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Secrets of the Playboy's Bride(22)

By:Leanne Banks

       
           



       

"Of course you are," she said. "You're smart. You're successful. What's not to like?"

"You weren't completely clear about what we'll be doing," he said.

"It could be anything from reading a book with a young child to helping  with math. It won't be brain surgery," she said, although Calista was  certain Leo was intelligent enough that he could have been a brain  surgeon if that was what he'd wanted.

"I may not be the best example for young children," he said in a stilted voice.

"Why?" she asked, even though she knew he'd tricked dozens of people and  made money off of it. "It's not as if you're a crook," she said.

His eyes barely flickered. "No, but there's always my misspent youth."

"Hmm," she said, feeling her anger shoot out of nowhere. So that was how  he described it. His misspent youth. She took a quick breath and  counted to ten to keep from saying what she really thought. "Nobody's  perfect. You have a lot to offer."

His mouth lifted in a half smile as his gaze fell over her possessively. "Are you speaking from experience?"

Her mind slammed back to visuals of their heated lovemaking and she bit  her lip, bothered by the way her feelings for him seemed to jerk from  one end of the spectrum to the other. "An observation," she said.

He turned off his laptop and stood. "Okay, but I can only stay for an hour or so."

Forty-five minutes later, Calista helped an elementary-age girl named  Kelly with division while a crowd formed around Leo. She assisted Kelly  until the little girl's attention waned and her mother collected her.  Curious about what Leo was discussing, she joined his class.

"Whenever you're selling anything to someone, including yourself, you  have to find out what the buyer wants. What does the buyer need? Your  job is to give him what he needs."

"What if you don't have it?" a young man asked.

"Then you tell him where he can get what he wants, or prove that your  product is the answer to his problems. The biggest part of sales is  listening to the buyer and helping him see that you're part of his  solution. How many times have you gone into a store and asked for help  only to have a salesman take you to the most expensive model of whatever  you're looking for instead of asking you questions about what you want  and need?"

"But I just sell candy for my community group," a little boy said.

"Then you sell the experience of being a part of making the world better  by buying one of your candy bars. Be what your buyer is looking for-a  clean, well-mannered young man," Leo said. "Same thing when you're  looking for a job. Do your research. Find out as much as you can about  the company where you're applying. Be prepared. You can learn a lot on  the Web. You may even find out something about the person who will  interview you."

"What if I ain't got no Internet?" another young man asked.

Calista watched Leo, wondering if this question would stump him. He  looked so magnetic, so self-assured. She wondered if anyone ever  succeeded in making him feel self-conscious.

"The library has Internet," he said. "All for now. Good luck with your future sales."

She saw the crowd, both adults and children, push toward him. Everyone  seemed to want to shake his hand. It was almost as if they hoped his  magic would wipe off on them. She wondered if he'd learned his selling  technique from his father. A bitter taste filled her mouth. He'd  certainly sold her father down the river. Yet, even now she could tell  that he wasn't all evil. He appeared as if he sincerely wanted success  for each person with whom he spoke. Was appearance the operative word?  Underneath it all, what was he really thinking?

He glanced up and searched the crowd, his gaze landing on her. She felt a  frisson of excitement at being singled out by him. Yes, the rest of the  world knew she was his wife. But she knew the truth. He didn't love her  and she needed something from him. Nodding in her direction, he walked  toward her.

"Let's go," he said and slid his hand to her back as he guided her to the Town Car.

"What is it?" she asked. "They loved you. They were hanging on your every word."

His body was tense, his mouth taut. "Maybe. They hear what they want to hear."

"What do you mean?" she asked as he opened the door to the car and followed her inside.

"Home," he said to George.

"Which one, sir?" George asked.

"Out of the city," Leo said.

She studied his face and instinctively lifted her hand to his clenched jaw. "Why are you so upset?"                       
       
           



       

He caught her hand just before she touched him. "I'm not upset. "He  shrugged, his eyes dark and full of tempestuous emotion. "Seeing them  reminded me … It brought back memories."

"Of what?" she asked.

He narrowed his eyes and shrugged again. "Nothing I want to remember."

She felt a strange twinge of compassion at odds with her wall of defense against him. "You gave them hope."

His mouth twisted cynically. "That's what I was selling."

"You don't believe there's any hope?"

"I believe in hard work, good timing and good luck," he said. "It's not easy being poor and wanting a better life."

"No, but what you told them is true. Selling a product, selling  yourself, is a life skill. Don't you believe that? Or were you just  telling them what they wanted to hear?"

"No," he said. "I gave that up."

She lifted her eyebrows at his revelation. "When?"

"Shortly after my time in the egg," he said.

"But you still used your sales techniques," she said.

"Yes. I found out what the buyer wanted, but I also found out that  people believe what they want to believe. Some are harder to read than  others." He lifted his finger to her lips. "Like you. What do you want  to believe, Calista? What do you want to believe about me?"

Her heart pounded at the intent way he looked at her. She feared he  could almost read her mind. She swallowed hard over the sensation of her  emotions wrapping around her windpipe and squeezing. "I want to-" She  broke off. "I believe that you're a powerful, charismatic man. I believe  some part of you wants a family," she added impulsively.

He lifted his eyebrows. "Is that what you believe or what you want to believe?"

Her thoughts whipped through her mind. She wanted to believe that he was  a bad person and that she should feel no guilt about marrying him for  his money. She wanted to believe that she couldn't have feelings for him  because he'd been part of her father's downfall. "I don't believe that  humans are hatched. Humans are born and want and need to be loved."

His eyes bored into hers. "A word of caution. Don't overestimate my  emotional needs. I've spent a lifetime learning to live without. I'm not  going to start now."

His statement made her blood run cold. "Are you saying you have no real  feelings for me?" she asked. "If that's true, then why did you marry me?  Oh, wait, you wanted a wife to make your business deals go through more  smoothly. So why me? Other than the fact that I was convenient."

"I told you that you fascinated me."

"And you thought I could be an asset," she said, digging into the dirty  truth as much for herself as for him. She had to find a way to keep him  from getting to her.

"Yes, but many women could be an asset."

"So all women are interchangeable?" she asked.

"I didn't say that. I told you that you fascinated me. I couldn't get  enough of you," he said, pulling her against him. "I still can't."

Her breath squeezed tight from her lungs again. "You don't have an  emotional attachment to me and you never plan to. What do you expect of  me?"

"Everything," he said. "Your mind, your body. Everything."

She gasped. "That's ridiculous, and it's not fair."

"I never said anything about being fair."

That night, he made love to her, consuming every inch of her, wringing a  response from her that surprised even her. When she awakened in the  morning, Calista felt like a prostitute. What was she selling in order  to secure her sisters' future?

Feeling suffocated by her feelings and her fake marriage, she took Pooh  and drove to visit her sisters. With each mile she put between her and  Leo, she breathed a little easier.

She brought a picnic lunch to share with her sisters and cousin's family on the back porch.

"Best picnic food I've ever had," Sharon said afterward when the girls and Justin adjourned to play a video game.

"Leo's chef prepared it. He's amazing," she said.

"But of course. The great Leo would have nothing less than amazing, including his wife," Sharon teased.