Read A Convenient Husband Online
Authors: Kim Lawrence
Rafe's narrowed gaze objectively noted the blotchy puffiness under her wide-spaced green eyes. She had that pale, almost translucent type of skin that tended to reflect her every mood, not to mention every tear! He recalled how impossibly fragile her wrist had felt when he'd caught hold of her hand.
âI promise I won't tell you things will get betterâthey probably won't.'
Tell me something I didn't already know! âYou always were a little ray of sunshine, but the depressive traits are new.'
âI'm a realist, angel. Life sucksâ¦' He pulled the cork on the bottle and glugged an ample amount into a stray mug.
âI'm so glad you stopped by, I feel better already.' Absent-mindedly she accepted the mug he handed her. âThis is actually rather nice,' she announced with some surprise, before taking another, less tentative sip of her grandmother's famous wineâfamous at least within the narrow precincts of this parish and then for its potency rather than its delicate bouquet.
Rafe shuddered as he followed suit and decided not to disillusion her. âWhat's happened to you that's so bad?' he enquired carelessly, refilling his mug.
âStill the same!' It gave her a feeling of perverse pleasure to see her sharp, sarcastic tone ignite a spark of irritation in his dark eyes. âYou always did have to go one better than everyone else, didn't you? You even have to be miserable on a grand scale!' There was a warm glow in the pit of Tess's empty stomach; she hadn't been able to eat a thing since that awful phone call from Chloe.
âMeaningâ¦?'
âMeaning my simple life can't possibly be expected to reach the supreme highs and hopeless depths of yours.'
Rafe's dark brows rose to his equally dark hairline. âYou got all that from a simple,
what's up
?'
âYou asked, but you weren't really interested!' she accused, waving her mug in front of him for a refill. âBut then why should you be?'
âI thought we were friends, Tess.'
âWe were friends when we were ten and eight respectively,' she corrected, injecting sharp scorn into her observation. âActually, I didn't think you went in much for slumming these days, Rafe.'
There was just enough truth in her words to make him feel uncomfortable and just enough unfairness to make him feel resentful. Before she'd had the baby and left behind her city lifestyle they'd got together pretty frequently. Things being the way they were, he wasn't likely to visit home often and after the first few refusals he'd stopped inviting Tess up to town.
âYou moved away too,' he reminded her.
âI came back.' And that was the crux of the matter. When she'd been a driven, goal-orientated career woman they'd still had common ground, but that common ground had vanished when her life had become baby-orientated.
She
felt her life was pretty fulfilling, but she wasn't so naive as to expect others, including Rafe, to share her interest in Ben's teething problems!
It was on the tip of Rafe's tongue to ungallantly remind her that decision hadn't been initiated entirely by a nostalgia for the rural idyll of their childhood. He restrained himself and instead poked a finger against his own substantial chest.
âWhat do you call this, a hologram?'
âI call it visiting royalty.' She performed a low mocking bow, blissfully unaware that the gaping neck of her loose nightshirt gave him an excellent view of her cleavage and more than a hint of rosy nipples.
âGot the latest girlfriend in tow again? Going to impress her with the family crypt or maybe the family ghost?'
Her soft, teasing chuckle suddenly emerged as she misread the reason for the dark tell-tale stain across the angle of his high cheekbones.
âOr is that the problemâshe
isn't
here? A frustrated libido would explain why you stalked in here with a chip a mile wide on your shoulder. Smouldering like something out of a Greek tragedyâ¦I'm right, aren't I? The girlfriend couldn't or
wouldn't
come�' she speculated shrewdly.
At least theorising insensitively about someone else's problems stopped her thinkingâif only in the short termâabout her own!
Now he had a pretty good idea what was under the shirt thing it was even less easy to stop thinking about it. âIs it that obvious I've been flung aside?' he bit back.
âLike an old sock?' she chipped in helpfully.
There didn't seem much point indulging Rafe's inclinations towards drama; she'd had enough of that with Chloe. He thought
his
life was a mess, he should try wearing her shoesânot that they'd fit, she conceded, comparing his large, expensively shod feet with her own size fours.
It was hard to feel sympathetic when the worst thing likely to happen to Rafe Farrar was a bad haircut! She gave his thick, healthily shining dark hair an extra-resentful glare.
