The Bridal Bed. HELEN BIANCHIN

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They’d only known each other three months. ‘Who, Mama?’

      ‘Trenton Wilson-Willoughby. Sloane’s father.’

      Oh, my God. Heat rushed through her veins, then chilled to ice. ‘You’re not serious?’ Tell me you’re not serious, she pleaded silently.

      ‘You sound—shocked,’ Georgia responded slowly, and Suzanne quickly gathered her wits.

      Recoup, regroup, fast. ‘Surprised,’ she amended. ‘It seems so sudden.’

      ‘Sometimes love happens that way. Sloane swept you off your feet in a matter of weeks.’

      Like father, like son. ‘Yes,’ she agreed cautiously. Sloane had gifted her a sparkling diamond, whisked her down to Sydney from Brisbane, and moved her into his Rose Bay penthouse apartment before she’d had time to think, let alone catch her breath. Blinded by a riveting attraction and primitive alchemy.

      ‘When is the wedding taking place?’ A few months from now would give her plenty of time to—what? Explain that she was no longer living with Sloane?

      ‘This weekend, darling.’ Georgia sounded vaguely breathless and tremendously excited.

      This weekend Today was Wednesday, for heaven’s sake. ‘Don’t you think—?’

      ‘It’s a bit sudden?’ her mother finished. ‘Yes, darling, I do. But Trenton is a very convincing man.’

      Suzanne took a deep breath, then released it slowly. ‘You’re quite sure about this?’

      ‘As sure as I can be.’ There was a funny catch in her voice. ‘Aren’t you going to congratulate me?’

      Oh, hell. She had to collect her thoughts together. ‘Of course I am. And give you my blessing. I’m just so happy you are happy.’ She was babbling, she knew, but she couldn’t stop. ‘Where is the wedding taking place? Have you chosen what you’ll wear?’

      Georgia began to laugh, and, Suzanne suspected, to cry. ‘Bedarra Island, Saturday afternoon. Would you believe Trenton has booked all the accommodation on the island to ensure total privacy? I’m wearing a cream silk suit, with matching shoes and hat. We want you and Sloane to be witnesses.’

      Bedarra Island was a privately owned resort situated high in North Queensland’s Whitsunday group of tropical islands. A minimum three-hour flight, followed by a launch trip to Bedarra.

      ‘Trenton has organised for you both to fly up on Friday morning and stay until Monday.’

      Oh, my. Trenton’s organisation would include the family jet, the charter of a private launch.

      Sloane.

      It was three weeks since she’d walked out of his apartment, leaving a penned note briefly spelling out her need for some time alone. It attributed nothing to the reality of an anonymous threat if she didn’t end the engagement.

      A threat she hadn’t taken seriously until the young socialite who’d initiated it had almost run Suzanne’s car off the road to emphasise her intent, then identified herself and promised grievous bodily harm if Suzanne failed to comply.

      The sequence of events had been very carefully planned, she reflected, to coincide with Sloane’s absence overseas. Bitter, vitriolic invective had merely added doubt as to the socialite’s mental stability, and extreme caution had motivated Suzanne to leave Sloane’s apartment and move all her clothes into a flat on the other side of the city.

      However, she had underestimated Sloane. When she’d refused to take his calls on his return, he’d pulled rank and walked unannounced into her office. His icy anger when she had refused to elaborate on the contents of her note had been so chilling, it had been all she could do not to fall in a heap the second the door had closed behind him.

      Now it appeared she had little option but to see him again.

      Suzanne slowly replaced the receiver, then stared sightlessly at the wall in front of her. Georgia and Trenton. Could her mother possibly guess at the complications she’d created?

      Allowing no time for hesitation, Suzanne punched in the digit to access an outside line, then completed the set of numbers that would connect with Sloane’s law chambers.

      Not that the call did much good. All she received was a relayed message stating that Sloane Wilson-Willoughby was in court and wasn’t expected back until late afternoon. Suzanne logged in her name and phone number on his message bank.

      Damn. The silent curse did little to ease her frustration as she turned her attention to the documents requiring her perusal. She made a note of two clauses she felt were not entirely to her client’s advantage, pencilled in a notation to delete one, and re-phrase another. Then she had her secretary lodge the necessary call in order to apprise the client of her suggested alterations.

      The afternoon was hectic, and the nerves inside her stomach became increasingly tense as the minutes ticked by. Each time the phone rang, she mentally prepared herself for it to be Sloane, only to have her secretary announce someone else.

      Was he deliberately delaying the call? Just to make her sweat a little? Whatever, it was playing havoc with her nervous system.

      At five her phone buzzed just as she ushered a client from her office, and she crossed to her desk and picked up the receiver.

      ‘Sloane Wilson-Willoughby on line two.’ The information was imparted in a faintly breathless voice, and Suzanne momentarily raised her eyes towards the ceiling.

      Sloane tended to have that effect on people. Women, especially, responded to something in his deep, smoky voice. Once they sighted him in the flesh, the response went into overdrive and tended to make vamps and vixens out of the most sensible of females.

      She should know. She’d been there herself. Part of her ached for the promise, the dream of what they might have had together.

      Then she drew in a deep breath, released it, and picked up the receiver. ‘Sloane.’ To ask ‘how are you?’ seemed incredibly banal.

      ‘Suzanne.’ The polite acknowledgement seared something deep inside, and she resolutely kept her voice even as she sank back in her chair. ‘Georgia rang me. I believe Trenton has relayed their news?’

      ‘Yes.’ Brief, succinct, and unforthcoming.

      He wasn’t making it easy for her. There was no way out of this, and it was best if she just got on with it.

      ‘We need to talk.’

      ‘I agree,’ Sloane indicated silkily. ‘Make it dinner tonight.’ He named a restaurant in a city hotel. ‘Seven.’

      She needed to put in another hour in order to appease her employer. ‘I don’t think—’

      ‘It’s the restaurant or your flat.’ His voice acquired the sound of silk being razed by steel. ‘Choose.’

      She didn’t hesitate. ‘Seven-thirty.’ A public place where there were people was the lesser of two evils. The thought of Sloane appearing at her flat, demanding entry...

      ‘Wise.’

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