An Australian Surrender. Maisey Yates

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      This was a huge part of making it all look real. “Yes.”

      “I’ll go and get it from the safe.”

      Ethan ignored the slow burn of guilt that mingled with the alcohol in his gut. Everything was working out now, just as he’d planned. The ring was another piece of the puzzle.

      He downed the last of his whiskey, letting the fire overtake the uncomfortable emotion that was swirling in his stomach. Everything was starting to fall into place, and guilt had no part in it.

      “You’re tense,” Noelle commented.

      They were about five minutes into the drive from his grandparents’ house and he hadn’t spoken a word. His hands were locked tightly around the steering wheel, the muscles on his forearms corded, showing his strain.

      “Not at all,” he replied, teeth gritted.

      “You’re a bad liar.”

      He tossed her a quick glance. “I’m not.”

      “You are.”

      “I’m not trying to lie.”

      “Well, then you’re a bad liar when you aren’t trying to be a good one. You aren’t fine, even I can see that, and I’m not really an authority on reading people. You can use my mother as exhibit A on that one.”

      He hunched slightly and shifted his hands lower on the wheel. “It doesn’t thrill me to lie to my grandparents.”

      She swallowed. “I’m with you. Your grandmother is … she’s very kind.”

      “She always is. She’s so stable. Calm.”

      “Not like my mother at all.”

      “Or mine.”

      “Want to tell me about her?”

      He leaned his head back against the seat. “Not in the least. You?”

      “Don’t you already know about her?”

      “I know what I saw. She was beautiful. Charming. She had my father under a spell. What did you see when you looked at her?”

      Noelle bit her lip. “All of that. She could play this kind of sweet beauty, act a little bit naive so that she could get away with being demanding. But that was an act. She was smart. Smarter than I am, obviously. She used me to make money, and I can’t seem to manage that.”

      “She was dishonest, you weren’t. That’s not smarter. That’s cheating.”

      “Then what are we doing right now?”

      “We’re cheating too. But it’s for a good cause. Trust me.”

      She wished she could.

      They were quiet again until he turned the car down a winding road that led toward the beach. Noelle unrolled her window and let the salt air and the sound of waves on the sand fill up the interior of the car. It was preferable to that ear-ringing silence.

      Ethan pulled the car up to the front of the hotel and left it, keys in the ignition. He got out, slamming the door behind him, not bothering to come around for her door this time. She sat with her hands in her lap for a moment before opening her own door and following him in to the opulent lobby.

      Her stomach tightened as she hurried to catch up with him, her high heels clicking on the black marble floors. She looked up at the high ceiling, at the five levels of rooms, each with a balcony that overlooked the massive lobby, ornate carvings on the hand rails with vines growing over them. Like a ruined city that still glittered with riches.

      She’d been here before. Stayed here with her mother whenever she performed in Brisbane. It brought so many things back. Every time they’d come, she’d practically been frog-marched through the lobby on her way to the many-roomed suite at the top floor, and, jet lag not even accounted for, had been settled in front of the piano to practice within five minutes of her arrival.

      And her mother had gone out, as she always did. To network or whatever it was she called it. And she’d been alone.

      “We’re staying in the room with the piano, aren’t we?”

      Ethan stopped dead in his tracks and turned, his dark eyebrows locked together, the heavy tension still radiating from his body. “Yes.”

      “I’ve been here. We came to Brisbane quite a bit for a few years and we always stayed here.”

      There was a strange light in his eyes, something cold. Dark. “Is that so?”

      “Yes. I mean, I like it … it’s … nice.”

      “If you’d like to stay somewhere else …?”

      She shook her head. “No. It’s fine.”

      She followed him over to the side of the lobby that had a stone wall and water running closely down the side of it. There was a line of elevators with golden doors, the water routed well around them so that people could step inside without fear of getting their designer clothing wet.

      “When did you buy this hotel?” she asked, stepping inside the lift behind him.

      “A few years ago. The first of my grandfather’s hotels that he surrendered to me. My father used to manage it.” He spat the last words out as if they tasted bitter.

      “I don’t even know who my father is.”

      He turned to her, his eyes hardened into black ice. “There are times when I wish I didn’t know who mine was.”

      It was difficult to hold his gaze when he looked like that, when the remnants of his charming facade fell away and he was all hard, angry male. But she managed it. She’d spent a long time being submissive, doing as she was told and cowering in fear. She didn’t want to do it anymore.

      “Why?”

      “I think he was quite like your mother in many ways. A cheat.”

      “Aren’t we a pair, Ethan? Probably a good thing we aren’t getting married for real.”

      He grunted in what, she assumed, was agreement.

      The doors to the elevator slid open after a moment and revealed an opulent gilded entryway, glowing with gold and cluttered with ornate carvings. She couldn’t hold back a laugh as Ethan punched in the key code. She was glad to find a reason, any reason, to laugh. To break some of the tension in her. Tension brought on by being here again. Tension from being near Ethan.

      “What?” he asked, pushing open the door.

      “This whole hotel is so very not you.”

      “How do you figure?” he asked, holding the door open for her and letting her enter the room first. He must have calmed down because that reflexive chivalry of his had returned.

      “You don’t strike me

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