Read Beaumont Brides Collection Online
Authors: Liz Fielding
‘I saw you on the television, Mr MacIntyre. Nice to meet you. Will you sign the book for me?’
Mac glanced pointedly at Claudia and she quickly intervened. ‘That won’t be necessary, Jim.’ She handed over a small photograph that Mac had given her. ‘Mr MacIntyre will be a regular visitor so it will be simpler if you make him a security pass.’
Jim grinned at Mac. ‘I guess that means you’ll be around for a while?’
‘Well, for a week anyway.’
Claudia, irritated by all this male bonding, interrupted. ‘Jim, will you find Phillip and ask him to come along to my dressing room as soon as he’s free.’ Then she extended her hand to Mac. ‘Come along, sweetheart,’ she said, with a distinct lack of warmth. ‘I’ll show you around.’
‘I’m all yours,’ he said, reaching out to take her hand, folding it into his own much larger one.
It was odd. He infuriated her, he made her feel scratchy and cross, yet she had to admit that she enjoyed the feel of his hand about hers. It was a slightly battered hand, and although the nails were clean and neatly trimmed there was nothing manicured or pampered about it. It was rather like Mac, she thought, as nature had intended, but tough as they came and very strong.
Wrapped around her fingers like this, it had the effect of making her feel cherished and protected. Not that she would was going to admit it.
Ever.
Claudia’s silver fox eyes gleamed softly as she looked up at him. ‘All mine?’
Mac, his fingers wrapped around the small, delicately boned hand of this unreadable woman, felt as if he had been kicked by a mule. She had that affect on him. One moment he was as irritated as hell because she was behaving like a wayward brat, the next she looked at him with those extraordinary eyes and he was gasping for air.
Yet even as he acknowledged that she was the most bewitching, the most desirable creature he had ever met, his skin crawled with the thought that flirting was something she did as naturally as breathing. That it didn’t mean anything.
And if it did?
The question was there at the back of his mind and wouldn’t go away, but damn her, he refused to make a fool of himself over her. He’d do his best to clear up the mess she was in and then he’d forget her. And quickly.
‘Just as long as you behave yourself,’ he told her, brusquely.
‘I’m trying to be good.’ Her husky voice teased him, just as her eyes had and the mule kicked again.
‘No, sweetheart, you’re just trying.’
She looked up at him, startled, but something in his expression must have reassured her because she laughed, her lips parting softly, the sound as sweet and warm as cinnamon toast.
It was all pretence of course. Meantime her hand felt good in his and the elusive flowery scent she was wearing seemed to fill his head as she leaned against his shoulder, turning to smile up at him as they walked to her dressing room, making certain that everyone they passed knew she was in love.
He swallowed, hard, and smiled back. After all, this had been his idea.
‘Oh, dear lord,’ she exclaimed, as she saw the pile of newspaper clippings placed in a neat pile on her dressing table. She reclaimed her hand, crossing swiftly to look at them.
Mac, missing the small hand tucked trustingly into his, somehow managed to stop himself from going after her, concentrating instead on the room itself. Concentrating on the job. Without a window the room was invulnerable from outside. He opened the door to her private bathroom, glanced around, but it had an electric ventilator. Whoever had slashed her costume had come through the door from the corridor and passing goodness knew how many people on the way. But no one had noticed. Which strongly suggested that it was someone who had every right to be there. An inside job.
And if whoever it was had left any clues they had all been cleaned away since Saturday night. The surfaces at been thoroughly polished, the floor vacuumed, the pots of makeup had all be wiped and were laid out along with brushes in all shapes and sizes in neat rows, waiting for her to transform herself into her character.
The roses in the tall vase had been beautifully arranged, the fading blooms removed. There was nothing hurried, slapdash about it. It hadn’t been a quick flick over with a duster. Someone had done this for her, did it for her every day with care and devotion and for the first time he was forced to confront the fact that she wasn’t just some tiresome actress who was in a bit of bother.
