The Marriage He Must Keep (20 page)

BOOK: The Marriage He Must Keep
14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘Shall we do that over dinner—?'

‘Why? We might as well hash it out now.'

He stood up, blatantly ignoring her interruption. ‘I wouldn't like to kick off our joyous life together on the wrong note,' he drawled, strolling towards the door, which her parents had tactfully shut behind him on their way out.

‘What do you mean?' Alexa followed him, disgruntled.

‘I mean your mother has had a doubtless delicious meal prepared for us. What kind of guest would I be if I disregarded her invitation?'

‘The kind that's marrying me thanks to parental pressure?' Alexa muttered sourly.

He shot her a brief look of appreciation.

‘Besides,' she continued, skin tingling from that momentary look, ‘you don't strike me as the sort of man who gives a hoot what other people think of him.'

She swept past him, breathing in his clean, woody scent and determinedly ignoring its impact on her senses.

‘I find that I'm willing to make an exception for my in-laws-to-be...'

‘Why are you taking this so calmly?'

It was the first thing Alexa said as they sat down at the table in the informal dining room. The blue room was still big enough to fit a ten-seater table, but places had been set for them opposite each another at one end. As always, it was a full arrangement, with dinner plates, side plates and separate silver cutlery for every course to be served—in this case salad, soup, main course and dessert.

Alexa could not have felt less hungry, and she looked with uninterest as salads were brought in and placed in front of them.

He, she noted, had no problem with his appetite.

‘How else do you imagine I should react?' Theo looked at her, and across the width of the table she felt his overwhelming presence all the more acutely.

There was something intimate about eating together, and she could barely concentrate on her salad as the flutter of nerves threatened to overpower her common sense.

She put that down to her healthy dislike of the man.

‘Do you imagine that this is a situation I
enjoy
being in?' he enquired coolly. ‘My father dropped this bombshell and I find I've had next to no option but to take the hit.'

‘I never thought I'd end up in a marriage with someone who would walk up the aisle only thanks to having to take a hit from a bombshell he couldn't dodge,' Alexa said bitterly—and that was the stark truth.

She had never followed the pattern of her friends, who had believed in sleeping around. She had never assumed that marriage was something to be taken lightly because it could be unpicked without too much difficulty if the going got rough. Her own parents had had a long and extremely happy marriage. Her mother, Irish by heritage, had been a gap-year student when she had met Carlo, and theirs had been a case of love at first sight. Which made it doubly upsetting that her father had seen fit to put her in this position. He had taken advantage of a situation and
she
was going to have to pay the price.

‘I don't think that way of thinking will pay dividends in this particular situation...' Theo pushed his salad plate to one side and sprawled back in the chair to look at her coolly. ‘We've both been put in an unfortunate position and now we have to deal with it.'

‘And you're not angry...?'

‘Like I said, there's no point in wasting energy on emotions that won't get either of us anywhere. We're going to present the perfect picture of a couple in love. Naturally there will have to be an engagement and a public announcement. Doubtless there will be cameras. You will smile and gaze adoringly up at me.'

‘And what will
you
be doing while I'm smiling and gazing adoringly?'

‘Controlling the situation.'

‘And this so-called engagement is supposed to last...how long?'

‘It'll be brief,' Theo asserted with the sweeping assurance of someone who had given the details a great deal of thought. ‘We can't wait to tie the knot.'

‘And how is this supposed to make any kind of sense?' Alexa demanded. She lapsed into silence as their salad plates were removed, to be replaced with soup. ‘Have you suddenly had a transformation and gone from being a womaniser to a one-woman man who's desperate to get married?'

‘And
that
,' Theo said in a hard voice, ‘is just the sort of approach I am warning you to avoid.' Then he smiled—a slow, lazy smile that made the breath hitch in her throat. ‘I never imagined that you were a spitting cat...' he mused. ‘Do you think that's the reason your parents think you'll end up on the shelf...?'

Copyright © 2016 by Cathy Williams

ISBN-13: 9781488000546

The Marriage He Must Keep

Copyright © 2016 by Dani Collins

All rights reserved. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical,
now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of publisher, Harlequin Enterprises Limited, 225 Duncan Mill Road, Don Mills, Ontario, Canada M3B 3K9.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental. This edition published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

® and ™ are trademarks of the publisher. Trademarks indicated with ® are registered are registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office, the Canadian Intellectual Property Office and in other countries.

www.Harlequin.com

Other books

The Millionaire Rogue by Jessica Peterson
Supreme Ambitions by David Lat
When Paris Went Dark by Ronald C. Rosbottom
No Hero: The Evolution of a Navy SEAL by Mark Owen, Kevin Maurer
Investigating the Hottie by Alexander, Juli
Bless The Beauty by Stacey Kennedy
Never Say Never by Kelly Mooney
The Lemoine Affair by Marcel Proust
Claiming the Knights by S.E. Leonard