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His After-Hours Mistress(4)

By:Amanda Browning


'You have?' she asked a tad breathlessly, whilst mentally she prepared  herself for what she would say in response. The surroundings could have  been more romantic-the restaurant was chosen for its convenience, not  its ambience. 'What sort of surprise?'

Daniel's smile broadened at her apparent eagerness. 'My parents have  invited us both to their place for the weekend. When I told them how  wonderful you are, my mother insisted that she had to meet you. I know  she'll adore you as much as I do.'                       
       
           



       

Ginny tried her best to hold on to her smile, but she could feel it  fading and her facial muscles stiffening. It wasn't that it hadn't been  the question she had hoped for, but rather the fact she was going to  have to refuse what was close to being a royal summons.

'Oh, Daniel, I'm so sorry, but I can't go. I was going to tell you  later. I have to go to Switzerland this weekend,' she told him  apologetically, hoping to soften the blow, but she could tell from the  way he dropped her hand that he was not best pleased.

'With Adams, I presume!' Daniel responded frostily, causing her to blink at his tone.

Ever since she had agreed to this trip, Ginny had been wondering what  she was going to tell Daniel. She abhorred deception, but his reaction  told her clearly that the truth was out of the question. She had known  for a long time that Roarke didn't think highly of Daniel, but she  hadn't realised until now just how deeply Daniel disliked Roarke.

'Of course. It's business,' she lied, watching him sit back and fold his arms.

'I don't trust him,' Daniel pronounced bluntly, and Ginny frowned just a  little. She could see where this was going, but she had never given him  cause to worry. It surprised her to think he had given the possibility  credence. He had no need to be jealous.

'You trust me, don't you?' she asked soothingly, and he instantly reached for her hand again.

'I do. Of course I do. It's just that that man … ' Daniel let the sentence  hang, and she knew what he meant. Roarke's reputation went before him.

She squeezed his hand. 'Is someone I have no interest in at all.  However, the trips are part of my job.' OK, not this one, but he didn't  need to know that.

Daniel nodded reluctantly. 'I know, but Mother won't be best pleased.  She hates having her arrangements altered. She won't like it, and I need  her to like you.'

Ginny did a swift mental double-take. Daniel made the visit sound as if  she was being presented for inspection, and whether or not he married  her depended on his mother's report. She didn't much care for the sound  of that, for good reason. Her father had insisted on vetting her  boyfriends, and for the most part had found them wanting. They had not  been welcome in his house and she had been compelled to follow his  dictates until she was old enough not to need his approval.

To find herself on the receiving end of a similar situation now, when  she had put all that behind her, made the hairs on the back of her neck  stand up. There was no way she was prepared to go through that.

'Does it really matter if she likes me, Daniel? After all, I'm going out  with you, not her.' She tried to make light of it, seeking reassurance.

She got it-of a sort. 'I suppose not,' he agreed uncomfortably, then  laughed. 'No, no, of course it doesn't. Though I would prefer her to  like you. There's no reason why she shouldn't, of course. It's simply  that I've always sought her opinion on the important things,' Daniel  explained, as if that would make it acceptable.

Ginny swallowed her unease. The situations weren't the same. All she  would be doing was meeting his parents. It had to happen eventually. 'I  shall do my best to make her like me, if that will make you happy. All  we have to do is postpone the visit for a few weeks.' If it was  important to him, then she would bite the bullet. As he said, there was  no reason why his mother shouldn't like her. She shouldn't allow the  past to cloud the present.

Daniel looked relieved. 'That would be wonderful. I just know she's going to like you. My mother has a very discerning eye.'

Ginny let the matter rest there, but later, when she was lying in her  bed trying to sleep, the conversation went over and over in her mind. An  uncomfortable feeling of déjà vu came over her. Daniel was the man  she'd settled for, but she didn't want to have to battle his mother for  him, and that was what she feared was going to happen. She had been  through that, and wasn't about to let it happen again. But maybe she was  seeing bogeymen where there were none. After all, she was predisposed  to balk at the idea of being inspected. It would be best to reserve  judgement until she had met his parents.