âIt didn't take a psychic to see you came here spoiling for a fight!'
Despite his growing anger, Rafe couldn't help but laugh at the irony of her accusation. âI knocked on the right door, then, didn't I?'
âYou didn't knock, you just barged inâ¦' Quite as abruptly as it had arisen, the aggression drained from Tess. Feeling weak, she gave a deep, shuddering sigh. âMaybe I just got tired of being patronisedâ¦? Has someone
really
given you the push?' Her wondering smile was wry. It hardly seemed credible.
âYou find that possibility amusing?'
She found the possibility incredible. âYou must admit that it does have a certain novelty value. Look on the bright sideâ¦'
âI can't guarantee I won't throttle you if you go into a Pollyanna routine,' he warned darkly.
âI'm trembling.'
Rafe's jaw tightened as he encountered the sparkling mockery in her eyes. He found himself grimly contemplating how hard it would be to make her tremble for realâ¦and he wasn't thinking of scare tactics! What he was thinking of scared him a little, though. If he was going to vent his frustration on anyone, it couldn't be Tess!
âIt might actually do you some good,' she mused thoughtfully. âYou're way overdue a dose of humility,' she explained frankly.
Looking at him properly for the first time, Tess saw that he actually did look pretty haggard in a handsome, vital sort of way. She couldn't recall ever seeing that hard light in his eyes before. The price of partying at all the right night spots?
âThen I'll give you a real laugh, shall I?' he flung the words angrily at her. âThe woman I wanted to spend the rest of my life withâhave children withâhas decided not to leave her husband!'
Tess's startled gasp was audible in the short, tense silence that followed his words.
âDoes that have the required degree of character-enhancing humility to suit you?'
âY
OU
were going out with a
married
woman?' Tess didn't know what made her feel most uncomfortable: the part that Rafe had been messing with a married woman, or the part that said he'd been contemplating wedding bells and babies.
âYou want to have
babies
�'
Rafe, regretting his unusual episode of soul-baring the instant the self-pitying words emerged from his lips, dragged an angry hand through his hair as Tess, after visibly recoiling from him as though he had a particularly nasty disease, started staring at him with the expression she obviously reserved for moral degenerates. He resisted the impulse to unkindly point out she was no saint herself!
âI don't think I've got the hips for it.' He didn't understand why this sarcastic response should make her flinch.
âAnd just for the record I didn't know she was married until it was too late.' He didn't know why the hell he was explaining himself to her.
âToo late for what?'
Rafe scowled at her dogged persistence. âToo late not to fall in love!' he bellowed.
He saw her soft wide lips quiver and a misty expression drift over her almost pretty features. Oh, God, not sympathyâ¦
please
â¦he thought with a nauseated grimace.
âWhat are you doing?'
âI need to sit down, and from the look of you so do you.'
Tess looked askance at the guiding hand on her arm but decided not to object; she found that she did need to sit down too. She made no immediate connection between the half-empty mug of wine still clutched in her hand and the shaky quality of her knees.
Rafe was relieved to find that Tess's spring-cleaning efforts hadn't extended as far as the small oak-beamed sitting room. He pushed a sleeping cat off the overstuffed chintzy sofa and sat down with a grunt. The grunt became a pained yelp as he quickly leapt up. A quick search behind the cushion recovered the item responsible for his bruised dignity.
He held aloft the culprit, a battered-looking three-wheeled tractor.
âI searched everywhere for that earlier,' Tess choked thickly, taking the toy from his unresisting fingers and nursing it against her chest.
âAre you
crying
�' Rafe wondered suspiciously. He didn't associate feminine tears or even more obviously feminine bosoms, of which he'd had that unexpected eyeful, with Tess, and he was getting both tonight. It intensified that vague feeling of discomfort.
Tess sharply turned her slender back on him and stowed the toy away in an overflowing, brightly painted toy chest tucked in the corner of the room. Scrubbing her knuckles across her damp cheeks, she turned back.
âWhat if I am?' she growled mutinously.
A nasty thought occurred to Rafe. âBen is all right, isn't he?' he asked sharply. A picture of a dribbly baby came into his head and he felt an unexpected twinge of affection. âI mean, he's not ill or anythingâ¦?'
