He didn’t bother to answer, but instead, and to her horror, began stripping off his black silk evening jacket!
Annie made an ungainly scramble into the furthest corner of the seat, blue eyes revealing the real alarm she was now beginning to feel.
‘Where to, mate?’
‘Tell the guy,’ the man beside her commanded. ‘Then put that on—’ the jacket landed on her trembling lap ‘—before his eyes pop out of his head.’
Annie glanced sharply at the cabby to find his eyes fixed on her breasts so shockingly outlined against the sodden fabric of her dress. Dark heat stung along her cheeks as hurriedly she dragged the jacket around her slender shoulders and clutched possessively at its black satin lapels.
‘Your address,’ her accoster prompted, after having watched sardonically her rush to cover herself up.
Annie flashed him a fulminating look, frustratedly aware that she had no choice but to comply. Well, she did have a choice, she acknowledged bitterly. She could toss this alarming man back his jacket, climb out of the cab and walk back into the hotel to face all those eagerly speculative eyes while she went in search of Todd.
But the very idea of doing that made her feel slightly sick. All those eyes with their amused, knowing looks, and sly sniggers from people who would see the whole thing as yet another Annie Lacey sensation.
Reluctantly she muttered her address, then subsided stiffly into her corner of the cab while he leaned forward to repeat it to the cabby.
Annie followed the lithe movement of his long body with her eyes.
Who is he? she wondered tensely. Though he sounded American there was an added hint of a foreign accent in his deep, gravelly voice that she couldn’t quite place. And his skin wore a rich, smooth olive tint that suggested foreign climes—like the colour of his raven-black hair with its outrageous pony-tail lying smoothly along the p
ure silk of his bright white dress shirt between well-muscled shoulderblades.
What is he? Even in profile his face showed a hard-boned toughness of character that somehow did not go with the flamboyant style of his hair.
He gave a conflict of impressions, she realised, and wondered if it was a deliberately erected facade aimed to put people off the track where his true personality was concerned.
And why did she think that? Because she did it herself and therefore could recognise the same trait in others.
Instruction to the cabby completed, he slid the partitioning window shut then sat back to look at her.
Instantly those strange sparks of awareness prickled along the surface of her skin—an awareness of his firm, sculptured mouth that had so shockingly claimed her own, of lips that made hers tingle in memory, made her throat go dry as they stretched into a smooth, mocking smile.
‘A novel way of meeting, don’t you think?’ he drawled.
Not gravel but velvet. She found herself correcting her description of the liquid tones of his voice. And laced with a hint of—what? Contempt? Sarcasm? Or just simple, wry amusement at the whole situation? Annie flicked her wary glance up to his eyes. Strange eyes. Green. Green eyes that again did not go with the dark Latin rest of him, and were certainly alight with something that kept her senses alert to the threat of danger.
Danger?
‘You were watching me earlier,’ she said half-accusingly. ‘And you know my name.’
He smiled at that, the wry—yes, it was wry—amusement deepening in his eyes. ‘But you are a very beautiful woman, Miss Lacey,’ he pointed out. ‘Your face and your body can be seen plastered on billboards all over the world. Of course I know your name.’ He gave a small shrug of those wide, white-clad shoulders. ‘I would expect every red-blooded man alive to recognise you on sight.’
‘Except that all those other men do not make a point of stalking me all evening,’ she pointed out.
His attention sharpened. ‘Are you by any chance trying to imply something specific?’ he enquired carefully.
Was she? She was by nature very suspicious of men in general. This one seemed to have gone out of his way to be where he was right now.
‘Perhaps you suspect me of spilling the champagne deliberately?’ he suggested, when Annie did not say anything.
‘Did you?’ Cool blue eyes threw back a challenge.
He smiled—the kind of noncommittal smile that tried to mock her for even thinking such a thing about him. But she was not convinced by it, or put off.
‘Things like it have happened before,’ she told him. ‘In my business you collect nut cases like other people collect postage stamps.’
‘And you see me as the ideal candidate for that kind of weird behaviour?’ He looked so amused by the idea that it made her angry.