“You don’t wear Brooks Brothers suits,” she chided with a giggle as he continued to tease her ear.

“I know,” he said with an unabashed grin. “And that’s what pisses them off. They don’t know how to deal with us. We’re unpredictable. We’re out of uniform.”

In his place, Diana would have been frantic at the possibility of a trial and of being wrongfully convicted on some sort of circumstantial evidence and sent to prison. But Cole had such strength of purpose that it empowered him. He generated his own force and it swept people along with it.

Diana smoothed her fingers over his hard jaw. “Do you really know what’s going to happen tomorrow?”

“No. I only know what can happen, and what I want to happen.”

“What do you want to happen?”

He turned her face up for a kiss and said with a somber smile, “What I want to happen is this: I want to see your face on the pillow beside mine when I go to sleep and when I wake up. And more than anything else in the world right now, I want to give you everything you want.”

“You?” she suggested and watched his gray eyes darken with tenderness.

“That, too,” he whispered.

The phone rang and Diana reluctantly pulled out of his arms and reached out to answer it. Still in a lighthearted mood, she said, “You’re the expert on human nature, tonight. Use your powers and tell me who this is.”

Cole threw out the first name that came to mind. “Hayward,” he guessed; then he had to hide his shock when he turned out to be right.

Diana covered the mouthpiece with her hand. “He wants to come up.”

In answer, Cole shoved his hands in his pockets and nodded curtly.

Chapter 61

DIANA’S BRIEF FANTASY THAT DOUG would apologize and offer to have the hearing called off was not only beyond his ability to fulfill, it was beyond his consideration. Instead, the two men looked at each other like sworn enemies. Cole kept his hands in his pockets and merely lifted his brows in aloof inquiry.

Doug was equally distant. “I won’t stay long,” he said. “I’ve come to apologize to both of you for everything I said and did that was the result of what I believed happened to Barbara.”

“Does that mean you’re planning to get off my back?” Cole mocked.

Doug not only refused to consider that, he was angered by the suggestion that he should. “Not a chance,” he said with biting scorn. “You’ve built an empire by swallowing up solid, reputable, old companies like Cushman who can’t fight you because they can’t survive your tactics.”

“Are you really that sanctimonious, or are you just plain gullible?” Cole inquired in a deliberately insulting drawl.

Diana saw Doug’s hands clench into fists, and so did Cole and yet Cole goaded him harder. “Isn’t it interesting that you’ve forgotten to mention the people who profit when I take over—you know, the shareholders of those ‘solid, reputable’ companies with the lousy management and antiquated facilities that don’t benefit anyone except the management at the top, who bleed off the profits before they can trickle down to the shareholders.

“You don’t give a shit about my ethics or methods or motives. You need a high-profile conquest for your political image, and you made the mistake of selecting me. If I could prove to you that I’m guiltless on every charge you’ve gotten filed against me, you’d still press the issue tomorrow in hope the federal courts will rule against me.”

“Does the term libel suit have any effect on you?” Doug retorted in a soft, deadly voice.

“Yes,” Cole scoffed. “It evokes an urge to tell you to shove it up your ass.”

“Stop it!” Diana cried, forgetting that Doug was no longer the same carefree youth who tried to teach her to drive a stick shift. “Cole is innocent of everything you believe he’s done. I’ve seen the proof, dammit.”

“He doesn’t want proof,” Cole said, sweeping Doug with a contemptuous glance. “He wants to make a reputation for himself.”

For some reason, this time when Diana protested Cole’s innocence, Doug faltered. “Are you saying that you can prove you did not start the rumors that drove Cushman’s stock down to half its value?” he demanded.

Cole folded his arms over his chest and regarded him with more disgust than anger. “You’re an attorney. You prove to me you did not tell any woman at any time in the last three months that she was pretty. Show me how you’d prove it.”

Having made his point, Cole said, “The people who belong in front of a judge tomorrow are the Cushman brothers and all their cronies.” Cole had meant to end the discussion there, but as he regarded Hayward, he realized there was something about the young senator’s attitude that was—almost—genuine.

“Just out of curiosity,” he added in a milder voice when Hayward turned and started to leave, “what would you do if I could prove to you that the Cushmans are as guilty as sin?”

Doug was completely convinced he was being manipulated by a master, but he was curious enough to stop and answer the question. “I would get the judge out of bed tonight to have him sign a subpoena,” Doug stated clearly and concisely. “And then I would make it my personal quest to see that they went to jail, among other things, for misusing the U.S. government.”

Cole was so amused by that choirboy speech that he decided to call his bluff, if for no other reason than to get a little petty revenge for the misery Hayward had caused Diana in the last two weeks. “You’re completely sure that’s what you’d do?”

“That is only the beginning of what I’d do,” Doug bit out.

“In that case, follow me.”

Cole took him to a room down the hotel corridor, where two well-dressed men appeared to be waiting for a friend who was inside. They stepped aside when Cole nodded at them. “I’m going to introduce you to Mr. Bretling,” Cole said. “And Mr. Bretling is going to tell you all about your allies, the Cushmans, and their alleged wonder chip. After you talk to Mr. Bretling, I’m going to give you a look at Mr. Bretling’s companion who’s traveling with us. She’s on the table over there, inside that jumbo-size, deep-dish pizza box.”

* * *

At seven-thirty that evening, while Diana was changing clothes for dinner, she heard her husband and her childhood friend return to the suite. Unable to stand the suspense, she opened the door and peeked into the living room.

Doug looked extremely angry. He yanked the telephone receiver off its cradle, jerked the knot in his tie loo

se, and started making phone calls. Diana sagged with relief. The thought of using the fact of Doug’s car accident against him had broken her heart. Besides being a truly dedicated and ethical politician, his problem with alcohol had been a rare metabolic allergy and not alcoholism.

Cole walked into the bedroom and slipped his arms around her, linking his hands at the small of her back while a lazy grin worked its way across his rugged features. In answer to her unspoken question, he said, “The senator would like to join us for dinner.”

“What did you say?” Diana asked warily.

“I felt bound by courtesy to consent,” he piously replied.

“Of course,” Diana said with sham solemnity.

“But not until he volunteered to pay for it.”

Chapter 62

AT TEN-THIRTY THE FOLLOWING MORNING, Kendall and Prentice Cushman and three other sponsors of the class-action suit being prepared against Cole Harrison and Unified Industries shoved their way through the curious crowd into the large room where the hearing was to take place.

Their friends and allies, Senators Longtree and Kazinski from the state of New York, had saved seats for them in the first row.

At ten-forty, an assistant to Senator Hayward walked up to the front row and politely handed the two senators and the five members of the Cushman entourage an envelope. In each envelope was a subpoena requiring their presence throughout the hearing today.

“What the hell is this for?” Senator Longtree said to Prentice Cushman.

Prentice Cushman didn’t answer because he was watching a familiar elderly man with stooped shoulders walk up the aisle and sit down at Harrison’s table.

Diana observed the unfolding drama from the back of the room, where she stood beside Senator Byers, who’d convinced the SEC security guard that she was a member of his staff and must be allowed to observe. Periodically he reached over and gave her arm a reassuring squeeze.

At first everything seemed to move with agonizing slowness. Cole’s attorneys announced that if the judge would permit a degree of flexibility in the presentation of the case, the whole matter could be easily resolved. The judge kept looking at the crowd of two hundred in the room and seemed extremely willing to do anything that would bring the matter to its earliest conclusion. He was already convinced Cole was guilty, anyway, Diana knew.


Tags: Judith McNaught Foster Saga Romance