Chapter 6
“Y
ou’re still acting?”
Jack allowed Quinn’s clumsy and painfully obvious attempt at changing the subject pass for now.
The two of them were due for a reckoning. Quinn didn’t owe him an apology so much as she owed him the right to defend his honor against her sexist assumption he’d have dumped her the next morning or never called after their night together in Hollywood.
He was a gentleman. He didn’t take a woman to a place where she’d have the right to expect things he had no desire to give. He’d made his mind up to give them an honest go at the same time she’d made up her mind about his intentions, apparently.
He put on a playful air of condescension. “At a certain point in one’s acting career, should things go well, it becomes sort of a lifetime gig.” He nodded toward the entrance. “That man there? The one with the unnecessarily large camera as if a mobile phone doesn’t do the job these days? He’ll snap a few photos when I leave. Oh, look. He’s been joined by his mate carrying an equally inconspicuous piece of equipment.” Of course, they probably missed him terribly since he’d been off filming in the Hungarian backcountry. Not much chance of running into these guys in a place like that.
She turned and swung back to him with surprise blatantly etched onto her features.
He tried to appear wounded, but his constant grin, which he had zero power over, no doubt gave him away. “You didn’t believe me, did you? I’m offended. I wouldn’t lie about my occupation only to claim something lousy and typical like acting. I’d go for broke, say I was a physicist. Or aide to the prime minister.”
Hadn’t she Googled him? Even once? He’d Googled Clementine Hazel more times than centipedes had legs.
He wouldn’t call it stalking, exactly. Maybe more like monitoring. No, that seemed worse.
Light research. Yes, he’d
lightly researched
Quinn. She had no online presence, not even a Facebook profile. Light research proved rather difficult when there’s simply no data to collect. She hadn’t been kidding about her quiet life.
She blinked. “I’m sorry. I assumed you were an actor in the same way my cabbie yesterday was a model.” A cheesy grin exploded on her face.
Her ability to keep up astounded him. Someone capable of understanding his babbling flow of nonsense constituted an uncommon find. One quick enough to use it against him? Unheard of. “You cheeky girl. For your information, it turned out my grocery bagger
was
an artist.”
A withering glance didn’t entirely hide her amusement. She indicated the entrance with a flick of her hand. “Why don’t they follow you in?”
The photographers. He’d almost forgotten them. “We have an accord. I eat breakfast in peace. They get nice, sellable photographs when I leave. All smiles and waves, no hands over the face or crying about privacy.”
“That’s quite an arrangement.” She turned to study the men outside. “Doesn’t it drive you crazy?”
“Totally bonkers. But I have ways of going under the radar. By that, of course, I mean hiding out at my mum’s. Or, as is the case with my recent absence from the headlines, I get an acting gig that takes me somewhere very boring, very remote, or both.” Like the Hungarian backcountry.
She gazed back at him and cocked her head to one side. “It’s surreal. Being here, seeing you. I can’t get over the odds. I should be at Casey’s.”
He stuck out his tongue in disgust. “Casey’s? Their coffee is dismal, and the pastries are stale. Besides, the odds are always good if something’s meant to be. It’s a matter of fate. I met you in L.A., so you’d meet me here. Where might we meet next? It’s inevitable we should.”
“Fate, huh? I guess it works the other way, too. Meant to be, meant
not
to be.” She glanced at her hands resting on the table. “I wonder if Nicholas would fall for that.”
Jack bobbed his head absentminded agreement.
Nicholas.
It didn’t surprise him. Eight months plus single woman didn’t equal lonely in any book he’d ever read. He had no right to the envy swirling through his gut, especially considering his own circumstances, but there was no help for it. Quinnie had been his little secret treasure. Practically, he accepted the likelihood she’d remarried by now. Or at least met someone.
On the inside, he rejected this idea. Instead, he opted to imagine her in a constant state of pining for her lost Irishman.
He ought to have been a comedian. “There’s a Nicholas, eh?”
She smiled tightly and shook her head. He’d seen it coming. God have mercy on anyone ever tasked with interrogating Quinn Buzzly. She didn’t keep her cards close to the vest so much as duct-taped inside a zipped pocket with a combination lock.