She was the centre of this small universe, her talent and her name brought in the crowds whose money paid the wages.
That she was, in fact, a star.
‘Claudia-’
‘I’m afraid this is worse than I expected,’ she said, turning to him with a sheaf of clippings in her hand, interrupting him before he could make an utter fool of himself. He had to make a serious effort to concentrate on what she was saying.
‘Worse?’ he demanded. ‘What could be worse?’
‘This,’ she said, with a giggle as she held up a sheet of newsprint to show him the headline. STAR FALLS FOR PARACHUTE HERO, he read and groaned. ‘Are you a hero, my darling?’ Her voice was teasing. ‘I think I ought to know.’
‘I would have thought you’d know better than to believe what you read in the newspapers,’ he reminded her.
‘Oh, I do,’ she replied, lightly. ‘But I find it odd the way everyone says that when they are in the news, yet still seem to be taken in by stories about other people.’
Mac mentally flinched, conscious that he had just been quietly reprimanded, gently but firmly rapped over the knuckles with the equivalent of a velvet-covered cane. Guilty as charged.
‘I suppose,’ he said, slowly, ‘that if a thing is repeated often enough it achieves a certain mythical status.’
‘Hang onto that thought, Mac,’ she told him, her laughter deepening the tiny lines around her eyes, lifting her whole face, giving it character, depth, offering him a glimpse of the woman beneath the public image. A real woman, warm and full of life and he realised, quite suddenly, that he had been wrong about her.
He had judged her on newspaper gossip and his own prejudiced attitudes. He’d made no secret of his feelings and because of that he had only been allowed to skim the surface shell of Claudia Beaumont. To know the part of her capable of taking on the sharpest television host around and stealing away his show. The woman who flirted her way across the gossip pages. The part of her the public thought it knew and owned.
But there was more, much more and he wanted to break through the shell and discover the whole woman. Find out what had made her so very protective of her inner self that he suspected she almost forgot it was there herself.
‘I think you’re about to become a myth in your own right,’ she added, then glancing obliquely at him. ‘I do hope you’re up to it.’
‘Why? What does it say?’ He was floundering, trying to regain a foothold as the ground shifted treacherously beneath him.
‘I did warn you. I’m afraid that since rumours of our romance were too late to catch the Sunday papers, the dailies have rather gone to town.’
‘I imagine I’ll survive,’ he reassured her, but as she looked at the photograph accompanying the headline, Claudia caught her lower lip between her teeth. It gave her a curiously vulnerable look and he moved closer, resting his hand on her shoulder as he looked over her head to see for himself.
What he saw made him frown. It was an almost indecent close-up of that television kiss, although why, frozen like this in a grainy black and white photograph, it should seem so much worse than live and in full colour before an audience of millions, he didn’t know. Live, it had been over in moments, it had been a performance and no one had been looking that closely. The photograph, however, captured something that the viewer would never see. Something that wasn’t quite make-believe.
‘You did say that Barty James would probably have a journalist on standby,’ he reminded her.
‘Journalist rather overstates the case,’ she said, touching the photograph with just the tip of her forefinger. ‘But you’re right, as the whole thing had been set up in advance it seemed logical that he would want to take full advantage of the situation.’
‘We might not have co-operated.’
‘Then he would simply have used the kiss on the film.’
‘But that wasn’t... You didn’t... Oh. I see.’
‘I knew you would.’ Eventually. He’d kissed her and that had given Barty James the idea to use it for the show. And now it was Claudia’s name that was being bandied about. Oh, he was there, but no one was really interested in him except as an accessory for their story. And that was how reputations were forged in the heat of the pressroom. Except of course there was no hot lead these days.
It was all done clinically, by computer.
She hadn’t said he was slow on the uptake, but then she hadn’t needed to.
He swallowed and turned back to the clipping for another lesson in reading between the lines. In fact there wasn’t much more than a caption, leaving the journalist little room to speculate on their relationship. But then he hadn’t needed words; the photograph said it all.
