Read The Seduction Scheme Online
Authors: Kim Lawrence
Even as she turned to look at him and firmly shake her head in refusal, the honest answer to his question was ringing in her mind. Not only could he tempt her,
he did
. Even though she knew he was shallow, deceitful, self-indulgent and definitely not for the likes of her, she actually wantedâno,
wanted
didn't begin to cover the craving that had taken over her body. Her treacherous hormones had conspired against her.
As devastating as this sudden self-awareness was, she was determined to keep it in proportion and not be overwhelmedâshe
could
cope. Her intellect and emotions weren't involved; she could rise above what amounted to basic lust.
âTell Charlie that Steve sends his love,' Benedict called after his secretary.
It looked to him as though she was about to break all records for escaping from the building. Or was it just him she was trying to escape? Whistling softly to himself as he pondered this question, he walked back into the inner office.
âW
HERE
are you off to?'
Rachel registered that the solid object she had walked into was the chest of her temporary boss. âS-sorry,' she gasped. So much for the cool, professional distance she'd vowed to keep. After a single morning of detachment she was flinging herself into his arms.
She was seized by a sudden strong and bizarre urge to blurt out her troubles. This is the wrong person and wrong place to indulge in an orgy of shared burdens, Rachel, she told herself firmly as she attempted unsuccessfully to pull clear of the protective circle of his arms. She'd learnt to handle life's crises alone some time ago.
âIs it the appeal of sandwiches in the park? I'd join you myself if I hadn't already promised to lunch with the revered parent.' The quizzical, teasing expression left his face as he took in her pale features. âWhat's wrong, what's happened?' he demanded, taking her by the shoulders. The smell of the soft, lightly floral perfume she used tantalised his nostrils. That haunted expression in her wide eyes was doing the strangest things to him.
âI'm sorry but I have to go⦠Charlieâ¦it's an emergency. I left you a note⦠I have to go.'
Hands flat against his chest, she tried to push past. God, what must he think of her? Only their second day working together and she was running off. She didn't care what he thought of her; there was such a thing as priorities. He'd have to wait for explanations.
âHold on, what's wrong?'
âI know it's not convenient, but Iâ'
âForget about what's convenient and tell me what's wrong.'
âThe headmistress rang; Charlie's at the casualty departmentâ¦'
She didn't get any further. âWhich hospital?' He nodded when she told him. âCome on, I'll take you.'
âWhatâ¦?' On the very few occasions when her meticulous childcare arrangements had not stretched to cover a domestic disaster that required her presence, at best her previous bosses had displayed impatience; at worst they'd been openly critical of her lack of professionalism.
âI thought you were in a hurry.'
âI am.' A sudden smile of pure relief spread across her face. The journey by underground and taxi would have taken her over an hour, with every second an agony of anticipation. âI can't impose,' she began doubtfully.
âShut up, Rachel; I'm trying to show you what a nice guy I am. Don't spoil it. A lift should be good for at least a dinner date.' His mouth curved in a lopsided smile and when she looked half suspiciously into them his eyes were kind and concerned, not predatory.
âOn me,' she promised fervently.
Seeing the glow of gratitude in her marvellous eyes, Benedict decided he might just have undervalued his services. She didn't object to the light touch of his guiding hand on her shoulder as they left the building.
He racked his brains to recall one instance when he'd actually put himself out to please one of his lady friends and failed, but then the disasters in his previous lady friends' lives had tended to lean in the direction of broken nails or an inability to get a hair appointment, not hospitalised children!
Â
Rachel pulled aside the cubicle curtain to reveal a pathetic sight.
âOh,
Charlie
!'
âI know I look terrible, but the hair will grow back; they had to shave off the little bits to stitch up the cuts. The blood's from my nose.' She touched the gory front of her once pristine school shirt. âI'm not cut anywhere and I didn't break anything.'
âCongratulations,' Rachel said drily as she sat down on the edge of the trolley.
âThey want to throw me out so I must be fit.'
âAnd does Mrs Faulkner want to throw you out too?' When Rachel had left the headmistress in the reception area with Benedict the lady had looked almost as stressed as she felt.
âI hope so. It's a crummy school. They all think they're so smart.'
âAnd you don't?' Charlie's new punk-spiky hair made her look incredibly young.