It occurred to him, as it perhaps should have done sooner if he was the friend he claimed to be, that it must be hard bringing up a baby alone. He couldn't be a babe in arms any longer, he must beâwhat? Oneâ¦more, evenâ¦?
âBen's fineâ¦asleep upstairs.' The tears were starting to flow again and there was zilch she could do about it, so Tess abandoned her attempt at pretence of being normal or in controlâof her tears ducts, her lifeâ¦anything!
âSomething's wrong, though.'
âYou don't usually state the obvious,' she croaked.
Rafe gave an indulgent sigh. âYou'd better tell me.'
âWhy bother?' she asked with a wild little laugh. âYou can't do anything!'
âOh, ye of little faith.'
âNobody can,' she insisted bleakly. The alcohol had broken down all the defensive walls she'd built up with a resounding bang. Without lifting her head to look at him, she laid it against the wide expanse of chest that was suddenly conveniently close to hand. Eyes tight closed, hardly aware of what she was doing, she brought her fist down once, twice, three times hard against his shoulder.
At some deep subconscious level that dealt with things beyond her immediate misery her brain was storing irrelevant information like the level of hard toughness in his body and the nice, musky, warm scent that rose from his skin.
âI can't bear to lose him. I just can't bear it, Rafe!' she sobbed in a tortured whisper.
Her distress made him feel helpless. Helpless and a rat! Tess was putting herself quite literally in his hands, displaying a trust and confidence she had every right to expect if he was any sort of friend. It made the response of his body to the soft, fragrant female frame plastered against it all the more of a betrayal!
âLose who? Your vetâ¦?' he prompted. He took her by the shoulders and gave her an urgent little shake.
âYou can't lose what you never had and furthermore don't want! Don't you ever listen?' she demanded hotly.
âThen who or what have you lost?'
âLost my inhibitionsâit must be the wine.'
âStop laughing.'
Fine! If he preferred tears, he could have them! âLose Ben!'
âYou're not going to lose Ben,' he soothed confidently.
Rafe always did think he knew everythingâwell, not this time! Angrily she lifted her head; tears sparkled on the ends of her spiky dark eyelashes.
âI am. Chloe wants him!' she wailed.
Rafe looked at her blankly. She wasn't making sense at allâ¦maybe she had an even lower tolerance for alcohol than he'd thought.
âI know Chloe gets what she wants,' he observed drily,
âbut on this occasion I don't think you're obliged to say yes. You really shouldn't drink, Tessâ¦'
âYou don't understand!'
Rafe shook his head and didn't dispute her claim as haunted, anguish-filled emerald eyes fixed once more on his face.
âI'm not Ben's mother, Chloe isâ¦' Sobbing pitifully, she collapsed once more against Rafe's chest, leaving him to digest the incredible information she'd just hit him with.
If it was true, and he couldn't for the life of him think why she'd lie about something like that, it was a hell of a lot to take in.
When Tess had taken leave of absence from her job as a high-powered commodities trader, he'd been as shocked as her other friends when she'd returned afterwards complete with a baby. Compared to that, the shock had been relatively mild when she'd walked away from the job she'd loved after a brief, unsuccessful attempt to combine motherhood with a demanding career and moved into the cottage she'd inherited from her grandmother.
Now she was saying she wasn't Ben's mother! She wasn't anyone's mother!
It was a good ten minutes before Tess was capable of continuing their discussion. Looking at her stubborn, closed-in expression as she sat with primly folded arms in the old rocking-chair, Rafe could see that talking to him was the last thing she wanted to do.
âWhy?'
âMorgan and Edward were out of the country, some jungle or other,' Tess recalled dully, speaking of her elder sister and brother-in-law who were both brilliant, but unworldly palaeontologists of international renown. They might be the first people everybody thought of consulting when a prehistoric skull was unearthed, but when it came to a pregnant daughter they wouldn't have been high on anybody's list.
âBesides which they would have been worse than useless even if they had been around.'
Tess chose to ignore this accurate summing-up. âChloe was five months gone before she realised and absolutely distraught when she was told it was too late toâ¦' Tess paused and looked self-consciously uncomfortable.
âShe wanted to be rid of it.' Rafe shrugged. âThat figures. She always was a selfish, spoilt brat.'