Other newspapers hadn’t been so restrained. Without the picture of the kiss they had simply printed a stock photograph of Claudia and made up for the omission by telling their readers what they had managed to dig up in the meantime.
All reported that the two of them had met during a charity parachute jump, all repeated the “hero” motive although mercifully without any details, which suggested it was just a useful word to go with parachute.
Thankfully none of them had taken the trouble to look up his record. Or anything else. Several had made a big point about the instant attraction between them.
‘There was an attraction all right,’ Mac said. ‘Your nearside wing was instantly attracted to the offside of my Landcruiser. I’ll bet none of them mentioned that.’
Claudia looked back up over her shoulder at him, laughing at his obvious indignation. ‘Oh, yes they did,’ she said, rifling through the cuttings. ‘Listen to this.’ She put on a pompous voice. ‘“Claudia Beaumont suffered a minor accident on arrival at the airfield, skidding on the wet grass in her new sports car. Gabriel MacIntyre immediately rushed to her assistance...” - rushing to wring my neck more like,’ she countered - ‘“and his deep concern was obvious to everyone present.”‘ She turned to face him without dislodging his hand from her shoulder. ‘Nicely done. You were concerned, weren’t you Mac? About your shiny black car. And your aircraft hangar.’
‘I did apologize.’
‘Mmmm. I don’t think you’ve quite got the hang of apologies, Mac. You should consider taking lessons.’
‘I thought you’d forgiven me.’
‘Well I have,’ she said, ‘for that. But you will keep doing and saying things that mean you have to say you’re sorry all over again. You’re beginning to slip seriously behind. That comment you made outside the theatre for instance,’ she said, ticking it off on her fingers. ‘Then grabbing my shirt and telling me to behave in front of the crew wasn’t exactly gentlemanly.’
And apologizing for his thoughts would take a month. Fortunately Claudia couldn’t read his mind. Interestingly she hadn’t mentioned the incident with the dress. Maybe that was her way of admitting she had been in the wrong. Maybe he should... No. She just wanted to forget about that. He certainly wished he could. Right now she was simply teasing him a little so he kept it light.
‘Lady, you could do with a few lessons yourself. Your own manners leave something to be desired. Just because you’re a star-’
‘A star?’ She laughed. ‘I’m sure you don’t think I’m a star.’
‘A wild star, a slightly wicked star, a star that twinkles when it thinks it will rather than according to any rules of physics, but I don’t think there’s any doubt about it, Miss Beaumont. You’re a star by any definition of the word.’
She laughed again, but this time a little uncertainly. ‘I do believe that was a compliment.’ She lifted her hand to his cheek, touching it lightly with just the tips of her fingers. ‘Rather a nice one. Perhaps there’s hope for you yet.’ On an impulse she raised her lips to his and kissed him, equally lightly. ‘Thank you, Gabriel.’
Gabriel. His name had been something of an embarrassment to him as a boy and he had ditched it the moment he had left school. And Jenny had hated it. But on Claudia’s lips it suddenly sounded wonderful.
‘Anytime,’ he said, his voice thick, his body tight with a sudden and very urgent need for her. Without allowing himself to think about what he was doing he caught her about the waist, drawing him into his body and as he lowered his mouth to hers, she closed her eyes.
They were alone, without an audience and the only reason to kiss her was because he wanted to. And he wanted to. If he was honest with himself he’d wanted to since he’d wrenched open her car door and first set eyes on her.
Oh, he’d been infuriated by her careless driving, but that had been nothing compared to the wave of anger that had overwhelmed him as he realised that none of the barriers that he had erected to protect himself from his emotions, from feeling anything for a very long time, were one damned bit of use when confronted by Claudia Beaumont.
All it had taken had been one look from those incredible eyes, one throwaway line in that low, husky voice and his defences had begun to crumble. And no amount of reinforcement had helped.