The Dare Collection December 2019. Clare Connelly

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restaurant?

      ‘From time to time. Have you ever been?’

      She looks around, her expression impossible to decipher. ‘Nope.’

      I sit beside her rather than across the table. It’s not my usual play but I don’t really want to be separated from her. Once Jake brings our drinks, I’ll have him draw the curtains. Our knees brush beneath the table. She jumps a little. I smile.

      ‘You’re nervous again.’

      Her eyes flex to mine. ‘A little.’

      ‘Why?’ I lift my finger to her perfectly painted, beautifully shaped lips. ‘Don’t tell me. Because you haven’t done this in a really long time.’ Her eyelashes are incredibly long, like wings hovering just above her eyes. They flutter as a bird might flap and I stare at her, transfixed, until Jake reappears with the drinks. He places them on the table and, without looking at him, I say, ‘Close the curtains.’

      ‘Yes, sir.’

      Imogen’s eyes flare, anticipation in their depths. I shouldn’t play with her—she’s too sweet and way too inexperienced—but I pull away from her a little. ‘We don’t want anyone to see us.’

      Her lips part a little. ‘See us doing what?’

      It’s just a question but it might as well be an invitation to lift her up and fuck her right here on this table.

      I’m seriously tempted. But I’ve got the night planned and, for a reason I can’t really fathom, I care about showing her what her social life should be like. Maybe it’s like passing a baton, enlisting an apprentice right before I hang up my New York shoes and go back to England?

      ‘Dating, of course.’ I grin.

      ‘Right.’ She swallows, her delicate, pale throat tensing with the gesture. ‘I’ve been thinking about that.’

      Something switches inside her, and the nerves are gone. She sits a little straighter, reaching for the champagne glass without sipping it in what I now recognise is a prop technique. She likes to hold something. To stop herself fidgeting?

      Her fingers curve around the stem. ‘Go on,’ I prompt, matching her gesture, pulling my own soda tumbler towards me.

      ‘This whole dating thing.’ She pauses, a furrow on her brow. ‘We need to discuss it further.’

      My lips quirk but I take a drink to hide the smile. I don’t think she’d like to feel as if I’m laughing at her. And I’m not, really, more just thinking how cute she is like this—trying to bring her impressive business mind to a social agreement.

      ‘Okay, so discuss it.’

      ‘I’m serious,’ she murmurs, her eyes forcing mine to hold hers.

      ‘What is it?’

      ‘I was thinking, earlier, about how crazy this is and I think we need to have some more rules in place.’

      ‘Rules?’ I jerk my brows without meaning to. ‘Out of nowhere, I’m thinking of a headmistress and I’ve got to tell you, Imogen, it’s very hot.’

      She grins, leaning forward and pressing her hand to my shoulder. ‘Maybe later, Mr Rothsmore.’

      Oh, crap. Role play. With her? Suddenly, she has about a thousand upper hands as I start to imagine her in all sorts of costumes and can barely think straight.

      ‘My business means everything to me,’ she says, her smile slowly falling from her face. ‘It’s not just… It isn’t just something I’ve worked really hard to build. It means a lot. To a lot of people. And part of that is my image. I really can’t have anyone find out about us.’

      ‘We’ve already dealt with this.’

      ‘I know.’ She nods a little jerkily. ‘But what we didn’t talk about is what happens after.’

      After? ‘In a month?’ I never think more than a day ahead. Even planning to see her until I leave was somewhat paradigm-shifting for my mentality. Planning beyond that is not something I have the skillset for.

      She nods. ‘We’ll see each other again. It’s inevitable.’

      ‘So?’ I lift a brow. ‘That’s kind of fun.’

      ‘No.’ It’s like a whip, cracking across me. ‘I don’t want this to be something that goes on, where we see each other in Monaco and decide to pick up where we left off.’ A moue of disapproval shifts over her lips. ‘That’s messy and inelegant and definitely leaves room for discovery.’

      Her summation is adamant, but she has a very good point. I could see me spying her from across the room at an event and finding an excuse to drag her into a hallway to have some fun, only to be seen by a passing member. It’s risky.

      ‘We need a line in the sand,’ she goes on carefully, as though she’s thinking on the fly. ‘The Christmas gala should be our last night together. After that, we’re civil, polite strangers. If you see me at an event, you say “hi”, and keep moving.’

      There’s nothing in her suggestion that worries me. I know what my future holds and it is far away from Imogen Carmichael and this wonderful world she’s created.

      ‘Fine.’ It’s easy to agree to that.

      Seeing her obvious relief dents my pride a little.

      ‘Okay.’ Her smile is bright. ‘So privacy and a hard stop point.’ She nods. ‘Good.’

      ‘You forgot the third rule,’ I say, unable to explain why something is firing in my chest that feels a lot like impatience.

      ‘Did I? What’s that?’ She’s businesslike again, focussed on me and what she could have missed.

      ‘A whole lotta fun in between.’ I swoop my head down and kiss her, swallowing her surprise and laughing deep in my throat. Yeah, this is going to be fun all right.

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      He kisses as if it’s a sport and he holds all the world records in it. He kisses as if his sole purpose for being is getting me off. He kisses as if he were meant to be doing this.

      I surrender to him, lifting a hand and curling it in his shirt, clutching onto him in case he gets it into his head to stop what he’s doing. I don’t want him to stop. Beneath the table, I lift one leg a little, onto his knee, and his hand curves around the leather, keeping it hooked there, his tongue duelling with mine as he kisses me harder, his other hand lifting to the back of my head and pushing through my hair, holding me right where I am.

      I have no intention of going anywhere.

      My head spins, afterwards, when he lifts away from me. He really is the quintessential English nobleman, so handsome, so swarthy and fancy yet masculine all at once. There’s something cultured and inaccessible about him that even someone like me, who grew up with Hollywood royalty and can generally move in all circles, finds intimidating yet fascinating.

      ‘Are

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