Read A High Price to Pay Online
Authors: Sara Craven
studied the contents, frowning a little. They were so beautiful, it
seemed criminal to leave them shut away like this, unworn. She
extracted a set of diaphanous ivory silk cami-knickers and the
suspender belt that matched them, and took them into the bathroom,
while she showered and washed her hair. She would try them on, she
thought, although she wasn't altogether convinced that she would
wear them. Yet once she had felt the silky, seductive glide of them on
her skin, she was lost.
Sitting at her dressing table, applying the hand- dryer to her damp
hair, she could hardly believe the image she saw in the mirror. When
her hair was dry, she brushed it straight back from her face and
anchored it with pins in a prim bun at the nape of her neck. The
contrast between the demureness of her hairstyle and the cloudy
sensuality of her attire could not have been more complete, she
thought, her mouth twisting slightly. It was almost—erotic.
An impression dispelled the moment she put on the black dress. In the
few seconds it took to fasten the zip, she was transformed from
embryo seductress into dull nonentity. She sighed a little. Well,
maybe it was safer that way.
She could hear her mother's silvery tones coming from the drawing
room when she got downstairs. She hesitated, then vanished to the
kitchen, to make sure that Cook, and her niece who helped her on
hectic occasions, hadn't encountered any unexpected snags. But
everything was going smoothly.
'As you should know, Miss Alison,' Cook told her placidly. 'And your
place is in the drawing room, not here, where you might get
something spilled on your dress,' she added, with a dubious look at
the garment in question.
'Oh, don't scold me,' Alison appealed mischievously. 'I just want to
relax for a few moments before the fray, that's all.'
'Well, you're in the way here,' Cook told her severely. 'And Mr
Bristow will be wondering where you are. And leave those canapes
alone!' she added in a voice of doom. 'Why, Miss Alison, for all
you're grown up and married, you're like a naughty child sometimes, I
swear you are!'
'But anchovies have always been my weakness, you know that,'
Alison said plaintively. She was in no hurry to go the drawing room.
She wanted no awkward questions about the black dress until it was
too late for her to change.
'And other people will like them too, I daresay. Now leave them,
there's a love. And isn't that the doorbell? Your guests are arriving,
and you're not there to receive them.'
Alison laughed, and slid off the kitchen table. 'I'm on my way!'
She reached the drawing room while the first arrivals were still
dispensing with their coats and wraps, but her lateness had been
noticed. And laughter gurgled within her, as she saw how Nick's
initial glare of annoyance changed dramatically to sheer incredulity
as he assimilated her appearance. She returned his searching stare
with a defiant lift of her chin, although she was quaking inwardly,
then, as he started towards her, his brows drawn thunderously
together, he turned, smiling with calm warmth to meet the new
chairman of Mortimers as Mrs Horner showed him and his wife into
the room.
The next few minutes was totally taken up with new arrivals and
introductions, and the handing round of drinks and canapes, so there
was no chance of Nick saying anything privately to her, although it
was obvious, by the fulminating glances he occasionally bestowed on
her, that he was anxious to do so.
And as she shook hands and murmured conventional greetings to a
succession of chic, well-groomed and bejewelled women, Alison
found herself wishing she had not allowed her resentment to get the
better of her. They were all too pleasant, and generally, she thought,
too kind to let their feelings show, but she could sense the shock in
them as they were introduced. They must all be wondering why the
sexy, dynamic Nicholas Bristow had saddled himself with a plain,
dowdy freak as a wife. And she wasn't sure she could blame them.
She had intended to annoy Nicholas, but even though she had
succeeded, probably beyond her wildest dreams, she had done herself
no credit either.
In fact, the whole day had been something of a nightmare, and when
Mrs Horner came to announce dinner, Alison would not have been in
the least surprised if she had told them the kitchen had exploded, and
the food was ruined.
She saw her guests seated, then took her own place at the foot of the
long table, opposite Nicholas but far enough away from him to be
safe, at least for the moment.
She gave her attention to the people sitting near her, responding to
their appreciative comments as the bowls of chilled avocado soup
with the swirls of cream were placed in front of them. The meal was
beginning, and she could relax.
Then she looked up and found Nicholas watching her,'-his blue eyes
skimming her like an Arctic breeze, and she shivered involuntarily.
Because eventually, however delicious the meal, however warm the
hospitality and interesting the conversational! these strangers would
leave.
And sooner or later she would have to face the reckoning with
Nicholas.
'MARVELLOUS party! Thank you so much.' 'We have enjoyed
ourselves.' The words of thanks and parting reverberated in Alison's
head as she went into her bedroom and closed the door behind her, a
stifled sigh of relief escaping her lips as she leaned against its solid
panels.
Outwardly, the evening had indeed been a great success, the meal a
triumph, the after-dinner conversation in the drawing room so
interesting, that everyone was clearly loth to tear themselves away.
But, for Alison, the evening had been a personal nightmare. Whatever
had possessed her to do such a crazy thing? she asked herself
wretchedly, chewing at the soft inner flesh of her lower lip. Oh, yes,
she'd made a fool of Nicholas, which was what she had intended, but
she had made an even bigger fool of herself. And the knowledge of
the stupidity of her own conduct had exacerbated her natural shyness,
so that their guests not only must think she was a frump, but a
tongue-tied idiot as well, she thought miserably.