âThat's different,' she said impatiently.
âBut
fighting
, Charlie?'
The thin shoulders hunched defensively. âHe was much bigger than me; I wouldn't hit a little kid. And I didn't hurt him; I fell down the steps before I had the chance to,' she admitted honestly.
âMrs French?' The nurse stepped into the room. âIf she gets any of the symptoms on this cardâ' Rachel skimmed anxiously over the card which was pushed into her hand ââbring her back. Ten days for the sutures. Your GP will remove them; here's a letter for him. Sorry to rush you but we're busy this afternoon.'
She'd whipped the paper sheet off the trolley which Charlie had just vacated and disappeared before Rachel could mumble her thanks.
The headmistress was deep in conversation with Benedict when they returned to the reception area; she looked almost
animated as she listened to what he was saying and a lot more relaxed. For once Rachel had reason to be grateful for his effortless charm; she needed the head mistress as softened up as possible. This was one tête-à -tête she wasn't looking forward to.
âMiss French, perhaps we could have a word?' Her eyes slid to Charlie.
âAlone?'
âI know you don't get into cars with strangers, Charlie, but with your mother's permission perhaps you'd like to look over mine,' Benedict said.
âWhat do you drive?'
âA Mercedes.'
âWhat sort?'
He told her, and her eyes widened in admiration.
âWow!' She looked hopefully in her mother's direction.
When Rachel returned to Benedict's car a few minutes later her daughter was deep in what appeared to be a technical discussion with Benedict.
âSorry to keep you waiting,' she said, looking through the open window of the passenger seat.
âI wasn't bored,' Charlie said happily. âHe doesn't know
anything
about this car,' she informed her embarrassed mother.
âI do now,' Benedict said drily.
âI was apologising to Mr Arden, not you, Charlie. We'll get a taxi home of course.'
âDon't be stupid, Rachel.' Before Rachel had an opportunity to complain at this form of address she was distracted.
âRachel!'
She spun around, startled at the sound of a familiar voice. âNigel!' she said, staring at him in blank amazement. âWhat are you doing here?'
âI work here, remember? More to the point, what are
you
doing here?' His expression changed as he recognised the
small, spiky-headed figure in the front seat of the car. âCharlie's been in the wars, I see. Why didn't you ring me, darling?'
So that was why the name of the hospital had sounded so familiar. The sound of the endearment made her feel oddly embarrassed.
âIt was all such a rush. I got a phone call at work and Mr Arden kindly offered me a lift. How are you feeling? Is the cold better?' How could she admit she hadn't even thought about Nigel? She'd forgotten he even worked in the hospital!
âI'm fineâ¦fine,' he said hurriedly. âThat was kind of Mr Arden. Have me met?' he asked, looking directly at Benedict, a puzzled frown pleating his brow.
Rachel held her breath.
âIt's possible,' Benedict admitted calmly. âBen Arden's the name.'
âAny relation to Sir Stuart Arden?'
âMy father.'
âI can see the resemblance.' Benedict nodded neutrally; he knew he was a genetic throwback to his Italian maternal grandfather and bore no resemblance to his very Anglo-Saxon-looking parent. âWe're in the same golf club,' Nigel explained affably.
Rachel could see the umbrella of social acceptability obviously extended to Sir Stuart's offspring.
âGive me a minute, Rachel, and I'll take you home.' He reached in the breast pocket of his white coat to retrieve his urgently buzzing pager.
âDon't worry yourself; it's on my way,' Benedict assured him.
Rachel met Benedict's benign smile with a look of seething frustration. Now that the immediate panic was over the last thing in the world she wanted was to get in that car with him.
âThat's very good of you,' Nigel responded, with a grateful smile. âI'll ring you tonight, Rachel.'
Whilst she was receiving a peck on the cheekâNigel wasn't the most tactile person in the worldâshe was overwhelmingly aware of the brown eyes watching her every move. This awareness probably had something to do with the fact that she turned her head and kissed a somewhat surprised Nigel full on the lips.
He looked bemused but pleased, and Rachel immediately felt guilty for using him. She was going to have to put a stop to thisâshe should have already. The knowledge weighed on her conscience like a stone.
âSlide into the back, Charlie, and let your mum sit up front.'