They couldn't be as bad as her own. Nobody's could. With which comforting thought she was finally able to drift off to sleep.



The rest of the week was hectic, and Friday came round all too quickly.  As she packed for the trip that evening, Ginny decided she was out of  her mind. Not only had she bought a new outfit for the occasion, which  would have been acceptable, but she had bought several other things as  well. For a trip she hadn't wanted to go on, and certainly wasn't  looking forward to. The truth of the matter was that she couldn't just  turn out in any old rag. Never mind she was going to be playing a part,  these people were Roarke's family, and a wedding was a very special  occasion. She couldn't bring any sort of disharmony to the day by  treating it as a non-event. Besides, she had the feeling Jenna Adams  would be dressed in only the best, and there was no way she would let  the woman upstage her.                       
       
           



       

A glance at her watch told Ginny that Roarke would be here soon. Closing  the case, she took it out to the hall, then double-checked that she had  her passport in her handbag. Which left her with nothing to do but  wait, and nerves started to churn in her stomach. They had nothing to do  with flying, because she was well used to it. Nor was it due to the  fact that she was travelling with Roarke, for she had done that  countless times too. No, the nerves were due to the fact she hated  waiting. Waiting gave her time to think, and her thoughts were rarely  pleasant.

She had learned to keep herself busy, to always have something on hand  in which to engross herself, but she couldn't do that now because Roarke  was due any minute. She paced to the window of her flat and stared down  at the road, but no car was pulling up. Where was he?

The silent question triggered a memory, and she could see herself  looking out of the window of that grotty bedsit, waiting for Mark to  come home so she could tell him her news. He had never come. Instead he  had abandoned her to a terrifying future which had ultimately led to  tragedy. She had waited that night, too. Alone in the dark, in pain.

'No!' With a low moan Ginny spun round, closing out the thoughts. She wouldn't go there. Not again.

The sound of the intercom buzzing made her jump, but it was closely  followed by a sense of relief. He was here. She crossed to the intercom.

'Hello?'

'It's Roarke,' his disembodied voice informed her.

'Top floor, on the right,' she directed him, pressing the door release.  She just had time to catch him muttering, 'It would be, wouldn't it!'

Ginny went to the door to meet him. To her eyes he didn't look the least bit out of breath when he reached her.

'Hasn't anyone ever thought of installing a lift?' he complained, and she shook her head at him.

'It's only three floors.'

'But six flights,' he was quick to point out.

'Quit complaining. You're the fittest man I know,' Ginny responded  dryly. She knew for a fact that he worked out regularly, and though she  had never seen it, she suspected there wasn't a spare ounce of flesh on  the whole of his body.

'Remind me never to come to you for sympathy,' Roarke muttered as he  glanced around. 'Is this it?' he asked, pointing to her single case.

Ginny nodded. 'It's all I shall need for a few days,' she confirmed, though she was well aware she had packed too much.

Roarke hefted her case and laughed. 'My mother never travels with less than thirty pieces of luggage.'

Ginny couldn't imagine having the clothes to fill them. 'Think about the  excess she must have to pay!' she exclaimed in amazement.

'Think of the pandemonium that arises every time she thinks a piece is  missing!' Roarke countered sardonically, and Ginny winced.

'Ouch. Does that happen often?'

'Nearly every time. You see, life has to be a drama for her. She's the  prima donna to end all prima donnas. It wouldn't surprise me if my  sister is marrying this man just to get away from our mother,' he  declared outrageously.

'Oh, but surely she loves him,' Ginny protested, uneasy at the idea that any woman would do such a thing.

Roarke shrugged indifferently. 'She probably thinks she does.'

'Thinks she does?' Ginny challenged as she pulled the door closed behind her and checked it was securely shut.