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Sharon Kendrick Collection. Sharon Kendrick
Читать онлайн.Название Sharon Kendrick Collection
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781474032308
Автор произведения Sharon Kendrick
Жанр Контркультура
Серия Mills & Boon e-Book Collections
Издательство HarperCollins
Thank goodness they weren’t talking on phones with video screens, thought Romy, her cheeks going pink. Because then he would have been able to witness the depressing little spectacle of her nipples stinging with some horrifying Pavlovian response to the way he said her name.
‘I can’t believe I’m through to the Great Man at last!’ she said sarcastically.
‘Had problems, did you?’
‘I should say!’ answered Romy crossly. ‘I had to speak to at least three snotty secretaries who obviously do a bit of moonlighting for the Spanish Inquisition!’
‘Which is why,’ he explained patiently, as though Romy had an IQ in single figures, ‘I offered to ring you—’
‘Can you still meet me tonight?’ Romy interrupted crisply, thinking it would go down well if she sounded both bored and busy.
‘Where?’
Romy blinked. ‘Wh-where?’
‘Well, you did say that you’d book.’
‘Oh, yes. I have. Of course I have!’
A pause. ‘Then where?’
Romy didn’t stop to think. ‘The Olive Branch,’ she said wildly.
Another pause. ‘Are you sure?’
‘Of course I’m sure!’ she lied outrageously. ‘Is this the way you usually respond when someone manages to get you a table in London’s best restaurant?’
‘I shall look forward to it immensely,’ came the dry rejoinder. ‘What time have you booked the table for?’
The stupidity of what she had done was only just beginning to register and Romy had to think rapidly. Getting a table at The Olive Branch was going to be like procuring a diamond the size of the Koh-i-noor. And the only way she had of increasing her odds was to suggest a time when most normal people had not only eaten their evening meal but were brushing their teeth and about to climb into their pyjamas too!
‘Eleven o’clock,’ she announced.
‘Isn’t that a little late?’
Crossing her fingers, Romy said, ‘Um—I promised my friend Stephanie that I would go and listen to her sing.’
‘So you wanted somewhere near the Royal Opera House?’ he guessed.
Actually, Stephanie couldn’t hold a tune to save her life, and was the least artistic person Romy knew—but there was no need for Dominic to know that. She needed to distract him!
Romy started rustling some papers close to the telephone.
‘What was that?’ he asked, and Romy could tell he was frowning.
‘I’ve no idea. I’d better go and investigate. I’ll see you later, Dominic.’
And she hung up.
‘I could hardly find you, stuck away out here,’ came the sardonic comment, and Romy didn’t need to look up from her mostly gulped down glass of gin and tonic to know who the speaker was.
She looked up to see that he was wearing a suit, and she almost did what he had accused her of longing to do. She almost swooned.
But not quite.
Nonetheless, her outward display of disinterest did not stop her eyes from wandering over him with hypnotic obsession.
The suit was dark grey—a grey that was the stormy colour of his eyes when he was angry. Which seemed to be most of the time when she was around! And the suit must have been designed with Dominic in mind, Romy decided, because the trousers made his lean legs look heart-stoppingly long and the superbly cut jacket emphasised his broad shoulders and the narrow indentation of his waist.
‘Hi!’ she greeted him, rather too brightly. ‘Do sit down, Dominic. You managed to find it all right, then?’
He was still looking at their table with a disbelieving frown. ‘Wouldn’t you rather sit in the main part of the restaurant?’ he persisted as a waiter emerged through the swing doors and whizzed right past them with two steaming platefuls of pasta balanced precariously on the palm of each hand. ‘It looks as though we could spend the evening fielding missiles if we stay here,’ he murmured.
Determined to show that she didn’t care that the maître d’ had seated them in the darkest corner at the back of the restaurant, somewhere in between the kitchens and the lavatories, Romy fixed a wide smile to her mouth. ’Rubbish! Besides, I like The Olive Branch for its delicious food, not the fact that half the media people in London are busy filling their faces!’
Dominic took his seat and looked around the restaurant with interest. ‘I didn’t realise they had an ante-room,’ he observed neutrally.
‘It is not an ante-room!’ Romy snapped. ‘I just thought you might like a little peace and quiet.’
‘I’ll certainly get that!’ he quipped. ‘It looks about as popular as a rainstorm on Derby day!’
Fortunately, at that moment the waiter interrupted them with menus and gave Romy a conspiratorial wink. She had virtually had to get down on her hands and knees and beg for a table. Even a table like this!
And now she wished that she had not behaved like a madwoman—trying to impress Dominic with her choice of restaurant. She should have taken him to a simple soup and salad bar...
‘Just pasta with clams,’ Dominic was saying to the waiter. ‘No, I won’t have a starter, thanks,’ he added, in reply to the waiter’s question. ‘It’s a little late for a three-course meal.’
‘I—I’ll have the same,’ Romy spluttered, wondering how he managed to be quite so superior.
‘And to drink, signore?’
‘The Bardolino, please.’ Dominic smiled and lifted curved black brows in query. ‘Unless you would prefer to choose, Romy?’
He didn’t actually say that if her wine choice was as bad as her table choice then it would leave a lot to be desired, but that was clearly what he meant, thought Romy furiously. She was half tempted to choose the sweetest, most sickly white wine on the menu but thought better of it. ‘Bardolino will be fine,’ she said tightly.
A distinctly awkward silence descended on them while the waiter bustled around, substituting spoons and swapping knives around and pouring wine, and then at last they were alone and Romy found that all her bravado had suddenly deserted her.
For the first time in her life she almost wished that she smoked because she was having awful difficulty deciding what to do with her shaking hands.
In the end she knotted them in her lap and smiled at him inanely. ‘Have all your guests confirmed?’ she babbled. ‘Twelve, wasn’t it?’
‘Ten,’ he corrected her, with a frown. He took a sip of his wine and put the glass down, his thick lashes allowing only a glimmer of silver light to shine from his narrowed eyes.
‘Pretty small do,’ she commented.
‘That’s right.’
‘And the purpose of the party?’
He gave her an ironic look. ‘Do all parties have to have a purpose, then? Can’t it just be for fun?’
Romy shook her head. ‘If it was just for fun you’d organise it yourself. Wouldn’t you?’
‘I doubt it.’ He twirled the stem of his wineglass between thumb and forefinger. ‘The idea of people roaming around my house wanting to be entertained fills me with a certain amount of dread, if you must know.’
‘But there’s only going to be ten people,’ she pointed out. ‘That’s hardly going to fill a stadium!’
‘It’s quite