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His After-Hours Mistress(6)

By:Amanda Browning


'Thanks,' she muttered awkwardly. 'Was I making much noise?' she added,  glancing round surreptitiously to see if anyone was looking at her. Much  to her relief, nobody was.

Only Roarke was studying her with any interest. 'Just whimpering sounds  that warned me whatever was happening in that head of yours, it wasn't  pleasant. Do you often have bad dreams?'

Glad to hear that she had stopped short of one of her more explosive  nightmares, Ginny shook her head. 'Only now and then,' she revealed.  Once she had been plagued by them. Driven to the point of exhaustion by  nights of broken sleep. Time had seen them fade until now she only  dreamed when she was worried or upset. It must have been Roarke's  questions about her family which had set her off this time.

She'd been dreaming of the last time she had seen her family. Her father  had been as cold and remorseless as ever. Denying her entry to the  house. Saying things in that harsh voice he used to show his  disapproval. Things that had cut her pride to ribbons, though she had  held her head high. He had seen her off as if she had been a creature  from the gutter. But that was what she was to him then. No longer his  daughter, just a thing he would step over in the street.

Roarke's hand on her arm gave her a start. 'Don't,' he ordered gently  when she looked a query at him. 'Come back. Wherever you just were, you  clearly don't want to be there.'                       
       
           



       

His perceptiveness brought an unexpected lump to her throat, and she had  to clear it. 'Some dreams are hard to shake off,' she confessed, and he  smiled faintly, as if he knew from experience.

'For some of us the past isn't a pleasant place to be, is it?'

That wasn't a path she wanted to travel, and in order to fend him off  Ginny eyed him ironically. 'You have bad dreams? I would have thought  you'd need a conscience for that.'

He wagged an admonitory finger at her. 'Now, that wasn't nice,  sweetheart. As it happens, I do have a conscience, but I doubt very much  if I could convince you of the fact. You have this habit of expecting  the worst of me.'

'A side you delight in showing me,' she was quick to point out, and he laughed.

'Ah, well, if you expect to catch fish you have to use the right bait,  otherwise they won't rise,' he explained, and Ginny's eyes narrowed.

'Implying that I rise to the bait, I presume?' she charged wrathfully.

'Which you do beautifully.'

She wanted to respond to that with a furious denial, but to do so would  be to rise to the lure he had just put out, and therefore confirm what  he was saying. She had to satisfy herself with a baleful look and one  word.

'Snake.'

Roarke chuckled. 'Damn, but I have to admire your self-control. You are one cool customer.'

She might look cool, but inside Ginny was seething to the point of  incandescence with frustration. 'You're too clever by half, Roarke  Adams. People like you have been known to come to a sticky end.'

'There, you see, there's something for you to look forward to. My  comeuppance. Will you look on, gloating with satisfaction?' he teased  her, and she rolled her eyes.

'Oh, please, gloating is so passé. I'll probably be leading the cheering  section. It will be made up of all the women you've toyed with over the  years.'

'I'm afraid it won't be as large a group as you imagine. I'm on pretty  good terms with most of my exes,' he reminded her, and she knew that  basically it was true. She might rag him over the ones who had taken it  badly, but they were in the minority.

Ginny had never been able to understand it. How could women allow  themselves to be used as they were, and still like the man when he  decided it was over? 'You must be related to Svengali,' she said now,  and Roarke smiled rakishly.

'Sweetheart, I don't have to hypnotise a woman to, as you'd put it, have my wicked way with her.'

'No,' Ginny agreed with a grimace. 'You merely smile at them, and they turn all weak at the knees.'

'What turns you weak at the knees, Ginny? What's Daniel's secret weapon?'

There was no way Ginny would tell him that if Daniel had a secret weapon  he kept it well hidden. He didn't turn her weak at the knees, and she  wouldn't want him to. She'd done that, and it wasn't all it was cracked  up to be. 'That's none of your business.'

Roarke's smile suggested he wasn't taken in by her response, but at  least he didn't follow it up. No, he took a different tack. 'So, what  did dear Daniel say when you told him where you were going this  weekend?'

