‘For Joey’s sake, I will. And so will you.’
For a moment Clare wanted to bite back that she did not take orders. Then she subsided. Joey would only be upset if he realised how much hostility there was between the two people who had created him.
‘OK,’ she conceded. ‘In front of Joey.’
He shook his head.
‘Not good enough. It’s not something you can turn on and off, whenever he’s around or not. It’s got to be permanent.’
She just looked at him. Looked at the man who had deleted her from his bed—his life—in a single sentence. With brutal words. A man she had actually thought felt for her something that went beyond her role as his mistress.
But all he had felt for her had been ‘appreciation’.
Appreciation that he had paid for with a diamond necklace.
‘How the hell,’ she said heavily, ‘do you think that’s possible?’
Again there was that brief flicker in his eyes. Then it was gone.
‘By forcing ourselves,’ he replied. ‘Until it becomes a habit. Because this isn’t going to go away. I am not going to go away. I’m going to be part of my son’s life for ever—and you’d better accept that. This is what I propose—’
She snorted again. ‘Not another insane idea like the last one, I hope?’
Again came that strange, very fleeting expression in his eyes, which she could hardly see in this dim light.
‘No. For Joey’s sake we behave…normally…with each other. Putting everything else aside. And we can start right now.’ He got to his feet. ‘Over dinner.’
He indicated the terrace, and Clare could see that the table there had been set for a meal, with flowers and napery and soft candles. Xander was looking at her. She headed towards it, rum punch in her hand, and plonked herself down, flicking her plait over her shoulder.
He took his place opposite her. It seemed a whole lot too close for Clare’s liking.
‘Your hair is longer,’ he said.
‘Long hair’s cheaper than short,’ she answered.
‘Why do you wear it constrained like that in a…a pigtail all the time?’
She looked at him. ‘It keeps it out of the way when I’m busy.’
‘Well, you are on holiday now. You don’t have to be busy. You can relax. Let your hair down.’
His eyes flicked over her. In the pit of her stomach Clare felt desire begin to pool.
The appearance of the steward was a reprieve, and the whole formal rigmarole of serving dinner gave her the insulation she needed. Wine and water was poured, bread was proffered, plates deposited with gloved hands. This might be a villa by the sea, but it was a silver service. No doubt.
Sickly she realised that the last time she had sat having dinner with Xander it had been the night she had been terminated.
He had seemed preoccupied then—and with hindsight, of course, it had been obvious why. He hadn’t even wanted to be there—had simply been waiting for the moment to hit the delete button on her…
She glanced across at him now. Four years ago. Had it really been so long? It seemed much, much closer in time than that.
But it wasn’t—it was four years ago. Four years—and everything changed that night. Your whole life. And nothing—not even Xander Anaketos storming back to claim his fatherhood of Joey—will change it back. Nothing.
She started to eat.
It was a strained, bizarre meal. Xander made conversation. Deliberately so, she realized. Perhaps partly for the waiting staff, but also because he was following his own precepts and trying to give an appearance of normality to their dining. He talked of the island—a little of its history as a former colony, and the activities it afforded those rich enough to holiday here. Clare returned the barest replies, a feeling of unreality seeping through her.
She tried not to look at him, tried not to hear that naturally seductive timbre in his voice, tried not to catch the scent of his skin. She had to stop herself, she knew. But it was a torment.
I’ve got to get used to this. I have no other option. So if I’m to endure it, I must make myself immune to it. To him.
It was with a sense of relief that she felt herself yawn at the end of the main course. She pushed her chair back. The glass of wine she’d sipped almost without realising it, combined with jet lag, was knocking her out fast.
‘I’m falling asleep,’ she said. ‘I’m going to go to bed.’
Did that slightest flicker come again? She didn’t know, didn’t care—was too tired to think about it.
‘I’ll see you in the morning,’ he murmured, and reached for his own wine glass.
She left him to it and headed indoors. The cool of the air-conditioning made her shiver after the warmth outdoors.