“Your turn. Home on business or pleasure?”
“Can’t it be a pleasure to do business? Both, actually, although, it’s a bit of a secret.” His stomach clenched, but he had to tell her. The guilt wouldn’t go away until he did. It was the most absurd thing in the world because he hadn’t done anything wrong.
He rubbed his hands together and leaned in close. “Since we’re besties, I’ll tell you, but you must keep it a secret.”
“You mean I can’t share the big news with the two gentlemen outside?”
“Exactly.”
“I can probably contain myself.”
Jack inhaled dramatically and closed his eyes. “I’m getting married.”
His eyes popped open to take in Quinn’s reaction. What did he hope to see? Regret? Jealousy?
She appeared surprised and a big grin brightened her entire face. “Congratulations! That’s great.”
It was the proper reaction but knowing that did nothing to soften his sense of deflation. He wanted her to care or give some sign it mattered. A stricken look, the smallest frown, a sad gaze, but she had only her sincerest felicitations to offer him.
“Thank you. I’m here for a month and then it’s off to Portugal. Two months into filming, I’ll take leave for the wedding. It’ll be a quick honeymoon, but waiting till the film wrapped didn’t suit her.” He went on to tell her about Vickie Lana, Venezuelan actress and model, who’d initially reminded him of Quinn with her long, shiny blond hair. Though, Vickie’s particular shade ran more toward wax-crayon yellow. “We met on the set. It happened rather fast. The rest is history, I suppose.”
History as written by a female, at any rate. Vickie was a woman who got her way. She embodied the definition of dynamo, both on set and off, determined and confident. He hadn’t stood a chance against the vivacious blonde once she’d set her sights on him, and he’d gone willingly. Holding out for Quinn after their one-night stand in Hollywood was a fool’s fate.
Yet here she sat. Less than a yard away. It was enough to make a man question the fate he claimed such adamant advocacy of, but Jack didn’t dare. He feared he couldn’t afford the answers.
“Now you can tell me about this Nicholas fellow.” He smoothly brought back the subject she’d attempted to drop. He lacked the superpower to go back in time to Hollywood and convince her to give him a chance but had the power to torture her here and now. “Oh, and how’s Richard? Still beating him off with a stick? Or does Nicholas handle verbal beat downs for you these days?”
Her eyes darted away. “Richard is long gone.”
She didn’t elaborate any further, but Jack had an uncanny intuition in his corner, a gift from his sixth-generation, full-blooded Irish mother. Quinn’s delightfully easy-to-read expression let him ferret out the goods with little effort.
“You
fired
him? Good for you, Quinnie, good for you.” He applauded quietly, something of a golf clap. “Brilliant. Inspired. Is Nicholas your new Richard? No, no. Boyfriend? Boy toy? Sugar daddy? Long-lost uncle? I shared some top-shelf intel with you. The least you can do in return is fill me in on this Nicholas bloke.”
She chewed her bottom lip and studied him.
He allowed his steady gaze to silently communicate his determination. He had no intention of dropping this particular bone.
“My boyfriend.” A self-conscious hand came up and tucked a stray strand of pale blond hair behind her ear.
Real
blond, almost vague in its color, but natural as the freckles dotting her nose and utterly refreshing. “Up until last night, anyway.”
Quinn recounted the events of the night before. She started out matter-of-fact but ended in a fervent show of self-doubt and worry.
He reached across the table, unwound her hands from her empty latte cup, and held them. “You’re killing me. Have a little faith in yourself. You can’t force a thing like love any more than you can fight it. You made the right choice.”
“But I do love him, in a way.”
Jack pressed on undeterred. “Your argument for passion is a valid one. Were it meant to be, you wouldn’t have questioned it. A ‘yes’ would’ve bubbled from your lips without warning or permission.”
She lifted her eyes back to his. Green, green eyes. Solemn and searching. “Did Vickie say yes right away?”
He grinned like a man caught. “Interesting thing, I don’t recall asking her. It’s one of those events that simply became so. I woke up one day to find myself engaged. Fancy that?”
“Where do you get your authority on fate and love if not from experience? Movie scripts?”
