Unforgettable: A Loveswept Classic Romance (2 page)

BOOK: Unforgettable: A Loveswept Classic Romance
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“What the hell are you doing, Grandmother?” Anne whispered fiercely as James turned around.
He waved back and swerved his horse in their direction.

Lettice’s look was the soul of innocence. “Being social, dear.”

“And I’m Whitney Houston,” Anne muttered. She curled her fingers around the polished wood armrests, knowing she couldn’t walk away without looking snobbish or silly. Heat flamed her face as she remembered the desire flooding through her body when she had watched him play. Lettice deserved to be roasted over a fire, she decided. James had certainly sparked one in her.

He dismounted and caught her staring before she could turn away. His gaze seemed to bore into her. Dirt streaked his face, but the smile he gave her was almost dazzling in its intimacy. He held the reins of his horse loosely in one hand, the bay following him like an obedient puppy.

The deep throbbing she had finally suppressed surged back hotter and fiercer than before. She desperately wanted to run. Obviously, she was more of a sucker for a man on a horse than she’d thought.

Somehow, she managed to stand as he reached them. She was immediately aware of the mingled scents of man and animal, primitive and enticing. He greeted her grandmother with a kiss on the cheek. Anne immediately stuck out her hand. She doubted he would give her the same greeting, but she wasn’t taking any chances.

It was still a mistake.

His fingers reached out and curved around hers … and held. She was frozen to the spot, the buzzing in her ears deafening all other sounds. She could feel only his palm pressed hotly to hers, sending signals of ageless sensuality throughout her body. It was as if time were standing still.

James Farraday stared at the woman before him. She was small-boned and slender and more beautiful than ever. A cloud of dark, shoulder-length hair spun around her face like an ethereal halo. Her large blue-green eyes, the Kitteridge trademark, were wide and fathomless. Her slim nose had a slight bump that intrigued rather than marred. Her lips were full and bow-shaped, urging a man to trace them with his finger, his lips, his tongue. Her dress was belted at a waist most women would kill to have, and the yellow linen skimmed over her breasts, hips, and thighs, outlining a body beautifully formed from a lifetime of riding. A simple gold chain necklace and button earrings were her only jewelry.

Annie Kitteridge had bedeviled him from the moment he had seen her as a baby, and she bedeviled him now more than ever. She had always been independent and stubborn, and possessed a vitality that shone out of her. He was glad it hadn’t been dimmed by a bad marriage. The thought of that marriage made his hackles rise. He wasn’t sure who or what to hate for it. He just knew a cruel twist of fate had shown him once what could be with Anne … and then denied her to him.

He ached now to touch more than her hand; he wanted to explore her hidden secrets. It didn’t matter that they were in a field full of people. He would give anything to know if her mouth still held that sweet fire that had haunted his dreams for so long. But he could sense new barriers erected around her, barriers he was tempted to challenge. He knew he would never allow himself the pleasure. He had good reason not to.

Still, he had been hoping she’d be here today. After the telephone call he had received this morning,
he had a proposition for her. Quite a proposition.

“Your champagne, James.”

Lettice’s voice broke the spell with a painful snap. As James let go of her hand, Anne could hear a mental clock re-starting somewhere inside her. She pulled herself up and straightened her shoulders.

“It’s nice to see you again, James,” she said in a polite tone. “Congratulations on the game.”

James grinned as he took the filled champagne glass from Lettice. “I feel as if I’ve been through a War. You look beautiful, Anne. I’m glad you came.”

She smiled her reply, not trusting her voice.

“I hope it will
not
take me months of pleading to get you to come to another game, Anne,” Lettice said to her. “Especially as you can see how much Philip enjoys it.” She added for James’s benefit, “He’s at the stables now. Probably looking at your horses.”

“I hope he likes them.”

“He probably will,” Anne muttered.

“I wonder if it’s a faux pas to play all out against royalty to win,” Lettice speculated aloud.

“I’m sure Prince Charles wouldn’t have it any other way, Grandmother,” Anne said, grateful for the idle conversation. That fire was still licking through her, and she needed to regain her composure.

“Our friend from England is a real fighter.” James chuckled. “He enjoyed himself out there.”

