Authors: Amanda Carpenter
haggard signs of the stress they had all gone through in the last
month as they struggled to finish papers and study for final exams.
She and Jane had stalked around the apartment, short-tempered
through lack of sleep and snapping at each other over the most
ridiculous things.
Still, the work had been worth it. Sian was well qualified to seek out
a position as a junior designer in a fashion house, though that wasn't
what she wanted to do. She nursed a secret ambition to set up her
own design company but lacked the self-confidence in how to go
about doing it in such a cut-throat industry. It was why she had
decided to continue going to school so that she could supplement her
knowledge of design with courses in marketing and business
administration. That way she stood a better chance of at least some
modest success. She wasn't looking to make her fortune. She just
wanted to earn a good living with some degree of independence.
Lost in contemplation of the future, she began to strip off her clothes
absent-mindedly, completely unaware of the sudden still attention
she attracted. Off came the pink top, revealing the pale rose bikini
that moulded like a second skin over high rounded breasts. Down slid
the elastic band of the skirt over a long, narrow waist, widening to a
soft rounded belly and shapely hips. Her flawless ivory skin was so
thin that delicate blue shadows could be seen in the strong sunlight at
temples and wrists, the bottom of her soft beating throat, the backs of
her knees.
She had just reached down for her bottle of water- resistant sun lotion
when two long, athletically muscled legs entered her peripheral
vision. Matt murmured silkily into her ear, stirring the tiny sensitive
hairs at the nape of her neck, 'Like me to rub some of that on to your
back?'
Joshua had appropriated the ball, and Jane and Steven chased him
down into the water, the trio laughing maniacally. Sian turned to look
at Matt with a wide gaze more green than long whipped strands of
sea oats and grasses. She smiled at him pleasantly. 'Yes, thank you.'
Startlement flickered past the mischief in his own hazel eyes. Got
him again, she thought with satisfaction, but he recovered himself
with admirable ease and took the bottle to squeeze a portion into one
large hand. She put her back to him and pulled her braid to one side
while he started to rub her shoulders.
She had steeled herself for the alien sensation of his touch roaming
by consent over her body, but found she was relaxing almost
immediately under the warm surprise of his extremely gentle hands.
He worked over the muscles of her back with unhurried sensitivity,
discovering knots of tension and kneading them loose with care. Her
head began to droop as she gave an unconscious sigh of pleasure.
'What happened to the open warfare?' he asked. The smile had
carried to his voice.
She said, 'It's gone underground in a change of tactics. I believe they
call it "low-intensity conflict".'
She felt rather than heard his laugh. Low and husky, it reverberated
through his hands to her body, and her heart missed a beat. 'You
won't give up, will you?'
'Is the Pope Catholic?' she returned sweetly. 'Besides, you don't strike
me as the kind of person who would give up easily yourself.'
'You're right. I don't, especially when I see something I want. Then I
go after it, and nothing short of flood, fire or act of God can make me
stop,' he murmured.
She could well understand that. He wouldn't have got where he was
today as a valued and respected senior partner for a huge
multinational architectural firm if he hadn't had that unswerving drive
to mould his actions. Certainly she had caught the backlash of his
aggression; unleashed and in full force at the workplace, it would be
something to see. His was the kind that erected
towers
and moved
mountains.
'I stand warned,' she said, and hoped the quiver of her voice could be
attributed to an answering amusement, instead of the real cause
which was the unbelievable magic he was working on her body.
He reached up to massage the exposed nape of her neck and she must
have made some sound, for the pressure in his fingers immediately
eased and he asked, 'Did I hurt you?'
'No,' she replied, muffled. 'My neck's just stiff because I slept on it
wrong.'
Then she almost flinched, half expecting another sardonic remark
about her sleeping habits. Instead Matt said gently, 'Where, over
here? Hold still a minute. There, how does that feel?'
Sian turned her head experimentally and said, surprised, 'Much
better, thank you.'
'You're welcome,' he told her, then purred, 'Want me to do your
front?'
She threw back her head and laughed out loud, the sound like music
in the air, and held out her hand for the lotion. 'Not on your life! The
warfare hasn't gone
that
far underground!'
He shifted to settle on the sand beside her, looping his arms around
upraised knees, showing no inclination to join the others who were
cavorting in the water. She shifted her gaze away from the flex of
those powerful- looking biceps and bent her attention to applying
lotion to the rest of her body.
After they had sat watching the swimmers and the silence had
stretched to several minutes into something like peace, Matt turned
his head and looked at her. 'It won't work, you know.'
'What won't?' she asked, startled and wary.
'What you're trying to do.' He regarded her with a cool, measuring
stare and said, soft and deliberate, 'I'm no young, inexperienced boy
you can get around by using your charm.'
The predator was back, curled and waiting his moment in the sun for
a chance to spring, the hard eyes unblinking on her sun-flushed face,
that mobile mouth taut. But for the first time Sian saw past the
impact his forcefulness had on her and smiled: It was nice to see him
doing the reacting for a change.
An attempt at innocence would be a mistake, for he had been right.
She leaned back on her elbows and returned stare for stare. 'Is that
what you think I'm trying to do?'
