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Excerpt of Trophy Wives by Jan Colley

Purchase


Silhouette Desire #1698
Silhouette
December 2005
Featuring: Lucy McKinlay; Ethan Rae
192 pages
ISBN: 037316698X
Paperback
Add to Wish List

Romance Series

Also by Jan Colley:

His Vienna Christmas Bride, October 2009
Mass Market Paperback
Friday Night Mistress, March 2009
Mass Market Paperback
Billionaire's Favorite Fantasy, July 2008
Paperback
Satin & A Scandalous Affair, April 2008
Paperback
Melting the Icy Tycoon, December 2006
Paperback
Trophy Wives, December 2005
Paperback

Excerpt of Trophy Wives by Jan Colley

Her heels clicked across the big expanse of floor, quick and sharp. Head swiveling, she dismissed the individuals milling this way and that. Where was he?

Who could blame him for not waiting? She was nearly an hour late, after all. Could she never get anything right?

There. Sitting alone by the domestic arrivals gate. Exactly where he was supposed to be.

Lucy replaced her impatient expression with a determined smile. Ethan Rae. Mr. Ethan Rae. She started quickly toward him across the concourse of the small airport, mentally chanting an apology. Mr. Rae. I am so sorry.

Her heels made a cheerful ditty on the polished linoleum. The sound kept up with her, and, as she drew level with the slumped figure in the chair, she was astonished to see no movement.

He was asleep!

Hot guilt washed over her and she nervously chewed her bottom lip. She was in so much trouble. Tom had already scalped her for the mix-up over ordering the luxury van that they used to escort clients from the airport to the lodge. By the time she had worked it out, it was too late to do anything else but collect him herself.

"Wha-a-a-t?" her half brother had practically yelled down the phone. "You can't pick him up in the Beast. Couldn't you have ordered him a car — limo, rental — anything?"

"Everything is booked. There's an APEC conference on in town, remember?"

"What about your car?"

She grimaced. "I'm having it cleaned. Why didn't you check his arrival time, Tom? We had a deal."

"Well, yes," he conceded, and Lucy was gratified to hear some guilt in his voice. "I've got rather a lot on my plate at the moment." His heavy sigh down the line was timed for maximum sympathy.

"You're not the only one. Besides you know how I am. You're supposed to check these things." Lucy tried to recall the fax containing details of the man's booking. "Who ever uses the twenty-four-hour clock, anyway?"

Tom sighed again. "Well, get here as soon as you can. And apologize like hell. Drinks start at seven-thirty. I need you here."

The current object of her agitation snoozed on, oblivious. She felt a headache twinge behind her eyes. She stood, clutching her wallet with both hands in front of her, wondering how to proceed.

Good suit, she noted, being rather an expert at clothes. Conservative, but expensive. The jacket was unfastened, revealing a stone-colored shirt wrapped around a long, lean torso with impressively broad shoulders. Long legs, crossed at the ankles, thrust into soft leather shoes. Well-tended hands lay on the armrests of the narrow chair, fingers splayed, giving the impression that he was ready to spring into action in an instant.

The thick hair on his bowed head was the color of bitter chocolate, with a fine tracing of silver at the neatly trimmed sideburns. It would grow wavy, she decided, if it were allowed. His skin was tan and smooth with a dark bluish shadow around his relaxed jaw.

She guessed he was little more than thirty, younger than she'd expected. Only the very rich could afford to stay at Summerhill, her family homestead, and enjoy the exclusive hunting, trekking and charters they offered. Usually the very rich were older — and accompanied.

A warm shiver of interest stirred, deep inside. Maybe her day was about to get better, after all.

The man's eyelids stirred. Lucy drew herself up to her full five-foot-five, inhaling apprehensively. Apology time. Her mind clicked into her best customer-service mode, her face into a smile she hoped conveyed apology and courtesy. She cleared her throat gently. "Mr. Rae? Ethan Rae?"

She watched his eyes squeeze tight. His mouth twisted in a grimace, then softened. The fingers of his left hand flexed then curled around the arm of his chair. When she looked back at his face, his eyelids had risen, but, because of his slumped position, he was looking down at her feet. Lucy waited.

And waited. He appeared to be conducting a fairly thorough examination of her painted toenails, her feet encased in strappy turquoise sandals, then her legs and finally the hem of the sea-green tunic that floated below the waist of her silk pants. He was actually studying her — minutely. Not even bothering to grant her the courtesy and respect of looking at her face.

Lucy shifted slightly, and the breath that escaped from her lips had no taint of apology now.

But still he dawdled, his shuttered eyes resting now on her hips, a tiny line creasing his forehead. And then they traveled on, up over the swell of her breasts. Instinctively, she tugged the edge of her blue-green silk shawl a little higher as his eyes lingered over pale skin exposed by the spaghetti straps of her tunic.

By the time his gaze reached her face, she felt as flushed as a schoolgirl. But it wasn't schoolgirl indignation she was feeling. Discomfort jostled with appreciation of his dark good looks, and a little thrill of awareness that she wasn't the only one pleasantly surprised by the meeting. A knowing and rather pleased smile quirked her brows as she met his gaze.