“It was very gracious of him to play while he’s here on an official visit.”

Anne choked back her laughter, knowing Lettice had arranged the match to entice the royal visitor and thereby gain prestige and needed money for one of her charities. “I don’t think he stood a chance.”

“I know he didn’t,” James said, grinning at Lettice. He turned back to Anne. “Annie, I need to talk to you—”

He was interrupted by several women suddenly flocking around him. He gave all of them a charming smile, and an odd pain knifed through Anne. She judged the other women were in their early thirties. She didn’t recognize any of them, but she’d bet her trust fund there was a Muffy, Buffy, or Babs in the group. There always was. Worse, the women were beautiful, very feminine in their flowered silk dresses and floppy hats. Her own dress now seemed too tailored and out of place. And the way they fluttered around James made her think of hot-house flowers desperate for a little pollenation. They probably were.

The interruption was for the best, she decided. She didn’t know which was worse. James needing to talk to her … or him calling her by her childhood nickname.

James’s horse, startled by the sudden influx of strange humans, whinnied his dismay and pulled free of his master’s loose grip. A scared horse was a potentially dangerous one, Anne knew. Sure enough, before anyone could grab his reins, the horse wreaked his own brand of havoc.

He walked over to Anne, butted his nose against her chest, and blew gustily down the front of her dress in a horsey sign of affection.

Anne pushed the horse’s head away in one deft movement, then gazed at her now ruined dress. She sighed in resignation.

James got the women. She got the horse. Dudley Do-right would have been proud of her.

“The last animal who did this to me, bub,” she said to the horse, “got curried with a brush that had five-inch steel bristles.”

The horse butted her chest again.

“Masochist,” she muttered, giving in and scratching the animal on its long black muzzle.

Under her hand, the animal’s hide was soaked in sweat. She set her jaw in anger as she felt the rest of the horse’s head and neck. While James was drinking champagne and flirting with his “flowers,” his horse had been left to sweat in exhaustion. A good horseman took care of his animal before himself. At least the horse wasn’t lathered, but it still needed to be cooled down and taken to the stables. She was ashamed that she had been so preoccupied with James, she hadn’t noticed the animal’s plight before this.

“I’m sorry, Anne,” James said, breaking away from his groupies. He patted the horse on the neck. “Monroe does that when he likes someone.”

“So I discovered.”

James grinned. “He has excellent taste. But your dress.… Get a new one and send me the bill.”

“That’s very nice of you,” she said while privately deciding she’d be damned before she did. She handed over the reins. “He needs attention, James.”

“I know.” He looked around the field. “The groom should have come for him by now. But I figured this might happen. That’s why I can spare only a minute. You’ll be at the dance tonight, right?”

“I don’t think so,” she said, ruthlessly forcing away a flush of embarrassment. She knew she shouldn’t feel embarrassed that she’d pointed out his horse needed attention.

“Yes, she is going,” Lettice corrected her.

Anne glared at her grandmother. She had forgotten about the damn dance tonight. She couldn’t go now. “I know I agreed to come to the match,
Grandmother, but I shouldn’t be away from the farm at this time of year—”

“Nonsense.” Lettice glared right back. “You have very competent people working for you. They know you are only a phone call away. Besides, you wouldn’t want to disappoint me, would you? Or James.”

Anne gritted her teeth, knowing she was caught in a social trap. “Of course not.”

“Good,” James said. “I’ll see you there. It’s important.” He stared at her for a moment longer, then gulped back the last of his champagne and shoved the glass into her hands. He turned to Lettice. “I’ll take Monroe to the stables, then come back for the trophy presentation. They’ll want you at that too, Lettice. After all, you arranged this match.”

“I’ll go with you to the stables,” one of the other women volunteered.

“Thanks, Buffy,” James said, “but it’s hectic back there. And very dirty. I wouldn’t want you to ruin that beautiful dress.”

Buffy looked both shocked and grateful, and Anne hid a smile. She had made a sure bet with her trust fund. Buffy did look … enchanting. Anne forced away the urge to shred the Gibson Girl hat the woman was wearing. It was a silly thought. Anyway, Lettice would kill her if she did.

