The Marriage Deal. Helen Bianchin
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He lifted two flutes of champagne from the tray and handed one to Sandrine.
‘Salut.’ He touched the rim of her flute with his own.
She ignored the temptation to drain the contents in one long swallow and deliberately sipped the chilled aerated wine, savoured the taste, then let the liquid slide down her throat.
‘Shall we join our host?’
Sandrine’s eyes clashed momentarily with his, then she veiled their expression. There would be an opportunity later to unleash the verbal diatribe seething beneath the surface. Round one might be his, but she had every intention the next would be hers.
She summoned a slow smile, her acting ability prominent as she tucked a hand into the curve of his elbow.
‘Having provided the guests with an unexpected floor show, don’t you think introductions are somewhat overdue?’
Minutes later Michel moved easily at Tony’s side, displaying an interest in each guest’s professional background as he posed questions with practised charm.
Working the room, Sandrine recognized with cynicism. A retentive and photographic memory ensured he was never at a loss in the business arena or among the social set.
‘As secrets go, yours is a doozey.’
She turned slightly and encountered a slender young woman whose name temporarily escaped her.
‘Stephanie Sommers, marketing.’
‘Yes, of course,’ Sandrine responded, warming to Stephanie’s faintly wicked smile.
‘I can understand you keeping him under wraps. Where did you find him?’
‘New York. We married in Paris.’
‘Ah, the universal city for lovers.’
Sandrine felt a shiver slither its way over the surface of her skin as she experienced instant recall of the city, the ambience. The magic. Paris in the spring, when the grey skies cleared and everything came alive. As her heart had when she first met Michel.
An ache centred in the region of her diaphragm, intensifying as memories surfaced. Memories that had held such promise, so much love, she’d imagined their lives together were inviolate and forever entwined.
The stuff of which fantasies are made, she reflected wryly. With little basis in reality.
‘Tony is on his best behaviour.’
Sandrine summoned a quick smile. Something that was becoming a habit as the evening progressed. ‘The future of the film is at stake.’
‘Is it?’
The query bore a certain quizzical humour as if Stephanie had already concluded the injection of essential finance was a done deal.
It was, although Sandrine wondered what the marketing manager’s reaction would be if she discovered the reason for Michel’s investment.
‘Okay. So the rest of us get to sweat it out a little longer.’
Sandrine looked suitably enigmatic until Stephanie gave a low, throaty chuckle.
‘You can’t say I didn’t try.’ The attractive blonde spared a glance at her watch. ‘I’m going to have to leave soon.’
‘A date?’
‘With a baby-sitter who can only stay until ten,’ the marketing manager replied with a touch of cynicism.
‘Divided loyalties?’
‘No contest. My daughter wins out every time.’ She quickly scanned the room, then lowered her voice to a confidential tone. ‘Your husband has escaped from Tony and is heading this way. Impressive beast, isn’t he?’
Beast was an apt description. Although not in the context Stephanie implied. ‘Tony, or Michel?’
She met Stephanie’s direct look with equanimity, glimpsed the momentary speculation before it was quickly masked and cast her a wicked smile.
‘Surely you jest?’
Sandrine refrained from responding as Michel loomed close.
She felt her body stiffen in anticipation of his touch and she unconsciously held her breath, only releasing it when he made no attempt at physical contact.
‘Michel, you’ve met Stephanie?’ she managed smoothly.
‘Yes. We shared an interesting discussion on marketing techniques.’
‘Albeit that it was brief.’
‘Something we will correct, n’est-ce pas?’
Oh, my, he was good. The right amount of interest, the desired element of charm, with hard business acumen just visible beneath the surface.
‘It will be a pleasure,’ Stephanie accorded, then she excused herself, and Sandrine watched as she talked briefly to Tony before exiting the room.
‘She is a friend?’
The mildness of Michel’s voice didn’t deceive her. ‘Actors have little to do with the business heads.’
‘Am I to assume, then, that tonight is the first time you’ve met?’
She cast him a mocking glance. ‘Would you like me to give you a run-down on everyone at this soiree? Whom I speak to, touch?’ She paused a beat. ‘Kiss?’
‘Careful,’ Michel warned silkily. ‘You’re treading dangerous ground.’
‘In the name of one’s craft, of course,’ she added, and derived a degree of personal satisfaction at the way his eyes narrowed.
‘If I thought otherwise,’ he drawled, ‘I’d carry you kicking and screaming onto the first plane out of here.’
‘Neanderthal tactics belong to a distant civilisation.’
‘Neanderthal and civilised do not mesh, chérie. Persist in baiting me, and I’ll show you just how uncivilised I can be.’
Her chin lifted, and her eyes remained remarkably steady as they clashed with his. ‘Too late, mon amant. I’ve already been there, remember?’
‘I retain a vivid memory of a little wildcat who threw a few objects at me in temper.’
Expensive Waterford crystal. An inkwell, a paperweight and a small clock decorating the antique desk in his study.
At the time she’d been too angry to care, but afterwards she’d experienced a pang of regret for the exquisite crystal items that formed part of a desk set. And the panelled wall they’d collided with before falling to the marble floor