Authors: Amanda Carpenter
letting her sleep on the couch, then stuffed various toiletries into her
hastily packed overnight bag.
She didn't care if her running away from the party had been
transparent; she had badly needed time to herself. She had pleaded
tiredness as an excuse to escape Matt's tenacious presence. Just
thinking about Joshua's older brother brought her blood to a low
simmer.
It had been no use telling herself that he'd had to hang around while
his shirt tumbled through a wash, then the drying cycle. It had
certainly been no use telling herself that she only had her own hot
temper to blame. For whatever reason, he had been there, tall and
tough and bare-chested, like a great wild tawny animal that had
prowled into the house for a nap. Laughing at the things Jane had
said. Talking quietly at some length to a fuming and subdued Joshua
in one corner.
That she had hated to witness. Joshua had acted as if Matt were his
father or something—rebellious, resentful and still with the
challenging bravado of the male adolescent, yet reined and under
control by his older brother's tough, authoritative presence.
Gone was the delightful young adult, the witty and articulate law
student, and in his place sat a sheepish little boy. Sian had seen
Joshua through Matt's eyes, and she hadn't appreciated the
experience. Matt might feel responsible for his younger brother, but
he was not Joshua's father and could not take the place of that man,
who had died some years ago.
She quickly and efficiently put her hair back into a sleek french
braid, then left her friend's apartment. Sian, Jane, Jane's boyfriend
Steven, and Joshua were going to Lake Michigan for the day, and she
was determined to enjoy the holiday as much as possible.
Chances were that, after her impassioned speech last night, Joshua
would be scared off from proposing for good. His older brother
would have gone back to Chicago some time this morning, and that
would be that. The whole situation was simple, really, just a storm in
a teacup in the cosmic scope of things, and Sian could get back to her
uncomplicated life. By the time she had driven back to her own
place, she had firmly resolved to put the annoying Matt Severn out of
her mind.
The original plan had been that everybody would help clean up, then
take off to the Indiana Dunes in two cars. But when Sian went
through the back gate, the garden was already clean and tidy. She
looked around in surprise. All the signs of the party were cleared
away and several full black plastic bags were piled neatly by the
kitchen door.
The apartment was similarly neat and, after last night, echoed with
emptiness. The muted sound of the shower came from the direction
of the bathroom. Shaking her head in bemusement, for Jane had
never before shown such initiative for housekeeping, Sian travelled
down the hall and put a hand on the doorknob of her bedroom.
The door opened inwards, and it was not propelled by her. Caught off
balance and still in motion, she collided with a very large body. Two
hands shot out to grip her arms; her own, outstretched, splayed flat on
a lean bare torso. For one sulphurous moment she felt surprisingly
silken skin, the sinuous rippling of hard abdominal muscle, and she
snatched her hand back as if she'd been burned while staring wide-
eyed up into Matt Severn's tough, formidable face.
She gasped, as her world tilted, 'You!'
'Me!' agreed Nick mockingly, his hazel gaze snapping with some
volcanic emotion.
His hands were large and warm, and curled easily around the
circumference of her upper arms. He shifted them down to her
elbows, and the sensation of those callused palms sliding along her
sensitive skin was so shockingly intimate that she recoiled violently.
'What are you doing here in my room?' she demanded, feeling
exposed and invaded.
'Making the bed,' he said. Then, at her furious glare, he added with a
careless shrug, 'I had to sleep somewhere, didn't I?'
Sian looked around a broad, tanned shoulder at the neat peach-
coloured bedspread. It looked just as she had left it the day before,
but a mental image of his long male body stretched out between her
sheets, his rather long tawny hair spilling on to the pillow, produced
the strangest reaction in the pit of her stomach. Swallowing hard and
frowning fiercely, she muttered, 'Why didn't you just go home?'
'Temper,' he chided, then moved with silent, menacing deliberation to
shut the door behind her. When she made an involuntary, protesting
movement, he turned to lean against the panels, blocking the exit. 'I
was over the drinking limit. You wouldn't have wanted me to cause a
car accident, would you?'
'No, of course not!' she snapped, throwing her bag down on the floor
in an impetuous gesture, inwardly struggling against a deep sense of
unease at how he had trapped her into this confrontation.
His searing gaze was like two gold coins; he was as angry as he had
ever been with her yesterday, Sian saw, and she was bewildered, for
surely the break from hostilities should have cooled things down.
'Where did you sleep, darling, and with whom?' he queried silkenly.
Match to dry tinder. Sian was bravely aware of what she did, as she
bent with striking speed to snatch up her overnight case and hurl it at
his head. He hardly moved. One powerful arm flexed, and the case
was caught in mid-air.
His expression was frightening. She snarled, 'Get away from that
door!'
'As you wish.' He pushed off from the barrier behind him, and began
to stalk towards her, his half-clad body overwhelmingly powerful,
those deep disturbing eyes of his afire.
She folded her arms tight across her chest, cupping her elbows, and
fought an-instinctive desire to back away from him skittishly. She
would not let him intimidate her, especially here on her own home
territory. It was where people psychologically felt most secure and
relaxed; that was why they felt so violated when their homes were
broken into. Not only were personal possessions lost forever, but
their security was stolen as well. She suspected that his choice of
venue for a private confrontation was made knowing fully well what
kind of advantages he might hope to gain.