'I think,' he said slowly, not returning her smile, 'that you would try to
charm the leaves off the trees if you thought it would be to your
advantage.'
Sian's eyes narrowed, a quick, telling gesture; and the slim lines of
her eyebrows became tokens of unpredictability. She said abruptly,
'People are like circles, don't you think?'
His face became shuttered, the thoughts moving behind the mask
with subterranean speed. After a moment he asked, 'How so?'
She drew him a picture in the sand, slim forefinger moving lightly
through the grains, of circles interlocking. 'Like so. Joshua sees this
part of my circle, and he thinks what he sees is me. Part of it is, but
that isn't all I am. We show different aspects of our personalities to
different people; we assume roles. Child to parent, friend to friend,
lover to lover, enemy to enemy.'
The quick hazel eyes lifted lightly to her face, the sun reflecting out
of his eyes in vivid sparks. 'And which are you?' he asked. Probing,
ever probing. 'Child, friend, lover, or enemy?'
The lines of her face were pared, stripped of every social convention,
clean of animation until what was left was a patient and unforgiving
intelligence.
'You drew a circle of all those preconceived notions about who I am,
and what I would do,' she said quietly, and clenched her fist in the
sand of her drawing. The tendons stood out, dusted with gold. 'You
think you've dropped your original ones, but you've only gone on to
form others. You're just so arrogant, Matt. That's your biggest failing
and that's how I'm going to get you, because, every time you turn
your back on me, I'll be jumping out of the circle.'
MATT just continued to watch her, large and powerful as some
transcendent classic, enigmatic as the Sphinx. In the glare of the
unrelenting sun his brown face showed marks of imperfection that
made his handsomeness so very human. There was a dangerous
attraction in the tiny laugh-lines fanning from his eyes and the faint
signs of exhaustion that lingered from recent overwork, for they
made him all that more approachable. He was no invincible
juggernaut; he was a man, with more than his fair share of a man's
strengths and not a few of the failings.
With an inward shiver, she steeled herself against such observations,
for she could not afford to soften. One slide into the tender side of
her emotions and she would be in trouble. In that one respect he was
like her father, for he too was a soul-stealer, one of that rare breed
that women invariably fell for all over the world. He could lay his
tawny head against a woman's breast and call forth all the feelings
Sian was so determined to avoid, accept them as his due, and then
walk away without a backward glance. He was more than dangerous;
he was lethal.
'You're not a forgiver, are you, Sian?' he commented, almost
absently. The keen focus of his attention took apart the definition of
her.
'No, I'm not much of a forgiver,' she agreed, after a moment of deadly
silence. It was an acknowledgement made in honesty, without pride
or prevarication. Fair warning, tit for tat. An eye for an eye.
Then, quietly, he said an astonishing thing. 'I hadn't realised that I
had hurt you so much.'
Reaction animated her expression as her green eyes flared, and she
turned her head away in a harsh jerk that sent her french braid
whipping over one shoulder. 'Did you?' she returned, with the faintest
mocking edge of vicious rejoinder. 'Or did you just get in my way?'
'Are you so sure,' asked Matt then, wise and gentle as he bent forward
over her half-reclining body, 'that I'm the one with the preconceived
notions now, and not you?'
The change in his position cast a shadow over her face. She glanced
up swiftly. He was a silhouette against the vast bright bowl of the
sky, and all she could see was the outline of his head, which
contained some fugitive quality that brought an unconscious parting
of her dry lips. The tip of her pink tongue darted out to moisten them,
and some slight change in the inclination of his head made her
extremely aware of the act and shortened her breath.
He whispered, and the sound of it came over her like a warm breeze,
'All I said to you earlier was that I considered you unsuitable for
Joshua, and you are. You're far too strong and volatile for someone
as young and inexperienced as he, even down to the lovely curves
and graceful shape of your perfect body. He hasn't got the capacity to
give you the depth of emotion and quality of passionate lovemaking
that you deserve. If you marry him, you will always ache for what
you don't have, and he will always feel inadequate without quite
understanding why.'
She trembled and longed to take the weight of her torso off the
uncertain strength in her arms, but if she tried to sit up now she
would bring herself within inches of his face, and the ravishing
devastation pouring forth from that sexy, ruthless mouth. So, rather
than moving towards him, she tried to attack instead. 'Maybe
somebody like Joshua has just what I'm looking for,' she mocked,
wishing her voice didn't sound so husky. 'After all, you can't control
his money forever.'
Matt sounded amused. 'I had that one coming, didn't I? All right,
Sian, I take it back unreservedly. A person who could handle that
poker game the way you did, with reluctance, finesse and
compassion, could never settle for a shallow, short-sighted goal such
as money. What are you really looking for?'
The insight that she had only recently wished for in Joshua was
present in abundance in his older brother, but Sian did not rejoice in
the finding of it. Instead she felt exposed and self-protective.
'Try stability, for one,' she said, her tone clipped. 'Plenty of people
build secure relationships on other things besides love and passion,
which can fizzle out so easily once the honeymoon stage of the
marriage is over.'