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Bought: One Bride(22)

By:Miranda Lee


It had been a mistake, he accepted as he finally looked up, to bring  Holly to one of the trendy eating places he and Joanna used to frequent.  Despite the time lapse, he should have realised that some of his wife's  old crowd might still go to their regular haunts. The Cockle Bay Wharf  at Darling Harbour was a favourite of the rich and idle on a Sunday  summer's afternoon.

"Hello, Kim," he said.

Of all Joanna's girlfriends, Kim was probably her closest. She'd been  the chief bridesmaid at their wedding. Richard had quite liked her to  begin with. Most of Joanna's friends were of the bright, bubbly kind.  Good fun to be with. But he'd changed his mind when she'd made a serious  play for him one night, uncaring that she'd been in her best friend's  home, or that her own husband had been just a room away.

Since then, she had divorced that particular husband, after he'd served  his purpose, of course, which was to provide her with an income for  life. Kim was a bitch through and through. A beautiful bitch, though.

Birds of a feather, he now realised.

"It's great to see you out and about again," she gushed. "And looking so  trendy! Do you know I was with Joanna when she bought you that outfit.  It suits you, darling. There again, Joanna's taste was impeccable,  especially in men. But I am blathering on, aren't I? Would you and your  little friend like to join us? We're just sitting over there." And she  indicated a long table full of people across the way. Richard glanced  over but didn't recognise anyone else from his past life.

"Holly's not my little friend," Richard informed her coolly. "She's my  girlfriend. And, no, thank you, Kim, we'd prefer to be alone."

"How romantic. There again, you always were a romantic, Richard. We'll  catch up some other time, shall we?" she said, and actually had the  temerity to bend and kiss him on the cheek before undulating off back to  her companions.

Richard felt as if his face were suddenly carved in ice.

Poor Holly was not looking too comfortable, either.

Damn Kim for going on about Joanna and the stupid clothes he was  wearing. He'd only put them on because Holly had picked them out of his  wardrobe, not because Joanna had bought them for him.

But Holly wouldn't believe that now. Which was a shame.

Less than five minutes earlier, he'd been thinking how happy she looked  sitting there in her simple but very pretty lemon sundress, her skin  glowing and her long brown hair gleaming in the sunshine.

"Sorry about that," he said abruptly. "Kim's an old friend of my wife's. Her best friend, actually."

Even as he said the words, a thought occurred to him. Kim would probably  know the truth about Joanna. Female friends always confided in each  other. But how much did she know, exactly?

Richard decided he would ask, as soon as he got the chance. He probably  wouldn't like the answers but he had to know. Had to put the past behind  him once and for all.

Till then, he wasn't going to let the memory of his wife, or her so-called friends, spoil his afternoon with Holly.

And it could, if the frown on her face was anything to go by.

"I'm not upset, if that's what you're thinking," he said.

                       
       
           



       



Holly stared at him across the table. Who did he think he was kidding?

She'd been flattered by the way he'd set Kim straight about her status  in his life. Holly had taken an instant dislike to the woman. Maybe  because she was drop-dead gorgeous, one of those slim, cool blondes who  always looked as if they'd just stepped out of a beauty salon.

But anyone with half a brain could see that Richard running into his wife's best friend had thrown a dampener over proceedings.

His eyes, which had been bright and sparkly all day, were now the colour  of a wintry lake under a cloudy sky. The muscles around his jaw looked  stiff and his mouth was pressed into a thin, hard line.

He certainly hadn't got over his wife. Not in the slightest. His mother  had been right. Any last lingering hope that some miracle might happen  and Richard might fall in love with her eventually went straight down  the gurgler.

Holly's dismay was acute, and telling. She was setting herself up for  another personal disaster with this man. One far worse than Dave,  because this time she was going into things with her eyes well and truly  open.

Richard didn't love her. He would never love her.

Face it, Holly, and deal with it.

Facing it was very depressing. Dealing with it quite impossible. Because she could not walk away from him. She loved him.

"Thank you for calling me your girlfriend," she said, trying her best not to sound the way she was suddenly feeling.

"I would have preferred to say fiancée," he returned.

She stared at him, then shook her head. "Please don't."

"Please don't what?"

"Don't keep on about that. I'm happy to be your girlfriend, Richard. But I won't marry you."

"You know, Holly, it's only in the western culture that people marry for  love. Romance is all very nice, but it's not all that reliable. Look at  our divorce rate. Most of those couples thought they were in love when  they tied the knot. Being in love doesn't last. Caring and commitment  are what makes a marriage last. That, and common goals. And children.  You want children, don't you?"

"Yes, of course I do."

"There is no of course about it. Some women these days don't want  children. And lots of men, according to the ladies from Wives Wanted. I  will give you children, plus the security to raise them right. I will  also give you caring and commitment. If this weekend is anything to go  by you won't have any complaints about our sex life, either. Our  compatibility in bed is better than lots of people who are in love."

Holly sighed. "That all sounds very reasonable, Richard, but you don't  love me. I'm all alone in the world. My parents are gone. So are my  grandparents. I have an aunt in Melbourne I might have seen three times  in my lifetime. And a gay uncle who moved to San Francisco when I was a  teenager. That's it. I have no family who loves me. I need to be loved  by my husband."

"That's romantic ideology," he said sharply. "What a wife and mother  needs is a husband who can provide and protect you and yours. Who will  always be faithful. Who will never deliberately hurt you or let you  down. I will deliver all that, Holly. I give you my solemn word."

His eyes bored into Holly's, the passion in his voice making her doubt  her resolve to resist his proposal. Maybe he was right. Maybe they could  be happy together.

But then she remembered that photo of Joanna, which she had seen propped up against her coffin.

She would always be there, coming between them. The beautiful first wife. The love of Richard's life.

"Just think about it," he went on. "That's all I ask."

"All right," she agreed, knowing she would probably think about little else.

"Shall we go?" he suggested.

"Why not?" They'd eaten most of their risotto and drunk all of the excellent bottle of white wine Richard had ordered with it.

Richard called for the bill.

Five minutes later they were strolling across the old iron bridge that  took them to the other side of Darling Harbour, her hand enclosed  tightly in Richard's. They hadn't spoken since they'd got up from the  table.

"Would you like to go into the casino?" he asked.

"Would you?" she countered, glancing up at the Star City complex.

"Not particularly. I'm not a gambler. I have a bet on the Melbourne Cup each year but that's about it."

"I have a flutter on that as well. But I never win."

He smiled. "Neither do I. What shall we do, then?"

"Whatever you like," she returned, perhaps a little thoughtlessly. Her mind was just so full with tortured thoughts.                       
       
           



       

"Right. See that taxi rank over there? Let's go!"

They hadn't driven here. They'd taken a taxi, Richard explaining that  parking at Darling Harbour on a Sunday afternoon was difficult.

"Where are you taking me?" she asked breathlessly as he pulled her along the pavement at power-walking pace.

"Where do you think?"

Holly ground to a halt once she realised what he was talking about.

"No," she said, panic-stricken at the idea of going back to that  penthouse and being seduced over and over. Her mind was already in a  mess. "I don't want to do that, Richard."

His eyes bored into hers. "Yes, you do."

"Well, yes, I do, but I'm not going to. You don't understand. I … I've  never experienced anything like I experienced with you last night. And  again this morning. It's sent me into a tail-spin."

"What's wrong with my making love to you?"

"It's confusing. And corrupting. I mean … I know you might laugh at this,  but I … I've never had an orgasm before. Then, in the space of a few hours  I had about twenty. With you."