‘Bored?’ The comment seemed to surprise him.
‘Oh, yes,’ she breathed softly, glancing around at her audience. Clare hadn’t expected her outfit to attract quite so much attention, but it served the purpose, and maybe the attention everyone else was giving her would motivate King and his over-sized ego right into her ambush.
After what Mark King had done, she was going to stuff and mount him, nailed directly through the heart. He wouldn’t know what had hit him.
King would look sensational mounted on her apartment wall, she thought crazily. His jet-black hair and olive skin would go well with her decor. His strong jawline, handsome square face, and the generous mouth that promised to be as seductive as the rest of him, would be far more interesting to look at as she sipped her morning tea than her print of Cézanne’s Still Life.
‘Why would a woman as beautiful as you be bored?’
The rich timbre of his voice tingled down her spine. She shrugged, allowing a smile to touch her lips. ‘Don’t you ever feel that there aren’t any challenges left in life?’
King’s gunmetal-grey eyes glinted mischievously. ‘I know exactly what you mean.’ He pulled her closer to him, her soft curves moulding to the contours of his hard body.
They fitted so well together, she thought traitorously, then rejected the notion. She wasn’t going to think of the enemy that way—and he was the enemy. What he’d done was unforgivable. She’d had it with men and their games. This was the last straw in a series of griefs and it was well past time she evened the score.
He expertly swept her around in a circle, as if he were as much at home on the dance floor as in the boardroom. She supposed he thought he was God’s gift to women. He held her firmly, the warmth of his embrace so male, so bracing, so damned annoying.
Clare hadn’t expected him to be quite like this. She’d expected someone colder—not this hot-blooded specimen that called to her primal urges. It was no wonder that women succumbed so easily to his charm.
She could feel the hard muscle of his shoulders under his black suit, feel the power in his body, feel the promise throbbing from him that he’d be an experience to remember.
Clare wasn’t about to lose her head, though. She’d had enough knocks in life to know the truth about men and relationships—all liars and all lies. No matter what he could make her body feel, what magic he might weave, she was impervious.
The anguish her last boyfriend, Josh, had left her with had cured her of any romantic notions. She bit her lip at the unwelcome surge of pain that accompanied her memories. It amazed her how she had been drawn into believing in love—the quiet dinners, the beach walks, the moving in. And then bam! It was over. And she hadn’t had an inkling that something was wrong until she’d found Josh packing.
How could she have been so blind? He’d been slipping away from her the moment he moved in: right into someone else’s loving arms. And she’d been too busy to notice.
She could have done something, she figured. Changed somehow. If she’d realised. He was married now, to that woman. Her neck muscles tightened—she’d never feel his cheating lips again.
She’d been a gullible fool. But not this time. Clare was prepared. Forewarned. Steeled for this. And she was glad she could look Mr Tall, Dark and Dangerous straight in the eye, thanks to her generous heels.
The music stopped and they stepped apart, applauding the orchestra with the rest of the crowd. She had to concede that the Excelsior’s grand ballroom made the perfect location for King’s charity dinner. The polished timber floors, the extravagant chandeliers of imported crystal and the twenty-piece orchestra all furthered his cause—to romance the money from his guests’ pockets.
Clare leant towards King and brushed her lips against his warm cheek. ‘Are you game for one?’ she whispered.
His eyes glittered dangerously. ‘One what?’
‘A challenge,’ Clare said casually. And she turned on her heel and walked away from him, vividly aware of his gaze following her. She forced herself to breathe through the onslaught of butterflies in her stomach. Step one was over; the plan was in motion. She just had to reel him in—and nothing was going to get the best of her, especially Mark King.
MARK scanned the room, his eyes searching the crowd for one extremely intriguing lady. He knew he shouldn’t have taken his eyes off her, but locating Sasha in the crowd next to the dance floor had been all it took to lose sight of her. Brunettes were everywhere, but none with the height, the split in the dress or those haunting deep blue eyes.
‘Who the hell was that woman?’ Sasha snapped, hooking her arm in his possessively.
‘I have no idea.’ But he was determined to find out. If she was as fascinating and mysterious as she’d intimated, he wanted to discover every detail about her—down to what underwear she wore. Or didn’t.
‘And you let her embarrass me like that in front of all these people?’ Sasha swung her arms wide, her cheeks flushed.
Mark forced himself to focus on his date. His blood cooled at the hurt in her eyes. The deal was to introduce Sasha to the notables of society, and he’d all but ignored her. ‘I’m sorry. I didn’t think.’
‘Well, I’d appreciate it if you did think. I don’t know how I can look anyone in the face now.’
Agreeing to a date with his sister’s best friend wasn’t the cleverest situation he’d got himself into, but he had needed a companion and Sasha had been available and there were no strings attached. And strings were what he wanted to avoid.
Mark caught a glimpse of his stranger. She certainly was a vision. She was so confident and so perfect that he knew there had to be a catch.
He had no idea what she meant. Was she challenging him? And, if so, to what? His mind buzzed with the possibilities—and they all ended with his stranger naked and in his bed.
Mark shook himself. This was crazy. The last thing he’d expected at this charity night was a woman like her. He was here to raise money for the Heart Foundation, to give back to society, to give his life some meaning beyond the size of his bank balance.
His own heart thrummed a call he couldn’t ignore. There was no reason he couldn’t pursue the woman and serve the charity…
Mark strode to the entrance of the dining room and hailed the head waiter. He leaned close to the man’s ear. ‘Seating has been changed. See that woman.’ He cast a look to his stranger, who was in a conversation with a gangly man. ‘I want her at my table.’
‘Certainly, sir.’
Mark smiled, straightening to his full height. He walked through the doorway, smiling to his guests. If she thought he was going to play along with her game she had a surprise coming. He was going to get some answers.
Clare wasn’t surprised when the waiter extricated her from the man she was talking to and escorted her to Mark King’s table. She would have been disappointed if he’d done anything less. From what she knew about him he was finding life a tad boring now he’d made it, and was taking on all sorts of challenges for the thrill alone. She figured his personal life wouldn’t be any different.
Clare had noted that he managed to keep his exploits out of the papers—and his photo. Which was probably why she was so surprised by King in the flesh.
Clare glanced around the dining room. It was laid out with over fifty round tables, all with white tablecloths overlaying burgundy ones. She couldn’t miss the lavish bouquet of roses that adorned each table, or the careful positioning of the cutlery, glasses and elaborately folded serviettes. Of course King wouldn’t settle for anything less than stylishly elegant.
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