Read A Convenient Husband Online
Authors: Kim Lawrence
âOf course not!' she responded indignantly. âI couldn't possibly sleep with anyone else but you!' she told him in a voice that throbbed with conviction.
Any male could be forgiven for looking slightly complacent when a woman made that sort of announcementâTess suspected her candour was going to cost her dear this time.
Rafe visibly relaxed. If he didn't actually preen himself, he came remarkably close. âThen that's a good start.'
âI meant thatâ¦' Go on, Tess, what did you mean? âI'd have to stop sleeping with you before Iâ¦Iâ¦' Until she'd actually put it into words, Tess hadn't really given much thought to how hard the transition back to a less intimate relationship was going to be. The prospect was one of the most depressing scenarios she'd ever contemplated.
âMove on to pastures new?' he suggested delicately when her hoarse voice dried up completely. âI think on the whole that's probably wise. It can be hell trying to keep too many balls up in the air at once.'
âYou'd know, I suppose,' she choked.
âI thought I'd already established that I'm strictly a monogamous sort of guy.'
Tess gave a soft moan of pure exasperation and tried to formulate a single sentence that would put paid for good to his flights of fancy. All she managed to come up with was rather weak and tremulous.
âYou know I can't get married.'
He shook his head and ruthlessly pushed aside her objection. âI
know
you can't have my children.'
It was true, but it hurt to hear him say it all the same. âIt amounts to the same thing.'
âBen would be our family.'
There was something awfully seductive about his logic and his air of complete certainty.
âStop trying to hustle me, Farrar,' she growled. âI know you want to thumb your nose at Edgar, but isn't this going a bit far?'
Rafe didn't deny her accusation, but then he wouldn't because basically he was a decent, honest man. If he weren't he would have been telling her the sort of things she wanted to hearâthings such as he loved herâbut he hadn't.
âIt was only a little while ago you were going to marry someone else.'
âThat was entirely different.'
Of course it was; he'd loved herâstill did. âYes,
I'm
not already married.'
âThat really bothers you, doesn't it?'
Tess bristled, resenting the implication her attitude was prudish. âCall me a freakâ'
âI wouldn't do thatâ'
She loftily ignored his interruption, and found it harder to ignore the warmth in his eyes. The starch went out of her spine and she sighed.
âYes, as a matter of fact it does bother me. I happen to think that if you make vows you should stick by them. If you don'tâ¦'
âIf you don't, things like me happen.' He met her confused look with a thin-lipped sardonic smile. âIf it hadn't been for marital infidelity I wouldn't be hereâ¦but maybe you don't think that would be a great loss?' he teased. âI won't cheat, if that's what is bothering you, Tess, and I know ignorance is no defence in law, but I was sort of hoping you'd be a little more flexible? I honestly didn't know Claudine was married when we met and when I did find out she swore to me her marriage was over in all but name.'
She'd sworn a lot of things that had turned out not to be trueâthings such as she wasn't sleeping with her husband, she still loved Rafe, she just loved her husband as well, or, as it had turned out,
more
âand he'd believed them all because he'd wanted to believe them. He'd wanted to be needed, not just for his looks or his money, but needed for himself. It had finally got to the point where self-deception hadn't worked any more.
âAnd it wasn't?' Tess persisted masochistically. Nothing showed in his eyes but she had the impression a lot was going on behind that enigmatic façade.
âShe's pregnant and it's not mine. Does that answer your question?'
âAre you sure?' she blurted out without thinking.
âMy dear Tess, do you think I'd have had unprotected sex with you if there was the
remotest
possibility I could have passed anything to you?' he asked her incredulously. âThe baby is
definitely
not mine.'
âAre you saying you've never
not
usedâ¦with anyone elseâ¦
ever
�' She'd been more articulate in her life but it seemed Rafe hadn't had much problem following her.
âA first for us both, angel.'
She drew a shaky sigh. âI suppose it was because you knew I couldn't get pregnant.'
âI wasn't thinking of consequences at the timeâ¦
were you
?'
Tess's stomach muscles spasmed. She tore her eyes from his dark intense gaze and fixed them on her hands, which lay white-knuckled and tightly intertwined in her lap. How could she forget that primal need to surrender, to be possessed, when she felt the same way, give or take the odd ache every time she looked at him? Hell, look nothingâevery time she
thought
about him!
âI met Claudine when her marriage was going through a rough patch,' she heard him recall. âShe admitted to me at the end that the only reason she slept with me originally was to pay her husband back for an indiscretion.'
Tess winced. âNot good for the ego, I grant you, but that's a position a lot of men must fantasise about finding themselves in.' Contemplating the shallow nature of the male of the species, she gave a cynical smile and flexed her stiff fingers to encourage the circulation to return. âEspecially if the vengeful wife happens to be drop-dead gorgeous, of course.'
She wasn't shocked when he didn't jump in and explain that Claudine had been nothing to look atâsince when did men make fools of themselves over a sweet nature?
âIt just so happens that I'm not one of themâ¦or,' Rafe conceded with a shrug, ânot on this occasion, I wasn't. Ironically, when she told the husband about me it seemed it revived his interest. I must have put the spark back in their sex lifeâquite a feather in my cap, don't you think?'
Under the circumstances Tess wasn't surprised that there was an air of suppressed violence about him. The husband's interest had resulted in a baby, without which Rafe might be with Claudine at this very moment�
âHard luck.'