“Were I the romantic-comedy type, I should say yes. Alas, being more of a political-thriller, action-hero type I can’t give my job the credit, either.”
“Then where?”
Snoopy and unrelenting were traits he understood well and practiced even better. What a pair they’d make. Fate had thoroughly screwed him this time. She was right here, her hands in his, and it was too late. “Same place as everyone else, I s’pose.” He lifted his shoulders. “Daytime telly.”
Jack drummed his fingers across the table. “You’re only doing this to watch me beg, aren’t you?”
They’d been too busy arguing for Quinn to notice the hour slip by. A quick glance at her watch stunned her.
She’d love to share details of her work, except for one tiny detail. Telling him his accent inspired her equated to a mere drop in the proverbial bucket compared to revealing her lead character
was
Jack, from the color of his hair and his sea green eyes, down to the quickfire sense of humor and catlike curiosity.
She had no intention of explaining herself, even if she had a non-creepy way of doing so. By the time the book hit the shelves she’d be back in L.A. where she belonged, safe from prying English Irishmen.
Unfortunately, her adamant refusals only poured fuel on the fire of his curiosity. He should’ve been a scientist or a reporter, someone whose job required asking questions and fervently seeking the answers.
“Not going to happen.” Her third deflection.
He held his arms out in an open plea. “I can help. I have the male perspective to offer.”
She shook her head. “Tell me more about your dog.”
Pure disbelief colored his face. “You’d rather hear another lame story about Biscuit than talk about your manuscript?”
“You make him sound incredibly interesting. He’s like a person to me now, like I
know
him.”
Jack was on the verge of responding when he glanced past her, and in one instant his happy, teasing grin ceased to exist. It fell away like melting butter and left in its stead saucerlike eyes and a gaping mouth.
He muttered a low curse seconds before an impossibly tall woman with a bright cascade of platinum-blond hair falling around her thin shoulders descended upon their table with all the regality of the Queen herself.
Striking, deeply tanned despite the cool weather, and utterly, unapologetically striking. With the bone structure of a Greek goddess and the body of a porn star, Vickie Lana made one hell of an entrance.
Quinn could see why Jack might like her.
He leaped to his feet to embrace his fiancée and planted a quick kiss on each exquisitely defined cheek. “Darling! What a surprise. What’re you doing here?”
Vickie cast an imperious glare at Quinn. “You were away all morning. I missed you, so I went to find you.” Her voice thrummed low like a purr, flavored by an exotic accent. Her eyes, black and flat like a shark’s, stayed on Quinn. A purring shark. Somehow, the description fit.
“Right.” Jack’s nervousness was palpable.
Quinn teetered between concerned and amused. It reminded her of Seth’s childhood discovery of a particularly crude swear word. She’d been appreciative of the humor in it yet wise enough not to laugh.
Vickie crossed her arms. “Are you going to introduce me to your pretty friend?”
Jack rubbed the nape of his neck. “Yes, of course. Sit down, join us. We’re catching up, that’s all.”
Vickie made no attempt to hide her disdain but accepted the offered chair.
“This is Quinn.” He reclaimed his seat. “She’s . . .”
He fumbled. The poor guy. The easiest way out would be to excuse herself and make a swift exit before he had to define their relationship, but Jack beat her to the punch with a choice introduction.
“My cousin.”
By some miraculous force of nature, Quinn kept her jaw from dive-bombing onto the tabletop.
“Distant, of course. And, um, long lost. She found me on one of those Web sites. You’ve seen the adverts. Like I said, we’ve been catching up on family history.”
Quinn instinctually detested the lie. She’d never forget Blake’s introduction of some-nameless-lady-at-the-office Kira. However, a glimpse at Vickie’s venomous stare swayed her. Besides, she wasn’t sneaking into supply closets with Jack behind his fiancée’s back. In this case, a little white lie might do more good than harm.
She forced the muscles in her face to relax. Maybe Vickie hadn’t noticed her momentary shock. She offered his betrothed the most nonthreatening, wide-eyed expression of innocence she had. “That’s right.” She held out her hand and ignored the daggers the other woman shot at her. “I’ve been tracking down my ancestral roots. I came all the way from America to meet Jack. I can’t believe I’m Irish!”