Read The Mistress Purchase Online

Authors: Penny Jordan

The Mistress Purchase (6 page)

Thinking of his grandmother made Leon frown again. He had been just fourteen when she died. A sensitive age, which was no doubt why—

His mobile phone rang, breaking his train of thought.

 

Was she doing the right thing? Sadie asked herself soberly as she parked her car in the hotel car park and made her way to her room.

She wished passionately that her grandmother were here for her to talk to. Would she approve of what she was doing? The wave of euphoria which had carried her back to Grasse had receded now, leaving her feeling shaky and insecure. What if she couldn't create a saleable perfume? And, even if she did, what made her think that her scent could succeed where so many others had failed? They lived in a different world now from the one in which the classic scents had been created. Consumers were more demanding, more fickle—but if she could succeed…if she could create a new scent that would take the world by storm and…

She was beginning to feel light-headed with excitement again. What if, between them, she and Leon…?

Between them? She and Leon? A fresh surge of excitement gripped her, but this one had nothing whatsoever to do with the creation of a new scent!

Why didn't she give in and admit it to herself? She had been attracted to Leon the first moment she had seen him.

Attracted to him! To describe her feelings as mere attraction was like trying to compare cologne with full-strength perfume.

Her heart started to thud, her palms suddenly becoming damp. Why was it that the look in one particular man's eyes could make a woman feel so…? Hot-cheeked, Sadie acknowledged that she did not want to explore just what it was that Leon made her feel right now! At least not in public.

 

‘I just hope that I'm doing the right thing.'

Sadie's voice wobbled a little, and she held her mobile just that little bit tighter as she voiced her uncertainty to her friend.

On the other end of the line Mary responded bracingly.

‘Well, it certainly sounds to me as though you are. Sometimes you just have to follow your instincts and your heart, Sadie, no matter how risky it might seem.'

Her heart! That organ started to thump erratically at the thought that she had betrayed herself so easily to her friend. How could Mary have guessed from what she had told her about her emergent feelings for Leon? She had barely mentioned him!

‘Your kind of work isn't merely a career choice, Sadie, it's a vocation, and when a person has your kind of talent—well, then they need to be able to fulfil the need it gives them and follow the direction of their heart, rather than make cerebral decisions!'

Her work! Mary was talking about her work, not about Leon!

‘It is a once in a lifetime opportunity,' Sadie agreed excitedly. ‘But—'

‘No more buts,' Mary told her firmly. ‘You go for it, girl!'

She had spent longer talking to her friend on the telephone than she had realised, Sadie recognised ten minutes after she had ended the call, when the grumbling protest of her stomach made her look at her watch. It was almost eight o'clock and she hadn't eaten since breakfast!

Showering quickly, Sadie redressed in an elegant taupe silk dress she had spotted in an expensive boutique's sale in Paris, slipping her bare feet into a pair of kitten-heeled sandals and gathering up a cream cashmere wrap just in case the evening air proved chilly.

It was only a five-minute walk from the rooms to the main hotel, and as Sadie picked her way along the prettily illuminated path and down the several flights of stone steps she paused to look out across the valley, to where the lights of the town twinkled in the distance.

As she crossed the car park
en route
for the hotel foyer she noticed that it was busy with cars, but thought no more about it, smiling briefly at the receptionist as she made her way across the tiled floor and then walked down the stairs and through the lower level foyer into the cocktail bar.

It had bemused her a little the first time she had walked into this bar, to recognise that it was styled very much in the manner of a gracious English country house—even to the extent of having a log-burning fire—but this hotel was not occupied merely in the summer, she acknowledged, but all the year round by those who wished to use its spa facilities. The cocktail bar was certainly very comfortable and welcoming.

The lower foyer, through which she had just walked, had elegant French windows which opened out onto a large paved patio area where guests could sit at wrought-iron tables and look out across the valley. Tonight the patio was crowded with several large groups of diners,
Sadie noticed as she headed for the entrance to the dining room and the
maître d'.

‘A table for dinner?
Madame,
I am sorry but that is not possible. We are fully booked,' he told her when she asked for a table.

Sadie stared at him.

‘But I am a hotel resident,' she protested. Delicious food smells from the meal being served to a table of diners just inside the doorway were informing her just how very hungry she really was. Her stomach was actually growling.

The
maître d'
looked sorrowful and spread his hands.

‘I am so sorry, but I think you will have seen in your room that hotel guests are requested to make prior reservations for dinner. We are a Michelin-starred restaurant, and many people drive out from Cannes to eat here.'

Sadie's heart was sinking deeper with every word he said. It was true that there was a notice in her room warning guests about the limited availability of tables for dinner.

‘There are several very good restaurants in the old town of Mougins,' the
maître d'
informed her helpfully. ‘It is only a short walk from here, and a very pretty place. It gets many tourists.'

Sadie sighed. Whilst she didn't mind eating alone in a hotel restaurant, she was loath to do so further afield. She
had
planned to visit the old town of Mougins, but during the daytime.

Ruefully she acknowledged that she ought to have pre-booked her dinner reservation, and realized that she was now going to have to return to her room and order a meal there, from Room Service. She had just thanked the
maître d'
and was making her way through the now ex
tremely busy bar, when she suddenly saw Leon on the other side of the room.

He was walking towards her and had obviously seen her. Immediately her face lit up, a giddy sensation, a heady mixture of thrilling excitement, shock, and pleasure, flooding her body with breathless delight.

‘Leon!' she exclaimed as he came towards her. ‘What are you doing here?'