Nick had accompanied Ian Farnham, his second-in-command, out to
his car for a final word, and Alison had seized the opportunity to
escape.
She had made the excuse to her mother that she had a
headache—which, in a way, was no more than the truth. Her scalp felt
tender as a result of wearing her hair wrenched back all evening, and
every pin she had used to secure the unbecoming bun seemed to be
burrowing into her head. She removed them carefully, then shook her
ill-used hair loose, as she walked over to her dressing table and sank
down on the stool. God, but she looked awful! Pale, washed-out,
because she'd used no make-up but a smudge of lipstick, and drowned
in that monster of a dress. She groaned and picked up her hairbrush,
stroking it gently through her hair, restoring it to its usual shining
order.
Well, she thought, at least she had managed to postpone the inevitable
confrontation with Nicholas, even though she couldn't put it off
forever.
But even that forlorn sense of reassurance went by the board, as her
bedroom door opened forcefully and Nick strode in. He closed the
door with a swift, backward kick of one well-shod foot, then stood,
hands on hips, regarding her grimly.
Alison swallowed, then turned slowly to face him, forcing herself to a
semblance of composure.
She said with a certain hauteur, 'Didn't my mother explain ...?
'That you have a headache?' Nicholas supplied. 'Yes, she mentioned
it. And I'm here to tell you, sweetheart, that if you play me any more
tricks like tonight's, you're going to ache in a very different part of
your anatomy!'
'I don't understand what you mean,' she said defiantly. 'I—I thought it
went very well.'
'You understand perfectly well,' drawled Nick. 'So—where did you
get the dress? A jumble sale? What a pity you couldn't find one that
actually fitted!'
Alison felt the betraying colour seep into her face, but she kept going
just the same. 'I'm sorry if you don't care for my taste in clothes.'
His mouth curled. 'I'd be sorry too if I thought for one moment this
was a genuine sample of it. No, darling. Your decision to appear in
front of our guests looking like something out of a third- rate touring
production of
Rebecca
was quite deliberate, and we both know it.'
'I know nothing of the kind,' Alison said stiffly. 'And I think you're
being very insulting. I'd be glad if you'd go now, and leave me in
peace.'
'I'm sure you would,' he said derisively. 'But I haven't finished with
you yet. I can appreciate why you might wish to ignore the jewellery
I've given you. It's hardly in keeping with your image of
Downtrodden Drudge, after all. But you could at least have worn your
bloody engagement ring. Or have you left that somewhere too—like
the car?'
Alison controlled a little gasp. The failure to wear his sapphire had
been a complete oversight, not a deliberate affront, little though he
might believe that now. A sense of guilt refuelled her rising temper.
'And why should I wear it?' she demanded scornfully. 'To
demonstrate to everyone how generous you are—and how rich? I'm
sure they know that already. I never wanted an engagement ring from
you, Nick. I was never your fiancee, just as I'm not your wife. The
truth is I'm just the housekeeper. I know it, and you know it, so why
shouldn't the rest of the world be aware of it too? And now get out of
my room!'
He said softly, 'This is my room, darling. It belongs to me, along with
most of the other things in this bloody house—yourself included. And
if you don't care for your role—self-imposed, I might remind
you—then that can be remedied, right now.'
He walked towards her, stalking her like some predatory jungle
animal, she thought, fear catching in her throat. She jumped up,
knocking over her dressing stool.
'I asked you to go.' Her voice sounded young and breathless.
'I heard you,' Nick said coolly. 'But I'm staying—at least long enough
to ensure that you'll never wear that damned dress again!'
She backed away. 'Please—leave me alone. I'll throw the dress
away—I promise I will.'
'You'll have to.' He was still advancing on her, and Alison found
herself, literally, with her back to the wall, and nowhere left to retreat
to.
'No!' She put out her hands to ward him off, and his fingers clamped
round her slender wrists, jerking her towards him.
'Experiencing a few regrets?' he asked with a low laugh. 'Well, you
started this, my sweet. Just remember that.' He swung her round, and
she felt his hands at the back of her dress, where the cowled neckline
dipped towards the zip-fastening. She began to struggle, trying to
drag herself away from him.
'Don't! I—I'll take it off—really ...'
'And deprive me of the pleasure?' Nick drawled. He didn't bother with
the zip. His strong hands gripped the material wrenching at it, until it
gave with a tearing sound that echoed in her head like a scream.
As it began to slip off her shoulders, she tried to grab at it, but Nick
forestalled her, using his superior strength to drag the crumpled and
ripped fabric downwards to fall in a dark mass at her feet. His arm
was like a band of steel round her waist as he lifted her clear of the
tangling folds.
"Put me down!' Nearly crying with humiliation, Alison kicked out at
him.
He obeyed so promptly that she almost fell over.
She turned to face him, like some small creature at bay, words of wild
indignation trembling incoherently on her lips. But never to be
uttered.
Because suddenly she saw him looking at her— and remembered too
late exactly what she'd been wearing under all that ugly black.
He was totally arrested, his eyes travelling over her in incredulous
absorption as he took in every provocative detail, from the heavy
band of lace that outlined the thrust of her small breasts to the fragile
suspenders which fastened her stockings.
Nick said, too quietly, 'You're full of surprises tonight, aren't you, my
sweet? Are you leading some kind of secret life, or was all this
glamour for your, own eyes only—because, if so, it's an appalling
waste.'