Rachel saw that Nigel looked a bit startled when the child immediately did as she was bid. âMaybe a knock on the head wasn't such a bad thing,' he joked softly to Rachel as she slipped reluctantly into the soft cream leather upholstery beside Benedict. Nigel waved them off cheerfully.
âWhat did he say to make you look so murderous?' Benedict asked curiously as they pulled away.
âIt was nothing,' she said shortly, avoiding his probing eyes. She told herself she was being over-sensitiveâNigel had only been joking. She knew she shouldn't compare Benedict's light touch with her daughter to Nigel's heavy-handed approach, but it was hard not to contrast their very different styles.
âI prefer Steve.
Benedict.
' Charlie screwed up her small nose, her expression speaking volumes.
âMy friends call me Ben if that's any help.'
âBen.' She tried it out experimentally. âNot bad,' she conceded. âI thought it was cool when Mum said she was working for you.'
âMr Arden to you,' Rachel put in sharply. Trust Charlie to
take a shine to him; that was
all
she needed. Where was that well-known disagreeable personality when she needed it?
âMum was really mad when she found out you'd fooled us,' Charlie piped up from the back. âI don't think she's forgiven you yet.'
âIs that so?'
âTake a nap, Charlie; you look tired,' Rachel observed hopefully. She knew from experience that short of gagging her child there wasn't much chance of stemming the flow of indiscreet comments.
âI wasn't worried about you, like Mum.'
âYou weren't?'
âNo. I saw the real expensive watch you were wearing so I knew either you were a good thief or an eccentric rich guy.' With a satisfied smile she settled into her seat.
âYou worried about me?' Rachel could hear the slightly smug smile in his deep, expressive voice. Why did this man's voice have the same effect on her as half a bottle of red wine? she wondered resentfully. It did have a marvellous texture; she found herself whimsically likening his warm, rich tones to being wrapped up in a rich, luxurious velvet sheet and pulled herself up short. The less she thought about sheets and Benedict Arden in the same context the better!
âNo more than I do any other destitute social outcast,' she observed with a dispassion she was far from feeling.
She'd never admit it was the man more than his condition that had got under her skin, but fantasising about someone she'd never meet again had seemed a fairly harmless thing to do. There was safety in distance and she found herself wishing she had more than a couple of feet to protect her right now.
They continued to travel in silence for several minutes. In the back Charlie fell asleep. When she noticed this Rachel
worriedly fished the card the hospital had given her out of her bag and scanned it.
“âSleepy or difficult to rouse”.' She read the words out loud and glanced anxiously at her sleeping daughter. âDo you thinkâ¦?'
âShe's just asleep, that's all, Rachel. She's had quite a day.'
Strange how a second opinion made things slip back into perspective. Rachel's smile was strained; she took a deep breath and tried to calm down. She tried really hard not to be a fussy, over-protective mother, but sometimesâ¦
âI expect you think I'm just a neurotic mum.'
âI think you've perfected the mum part, Rachel, but I think you've neglected the woman part.'
His words startled her and made her feel uneasy. âYou're saying I'm not feminine.'
âYou're about the most feminine female I've ever met.' Her stomach went into its now familiar acrobatic contortions as his dark eyes moved warmly over her face and lower⦠Give me strengthâ
please
, she prayed without much confidence that anyone was listening. In the wider view her libido probably came pretty low down priority-wise.
âYou're just overcompensating for being a single parent. When did you last do something for yourself?'
âWhat do you mean?'
âI mean something spontaneous, selfishâ¦'
âI'm not a spontaneous sort of person.'
âYou must have been once.' She saw his eyes touch the image of her sleeping daughter in his rear-view mirror and her expression grew chilly.
âI don't think that's any of your business.'
âGranted,' he acknowledged easily. He changed tack. âHow do you think Charlie will feel if in eight years' time
she realises that you've built your whole life around her needs?'
âI haven't, I don't!' she protested angrily. He knew nothing about herânothing! She recalled uneasily that Aunt Janetâmore tactfully, of courseâhad insinuated something similar last year.
âIt's highly likely she'll feel guilty when she wants to be independent and go her own way. You're not doing her any favours by living your life vicariously through her.'
âI don't!'
âNot yet, but you have definite leanings in that direction.'