“Our table is in the third row.” She sighed. “Why couldn’t at least one of us have been seated at the back of the room? There’s no way we can slip in there unnoticed.” Anxious to get inside before they were any later, she reached for the big handles on the heavy doors, but he laid his hand on her arm to stop her from pulling them open.
“Why try to be invisible? Why not let them think what everyone who reads the Enquirer is going to think in a day or two—that you don’t give a damn about Penworth and you’re interested in me, not him.”
“No one who knows me is going to believe that!” she cried, almost wringing her hands in despair. His whole face tightened. “You’re right. How stupid of me. I forgot that this is a gathering of the rich and useless, who would never believe you’d switch from one of their own to an ordinary, common man—”
Diana glared at him, confused and frantic and dumbfounded. “What are you talking about! There’s nothing ordinary or common about you.”
She meant it, Cole realized with a surprise that was outweighed by self-disgust at his ridiculous outburst. “Thank you,” he said with an assessing smile as he studied her flushed, upturned face. “At least anger put the sparkle back in your eyes. Too bad my kiss couldn’t have accomplished that.”
Diana made the mistake of looking at his mouth, then had to look away before she could concentrate on the issue. “I’m not accustomed to kissing men I hardly know, particularly when someone else is watching me.”
“You’ve gotten awfully finicky,” he joked. “You used to kiss stray kittens and mongrel pups all the time.”
The analogy was so absurd that Diana laughed. “Yes, but only when I thought you weren’t watching me.”
In the ballroom, polite applause heralded the end of the opening speech. Cole pulled open the heavy doors, put his hand beneath her elbow, and escorted her forward. Murmurs erupted throughout the ballroom as one thousand startled people observed the unexpected arrival of their guest of honor—a notoriously illusive billionaire recently listed by Cosmopolitan magazine as one of the World’s Fifty Most Eligible Bachelors—who strolled nonchalantly into their midst with his hand possessively cupping the elbow of Diana Foster—Daniel Penworth’s recently discarded fiancée.
Cole escorted Diana to her table in the third row and seated her there in the vacant chair between Spence and Diana’s grandfather. He nodded politely to everyone, but he winked at Corey, smiled warmly at Diana and briefly touched her shoulder, then strode off to his own table in the front row.
Diana watched him for a moment, impressed and amused by his supreme indifference to the excited curiosity his appearance was generating. Keeping her expression pleasant and neutral, she looked at Doug and his date, Amy Leeland, who were seated across from her to the left; then she glanced to the right at her mother and grandparents. Corey was one seat away, between Spence and Doug, and her eyes were filled with questions, but her expression was perfectly composed.
They were all dying of curiosity, Diana realized, but they all knew the first rule of social survival—always present a calm, united front. In keeping with that rule, Spence, Corey, and Doug smiled at her as if there were nothing in the least extraordinary about Diana arriving conspicuously late on the arm of a man whom they hadn’t seen in over a decade and who treated her with possessive familiarity.
Diana’s mother and grandfather had no idea at all who he was, but they followed suit.
Diana’s grandmother, who had begun ignoring social rules at approximately the same time she attained the age of seventy, decided to ignore this one, too. She stared at Cole Harrison’s back with a perplexed frown, then leaned forward in her chair and demanded of Diana in a loud stage whisper that got the attention of three people seated at the table behind her, “Who was that man, Diana?”
Anxious to avoid a discussion that would be heard by others, Diana said hastily, “That’s Cole Harrison, Gram. You know—he’s the man who donated the Klineman sculpture that you were admiring earlier.”
Rose Britton was aghast at that notion, and in her advancing years, she’d also developed a disconcerting desire to state the entire truth, regardless of the consequences. “I did not admire it,” she protested in an indignant whisper that was overheard by two more people at the table behind her. “I said,” she clarified, “that it was hideous.”
She glanced at the others in an innocent invitation to argue the merits or lack thereof of the sculpture, but everyone launched into diversionary small talk to avoid doing exactly that. “Well, it is,” she told Diana as soon as she looked her way. “It looks like a huge pipecleaner doll!”
Diana was anxious to explain to her that Cole Harrison was the same Cole who’d worked at the Haywards’ when Diana was a teenager, but she was afraid to do it now, for fear that the elderly lady might then begin reminiscing about the food they’d sent over to him and be overheard. Cole had gallantly come to her rescue tonight, and Diana was determined to protect his pride and his privacy in return.
