Propositioned Into a Foreign Affair: Propositioned Into a Foreign Affair. Maureen Child
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“Oui, Mademoiselle Hudson. Monique and I are very ‘appy. Four-tee years, three children and ten grandchildren later. My Monique is still beautiful.”
He continued to laud his wife and family, his adoration so thick it threatened to smother her.
Or make her gag.
She’d really thought Ridley loved her, only to have him say he’d been too caught up in the romance of their starring roles in the movie about her grandparents’ WWII romance. She’d really thought her parents loved each other, too.
Wrong. And wrong again.
Her mother had cheated. She’d slept with her own brother-in-law and now Bella’s uncle David was actually her daddy David. Her two cousins were actually her half-siblings. Good God, her family was ripe to be featured on an episode of Jerry Springer.
Even river stones couldn’t ease that ache.
A low-sounding beep echoed through the room. A series of clicks eched. Had the whale sounds traded up to dolphin calls?
Henri yanked the sheet up to her shoulders. “M’selle Hudson, quick, get up!”
“What?” she asked, not quite tracking yet.
Her eyes snapped open. She blinked to adjust in the dim light and found Henri blocking someone trying to push through the door.
Someone with a camera.
Crap. Crap. Totally tracking now, Bella bolted off the table and to the floor. Her feet tangled in the sheet and she pitched forward.
“Paparazzi. Run!” Henri barked as Bella struggled to regain her footing. “Run. M’sieur Garrison prides himself on protecting the privacy of his clients. He will fire me. Then my wife, she will keel me. She is crazy mean when she gets angry.”
So much for Henri and Monique’s happy marriage.
“Where the hell am I supposed to run to?” Bella spun away from the door—and the camera—making sure to anchor the sheet over her backside. She dashed to Muffin’s quilted pink carrier and grasped the handle.
She couldn’t wedge past Henri and the photographer struggling to raise his camera over Henri’s head.
“The screen,” Henri gasped. “Move the screen. There’s another door behind. I will hold off this piece of garbage, M’selle Bella.”
Henri might have strong hands, but he appeared to be fighting a losing battle. It was only a matter of time before the paparazzi passed him.
Clutching the Egyptian cotton in one hand and the rhinestone-studded carrier in her other, Bella raced to the antique screen painted with Monet-style murals. Sure enough, she found a narrow exit decorated with a large red bow. She butt-bumped the bar, creaked the door open and peeked out.
She looked left and right down an empty corridor, less ornate than the rest of the hotel. Labeled office doors were bedecked with simple holiday wreaths. There might be some after-hours workers around, but running into them beat the hell out of sprinting through the wide-open, high-ceilinged lobby with crystal chandeliers spotlighting her mad dash toward the elevator.
“Okay, Muffin, cross your paws, ‘cause here we go.”
Her sweet little fur baby yawned.
Bella tucked into the dimly lit hall, empty but for ornately carved antiques. Her bare feet pounded along the thick Persian carpet on her way past a lush green tree, tiny lights winking encouragement. She paused at the first office.
Locked. Damn.
She ran her hand along door after door on her way down. All locked. Double damn.
An echo sounded behind her. The sound of someone running. She glanced over her shoulder and…
Click. Click. Click.
She recognized the sound of a camera in action too well. The short but bulky photographer had over-powered Henri.
Bella ran faster, Muffin’s cloth cage bumping against her leg. She wasn’t a novice in ditching the press. She’d been aware of the media attention on her family since she was born twenty-five years ago.
Gilded, framed photos of employees stared at her in a weird pseudo voyeurism. She rounded the corner and yes, yes, yes, found a mahogany door slightly ajar. No lights on. Likely empty. She would lock herself inside and call for help.
Panting, she raced the last few steps, slid through the part in the door.
And slammed into a hard male chest.
One without a camera slung over his shoulder, thank heaven, but still a warm-bodied—big-bodied—man. She looked up into his cool gray eyes. She didn’t need to check the formal photo by the door to confirm the identity of this dark haired, billionaire bachelor. At only thirty-four, he’d already been featured on plenty of “most eligible” lists. This expatriate bad boy had broken hearts from the Mediterranean to South Beach.
She’d fallen into the arms of hotel magnate Sam Garrison.
Sam stared down into the panicked blue eyes of film star Isabella Hudson.
Where the hell were her clothes?
He was used to dealing with eccentric behavior from his star-studded guest list. But a woman running around in nothing more than a sheet? That was a first.
He kept his eyes firmly locked on her panicked face and mussed red hair while waiting for her to clue him in. No need to check out the luscious cleavage on display. He could feel every voluptuous curve of the near-naked beauty pressed enticingly against his chest.
“Media,” she gasped, pressing her breasts more firmly against him. “Paparazzi!”
Damn. His libido took a backseat to business. God, he hated the press.
He prided himself on his hotel’s privacy, an essential element in attracting high-profile clientele. A breach like this could cost him. Big time. Nothing was more important to him than his hotels.
Not even a potentially distracting pair of amazing breasts.
Where was the man she’d been trysting with? Must be a wimp if he’d left her to face the media on her own while clad in nothing more than a sheet, her body slicked up enticingly.
Was the guy married? Or a high-profile politician? His mind raced with possible publicity landmines. This temperamental actress could spell big trouble.
Sam gripped her by the shoulders, her silly, pink dog carrier thumping him in the knee. “Stay in my office. I’ll take care of this.”
“Thank you. But hurry, please.” She backed into the office, her foot peeking out from beneath the sheet to show a gold toe ring. “He’s right around the corner—”