Honesty prevented Tess disputing this cruel assessment. Her elder sister and her husband always had either indulged or ignored their only child, and the product of this upbringing had turned into a stunningly beautiful but extremely self-absorbed young woman.
âA
scared
spoilt brat back then,' Tess snapped sharply.
âShe didn't want anyone to know about it; she made me promise. So I took her away.'
âIsn't that a bitâ¦I don't know, Victorian melodramaâ¦?'
âYou've not the faintest idea of how weird she was acting.' Tess had been genuinely worried that Chloe might have done something drastic. âI thought a change of scene, away from people that knew her, might help. I imagined,' she recalled, âthat after the birth she'dâ¦'
âBe overcome by maternal instincts.' Rafe gave a scornful snort.
âPeople are,' Tess retorted indignantly.
âA classic case of optimism overcoming what's right under your nose. Chloe was never going to give up partying to stay at home and baby-sit. I can't believe you were that stupid.'
âWhy?' she asked, roused to anger by his superior, condescending attitude. It was easy for him to condemnâhe hadn't been there; he couldn't possibly understand what it had been like. âYou don't usually have any problem believing I'm an idiot!' She shook her head miserably.
âI don't know why I'm even telling you all this. It won't make any difference. The fact is, Chloe is his mother and if she wants him there's nothing, short of skipping the country, that I can do about it! I wish now I'd adopted him legally myself when she suggested it,' she ended on a bleak note of self-condemnation.
âDon't worry,' she added, slanting him a small, bitter smile. âI haven't got the cash to skip the country.'
That was another thing that had been nagging away at him. Tess had lived a starkly simple life since she'd moved here, she owned this place outright, had no debts that he was aware of, and she must have made a tidy pile during her brief but successful career. Yet this place needed a lick of paint. In fact it needed a lot of thingsânot big things, butâ¦And when had she stopped running a car? He couldn't remember; it hadn't seemed important at the time. But covering the primaries in the States had been? In light of Tess's distress there was a big question mark hanging over his priorities.
âI could lend it to you.'
Just as well he didn't know how tempting she found his offer, even though she knew it was meant as a joke. “âNeither a borrower nor a lender be,”' she quoted sadly.
âI can't believe you've fooled everyone all this time.' Rafe was looking at her as though he were seeing her for the first time. It had taken him long enough to get his head around the idea that she was a motherânow he'd have to unlearn something that had been surprisingly hard for him to accept in the first place.
âIt wasn't intentional, it just sort of happened,' she replied, knowing her explanation sounded lame.
âYou didn't just sort of
happen
to give up a great job you loved. You didn't just sort of
happen
to spend over a year of your life bringing up someone else's child.'
âI forgot that sometimes,' she admitted. âThat he wasn't really mine,' she explained self-consciously. âAnd I know what I did must seem a bit surreal to you now, but it was never meant to be a permanent solution. Chloe didn't want Ben, she wanted to give him up, have him adopted. It seemed so awfully final. You hear about women who have given up their babies suffering, never coming to terms with the regret.
âI didn't want that to be Chloe ten years down the line. I thought it was only a matter of time before she realised, and then I suppose as time went on I lost sight of the fact I was just a stopgap.' With a choked sound she buried her face in her shaking hands. âI was right, wasn't I? She has realised that she wants him. Only it's been so long Iâ¦'
âGod, Tess!' Rafe thundered, banging his fist angrily down on a blameless bureau. A dozen images he didn't even know he'd retained of Tess with the baby drifted through his mindâshe loved that kid and he loved her. Mother or no mother, they should be together. âShe can't just take him away from you!'
Tess's lips, almost bloodless in her pale face, quivered. The eyes that met his were tragic. âYes, Rafe, yes, she can.'
âDon't give me all that martyr stuff, Tess. You don't actually believe it's in Ben's best interests to live with Chloe, do you?' he grated incredulously. âYou know Chloeâthe novelty will wear off within a couple of months and where will that leave Ben?' he intoned heavily as her eyes slid miserably away from his. âSo stop crying and decide how you're going to stop her.'
The callous implication that she was behaving like a wimp really stung. âWhat do you think I've been doing? Whichever way you look at it, Chloe is his mother!' she reminded him shrilly. âI'm just a distant relation.'
âYou're the only mother Ben has ever known.'