Chapter 22
TO DIANA’S INTENSE RELIEF, THE minor flurry created by their late and conspicuous arrival soon died down. Waiters began serving the first course of the dinner that was included in the $1,000 cost of a ticket to the ball, and the events of the last half hour finally began to sink in.
She could hardly believe the forceful, sophisticated male in the elegant black tuxedo who’d materialized out of the shadows on the balcony was actually the same jean-clad youth who’d talked with her while he curried the Haywards’ horses . . . and teased her while they played cards . . . and greedily dug into whatever food she brought along.
She reached mechanically for a crusty roll and broke it open, her hands then going still. . . . The Cole she’d known before had always been hungry, Diana remembered fondly. A smile touched her lips—judging from the adult Cole’s tall, muscular physique, he’d undoubtedly been hungry because he’d still had some growing and “filling out” to do.
A politely insistent voice near her ear intruded on her reverie as two bottles of excellent wine appeared in her peripheral vision. “Would you prefer red wine or white wine, miss?”
“Yes,” she murmured absently.
The confused waiter hesitated, looked helplessly at her and then at Spence, who was on her left and who came to the waiter’s aid. “Perhaps both,” Spence suggested blandly.
Another waiter followed in his wake and slid a bowl of shrimp bisque in front of her; animated conversations and bursts of laughter swirled around her, blending with the soft clink of flatware against china, but Diana noticed none of that. Cole had changed a great deal, she decided as she absently spread a rosette of butter onto the roll, then laid it on the plate without touching it and reached for a glass of wine instead. She picked up the one closest to her hand, a chardonnay, smooth and mellow.
The years had not mellowed Cole, she thought a little sadly, just the opposite. As a youth, he’d had an aura of hard-bitten strength, but he’d seemed approachable and kind, even gentle at times. Now there was a cynical edge to his voice and a coldness in his eyes—she’d witnessed both when she objected to entering the ballroom with him. He was battle-hardened, toughened. But he was still kind, she reminded herself. When the photographer had appeared on the balcony, he was kind enough to rush to her rescue. He was also quick enough and smart enough to instantly devise a plan that turned a negative situation into one that would work in her favor. To accomplish that, he had kissed her. . . .
Diana’s hand shook as she reached for her wineglass again and took another hasty swallow. She should never have let that happen! What a foolish, uncharacteristically impulsive thing for her to do. And what a kiss! Soft at first . . . awkward fo
r her as she came into unexpected closeness with the legs and chest and mouth of a stranger—an old friend, whose mouth had covered hers with casual expertise and then with teasing insistence . . . and then with increasing demand. He’d lifted his head, ended the kiss, stared into her eyes . . . and then he’d kissed her again . . . almost reluctantly, and then almost . . . hungrily.
Diana’s cheeks reddened with embarrassed heat, and she drained the rest of the chardonnay, trying to steady her nerves. She shouldn’t have let that second kiss happen. Other women got jilted, and they didn’t throw themselves into the arms of the first available man who offered sympathy.
Or did they?
Now that she thought about it, maybe they did!
In fact, now that she thought about it, she realized she was overreacting to everything and making far too much out of a simple, meaningless kiss enacted purely for the benefit of a spying reporter. While she was obsessing on a kiss, Cole had probably forgotten the entire trivial incident. For all she knew, he had escorted a woman to the ball who was with him now. Either way, he was undoubtedly being showered with attention at the head table and having a perfectly pleasant time.
She tried to resist the impulse to find out for herself and failed. Cole’s table was two rows in front of Diana’s and a little to the left, directly in front of the auctioneer’s podium, which was on a raised platform. By looking slightly to the left or the right, she could see between the shoulders of the group at the next table and see most of the people at Cole’s. Casually, she lifted her glass to her lips and looked to the right. The head table was larger and seated more people, two of whom made Diana’s heart sink the instant she saw them.
Franklin Mitchell was the chairman of this year’s ball, and he and his wife were naturally seated at the head table—but so was their son, Peter, and his wife, Haley, formerly Haley Vincennes. The other couple were friends of Peter and Haley’s. The elderly woman with blue-tinted white hair, with her back to Diana, was undoubtedly Mrs. Canfield, whose ancestors had founded the White Orchid Ball. The balding man beside her had to be her son Delbert, a middle-aged bachelor.