In Bed with Her Ex. Nina Harrington

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In Bed with Her Ex - Nina Harrington Mills & Boon By Request

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heart—astonished, bewildered, aghast, shattered. But in the next instant it was all gone, and only a stone mask remained.

      No matter. She’d seen all that she needed to see. He’d expected to find Mrs Henshaw, but Cassie’s ghost had walked and nothing would ever be the same.

      Now she was glad there hadn’t been time to change into something more respectable. There was a time for restraint and a time for defiance. Mrs Henshaw would have been left floundering, but Cassie was the expert.

      Monsieur Lenoir cleared his throat and came forward, sounding embarrassed. ‘Madame Henshaw, allow me to introduce my son.’

      ‘Well, I think he’s already introduced himself,’ Cassie said with a little giggle.

      ‘But you haven’t introduced yourself,’ Henri said.

      Brigitte intervened. ‘Mrs Henshaw is masterminding Marcel’s purchase of the London hotel.’

      ‘That’s a bit of an exaggeration,’ Cassie said hastily. ‘I’m not exactly masterminding it.’

      ‘But Marcel says that you are a great brain,’ Brigitte reminded her.

      ‘I’m no such thing,’ she defended herself.

      Henri gave an exaggerated sigh of relief. ‘Thank goodness for that. Brainy women terrify me.’

      ‘Then you’ve nothing to fear from me,’ she cooed, giving him her best teasing smile.

      ‘But you must be brainy or Marcel wouldn’t have employed you,’ Brigitte pointed out.

      ‘That’s true,’ Cassie said as if suddenly realising. ‘I must be brighter than I thought.’

      Her eyes met Marcel’s, seeing in them floundering confusion wrestling ineffectively with anger. She was beginning to enjoy herself.

      ‘It’s time were going,’ Monsieur Lenoir declared, edging his son firmly out of the way and offering Cassie his arm. ‘Madame Henshaw, may I have the pleasure of escorting you?’

      ‘The pleasure is mine,’ she replied.

      But then Henri too stepped forward, offering his other arm so that she walked out of the door with a man on each side, leaving Marcel to follow with Brigitte.

      They made a glamorous spectacle as they went along the corridor, the men in dinner jackets and bow ties, Brigitte in flowing evening gown, and Cassie in her luxurious black satin that left nothing to the imagination.

      Perhaps that was why Marcel never so much as glanced at her as they went down in the elevator.

      But as they stepped out and headed for the restaurant he raised his voice. ‘Mrs Henshaw, there’s a small matter of business we need to clear up before the evening starts. The rest of you go on and we’ll join you.’

      His hand on her arm was urgent, holding her back and drawing her around a corner, where there was nobody to see them.

      ‘Just what do you think you’re doing?’ he muttered furiously.

      ‘Being civil to the people who are important to you.’ ‘You know what I mean—the way you’re dressed—’ ‘But you told me to.’

       ‘I—?’

      ‘Be less severe, you said. And only today you brushed my hair forward so that—’

      ‘Never mind that,’ he said hastily.

      ‘I’m only doing what I thought you wanted. Oh, dear!’ She gasped as if in shocked discovery. ‘Didn’t I go far enough? Should the neckline be lower?’

      She took hold as though to pull it down but he seized her hands in his own. Instinctively her fingers tightened on his, drawing them against her skin, so that she felt him next to the swell of her breasts just before they vanished into the neckline.

      He stood for a moment as though fighting to move but unable to find the strength. There was murder in his eyes.

      ‘Damn you!’ he said softly. ‘Damn you, Cassie!’

      He wrenched his hands free and stormed off without waiting for her to reply. She clutched the wall, her chest rising and falling as conflicting emotions raced through her. The signals coming from him had been of violence and hostility but, far from fearing him, she was full of triumph.

      He recognised her. He’d admitted it.

      He’d blurted it out against his better judgement and they both knew it. Whatever the future held, thus far the battle was hers.

      As she turned the corner she saw that he was still there, standing by the door through which they must go. He offered her his arm without meeting her eyes, and together they went on their way.

      The others were waiting for them just inside the restaurant, agog with curiosity, but their polite smiles acted as masks and curiosity went unsatisfied. Monsieur Lenoir pulled out a chair, indicating for her to sit beside him, and Henri nimbly seized the place on her other side. For a moment she thought Marcel would say something, but Brigitte touched his cheek and he hastened to smile at her.

      Cassie looked about her, fascinated. Chandeliers hung from the ceiling, golden ornaments hung from the walls. The glasses were of the finest crystal, just as the champagne being poured into them was also the finest.

      She wasn’t usually impressed by luxury, having seen much of it in earlier years, but there was an elegance about this place that appealed to her. She sipped the champagne appreciatively, then took a notebook from her bag and began to scribble.

      ‘What are you doing?’ Henri murmured in a tone that suggested conspiracy.

      ‘Observing,’ she said briskly. ‘That’s what I’m here for.’

      ‘Surely not,’ he murmured. ‘You’re here to have a wonderful time with a man who admires you more than any other woman in the world.’

      ‘No, I’m here to do a job,’ she said severely. ‘Monsieur Falcon has employed me for my efficiency—’

      ‘Ah, but efficiency at what?’ His eyes, raking her shape left no doubt of his meaning.

      ‘At business matters,’ she informed him in her best ‘prison-wardress’ voice.

      ‘But there’s business and business,’ he pointed out. ‘It’s not just facts and figures he wants from you, I’ll bet.’

      ‘Monsieur Lenoir!’ she exclaimed.

      ‘Henri, please. I already feel that we know each other well.’

      ‘Henri, I’m shocked!’

      ‘And I’ll bet you don’t shock easily. Do go on.’

      ‘You cannot know me well if you think that of me.’

      ‘Think what of you?’ he asked with an innocence that would have fooled anyone not forewarned. ‘I don’t know

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