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Irresistible Temptation(3)

By:Sara Craven


She looked at the case beside her, and groaned inwardly. How far could she carry it before her arm came out of its socket?

In her home village, she thought, swallowing, they wouldn't treat a stray dog like this.

She looked stonily at her persecutor. 'I don't suppose you'd let me leave my luggage here while I go and look for a room?'

'Quite correct,' he said. 'I wouldn't. And for two pins I'd let you  tramp the streets to teach you a much-needed lesson. But I can't do  that, because London is not a place where you turn up on the off-chance.  You could end up in all kinds of trouble-things you've never envisaged  in your worst nightmares. And I don't want that on my conscience.

'Thanks for the pious platitudes,' Olivia said. She was shaking inwardly with rage. 'What have you in mind? The coal shed?'

'Alas, no.' He reached forward and picked up her case, handling it easily. 'You'd better come in while I talk to someone.'

'You mean I'm being allowed to pollute your sacred portals?' She  followed him into a wide hall. On the left, a flight of stairs carpeted  in pale green led to the upper floors. On the right, an open door showed  her a room fitted out as an office, with a fax machine, a photocopier  and a state-of-the-art computer sitting on a workman-like desk. This was  where the music was coming from, too.

'Not for long,' he tossed back over his shoulder, leading the way to the  rear of the house. 'And don't consider going for squatters? rights,  either.'

She'd been about to ask what computer system he used, attempt to  establish that she had a life and a career, and wasn't just some  helpless hopeful. Now all she hoped was that the whole thing would crash  spectacularly at some crucial moment.                       
       
           



       

He stood back, allowing her to precede him. 'You can wait in here.  Please don't make yourself too comfortable. I'm just going to make a  phone call.'

'And put some clothes on as well?' Olivia gave the dressing gown an acid glance.

'This,' he said softly, 'is my Saturday morning. I will dress-and do-as I  like.' He tightened the sash with ostentatious care. 'Just remember,  lady, you came knocking on my door, not the other way round.'

Biting her lip, Olivia walked past him. She found herself in a long  rectangular room with one wall that seemed to be made entirely of glass.  The main item of furniture was a long refectory table supplied with  high-backed oak chairs. On the table, beside a newspaper folded open at  an inside page, was a used plate and knife, an empty mug, and a dish of  dark red jam. A lingering fragrance of coffee and warm croissant still  hung in the air from the adjoining kitchen.

Despite her best efforts, Olivia felt her nose twitch longingly. It had  been a long time since the blueberry muffin and carton of hot chocolate  which she'd consumed at Bristol Temple Meads Station.

But something warned her that it would be an even longer time before the Owner offered her a sip of his espresso.

Swine, she thought. Greedy, selfish pig.

To take her mind off her empty stomach, she wandered over to the French  windows. Beyond them, she saw a mass of greenery. No walls or fences,  she noted, puzzled. Just a riot of tall shrubs and huge trees, already  heavy with approaching autumn. There were late-flowering roses, too, and  great banks of fuchsias and hydrangeas. Behind the leafy barrier she  caught a glimpse of the more strident green of a lawn. And a sunlit  dazzle of water.

She drew a swift breath of sheer appreciation. This garden seemed to  stretch for ever, its only confine the wide gravelled path which circled  it.

It was the last thing she'd expected to find, here in the middle of the city-this wonderful secret wilderness.

It was like the garden behind her parents' home, she thought, although  on a vastly larger scale, and for a moment she was assailed by a pang of  homesickness so strong that she could have cried out.

'Is something wrong?' The Owner had joined her, tapping out numbers on a cordless phone. Clearly he didn't miss much.

'I-I was just looking at the garden.' Olivia bit her lip. 'It's beautiful. Who-who does it belong to?'

'Everyone whose house backs on to it,' he returned laconically. 'It's a communal venture.'

Then, into the phone, 'Sasha-sorry to annoy you at the weekend, but do  you have any place available in that doss-house of yours?' The lines  beside his mouth deepened in amusement as he studied Olivia's sudden  rigidity. 'Yes, just one waif and stray-female-wandering in off the  street'

He laughed. 'No, not feline, although I'd say she had claws.' He  listened for a moment, grinning. 'Not a chance, my love. She's  definitely not my type, and claims to be spoken for anyway. You can?  You're a saint I'll send her round.'

