Название: Secret Wedding
Автор: Emma Richmond
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
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‘Don’t be so callous!’ she reproved him angrily. ‘She—’
‘I said,’ he repeated, with the air of one who expected to be obeyed and usually was, ‘Leave her be. She’s leaning on the railing above the bay. She’ll come to no harm out there.’
‘I wasn’t talking about harm! I was talking about emotions! Something you clearly know nothing about!’
Not angry, not annoyed by her outburst, he merely stared at her.
With a glare of frustration, she gritted, ‘You really are the most. . .’
‘Autocratic?’ he asked helpfully.
‘Yes. And unkind. She needs comforting:
‘No, Miss Hart,’ he denied smoothly. ‘She needs leaving alone. Tell me about her.’
‘I don’t know anything about her! I met her five minutes before you did. She asked me if I knew you, I said yes, and that was it!’
‘Was it?’ he asked sceptically.
‘Yes.’ With an irritable twitch, she moved away, stared disagreeably at an inoffensive vase. And it’s surely understandable she muttered, if she’d only just found out, that she’d want to know if she was like you?’
He gave a twisted smile. ‘Unlikely, seeing as I have no daughter.’
‘Your name’s on the birth certificate.’
‘Certificates can be forged.’
‘Yes, but surely not by her?’ she swung back to exclaim. ‘She came on impulse!’
‘Did she?’
‘You don’t believe her?’
‘I don’t know what I believe!’ he stated flatly.
Don’t you? she wondered. Staring at his strong back, she eventually asked quietly, ‘Why are you so sure? I mean. . . when you were young, you could have–probably did. . . Most. . .’ Oh, shut up, Gillan. With a deep sigh, she opened out the birth certificate that Fran had thrust at her. ‘Her mother’s name is Elaine Dutton. And you are listed as the father.’
‘Never heard of her. When was she born?’
‘Fourteenth of June.’
‘Full term?’
‘I don’t know,’ she replied helplessly. ‘How would I know?’
‘Then let’s assume she was.’ His voice clipped, authoritative, like a lawyer, he continued, ‘That would make conception the middle of October in the previous year.’
‘Yes.’
‘Here?’
‘What?’
‘Here?’ he repeated. ‘On the island?’
‘Oh, for goodness’ sake, the certificate only lists the place of birth, not conception. And, before you ask, no, I do not know how she found you, or what her mother said, thought, felt. I’m doing my best!’
‘Kind of you,’ he praised with humourless irony, then he turned and twitched the certificate out of her hand.
‘But if you’re not—’
‘I’m not,’ he said positively.
‘Then I’ll leave you to sort it out,’ she decided in exasperation. ‘Find a hotel. . . Yes,’ she insisted when he began to shake his head.
‘No,’ he said, his attention still fixed on the birth certificate. ‘You will stay here.’
‘But why?’
‘To keep an eye on her.’
‘But it isn’t any of my business,’ she protested.
‘Isn’t it?’ he asked, with a rather cynical smile.
‘No!’
‘Then humour me.’
‘Humour you?’ she practically shouted. ‘Why on earth would I want to humour you?’
He just looked at her, waited. And she sighed and stated quietly, ‘Nerina.’
‘Yes. Nerina. She’s going to ring you, remember? And I will not,’ he added grimly, ‘have her hurt, worried or upset.’
‘And finding out that her precious big brother might have a daughter would do that, would it?’
‘Not “might”, Miss Hart,’ he corrected her. ‘I do not have a daughter. And I have no idea whether it would upset her or not, but I don’t intend for her to know. And you have a promotional brochure to do, don’t you?’
‘Do I?’ she asked wearily.
‘Yes. And it will need your full attention, won’t it?’
‘I can give it my full attention from a hotel. You could let Nerina know where I am.’
‘No, here; it will be easier to collaborate.’
‘Interfere,’ she muttered.
‘Collaborate,’ he insisted.
‘And Francesca won’t think she’s being spied on?’
He gave a derisive little nod.
Swinging away, frustrated, irritated, tired, she muttered, ‘I was hired—’
‘By my sister,’ he put in helpfully.
‘By your sister,’ she gritted. ‘I thought it was because I’m innovative, able to give a fresh slant—which apparently turns out to be a load of old nonsense, because she was in no position to hire me, or even invite me. And now. . . Now I’m not only your fiancee but expected to be Mother Superior to a young, frightened—’
‘Manipulative,’ he put in smoothly.
‘All right, maybe manipulative young lady. But so as she won’t suspect spying I am to pretend to be ace photographer for the Micallef Corporation.’
‘I thought you were an ace photographer. I’m sure Nerina told me you were.’
‘Shut up!’ she gritted fiercely. ‘And, ace or not, it’s a job I cannot do if I’m supposed to be supervising a fourteen-year-old girl, or if you’re continually breathing down my neck and overriding my innovations just so that you too can keep an eye on Francesca!’
‘I have no intention of overriding your innovations,’ СКАЧАТЬ