Tall, Dark... Collection. Carole Mortimer

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style="font-size:15px;">      ‘Actually, Jacob Gardner kept it in his—Are you okay there, Jean?’ He moved forward quickly to catch her cup and saucer as they seemed to leap out of her hand of their own volition.

      ‘Oh, how silly of me.’ Jean got up agitatedly to take the cup and saucer away from him. ‘I’ll take these things out to the kitchen so that there are no more accidents,’ she added swiftly, before picking up the laden tray and bustling from the room, her husband following her a few seconds later.

      Nick was left not just with a suspicion, but with the certainty that these two elderly people were hiding something…

      He just had no idea what.

      A searching look at Hebe showed him that she had seen it too, and was just as puzzled. Her baiting of him to get information had somehow backfired on her in a way she hadn’t expected…

      CHAPTER EIGHT

      ‘YOUR parents are hiding something.’

      Hebe gave Nick a frowning glance as he drove them back to London later that evening.

      He was right, of course, though she was loath to admit it. Her parents were hiding something. Her mother’s accident with her cup and saucer after hearing Jacob Gardner’s name mentioned had to be indicative of something.

      Hebe just had no idea what it was!

      Her father had changed the subject once her parents had returned to the sitting room a few minutes later, going back to talking of the forthcoming wedding—a subject guaranteed to put Hebe herself on edge.

      ‘Of course they aren’t,’ she defended now, having already decided she would talk to her parents in private about this—probably when they came down to London. No concrete plans had been made on that suggestion, though, and wouldn’t be until they all knew the date and time of the wedding. ‘You’re just imagining things, Nick,’ she said airily, not wanting him to pursue this particular subject. ‘Now, tell me exactly what paperwork it is that your lawyers are working on?’ she added scathingly.

      She hadn’t forgotten that remark, even if he had hoped she had!

      ‘It wouldn’t happen to be a pre-nuptial agreement, would it?’ she prompted angrily.

      Nick raised dark brows. ‘Would you sign it if it were?’

      ‘Absolutely not!’ she snapped.

      ‘I didn’t think so,’ he mused.

      ‘They’re an insult to everyone involved,’ Hebe told him caustically.

      ‘Most of them aren’t worth the paper they’re written on, either,’ he drawled.

      ‘Oh, I have no doubt that any pre-nuptial agreement your lawyers prepared would be watertight!’ she replied with disgust.

      ‘Probably,’ Nick conceded dryly. ‘But that isn’t what they’re doing, and you wouldn’t sign it if they were. The paperwork they’re dealing with has to do with the fact that I’m an American getting married in England, so this conversation is rather pointless, wouldn’t you say?’

      Completely, it seemed, and Hebe turned so Nick couldn’t see the embarrassment flooding her cheeks. But she felt happier knowing it was only the legal details of their marriage that Nick’s lawyers were dealing with, but now she had nothing to distract her thoughts from slipping back to her parents’ odd reaction earlier.

      That conversation at her parents’ house hadn’t gone at all as she had expected. She had thought to get Jacob Gardner’s name from Nick, but not the response she had from her parents.

      ‘I guess that was probably the intention,’ Nick drawled knowingly.

      ‘I have no idea what you’re talking about,’ she snapped resentfully. He was far too astute for comfort, this man she was marrying…

      ‘No?’He quirked dark, sceptical brows over questioning blue eyes. ‘Your parents obviously know of your involvement with Jacob Gardner, and they would rather I didn’t know about it too—is that what all the mystery is about?’

      ‘I have never been involved with a man called Jacob Gardner!’ she protested heatedly. ‘I had never even heard his name until you mentioned it!’

      ‘Oh, please, Hebe—your parents had,’ he said quietly. ‘So you must have told them!’

      She’d realized her parents knew the name, but she had no idea how.

      Neither did she understand how Nick had jumped to the conclusion that she had known Jacob Gardner in that way. A man who Nick himself said had been quite old when he died.

      She shook her head. ‘I have no idea why you should think I was ever involved with him!’

      ‘It’s quite simple—logical, really, if you think about it.’ Nick shrugged, his expression grim. ‘Andrew Southern painted that portrait. A portrait that was in Jacob Gardner’s possession when he died. In the portrait you’re wearing an engagement ring. Emeralds and diamonds, as I recall,’ he added hardly. ‘Which is why you didn’t get emeralds and diamonds from me!’

      Hebe had noticed the ring, of course. She just hadn’t realised that Nick had…

      ‘I’m not asking you for emeralds and diamonds!’ she came back tartly.

      ‘Just as well,’ Nick rasped dismissively, knowing that the thought of Hebe wearing any man’s ring but his filled him with jealous fury. She was his, damn it. His!

      But that ring on her finger in the portrait, the fact that Jacob Gardner had owned the portrait, and Hebe’s mother’s reaction to the man’s name—it was enough to convince him that what he had suspected all along was, in fact, true. Hebe had to have been engaged to Jacob Gardner when she’d had an affair with Andrew Southern!

      And the thought of her involved with either man was enough to fill him with a blinding rage!

      ‘You were engaged to Jacob Gardner and you had an affair with Andrew Southern. Just admit it, and then get past it,’ he rasped furiously, his hands tight on the steering wheel.

      ‘Let me see if I’ve got this right?’ Hebe turned to him, frowning. ‘I was engaged to Jacob Gardner—an obviously wealthy man if he could commission an Andrew Southern portrait of me—and then when I met Andrew Southern I changed my allegiance to him—probably because I discovered he was the wealthier of the two men?’ she prompted. ‘And when my relationship with both men didn’t work out I obviously set out to entrap the owner of the Cavendish Galleries instead! Tell me if I’ve got any of that wrong, Nick?’ she prompted with impatient anger.

      No, that sounded about right to him!

      He was so angry he wanted to hate her, and yet all he could think about was making love to her instead.

      ‘Where are we going?’ Hebe prompted frowningly, as she realised they weren’t heading in the direction of her flat.

      ‘My apartment.’ Nick tersely confirmed her suspicions.

      She

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