It was then she realized all of the women were scowling at her as if she had deliberately forced the horse to ruin her dress and draw James’s attention from them. She arched her eyebrows and gazed at them in cool defiance.

James took the horse to the stables, Buffy and crew electing to forgo that pleasure.

“So much for your ideas about James, Grandmother,”
Anne said in a low voice as the other women departed.

“Nonsense. A little competition is good for the soul,” Lettice said. “James is an attractive boy. You certainty wouldn’t want someone who scratches himself every ten seconds, now, would you?”

Anne eyed the other women sourly as they teetered away, their ridiculously high heels sinking into the ground. She also admitted her grandmother might have a point.

“No comment,” she finally said.

“Naturally, you wouldn’t,” Lettice said. “I better get over to the presentation. Then we’ll go home and change for the dance.”

As her grandmother headed for the knot of officials on the playing field, Anne shook her head and began to pack up the remains of their picnic.

“There is no way I will be at that damn dance tonight,” she muttered to herself. After her gaping schoolgirl reaction to James, she’d be stupid to expose herself again to his charm.

Incredibly stupid.

Two

Okay, so she was incredibly stupid.

Anne grimaced as she watched the elegantly dressed men and women swirl around the dance floor. She stood almost directly behind a potted palm in the archway, as good a spot as any while she waited for her grandmother to finish “fussing” in the ladies’ room.

She had tried to get out of the dance yet again, but arguing with her grandmother was like trying to stop a race horse from running. A useless gesture but one that sometimes had to be made. Lettice had promised, however, that she would never ask her to one of these things again—if she came tonight. Although Anne had her misgivings about this particular evening, it was a bargain she couldn’t pass up.

Pulling at her gown’s bodice, she cursed herself yet again for not looking in her closet earlier. The gown she was wearing was a leftover from her California days. All her evening wear was. It had
seemed so tame then. But it could be worse, she thought. She could have worn the red.

She spotted her cousin, Ellen Kitteridge-Carlini, on the dance floor with her new husband, Joe. Ellen had suffered through a bad marriage and the loss of a child. It was good to see her so radiant and happy now. Anne frowned. It was funny, but she’d always thought James and Ellen would have been perfect together. Yet seeing Ellen with Joe only proved how wrong her original perception was.

She leaned back against the wall and closed her eyes. She hadn’t seen James—yet. Maybe he wasn’t here tonight. Her reaction to him that afternoon had haunted her for the rest of the day. She had finally concluded that it had been seeing him with horses. What else could explain her gaping at him like a dizzy kid? She’d done that once before. Once was enough.

Tonight she would be cool and calm. She’d put on a cloak of sophistication. She only hoped she had one somewhere.

“Annie.”

At the sound of a deep, all too familiar voice, Anne jumped … right into the palm tree. She grabbed for it as it started to tip over, the sharp fronds whipping around her in a frenzied attack. The palm came completely away from its heavy pot, the dirt surrounding the roots as dry as a desert. Hugging the tree to her, she focused her gaze on James.

“Hello,” she said brightly as she set the palm back into the pot as casualty as possible. First his horse picked her dress to snort all over, and now this, she thought. She’d be lucky if she didn’t fall into the champagne fountain tonight.

She turned around and matters were made worse by the sight of him in evening wear. His tuxedo fit like the proverbial glove, and she tried desperately not to stare. She was all too aware that she was virtually alone with James … and the palm tree. She couldn’t think of a better place to be—except prison, maybe.

“Hello,” he said. “I’m glad I found you—”

It took James several seconds to realize his greeting had stopped abruptly when she turned around. It took him several more to realize he was staring at her. Her ankle-length gown in shimmering turquoise crepe clung to her every curve. The sleeves and torso glittered with blue and silver bangles, and the skirt glimmered with woven silver threads. Any jewelry, other than earrings, would have been gaudy. But it was the keyhole opening from throat to below her breasts that captured his attention. Her cleavage was completely exposed. The bodice was incredibly daring, and he wondered at the engineering feat that kept it in place. One slip and more than cleavage would see the light of day. He tried to shift his gaze from the sight of her creamy flesh, but it was impossible. The temptation to find out if her skin was as silken as it looked was nearly overwhelming.

BOOK: Unforgettable: A Loveswept Classic Romance
5.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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