Some of her feelings must have shown in her voice because he looked up, the bitter, distracted expression gradually fading from his face.
âHow did we come to be talking about that?'
âLet's see,' she mused, pressing a finger to the tiny suggestion of a cleft in her rounded chin. âYou asked me to marry you, then to clinch the deal you started pointing out the plus points of marital infidelity, and for good measure finished off going into painful details about your ill-fated love for the much-married and embarrassingly fertile Claudine.'
âHell, Tess, you make it soundâ'
âBoring?'
A thoughtful frown creased his forehead. âYou don't sound bored.'
He was too sharp for his own goodâor hers!
âI'm polite.'
He permitted himself a wry grin at this assertion. âI'll let that one pass.' His expression sobered. âYou sound angry.'
âWould it be so unreasonable if I was? You were mad when you caught me innocently kissing Ian. You don't have to be in love with someone not to like the idea of them slobbering over someone else!' she finished shrilly.
âI didn't say you were in love with me.'
Panic raced through her tense body. No, he didn't, but if I don't keep my stupid tongue still the whole world and his neighbour will know. It was too late now to retract her wordsâshe'd just have to tough it out.
âOf course you didn't. You're stupid and vain, but not
that
stupid and vain.' She saw there was still shadowy suspicion in his eyes and her bolshiness faded; it wasn't getting her anywhere. When she managed to compose herself there was the unmistakable ring of authenticity to her words. âIf you must know, the idea of you touching me while you're thinking ofâ¦' She broke off and covered her mouth with a trembling hand. âIt makes me feel ill,' she revealed in a tearful whisper.
Rafe swore and dropped down on his knees before her. There were some things which everyone but a totally insensitive fool would realise! One of them was that there were some things you could discuss openly with your best friend that you couldn't discuss if she unexpectedly became your lover. Top of that list was other women.
Did this mean that the price of intimacy would be a loss of the closeness they'd always enjoyed? He'd no longer enjoy the freedom to say exactly what he felt around her? He hoped not.
âOf course it does, angel, only I wouldn'tâ¦I haven't.' He took her face between his hands and looked into her tear-filled eyes. The slight quiver of her soft pink lips drew his attention to the full passionate curveâ¦actually his appetite never had run to sugary confections, and Tess was definitely more spice than sugar.
âI honestly can't think of anything or anyone but you when we're in bed together.'
A man would have to be crazy to admit his mind wandered while he was making love to a woman, especially if that wandering took him in the direction of another woman. It struck Rafe forcibly at that moment that he didn't need to seek refuge in prevaricationâloving Tess had not left room for any intrusive thoughts. There had been nothing and nobody for him but Tessâhis senses had been saturated with her. A flicker of confusion passed over his face before he continued.
âI fell in love with Claudineâ¦' he heard the odd defensive note creep into his voice and his frown deepened ââ¦but what did it get me? Nothing but a short stint in hell! I
never
,' he told her in a voice that came straight from the heart, âwant to feel like that again. No,' he explained to her warmly,
âwhat we have is much
much
better. We have incredible sex. Admittedly,' he conceded realistically, âthat might not last.' Experiencing a sudden flashback of her slender, sweat-slick body arched beneath him, Rafe determined to do everything within his power to keep their passion alive.
Now there, Tess thought bitterly, was a prospect to keep a girl warm at nights.
âBut we'll still be friends; we'll
always
be friends. What could be a better basis for a lasting marriage? Sometimes the solution is so simple you don't notice it.'
So long as he doesn't have any more revelations! The longer he remained oblivious to things like the neon sign above her head saying, âI love you, you idiot' in great big letters, the better!
Maybe he was having second thoughts. His enthusiasm sounded a bit forced to herâalmost as forced as the smile she responded to his concern with.
âIt's all right if you want to talk about Claudine,' she lied bravely. âI was being silly.'
Her tolerant generosity seemed to go down like a lead balloon.
âI don't want to talk about her.'
Tess caught his hands as they fell from her face and gave them a comforting squeeze. âI understand.'
âLucky you.'
âI can also understand why you want things to be simple after what you've just been through, but don't you see if we get married things won't be simple any more? The way things stand youâ¦either of us can just walk away at any time.'
âSo you're willing to lose Ben to the old man just because you want to keep your options open in case a better prospect in bed happens along!' Rafe shook off her hands and she watched his own ball into fists.
Tess shook her head in disbelief. âOnly you could turn this around so that I'm the selfish one.'
Rafe pressed his face into his hands before lifting his head and dragging them through his dark hair. âYou're right.' His ready retraction did more to sap her resolve than all the moral blackmail in the world. âI'm sorry, Tess. It's just I know what it's like to be brought up in a house where you feel nobody wants you. Together we could make sure that Ben knew he was wanted every day of his life.'
His conviction was deeply compelling. Tess found herself reaching out to touch the side of his face. His jaw was velvet-rough under her fingertips.
âThat's a truly lovely thing to say, Rafe.'
He looked embarrassed. âI mean it.'
âI believe you, Rafe, it's justâ¦' She felt too emotional to continue.
âWe can make it work. I
know
we can.'
âFor Ben's sake?' It would make all the difference if she didn't already know the answer to that question.
His eyes slid from hers. âYou know me, Tess, I'm not big on self-sacrifice.'