The Virgin's Proposition. Anne McAllister

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The Virgin's Proposition - Anne McAllister Mills & Boon Modern

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wondered what Gerard would say if she told him.

      Actually she suspected she knew. He would blink and then he would look down his regal nose and ask politely, “Who?”

      Or maybe she was selling him short. Maybe he did know who Demetrios was. But he certainly wouldn’t expect his future wife to be having dinner with him. Not that he would care. Or feel threatened.

      Of course he had no reason to feel threatened. It wasn’t as if Demetrios was going to sweep her off her feet and carry her away with him.

      All the while she was musing, though, the crowd around him, rather than dissipating, was getting bigger. Demetrios was still talking, answering questions, charming them all, but his gaze flicked around now and lit on her. He raised his brows as if to say, What can I do?

      Anny shrugged and smiled. Another half a dozen questions and the crowd seemed to double again. His gaze found her again and this time he mouthed a single word in her direction. “Taxi?”

      She nodded and began scanning the street. When she had nearly decided that the only way to get one was to go back to the Ritz-Carlton, an empty one appeared at the corner. She sprinted toward it.

      “Demetrios!”

      He glanced up, saw the cab, offered smiles and a thousand apologies to his gathered fans, then managed to slip after her into the cab.

      “Sorry,” he said. “Sometimes it’s a little insane.”

      “I can see that,” she said.

      “It goes with the territory,” he said. “And usually they mean well. They’re interested. They care. I appreciate that.” He shrugged. “And in effect they pay my salary. I owe them.” He flexed his shoulders against the seat back tiredly. “And when it’s about my work, it’s fine. Sometimes it’s not.” His gaze seemed to close up for a moment, but then he was back, rubbing a hand through his hair. “Sometimes it’s a little overwhelming.”

      “Especially when you’ve been away from it for a while.”

      He gave her a sharp speculative look, and she wondered if she’d overstepped her bounds. But then he shrugged. “Especially when I’ve been away from it for a while,” he acknowledged.

      The driver, who had been waiting patiently, caught her gaze in the rearview mirror and asked where they wanted to go.

      Demetrios obviously knew enough French to get by, too, because he understood and asked her, “Where do we want to go? Some place that’s not a madhouse, preferably.”

      “Are you hungry now?” Anny asked.

      “Not really. Just in no mood to deal with paparazzi. Know any place quiet?”

      She nodded. “For dinner, yes. A little place in Le Soquet, the old quarter, that is basically off the tourist track.” She looked at him speculatively, an idea forming. “You don’t want to talk to anyone?”

      A brow lifted. “I want to talk to you.”

      Enchanted, Anny smiled. “Flatterer.” He was amazingly charming. “I was thinking, if you’re really not hungry yet, but you wouldn’t mind talking to a few more kids—not paparazzi, not journalists—just kids who would love to meet you—”

      “You have kids?” he said, startled.

      Quickly Anny shook her head. “No. I volunteer at a clinic for children and teenagers with spinal injuries and paralysis. I was there this afternoon. And I was having a sort of discussion—well, argument, really, with one of the boys…he’s a teenager—about action heroes.”

      Demetrios’s mouth quirked. “You argue about action heroes?”

      “Franck will pretty much argue about anything. He likes to argue. And he has opinions.”

      “And you do, too?” There was a teasing light in his eye now.

      Anny smiled. “I suppose I do,” she admitted. “But I try not to batter people with them. Except for Franck,” she added. “Because it’s all the recreation he gets these days. Anything I say, he takes the opposite view.”

      “He must have brothers,” Demetrios said wryly.

      But Anny shook her head. “He’s an only child.”

      “Even worse.”

      “Yes.” Anny thought so, too. She had been an only child herself for twenty years. Her mother had not been able to have more children after Anny, and she’d died when Anny was twelve. Only when her father married Charlise seven years ago had Anny dared to hope for a sibling.

      Now she had three little half brothers, Alexandre, Raoul, and David. And even though she was much older—actually old enough to be their mother—she still relished the joy of having brothers.

      “Franck makes up for it by arguing with me,” she said. “And I was just thinking, what a coup it would be if I brought you back to the clinic. You obviously know more about action heroes than I do so you could argue with him. Then after, we could have dinner?”

      It was presumptuous. He might turn her down cold.

      But somehow she wasn’t surprised when he actually sat up straighter and said, “Sounds like a deal. Let’s go.”

      The look on Franck’s face when they walked into his room was priceless. His jaw went slack. No sound came out of his mouth at all.

      Anny tried not to smile as she turned back toward Demetrios. “I want you to meet a friend of mine,” she said to him. “This is Franck Villiers. Franck, this is—”

      “I know who he is.” But Franck still stared in disbelief.

      Demetrios stuck out his hand. “Pleased to meet you,” he said in French.

      For a moment, Franck didn’t take it. Then, when he did, he stared at the hand he was shaking as if the sight could convince him that the man with Anny was real.

      Slowly he turned an accusing gaze on Anny “You’re going to marry him?”

      She jerked. “No!” She felt her cheeks flame.

      “You said you had to leave early because you were going to meet your fiancé.”

      Oh God, she’d forgotten that.

      “He got delayed,” Anny said quickly. “He couldn’t come.” She shot a look at Demetrios.

      He raised his brows in silent question, but he simply said to Franck, “So I invited her to dinner instead.”

      Franck shoved himself up farther against the pillows and looked at her. “You never said you knew Luke St. Angier. I mean—him,” he corrected himself, cheeks reddening as if he’d embarrassed himself by confusing the man and the role he’d played.

      Demetrios didn’t seem to care. “We just met,” he said. “Anny mentioned your discussion. I can’t believe you think MacGyver is smarter than Luke St. Angier.”

      Anny

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