He switched off the phone. 'Well, that's you fixed up.'

She glared at him. 'It never occurred to you that I'd like to make my own arrangements, I suppose?'

'Frankly, no.' His grin deepened. 'So, what was your major plan? Camping  on my doorstep, looking hopeless and helpless, until Jeremy comes  back?' He shook his head. 'You'd lower the tone of the neighbourhood.'

'No, you'll be all right with Sasha,' he went on, ignoring her furious  gasp. 'Her lodgers seem to be a transient population, so she's usually  got a room free.'

'Sasha.' Olivia paused 'Is she Russian?'

'No.' His face softened momentarily, making him seem almost human. Even  attractive. And increasing that vague sense of familiarity. 'Just  eccentric.'

He gave her a level look with no amusement at all. 'And she's got a kind  heart, so I would take it personally if she was made a fool of in any  way. By someone doing a runner, for instance, without paying the rent.'

'She'll be paid.' Olivia stopped trying to work out where she could  possibly have seen him before, and reverted effortlessly to simply  loathing him again. 'Although I don't expect to be staying there long.'

'Of course not. You'll be waiting for Jeremy to provide a suitable  love-nest, no doubt. And maybe he will. Only it won't be under my roof.'

'And what the hell has it to do with you?'

He shrugged, unruffled. 'As I mentioned, he's married. Maybe I have more scruples.'

And, as if on cue, a girl's voice called, 'Declan-Declan, darling, where are you?'

Olivia, glancing toward the hall, could see long bare legs descending  the stairs. Up to that moment she'd thought no one could be wearing less  than her reluctant host, but she was wrong.

The redhead who now appeared and stood, posing co, in the doorway was using a peach-coloured towel as an inadequate sarong.

'Darling,' she said, pouting reproachfully. 'I woke up and couldn't find  you. It was horrid.' She glanced towards Olivia, her glance hardening  fractionally. 'But I didn't realise you were-entertaining.'                       
       
           



       

Her laugh was slightly metallic. 'If this is your latest, then your taste must be slipping.'

Indignant colour flared in Olivia's face at this piece of gratuitous  rudeness, but before she could speak Declan stepped forward.

'Wrong on all counts, Melinda, my sweet Ms Butler is just a passing  acquaintance.' He sent Olivia an edged look. 'And, hopefully, passing  out of my life for good very soon. Now go back to bed, and I'll see you  presently.'

The girl sent him a radiant smile, the tip of her pink tongue caressing her lower lip. 'Is that a promise?' she asked huskily.

'Trust me.' His voice was low-pitched, intimate. The air in the room seemed suddenly alive-electric.

For a shocked moment, Olivia was aware of a slight frisson-a tingle down her own spine.

The Owner might be loathsome, but he was also undeniably sexy-if you  liked that sort of thing. As the redhead falling out of the peach towel  obviously did, for she was turning and trailing obediently back  upstairs.

Olivia felt oddly desolate, suddenly. But small wonder, she thought.  After all, she'd arrived expecting a blissful reunion     with Jeremy,  leading to a passionate consummation, and instead here she was, an  intruder, forced into the role of voyeur in someone else's love-life.

There was a strange silence in the room that she needed to break.

She cleared her throat. 'I gather you don't have any moral scruples about your own conduct?'

'Correct.' His grin was unabashed. 'But I'm not married, and never have  been. That makes a difference.' He paused. 'Nor am I a home-wrecker.'

The atmosphere tingled again.

Olivia said coldly and clearly, 'If you'll give me this woman's address, I'll go.'

He picked up a message pad and wrote on it. 'It's on the other side of  the garden. You'll be able to pick up a black cab at the end of the road  if you can't walk that far with your luggage.'

'I hope you don't expect me to thank you effusively.' Olivia accepted  the slip of paper, then stalked into the hall and picked up her case.

'I gave up believing in miracles a long time ago.' He unfastened the front door and held it open for her. 'Goodbye, Ms Butler.'

'Oh, that's such a final word,' she said with saccharine sweetness. 'I much prefer au revoir, don't you?'