But Sian had moved around so much when she was young that she
had instinctive guards erected against that sort of thing. Home and
security were not the walls that surrounded her; home was where the
heart was, and she carried hers with her. People mattered, not places
or things, and, though this had been her bedroom for the last four
years, in the end it was just another room. Sian had her poise back,
and her angry, delicate face was thrown back as she faced him with
an unflinching, unrepentant glare. She could have hurt him with the
heavy case. She didn't care.
Matt murmured speculatively, his attention focused on her like a
spearthrust, 'You weren't with Joshua— you left far too early for
that.'
She sneered at him, 'How do you know we didn't meet later?'
'You ran away from me, didn't you? Coward,' he accused her
mockingly, bringing a hand up to the taut lines of her jaw.
She jerked her face away and spat, 'Don't touch me! My God, you've
got an inflated sense of yourself, and my sleeping arrangements are
none of your damned business! Why don't you go back to where you
came from?'
'But, darling,' he purred from low in his chest, his naked golden chest
that was making her crazy, 'I'm on vacation as well. That's why,
when Joshua told me he intended to marry you, I decided to come
and see how things were for myself.'
'Well,' she drawled, lips curling sardonically while her stomach
turned into a hard rock of nerves, 'we all know how successful
that
turned out to be. And what did Joshua think about all this?'
'He thought it was a good idea, actually,' was Matthew's surprising
reply, albeit said in an extremely dry tone of voice. His eyes were all
over her. She felt as if she were being eaten alive. 'Obviously one
look at you was supposed to dispel all my preconceived notions.'
Sian's jaw flexed against a furtive, psychic bruise and the expression
in her own gaze went flat and dead. The implication that even in
person she did not meet up to his high standards was insultingly
obvious, and she absolutely hated her own inability to prevent this
man from so casually hurting her. She said, choked, 'I've had enough
of this abuse.'
'I haven't finished yet.'
He held her, two hands on her slim shoulders, with damnable ease.
There was a high flush under her creamy skin, a tight line to her
normally soft mouth, an unconscious shift to defensiveness in her
posture.
Matt frowned. He said clearly and forcefully, 'Listen to me. For some
time Joshua has been coming home full of admiring stories in which
a certain Sian Riley figured largely. He talked about Sian's poise and
wit, and the clever way she could manoeuvre a situation to gain the
advantage. Sian had travelled all over the world, and had famous
rock-star friends and midnight swims off private yachts in the
Mediterranean. Sian was the life and soul of the party. Sian told him
just exactly how to manipulate a difficult professor. Sian cleaned out
all his friends in a poker game, so that he had to ask for an advance
on his next month's allowance.'
Her eyes grew gradually larger and more bewildered as he spoke, for
the person he was talking about wasn't her. Everything he said had an
element of truth to it, but the emphasis was all wrong.
Was that really how Joshua saw her? What about all the
characteristics
she
considered important, like her sense of humour,
compassion, and caring? The picture Matt was portraying was a
figure made of cake icing, all soft and frothy and without real
substance. When at the last he mentioned the poker game, she could
no longer remain silent.
'That stupid game!' she cried angrily, moving under his grip with
sharp impatience. 'I didn't even want to play but they were so
insistent, so determined to pit their wits against someone who had
been taught by a legend— my father! You don't know what it was
like.'
'I have been to university myself, once upon a time,' he reminded her
drily. 'I know what kind of idiotic macho stunts get pulled. So you
took all their money from them.'
'What was I supposed to do—give it back?' she retorted. 'That might
have been convenient for
you,
but their pride would never have
allowed it! It was better they were taught a lesson by somebody who
knew when to stop, instead of meeting up one day with a card shark
who would get them into real trouble.'
'Such a hard woman,' he drawled, one corner of his mouth pulled in
deep, scoring that dimpled crease into one lean cheek.
If only she was! If only she could find some way to unmake that
deep-seated need of hers to be accepted and become entirely self-
sufficient, so that people like Matthew could never find their way
past her defences to wound her with careless words! A dark shadow
of self-mockery crossed her face and she said bitterly, 'Is that how
you see me?'
'I didn't say that I didn't agree with you, or that I wouldn't have done
the same under the circumstances,' he pointed out impatiently. 'I'm
merely explaining how you come across, from what Joshua was
telling me.
That's
the person I was warning away yesterday, don't you
understand? Whereas in reality you turned out to be something—
quite different.'
She didn't understand the strange note in his voice. All she could
grasp was that his explanation was nearly an apology. She was
staggered, and, to 'cover up her reaction, said quickly, 'Ouch!
Admitting that must have hurt. And how did Joshua take it, when you
told him?'
Matt raised a single, haughty eyebrow and laughed so softly that
Sian's colour rose again as she realised what she had betrayed by her
question. If he'd had suspicions before about her implication that
she'd spent the night with Joshua, now he knew for sure.
His hands relaxed and caressed her shoulders. He told her with