. She
could not wear a bra with it, of course, but then she didn't need one,
for her breasts were high, rounded and firm.
The scrapes along' her back were almost healed, but faint marks still
remained. Sian covered them with a black long-sleeved, silk turtle-
neck that was so transparently sheer that every draught of air wafted
through and the lines of her arms and back were clearly visible, yet
sheathed.
The dress went over the turtle-neck, then she drew on black silk
tights, slipped her feet into the patent leather pumps that elongated
her legs, and fastened at her narrow waist a wide black belt that came
just under the edge of the dress line at her back. Then she brushed her
sleek hair until it shone and clipped it at the nape of her neck with a
plain black, extravagantly feminine bow, and, with make-up applied
to emphasise her large eyes, cheekbones and a touch of red lipstick,
she finally pronounced herself ready.
The evening would still be warm outside the comfortable air-
conditioned coolness of the condominium, so she didn't bother with a
jacket and retrieved her bag from the leather settee as she exited the
study.
The men were already dressed and waiting in the living- room,
formalised by their light summer-weight suits. Sian smiled to herself
as the male conversation hesitated briefly at her entrance, and even
Steven, who was very much in love with Jane, gave pause.
But Matthew hardly looked at her. He said briefly, 'Would you like
some wine, or another glass of lemonade?'
'Wine, please, if it isn't any trouble,' she replied. It was only as she
veiled the disappointment in her green eyes with dark lashes that she
realised she had dressed with such care for him, and he showed no
reaction at all, was even brief to the point of rudeness.
'Not at all, we'd just -'
She turned away to put her bag on the arm of a chair and exposed the
graceful hour-glass curve of her cream and midnight-sheathed back
to view.
If there had been a pause before, now there was dead silence. She
looked around her shoulder with a slight frown. 'You'd just what?'
Joshua and Steven were staring in frank admiration. Matthew,
however, had turned away and busied himself at the drinks cabinet by
the wall, so his reply was muffled. "We'd just opened a bottle while
we were waiting.'
'Sian, you look exquisite,' said Joshua simply.
She forced herself to smile at him. 'Thank you.'
Matt's expression, when presented again to the group, was composed
to the point of being deadpan. In high, volatile contrast were his
glittering eyes, in which the lambent flecks of blue and green were
very pronounced. With the thick tawny length of his hair combed
under severe control and the fresh change to a grey suit much lighter
than Sian's dress, he looked urbane, sophisticated and heart-
stoppingly sexy.
It wasn't fair, she had time to think despairingly, as he crossed the
room with a wine glass in each hand. Just the sight of him was
enough to send her weak at the knees, while he revealed absolutely
no reaction to her whatsoever.
As he came up to her, Jane entered the room and immediately
wandered over to Steven and Joshua to coax a glass of wine for
herself. Sian reached for the glass that Matt proffered, but he held on
to it too long, drawing her questioning gaze up to his.
Under the cover of the shift in movement and general noise from the
others, he said, softly mocking, 'I see the silk and leather. No lace?'
Piqued already, she had no thought for caution and gave free rein to
her own personal devil, who murmured, 'Did I say I wasn't wearing
any lace?'
His eyes shot down in lightning response to her lips and legs, for it
was obvious the only other possible item of clothing she might be
wearing that was not on display were her panties. 'Now, there's a
concept guaranteed to send a man's temperature up a few degrees.'
She took a sip of her wine and held the liquid on her tongue to savour
it, watching him over the rim as she said, 'And here I was thinking
that you didn't like the cut of my cloth.'
'Like it?' His gaze sprang back up to hers, and for one unguarded
moment flared hot and ravenous, while the set of his face was
anything but amused. He whispered hoarsely, 'It's all I can do to keep
my hands off you.'
For a suspended electric moment, they stared at each other, while
Sian's world rocked under the clear, unmistakable power of his intent
rigidity, the veneer of urbanity stripped clean away from the naked
planes and angles of his expression.
Her eyes grew huge and her breath froze in her lungs, and, in a
terrific surge of wild reaction, she didn't know if she wanted to reach
blindly for the towering strength of his shoulders, or run away in
terror.
Then he cocked his head at her, just a little, and smiled a tiny smile,
and took up again the cloak of normality he had so impetuously cast
at her feet.
Matthew said to everyone, 'We'd better leave for the theatre now. Do
you want to catch a few cabs, or would you prefer walking? It's not
far away, about a fifteen- minute stroll.'
The general chorus of reaction was that everyone would like to walk.
Nobody seemed to notice Sian's frozen immobility or her silence; she
noticed and was grateful for she was still trying to recover from what
had just happened.
She felt dizzy, concussed. The stroll to the theatre helped to clear her
head somewhat. Matt led the way, while Jane had grabbed hold of
Joshua's arm and was busy teasing him unmercifully. The pair
bobbed and weaved erratically along the pavement, while Sian and
an amused Steven brought up the rear.