Not that she cared, but no sign of apology crossed his unwavering look. Pale blue eyes, in shocking contrast to his deeply tanned face, met hers and continued to scrutinize bluntly, curiously, in a haze of drowsy appreciation.

Lucy lifted her chin. "Mr. Ethan Rae?" She was thankful that there was no hint in her voice of the butterflies that leapt to life in her midriff.

Still regarding her intently, his head inclined an inch. Lucy exhaled. "Lucy McKinlay." She offered her hand. "I've come to drive you out to Summerhill."

He blinked, ignoring her outstretched hand, and slowly raised himself to his feet. She stepped back involuntarily. His long lean frame unwound itself to loom above her, with only inches between them.

Her heart gave a lazy, rolling thump, just once. Ethan Rae stretched and ran one hand through his hair. An interesting little cowlick flicked up at the front, incongruous when matched with his stern and conservative air. She rather liked it.

His eyes narrowed, crinkling at the corners and pierced her with a glittering lance. "Evening." His voice was deep, lazy.

Lucy pursed her lips to stop the teasing smile that threatened to erupt. This man was a client. Flirting would be unprofessional and inappropriate.

But tempting. Very tempting... "I'm sorry I'm late, Mr. Rae."

He glanced at the silver timepiece on his wrist. "One hour late."

Three short words, but Lucy lost herself in the deep, flowing timbre of his voice. "Sorry," she said again, too distracted to look contrite. "Do you have luggage?"

His pale orbs flicked to an expensive-looking bag under the chair beside his.

Lucy reached for the bag. "You travel light." Ethan Rae intercepted her with his shoulder, all signs of drowsiness gone, and hoisted the bag. "I've got it."

Lucy turned and led him through the terminal toward the exit, totally aware of his presence behind her, of his eyes on her. She consciously tightened every inch of her spine, lifted her head and walked as if she were on a cat- walk. The shawl dipped down at the back and she did nothing to halt the slide. She didn't mind at all showing off the almost backless tunic top, loving how the silk swished and rustled with the movement of her thighs. If he wanted to look, he could look. It might take his mind off her tardiness.

He was the most attractive man her eyes had been treated to in a long while. She obviously spent too much time with older men.

"Did you have a hard night?" she asked brightly, determined to charm him. It was a seventy-minute drive to their destination. Lust was uncomfortable enough. Disapproving silence would be worse.

Ethan blinked as the crisp night air touched his face. He drew level with her in long gliding strides. His brows rose at her question but he did not speak.

A man of few words, she deduced. "You were sleeping."

"Long flight," was his eventual response, matched with a lengthy gaze.

A man who considers every word uttered to him and by him. The commentary hummed in her brain. "From Sydney?"

He nodded briefly. "Started a couple of days ago. From Saudi."

Lucy nodded and turned to the pay-to-go station, feeding her ticket and some coins into the slot to pay for parking. Then she faced him and took a deep breath. "About the transportation..." She reluctantly gestured toward the filthiest and most ancient four-wheel-drive in the park. "I have to apologize. Again."

Ethan stopped and stared disbelievingly. She swung herself up into the driver's seat of the Land Rover and leaned over to unlock and push open his door. After a few seconds of hesitation, his hand snaked around the passenger door to pull up the lock on the back. Lucy heard the slide of his bag in the back while she gave the passenger seat a quick and ineffectual swipe. Grimacing, nose twitching, he eased himself in beside her and settled back.

She put the key in the ignition and then turned to face him. "You see, I was supposed to order you a car. But I got the times mixed up."

"Yours?" he asked, staring at the dust-covered dash, the mud and plant matter under his expensive shoes, the barely transparent windscreen. Preparing to rest his arm along the doorframe, he thought better of it and leaned forward to stare at a dubious dark stain running along the bottom of the window.

"No. Mine is — indisposed at the moment," Lucy told him, backing out of the parking space. "Mrs. Seymour's horrible little bichon frise indisposed it this afternoon." Her mouth turned down as she recalled the whining woman from Auckland and her grotty little dog, whom she had gratefully delivered to the airport just a few hours ago. When she glanced at him his brows were raised in query. "Put it this way," she told him with a wry smile. "You think this smells bad..."

The Land Rover shuddered to a halt before the arm of the exit station. "By the time I found out about the car mix- up, it was too late to find any other vehicle. Normally, I wouldn't dream of picking up a client in the Beast."

Lucy laboriously wound the window down, then entered the ticket into the slot and watched the barrier arm rock and bounce up. The vehicle lurched forward unsteadily while she rewound the stubborn window. She could feel his gaze on her but kept her eyes on the road ahead.

"You pick up all your guests looking like that?" His tone had lost the sleepy, lazy quality of before.

"We're having cocktails tonight in honor of a VIP. The other guests are welcome to attend. It's sort of a meet- and-greet thing." She shot him a welcoming look.

"If you're not too tired."

His eyes flashed over her. "Wide awake, suddenly," he told her enigmatically.

Lucy felt her face flame in a burst of pleasure and focused on the road. It was nice to be noticed, especially after the day she'd had. A million errands, the loathsome dog and her error over Ethan's ETA meant she'd only had time for the quickest of showers and a lick of makeup to go with the cocktail outfit that was supposed to impress tonight.

Excerpt from Trophy Wives by Jan Colley
All rights reserved by publisher and author

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