Man In A Million. Muriel Jensen
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Название: Man In A Million

Автор: Muriel Jensen

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Современные любовные романы

Серия:

isbn: 9781472025098

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СКАЧАТЬ as immune to my charms as you thought you were.”

      “Apparently not,” she whispered.

      “What was that?” he teased, holding a hand to his ear.

      “Apparently not!” she repeated in a louder tone. “Do you want a piece of chocolate?”

      “Please.”

      “Nut or soft center?”

      “Surprise me.”

      He held his right hand out and she placed a peanut cluster in it.

      “Enjoy that,” she said, “because I’m not sharing any more.” She selected a chocolate, bit it in half and made a soft sound of pleasure. “Oohh.” There was a moment’s silence while she finished the morsel, then she seemed to suffer eater’s remorse.

      She hit his arm with the box lid, then covered the chocolates. “This is going to set me back five or six pounds, at least!” she complained. “I’ll never fit into the red dress, and Prue’s going to be filled with recriminations! I mean, we’re just starting to get along, and this is one thing I can do for her, though I’d rather be shaved bald than walk down a runway in front of hundreds of people! And she’s going to be furious with me because I’m going to look lumpy in her clothes! It’s going to be like high school all over again!”

      “What about high school?”

      “We hated each other,” she said, reaching over the seat to put the chocolates in the back. The action brought them into fairly close contact as she braced her hand on his shoulder to reach the back seat. He felt the softness of her breast against his arm and caught a whiff of jasmine.

      Her eyes met his, just inches away, and he forgot completely about the road ahead.

      She sat back quickly.

      He was grateful that the road was straight, and that there was nothing in front of him.

      “She was beautiful and I was…more cerebral. I hated her because every boy who came to our home noticed her and not me, and she hated me because I got the grades and she was always having to explain to our parents why hers were so low.”

      “That’s just the usual kid stuff, isn’t it?”

      “It would be,” she said, sounding distracted, “if the father we both adored growing up hadn’t turned out to be her father, but not mine.”

      “That’s what you were thinking about this morning,” he guessed, “when you didn’t see the oncoming car.”

      She nodded regretfully, then folded her arms, clearly upset with herself that she’d shared that. “I can’t believe I didn’t see that car. Well, I must have seen it, but somehow it just didn’t register.”

      “I’m sure discovering that your parent isn’t really your parent is pretty heavy stuff. You just found out?”

      She told him how she accidentally learned in a college class that her father could not be hers biologically. About coming back to Maple Hill to confront her mother, who seemed to have explained away the situation with a series of lies.

      “My mother left for a photo shoot in Africa a few days ago,” Paris said. “And I determined that while she was gone, I was going to find out for myself who my father was.”

      “But…you said she told you he was dead.”

      “Yes, but she lied. Well, at least the man whose name she gave me is very much alive. And he denies being my father.”

      “He could be lying, too.”

      “I don’t think so.”

      “Then…I guess you have to somehow convince your mother that you can take the truth.”

      “Take the truth.” She leaned back against the headrest. “Why would she think I can’t take it? Certainly she wouldn’t be the first unwed mother, if that’s the case. Anyway, I’d just talked to Jeffrey St. John this morning—that’s the man she told me was my father—and I was a little upset and on my way to the market to buy a giant candy bar.”

      “There was half of one in your wallet,” he said, turning onto Lake Road.

      She made a face at him. “Prue ate it when she drove last night.”

      He laughed. “You mean, she denies you but eats it herself?”

      “She can,” she said. “She’s very petite. It’s that yellow house.”

      She pointed to a big bungalow with a private dock and a considerable amount of lakefront. He pulled into a short driveway with yellow chrysanthemums on both sides.

      Prue, wearing overalls and a broad-brimmed sun hat, was weeding the beds. She looked up in surprise, then stood as he pulled up to the rear steps.

      “Isn’t she like a cover of Better Homes and Gardens magazine?” Paris asked. “Dressed in grubbies and somehow still a picture.”

      He had to agree. “She’s a very attractive woman. But so are you. And while confidence is sexy, there’s something about vulnerability that’s very appealing.”

      She looked at him in surprise.

      “What happened?” Prue asked, putting the basket and scissors down at the sight of Paris’s pale face. Then she noticed the Berkshire Cab sign on the strange car. “Where’s the wagon?”

      Paris explained briefly about the accident. “The wagon’s going to be in the shop for a couple of days, so Randy’s lending us his car.”

      “That’s very kind of you.” She gave Randy a knowing look, as though suspecting his interest in her sister motivated his kindness. Then she returned her attention to Paris. “But are you okay? Have you seen a doctor?”

      Paris started for the house, telling her sister about the trip to the emergency room. Then she seemed to remember him.

      He was wondering if he was going to have to walk home when she studied him consideringly, then drew a deep breath. “I’m going to make him a sandwich, then you can take him home when you start your shift.”

      She glanced at her watch. “I’d better start early. We have a Wednesday afternoon regular, don’t we? Two-thirty?”

      Paris put a hand to her forehead and groaned. “I forgot! The Lightfoot sisters and their weekly tea party with Mariah at Perk Avenue.” The Lightfoot sisters ran the Maple Hill Manor School where Mariah once worked. “And I was congratulating myself on having picked a slow afternoon to have an accident. No calls backed up on the cell phone.”

      “Not a problem.” Prue snatched the phone and whipped the sun hat off her head. “I’ll take over now, then you can call me when Randy’s ready to go home. I like it when you owe me.” Then she used her hat to point at the box in Paris’s hands. “Is that chocolate?”

      Paris clutched it to her and her expression grew firm. “They were a gift from Randy when he picked me up at the hospital. You can trust me with СКАЧАТЬ