His calm, ‘Actually, I'm staying here,' took her thrilled delight down a few notches, and she had to control her expression to stop herself from betraying her disappointment. He had not come looking for her, as she had originally deliriously believed.

‘And you?' he queried. ‘Are you dining here?'

He looked and sounded so coolly remote that her heart banged uncomfortably against her chest wall whilst she battled against the feeling of disappointment that was filling her.

The reality of him was so different from the fantasies she had been building inside her head all afternoon. He looked so austere, so disapproving and remote, so very much the man she remembered from their first encounter—right down to the immaculate shirt and suit.

The happiness and expectation that had fuelled her day was leaking out of her, and she was miserably conscious of the way in which Leon was looking over her shoulder and beyond her, as though in search of someone! Another woman perhaps? Did he have a dinner date?

Lifting her chin she told him bravely, ‘Actually, no, I'm not dining here this evening, Coincidentally, I am also staying here.' There was no way she wanted him thinking she had booked in because she knew he was staying at this hotel. After all, she hadn't realized that he was. ‘But unfortunately—obviously unlike you—I ne
glected to make a reservation for dinner. The
maître d'
has suggested that I walk into the old town and—'

‘What? On your own? You are doing no such thing.' Leon stopped her authoritatively ‘I'm surprised that he suggested such a thing to a woman on her own. You
are
on your own, I take it?'

He wasn't looking over her shoulder any more. In fact he was looking right at her, and his eyes, like his voice, had warmed—as though…as though…

‘Yes. Yes, I am…' Sadie agreed weakly. ‘I…Whoops.' She gave a small gasp as a new crowd of people pressed into the confined space of the bar, one of whom inadvertently bumping into her and causing her to stagger slightly.

Immediately Leon reached out for her, drawing her towards him. So close to him, in fact, that all it would have taken for their bodies to actually touch would be for her to take one good deep breath. And, even though she was in no real danger of being pushed or crushed by the crowd, his arm was still curled protectively around her.

‘Look, it's getting like a beer garden in here,' he told her. ‘Since I've got a table booked, why don't you join me?'

‘Oh, no!' Sadie protested immediately. ‘I didn't tell you because—'

‘I did!' Leon told her softly.

The cold ice she had previously seen in his eyes had melted and turned into…Dizzily, she acknowledged that she could not find the right words to describe the incredible heat and sensuality that was burning in the green gaze he'd turned on her. All she could think of was what it was doing to her…

‘Do you think that's a good idea?' Sadie couldn't help protesting.

‘Why shouldn't it be?' Leon retaliated.

Sadie could think of a hundred reasons, all of which had to do with the fact that she was already dangerously aware of him and potentially responsive to him, without doing something that was bound to encourage her vulnerable emotions to start rioting totally out of control!

‘Well, in view of the professional situation between us…' she began a little lamely, not wanting to admit to him the real reason why she felt that having dinner with him might not be a good idea.

But Leon wouldn't allow her to continue, saying immediately, ‘Why don't we draw a line under all of that and start again? Call a truce? I've spoken to Raoul…'

Even though she knew she was being idiotic, Sadie couldn't quite suppress her small spurt of disappointment when she realised that Leon was talking to her as a business colleague, not as a woman he wanted to get to know personally.

‘Oh, have you?' she answered him.

‘I have,' he confirmed, ‘and I can't tell you how pleased I am to hear about your decision, Sadie.'

‘It seemed the best thing to do.' Sadie paused, wanting to tell him how pleased she was that he had backed down over the use of natural raw materials. But before she could continue Leon shook his head.

‘Part of the truce is no business talk tonight.'

‘You never said that before.'

‘Didn't I?' The corners of his eyes crinkled with amusement. He really was heart-stoppingly sexy, Sadie acknowledged giddily. ‘Ah, well, I'm saying it now!'

‘But if we don't talk about business, then what—?'
Sadie stopped and blushed as she saw the way he was looking at her.

‘Oh, I think we'll find that we have plenty of things to say to one another,' Leon told her softly.

Sadie didn't make any reply. She was far too conscious of the fact that she was dangerously close to wanting much more from him than a simple business relationship!

He was looking away from her and in the direction of the
maître d'
who was hurrying over. Turning towards him, Leon said something quietly and the other man ushered them both to Leon's table.

Sadie could see the subtle feminine interested looks Leon was attracting from the women diners at the other tables as they were led to their own. Predictably, he had been given a table in a prime position, and as the waiter pulled out a chair for her Sadie couldn't help feeling glad that she had chosen to wear her silk dress. It might not be as dramatic as some of the outfits several of the other women were wearing, but thanks to her grandmother she knew how to choose clothes that suited her.

Sadie had barely opened her menu when another waiter arrived, carrying a bottle of champagne and two glasses.

Wide-eyed, she looked at Leon.

‘I hope you don't mind,' he told her softly. ‘Only it seemed appropriate. To celebrate.'

Sadie couldn't drag her gaze away from his. Why on earth had she ever thought his eyes cold? They were anything but. And as for his smile…A funny aching sensation had begun to spread from the direction of her heart all the way down through her body right into her toes, making her curl them protectively inside her sandals!

‘Well, yes…' she agreed, trying to sound nonchalant and sophisticated. ‘Only Raoul did say it could be a few
days before the contracts were ready for us all to sign, and since he isn't here…'

Other books

The Blue Bistro by Hilderbrand, Elin
Sick by Brett Battles
For My Country's Freedom by Kent, Alexander
Vengeance by Brian Falkner
Quiet as the Grave by Kathleen O'Brien
London Pride by Beryl Kingston
Breathless by Heather C. Hudak