It gave Sasha a mental jolt. She had accepted Nathan Parnell’s claim without question, but out of the mouths of children came innocent truth.
‘When did you become a police officer?’ Matt relentlessly pursued the question as children always do.
‘When needs must, Matt,’ came the quiet reply.
Sasha realised he had supplied what he considered the situation demanded. But who was he really?
The answer exploded through her mind. A man who needed a wife, that was who, and he’d j
ust made the opportunity to proposition her again. Nothing like a white knight to the rescue to soften a woman’s heart and mush up her brain. Well, not this woman, thank you very much, Sasha vowed. For the time being, she was through with men.
She stopped walking.
They all stopped walking.
Matt looked up at her. ‘My daddy can do anything,’ he stated proudly.
‘I don’t doubt it,’ Sasha bit out. She turned to confront the man who considered when needs must a good enough reason for arranging matters as he saw fit. ‘Do you have anything at all to do with the law, Mr Parnell?’
His craggy, handsome face relaxed into a slow, heart-melting smile. ‘I don’t mind if you call me Nathan.’
Sasha battled to remain firm in her resistance to any tactics he might employ to persuade her to his way of thinking. ‘You didn’t answer the question,’ she said tersely.
The smile quirked into winsome appeal. The effect was so sexy, Sasha could feel certain nerves quivering in response. ‘I practised as a barrister for a while,’ he said in a voice that had undoubtedly swayed juries, especially if the jurors were all women.
Sasha refused to be swayed. ‘Did you get thrown out for malpractice?’ she demanded.
He looked affronted. ‘Of course not. I’m a very law-abiding citizen. I like legality. That’s the beauty of marriage. Or, at least it would be with a properly drawn-up contract.’
Sasha was not going to get sidetracked on to that issue. Just for once, she was going to pin this man to a proper answer. ‘Do you or do you not practise as a barrister now?’
‘I do not. I gave it up.’
‘Why?’
He shrugged. ‘The judges didn’t agree with me all the time.’
That didn’t come as a surprise. ‘I don’t agree with you, either,’ Sasha asserted.
‘Over what?’ He looked innocent. ‘Have I done something wrong?’
‘Threatening bodily harm. I don’t believe in violence, Nathan Parnell.’
‘Neither do I. None eventuated, did it?’
‘No.’
‘I rest my case.’
He looked positively smug. It exasperated Sasha into saying, ‘I bet you’re not always right.’
‘My daddy’s never wrong,’ Matt said, looking up at his father admiringly. ‘He told me so.’
‘Brainwashed,’ Sasha muttered, but she couldn’t stop a smile at the precocious little boy.
It was a mistake. Nathan Parnell read it as compliance with their company. ‘So, which way is home?’ he asked, gesturing for her to indicate direction. ‘Matt and I will see you safely to your doorstep. If you like,’ he added belatedly, but with a smile that could have buckled her knees if Sasha weren’t made of sterner stuff.
It was time to effect the parting of the ways. Nathan Parnell was not the law and Sasha was not about to let him take the law into his own hands any more than he had. She had the distinct feeling that he could twist anything to his purpose, including her if she didn’t take herself out of his orbit.