In Bed With The Boss. Sharon Kendrick
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу In Bed With The Boss - Sharon Kendrick страница 3
“B-Blake!” she gasped, but the word dried to sawdust in her mouth.
“Disappointed?” he drawled, but at least she was here. And she seemed to be okay. “Expecting your husband, were you, sweetheart?”
She shook her head, wishing he wouldn’t use that word, not when he didn’t mean it. “He’s taken all his clothes. He’s gone.”
“I know he has,” he said grimly.
Her eyes narrowed. “How can you possibly—”
But Blake wasn’t listening. He had unceremoniously pushed his way past her, to stand dripping raindrops onto the beautiful, polished wooden floor.
“Shut the door!” he commanded, his eyes raking reluctantly over her skimpy evening dress. A pulse began to beat at his temple. So she still dressed to kill. “Or were you hoping to freeze to death? Just shut the door, Josephine! Now!”
Mutely she obeyed him. There was something about the tone of his voice that was impossible to ignore. But maybe if she had listened to him the last time around, she wouldn’t be in this situation.
She stared at him. They said that time healed, but time didn’t always change the way someone made you feel. She hadn’t seen him in over a year, but the sheer force of his personality was devastating as ever. As were his looks. The blue eyes were as vibrant as a summer sky and the hard, lean body as formidably gorgeous as it had ever been.
Lucky Kim, she thought, forcing herself to remember in the most painful way possible that he had a fiancée.
“What are you doing here?” she whispered. “And how on earth did you know that Luke had left, when I’ve only just found out myself?”
He gave a cynical smile, which iced over her. “Because he rang me from the airport.”
“The airport?” she repeated dully. “Where was he going?”
“He didn’t say.”
“I don’t understand,” she breathed, and she heard him swear softly beneath his breath.
“I think you’re just about to,” he gritted. “He’s with someone called Sadie.” The blue eyes bored into her questioningly. “Know her?”
Josephine nodded. “Yes, I know her,” she said dully. Best friends weren’t all they were cracked up to be, were they? And yet, deep down, he wasn’t telling her anything that she hadn’t already guessed.
But despite the fact that Luke had gone, only one question nudged at the edges of her mind.
“So just why are you here, Blake?”
BLAKE shrugged. “I guess I’ve come to pick up the pieces .”
Still feeling as though she was in the midst of some nightmare, Josephine stared at him uncomprehendingly. “And what’s that supposed to mean?”
His eyes moved over her, noting the angular line of her collarbone and the way her hipbones jutted against the filmy material of her dress.
As a model, she had always been slim, but now she looked as though a breath of wind could blow her away. Had marriage to his cousin turned her into a mere shadow of herself?
“How the hell can he afford to take off like that?” he demanded.
Josephine stared at him blankly, because his words didn’t make sense. Come to think of it, nothing made sense right now. “What?”
“I think it might be a good idea if you took a look at your accounts,” he ground out.
All she could see was his blue eyes burning into her. “Accounts?” she echoed.
It was only a hunch, but Blake knew his cousin well enough to suspect that he had taken more than his clothes with him. “Just do it, will you?” he said quietly. “I doubt whether Luke has financed his trip with the fruit of his own labors.”
The rising sense of panic she felt was making her blood run cold, and though she shook her head in denial, she couldn’t stop herself from suspecting the worst. But he wouldn’t have taken her money, surely? Bad enough that he had walked off with one of her supposed friends—surely it couldn’t get any worse than that?
She could feel Blake’s eyes on her as she walked to the bureau to find the telephone number of the bank. She picked up the phone and punched in the numbers and when it was answered she said, shakily, “I’d like to know the balance of my current account, please. And could you check my savings account, too, please?”
The sums quoted took her breath away and her fingers were trembling as she turned round to meet the piercing brilliance of his eyes.
“Both accounts are empty,” she said in a dead, flat voice. “He’s taken everything.”
His mouth twisted, ruing an aunt who had showered everything on his pretty, petulant cousin. “It seems that your precious Luke is nothing more than a common thief.”
The rising panic was fast turning into a swamping tide. “Oh, my God,” she breathed. “He can’t have done!”
“Well, it looks as if he damned well has!” He let out a low sigh of frustration. “I told you that you were a fool to marry him, Josephine! I’ve known the guy for most of my life—I knew what he was like! You should have listened to me!”
Yes, she should have listened to him, but how could she have done, when her perception of him had been tainted by the night she had spent in his arms? And the fact that he hadn’t wanted her afterward.
“Does it make you feel better to say ‘I told you so’?” she questioned, her voice shaking with a sense of anger and outrage.
He shook his head. “You know, you’re going to have to contact the police.”
“The police?” It was unthinkable, surely, to report her husband to the police?
“Of course you will!” he stated impatiently. “Your precious Luke can’t be allowed to get away with bleeding you dry! I presume that most of it was your money?”
Of course it was. Luke’s “acting” career had dried up around about the time she’d married him. They had lived off the small fortune she had earned as a model. And when she had decided to study for an alternative career, her fees at business school and the fact that neither of them had been earning had eaten into a fair bit of it.
“Yes,” she said dully. “It was mine.”
“Well, surprise, surprise,” he murmured.
And