She did not know how he had managed it at such short notice, but
Matt had procured excellent seats for a highly popular romantic
comedy. He presented the tickets to a woman usher who showed the
group where they were located, then he courteously stood back and
let the others file into the seats that were at the end of one row. Sian
had held back so that Jane and Steven could sit together, and as they
studied the seat numbers and compared them with the ticket stubs
Matt had handed to them, they stopped in confusion. Joshua looked
back with a frown and said, 'There's only three here.'
'It's all right,' replied Matt, who gestured carelessly. 'The other two
are over here, across the aisle. It was the best I could get on such
short notice.'
He had only voiced what Sian had thought moments before, but she
regarded him with deep suspicion, for somehow she couldn't help but
wonder if he had somehow arranged for this to happen.
Jane was watching with bright, scarcely concealed merriment. Sian
scowled at her friend, who shrugged expressively, then turned to
cajole Joshua's sharp stare away from his brother.
Matthew raised his eyebrows at Sian. He wore his most guileless
expression. She shook her dark, elegant head at him, and said softly
as she slid into the second seat of the row he indicated, 'You're a very
naughty man, Matt.'
'And unrepentant, one might add,' he replied, and put a proprietorial
hand at her back. The unexpected physical contact of his hand
radiating warmth through the sheer transparency of silk covering her
skin quivered shockwaves through her muscles, and she averted her
head sharply at his barely audible intake of breath.
'Do you always go for what you want, no matter how unscrupulous
the method?' she asked, watching him carefully.
'That's a very subjective question,' he replied coolly as he frowned.
'And I think it depends on what your priorities are. If you want
something so badly that you will do whatever you can to get it, and
pay any price, some people are bound to call that unscrupulous. The
key is to reach out for what you want while still maintaining your
own sense of integrity. For instance, there are parts of myself that I
will not sacrifice, not for love or money. Compassion, consideration,
a sense of justice, and fair dealing in business are but a few. High
safety standards in my workâthat's another one. I'm not an idealistic
man, but to me these things are paramount. If I lose them, I lose the
greater part of myself, and money becomes just another dirty word,
and love a meaningless commodity.'
'Faith, hope and charity?' she whispered, turning her gaze to stare
unseeingly ahead of her.
'Yes,' he said with quiet simplicity, and reached out to take her hand
in his.
The house lights dimmed then, and the curtains went up, and for the
next few hours they laughed until their eyes teared at the light-
hearted, witty play. During the interval, Joshua and Steven went to
fetch ice-creams for everybody and Sian was content to relax in her
seat in silence while Matt chatted with Jane, who had come over to
visit them.
When the other two men had returned, and they had eaten their ice-
cream and gone back to their seats to await the second half of the
play, Matthew retained her hand and asked, 'Want to help me fix
breakfast in the morning? I can butter the toast, but I'm not too
confident about cooking eggs for five people.'
'Sure,' she agreed as she pretended her attention was fixed on the
change in sets as the curtains rose again.
All of her awareness, however, was focused on the long tendoned
fingers curled around hers. Then she said softly, 'Thank you again for
having us. Everybody's having a wonderful time.'
His fingers tightened. He replied, 'It was all done for purely selfish
reasons, I'm afraid. Will you come again?'
She turned to him, with a wide searching gaze in which the colourful
stage lights flickered like tiny rainbows over the clear green depths.
Her hand, in his, was very still. He watched her closely as she licked
her lips and finally murmured, 'I'm not sure how easy it would be to
coordinate the time after the others start their jobs.'
His predator's gaze held coiled patience. 'I wasn't inviting the others.'
The play rollicked on, unnoticed. She said nothing, just staring up
him, but the slim fingers lying in his clasp quivered once. 'Sian,' he
said then, carefully, 'why are you so afraid?'
She shook her head and would not answer.
His mouth hardened, but still he was careful. 'Will you come
anyway? I'd take you dancing, and we could go to the movies, or to
the park, or maybe spend an afternoon at the Art Institute. And I
know when you meet them tomorrow night you'll like my friends
every bit as much as I like yours.'
But underlying every picture he painted was the real question, the
heart of the question. Will you come? How could she answer? That
she wanted to, certainly, but that she was afraid as well, which he
already knew. For every reason there was a caution, and for every
caution, the dangerous, heedless desire to fling them to the winds.
'I don't know,' she said helplessly.
Her distress was obvious. He leaned over and brushed his lips against
her cheek. 'There's no hurry to decide,' he murmured languidly in her
ear. 'We've all the time in the world. Just promise me you'll think
about it.'
And, because he had not pressed her for an answer but was instead
considerate and understanding, just as he always was when he was
playing the friend, she found that it was easy to meet him that far. 'A-
all right.'
Matt nodded and turned his attention back to the play. Well, she
thought, that was remarkably painless. She'd answered with no