His Black Sheep Bride / The Billionaire Baby Bombshell: His Black Sheep Bride / The Billionaire Baby Bombshell. Anna DePalo

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His Black Sheep Bride / The Billionaire Baby Bombshell: His Black Sheep Bride / The Billionaire Baby Bombshell - Anna DePalo

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want.

      Sawyer studied her. “It seems only fitting, though, that the marriage of the Earl and Countess of Melton occur at Gantswood Hall, the ancestral home of the earls of Melton.”

      Tamara resisted pointing out that it was hardly necessary to go to such trouble for what would be a short-lived marriage. But then again, she’d been half expecting Sawyer’s proposition of a proper British wedding. “Very well. I suppose the sooner, the better.”

      Sawyer’s lips quirked. “Anxious, are you?”

      “The sooner we begin, the sooner the corporate merger will occur and we can be done with this.”

      “How about next week then?”

      Tamara shook her head. “Pia would have a heart attack. I already asked her to help plan the wedding. Three weeks.”

      “You and Pia Lumley are close.”

      It wasn’t a question, but a statement. Tamara nodded anyway. “Pia is a dear friend and one of the best bridal consultants around. She also needs all the help that she can get now that—” her voice darkened “—your fiendish friend the Marquess of Easterbridge ruined Belinda’s wedding day.”

      Sawyer laughed. “‘Fiendish friend’? You certainly have a way with alliteration.”

      “Don’t change the subject,” Tamara snapped back. “Your friends seem to come in one stripe only—namely, villainous.”

      Sawyer arched a brow.

      “I suppose you’re chummy with the Duke of Hawkshire, too?”

      “Yes, but not with his alias, Mr. Fielding.”

      “Very funny.”

      “Since we’re on the subject of our marriage,” Sawyer said drily, “what have you told your friends?”

      “Pia and Belinda?” Tamara responded. “They know the truth, and they’ve already said they’ll be at any wedding to support me.”

      “Splendid.”

      “We’ll need a referee if, as I assume, your titled compatriots will make an appearance, too.”

      Sawyer inclined his head. “I imagine Hawk and Colin will be there, schedules permitting.”

      “Everyone else, including my mother and sisters,” Tamara said determinedly, “will believe that for reasons known only to me, I’ve decided that you are Mr. Right.”

      “Since Hawk has already claimed the moniker Mr. Fielding, I’ll settle for Mr. Right without qualm,” Sawyer quipped.

      Tamara eyed him doubtfully. “Well, I’m glad that’s all resolved—anything else?”

      “Since you mention it—”

      Tamara tensed. “Yes?”

      “There is the small matter of where we’ll reside after the wedding.”

      Tamara felt her stomach plummet. Why hadn’t she thought of such an obvious and all too important detail?

      “I’ll keep my business in SoHo,” she said automatically.

      “Right,” Sawyer agreed, “but we won’t convince anyone that we’re serious about this marriage unless you move into my town house after the wedding.”

      Share a roof with Sawyer? They could barely share a meal without sparks flying.

      “I suppose I can bear it for a short while,” she responded in a disgruntled tone. “Will I have my own wing?”

      Sawyer laughed at her sudden hopefulness. “Why don’t you come see? It occurs to me you’ve never been to my home, and that’s a detail that should be rectified as early as possible. In fact, what are you doing the rest of the afternoon?”

      She wanted to lie. She wanted to say she had a slew of meetings. But if Sawyer could make time in his busy CEO schedule, her demurral would hardly ring true. And besides, he had a point about her becoming familiar with the place where she’d soon be living.

      “I’m free,” she disclosed reluctantly.

      Sawyer smiled. “Fantastic. We’ll ride up there right after lunch. My car is outside.”

      The waiter arrived with their food, and as the conversation turned to more mundane topics, Tamara had time at leisure to reflect on what she’d gotten herself into.

      Was it too late to back out now?

      Seven

      Tamara wanted to hate everything about Sawyer’s life, but she was finding it impossible to do so. Instead, she clung tenaciously to indifference—was it too much to ask?

      It was bad enough that Sawyer himself was demonstrating remarkable skill at seduction. Must his lifestyle be an added lure?

      Tamara discovered that Sawyer’s town house was a four-story structure on a prime block in the East 80s. The limestone facade was set off by black wrought-iron flower boxes at the windows and a matching black front gate. Shrubbery concealed from prying eyes the garden that ran along one side of the residence.

      And in an unusual setup for Manhattan, Sawyer’s town house boasted its own garage, enabled by the residence’s prime corner location.

      Except for a few minor details, the house might have been a transplant from London’s fashionable Mayfair district—just like its owner.

      A middle-aged, uniformed employee came hurrying out the front door and down the front steps of the town house, and Sawyer handed his car keys to him.

      “You might as well garage the car, Lloyd,” Sawyer said. “I don’t know how long I’ll be home.”

      The man inclined his head. “Very well, my lord.”

      Sawyer glanced from Lloyd to Tamara and back. “Lloyd, this is Ms. Tamara Kincaid, my fiancée.”

      Without missing a beat, Lloyd said gravely, “Welcome, Ms. Kincaid. May I offer my utmost felicitations on your engagement?”

      Tamara stopped herself from saying that felicitations weren’t necessary. Instead, she shook Lloyd’s hand and accepted his congratulations before he got into Sawyer’s black Porsche Cayenne.

      She turned to Sawyer. “What? No Bentley? No valet named Jeeves?”

      Sawyer smiled briefly. “The Bentley is at my country estate. I sometimes prefer to drive myself, so Lloyd has time on his hands. There’s also a butler, housekeeper and part-time chef, whom you’ll soon meet, but no valet.”

      He added teasingly, “I like to keep things a little democratic when I’m stateside.”

      Tamara nodded at the house. “I’d have assumed a bachelor like you would prefer a penthouse co-op.”

      “I

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