Or something did.
Behind her, Xander watched her go. His expression was strange. His mood stranger. She had changed, all right—she was a different woman from the one he remembered. The one who had been so reserved she had refused to look at him as he walked past the time he’d first spotted her at his London offices. The one who had become his mistress without a murmur, her cool, understated beauty engaging his interest as an intriguing contrast to the sophisticated passions of the previous incumbent, whose charms had palled for him. Clare had fitted into his life effortlessly, and he had taken her with him because she’d been undemanding and accommodating, calm and composed—the classic English rose without thorns…
His mouth twisted. Well, that had gone, and with a vengeance! Now she scratched and tore at him verbally, snapped and snarled and answered back, defying him and refusing to do what was best for his son. His expression darkened. Would she realise why he had brought her here? He lifted the wine to his mouth and savoured its rich, expensive bouquet. His eyes glinted opaquely.
Not until it’s far, far too late for her…
CHAPTER EIGHT
CLARE sat on a padded lounger on the beach, under the shade of a coconut palm, looking out over the brilliant azure water beyond the silver sand.
She had been here a week. The most difficult week of her life. Even the days after Xander had thrown her out of his life, even when she had given birth to his child, even the nightmare of coming face to face with him again, did not compare with this.
Each passing day here seemed more difficult than the last. She tried her hardest not to let it show for Joey’s sake—to be calm and normal, to conceal from him the emotions roiling in the pit of her stomach, to speak civilly to Xander so that Joey would not be upset. But it was hard, so hard.
But only for her, it seemed. Joey, she could see with her own eyes, day after day, was having the time of his life—and so was Xander.
Her eyes went to the two figures in the sea, one so small, battling with his armbands, the other tall and bronzed and lithe. She watched Joey throwing a huge inflated ball at Xander, who made a vastly exaggerated play of launching himself sideways to catch it, landing in the water with an almighty splash. Joey whooped with laughter and Xander surfaced, his grin wide, shaking water drops from his head.
Clare felt her hands tighten around her book. Watching them together sent a pain through her heart she could not stop.
Could that really be Xander Anaketos there? Playing with his little child? It was a man she had never seen before. Xander as she had never known him. A man who—pain pierced her—had existed only in her imagination, for so brief and pathetic a time, when she had hoped against hope that he felt something for her, that when she told him the news that she was pregnant he would sweep her up into his arms and declare his love for her—marry her, make them a family together…
That dream had been obliterated for ever in a single moment.
‘It’s over.’
Pain stabbed again, the deepest yet. All she had was this hollow mockery—three people who looked like a family but who were no such thing…
‘Mummy! Mummy! Come in the water!’
Joey’s excited voice called to her. He was wading out, running across the sand to her. He seized her hand. ‘Come on, Mummy,’ he said, and started to drag at her.
‘Your mother wants to rest, Joey.’ Xander’s deep voice sounded as he came up to Joey, ready to lead him back to the sea. Water ran from his sleek, bare torso, dazzling like diamonds. Clare did not want to look.
Joey’s expression grew doleful. ‘It’s no fun resting,’ he objected. ‘Come on, Mummy.’
Clare got to her feet. ‘Of course I’ll come in,’ she said. There was no point lying there, heart heavy.
Joey seized her hand enthusiastically, then grabbed Xander’s hand.
‘Swing me!’ he commanded.
Automatically Clare raised her arm, as did Xander.
‘One, two, three, swing!’ ordered Joey.
She hefted him up, and Xander did too.
‘Whee!’ cried Joey. ‘Again, again!’
‘One, two, three, swing!’ said Clare, hefting Joey up again, and realised that she had said it in unison with Xander. Her eyes flew to his, and just for a moment, the briefest moment, they met. Then she tore her eyes away.
Emotion buckled through her.
Suddenly, out of nowhere, it seemed unbearable—just unbearable. To be here, Joey’s mother and father, so close to him, with him linking them together, and yet to be so unbridgeably far apart.
‘Swing me into the water!’