The nerves in Ginny's body jolted uncomfortably. Picking up her  magazine, she flipped it open. 'He said nothing. Why should he have  anything to say?' she responded in an offhand manner designed to tell  him how unimportant the situation was.

Roarke studied her downbent head curiously. 'You mean he saw nothing odd  in you going away with me? How open-minded of him. I didn't think he  had it in him, to be frank.'

Ginny shrugged. 'We travel together too often for him to be upset this  time,' she offered, recalling with a tiny frown just how upset he had  been.

'True, but this is different … or doesn't he know that?' Roarke added  thoughtfully, and Ginny groaned silently at his persistence. 'You didn't  tell him, did you? Where does he think you are?' The amusement in his  voice made her wince.

Slapping the magazine closed, she turned to stare him out. 'This is a  business trip as far as he's concerned. When I realised how much he  dislikes you, I chose not to tell him. Are you satisfied now? Can I read  my magazine in peace?'

'Daniel dislikes me?' he asked, sounding even more amused. 'The man has a hidden depth. Well, well, well.'

Exasperated, Ginny was tempted to hit him with her magazine. 'It's not  uncommon for people to dislike you, Roarke, hard as that is to believe. I  dislike you too.'                       
       
           



       

'Ah, but does he dislike me for the same reason? You see me as a  womaniser. Is that what Daniel thinks too?' Roarke mused, then snapped  his fingers as an idea struck him. 'Of course, that's it. He's afraid I  might turn my attention to you.'

It was irritating that Roarke should hit the nail on the head so  quickly. 'I told him he had nothing to worry about. I'm not the least  bit interested in you. I think I may even have mentioned a ten-foot  bargepole. That desperate I'm not,' she added sardonically for good  measure.

'Besides, you have Daniel,' Roarke put in sagaciously.

'Exactly,' Ginny agreed, returning once more to her magazine. 'I have  Daniel, and I'm not in the market for anyone else.' Saying which, she  turned her shoulder on him and concentrated on the words on the page.

Roarke wasn't to know that they were little more than a jumble of  letters because her thoughts were concentrated on those brief moments  when a pair of roguish grey eyes had set her nerves skittering and her  heart skipping. Why they had become fascinating, she couldn't say, but  she was seeing them in a way she never had before. Added to that, she  could still feel where his hand had touched her. She was aware of him,  too. Physically. Suddenly she could sense him, when she had sat beside  him before and never felt a thing. It was as if something had been  switched on inside her, and she was far from comfortable with it. She  had to be losing it to find Roarke Adams even remotely attractive. That  damned chemistry had picked a fine time to rear its ugly head. However,  what could be switched on could also be switched off, and that was what  she was going to do. All she had to do was will it. She was a sensible  person, so it shouldn't be that difficult … should it?





CHAPTER THREE




IT WAS evening when they landed, but as it was summer the sun hadn't  quite set and it was still warm. Someone had sent a car to collect them,  and Ginny was more than a little surprised to find herself being  ushered into a luxury limousine.

'Somebody's pushing the boat out,' she murmured as she ran an appreciative hand over the soft leather seat.

'Mother never travels in less than the best,' Roarke explained dryly as  he joined her in the back, having passed a few friendly words with the  driver, whom he obviously knew well.

'Hasn't she heard of energy saving?' she charged, judging that the  limousine would guzzle petrol as if it was going out of fashion.

Roarke uttered a bark of laughter. 'She never hears anything that would  be to her disadvantage. Which is why she insists her children call her  Marganita and not mother. The surgeon's skill has maintained her  youthful looks, which would be undermined by having a son my age.'

'What do you call her?' Ginny wasn't sure whether the woman sounded  likeable or not, he was painting such a dreadful picture of her. Her  eyes narrowed. Just a minute, why was he doing that? It wasn't like him  at all to be so openly critical. She began to smell a rat.

That roguish smile reappeared. 'Mother, of course. I think it's important somebody keeps her in touch with reality.'