THE BOSS'S CHRISTMAS SEDUCTION

CHAPTER ONE

  Bile rose in his throat. Hot, bitter, acrid bile.
  Connor Knight dashed the investigator’s report violently across the polished mahogany surface of
his desk, scattering papers like giant confetti through the air where they hovered briefly, before
floating inexorably to the thickly carpeted study floor.
  Through the open French doors behind him he heard the drone of the launch’s engines as it pulled
away from his private jetty, taking the bearer of bad tidings back across the harbour to Auckland city.
  The vile taste in Connor’s mouth rivalled the malevolence of his ex-wife’s actions. He swallowed
against it, but the irrefutable proof of her betrayal could not be as easily diminished.
  As if her insatiable partying and gambling hadn’t been enough, now he knew that six months into their marriage she’d knowingly destroyed their baby—the child she knew he’d wanted—and had then been sterilised rather than ever bear another child again.
  If not for a careless comment from one of her friends at a recent charity fundraiser he’d have been none the wiser. Yet the throw away remark had been all he needed to start the investigation and to confirm beyond any doubt that she’d lied about the miscarriage.
  A tearing pain clawed at his chest.
  The proof of her treachery now lay scattered on his floor—information that had come at a hell of a price, but which was worth every last cent.
  A copy of her admission to a private hospital four years ago, the bills from the anaesthetist, the surgeon, the hospital. The procedures. Termination. Sterilisation.
  And through it all he’d been oblivious.
  So now she wanted more money? He’d have paid it just to be rid of her—until he’d received today’s information.
  It had been bad enough to realise back then that she’d emasculated him with her deceit, her avaricious need to grasp at everything in her path during their brief union, but this? This went way further than that.
  The sonorous grandfather clock chimed the hour. Nine o’clock. Damn! The meeting had made him later into the office than he expected.
  He punched the quick dial on the speakerphone on the desk, connecting immediately to his office in the city.
  “Holly, I’m running late. Any messages or problems?”
  “Nothing urgent, Mr Knight, I’ve rescheduled your conference call to New York.” His PA’s gentle, well-modulated voice washed over him like a calming wave of sanity in the madness of his morning. Thank goodness he could still rely on some people.
  Connor slipped into his suit jacket, adjusted his tie, and, oblivious to the crunch of the report underfoot, stalked out the open French doors and towards the chopper waiting to take him from his island home and into Auckland’s central business district.

  If Holly Christmas received one more tartan beribboned poinsettia she would scream.
  So what if her birthday fell on Christmas Eve? She was used to that. After all, it was the same day every year. She blinked back the unbidden rush of tears that pricked her eyes and gave herself a hard mental shake. Toughen up, she growled silently. Self-pity was so not her style. Survival—whatever it took—that was her key. Then why did she feel different this year? Empty. Alone.
  At least her colleagues had remembered today was her birthday, and not just the last day of work before Knight Enterprises closed for the Christmas break. She straightened her shoulders, stiffened her spine and, with the plant clutched tightly to her aching chest, summoned a smile.
  “The poinsettia is beautiful, thanks. I really appreciate it.” The words sounded normal, thank goodness, collared with just the right amount of enthusiasm.
  “See you at the party tonight, Holly?” one of the girls asked.
  “Oh yes, I’ll be there,” she confirmed with a wry twist of her lips. Someone had to see to it that the annual bash ran smoothly, that the grossly inebriated were tactfully withdrawn from the proceedings and inserted into taxis and that spills and breakages were swiftly dealt with. For the third year in a row she was that someone.
  She loved her job and she was darned good at it. No, she was better than good. She was the best. And that’s why, after working her way through the secretarial pool here at Knight Enterprises she’d risen to Executive PA to Connor Knight, head of the corporate law department.
  A ‘ping’ from the elevator bank down the hall heralded the tall, imposing figure striding along the carpet lined corridor, and sent the small group of women scurrying back to their respective workstations. Holly turned and put the lush red-leafed poinsettia on the credenza behind her desk—next to the one from the finance department and the two that had come up from security and personnel. She caught her lower lip in between her teeth, tugging at its fullness. How on earth was she supposed to get them home on the bus?
  “Good morning, Holly.” His voice, as rich and dark as sinful chocolate, made the hairs on the back of her neck stand up. From the day she’d interviewed for her position as his personal assistant her reaction to him had always been this painfully immediate, although she’d schooled herself to hide it well.
  She’d given up asking herself why his presence made every nerve ending in her body stand on full alert, and learned instead to knuckle down and do her job masking the flush of warmth that suffused her body. Some people didn’t believe in love at first sight, but Holly knew from sudden and lasting experience that it happened.
  She clenched her jaw slightly then slowly released it, and the tension that bound her muscles in an iron grip, and turned to face him secure in the knowledge he’d never have an inkling as to the thoughts that raced through her mind or the sharpened awareness that brought her senses to screaming attention when he was around.
  “Mr Tanaka from the Tokyo office called about the negotiations. He sounded tense.”
  Connor didn’t break his stride on his way through the open polished rimu double-doors that led to his corner office. “He must be. It’s about five-thirty in the morning there. Get him on the line for me.”
  For the briefest moment Holly allowed herself the luxury of inhaling the lingering scent of his cologne, crisp, fresh and expensive yet with an underlying hint of something forbidden, especially to someone like her. With a mental shake she lifted the receiver of her phone, automatically punching in the numbers that would connect his private line to Japan. She waited until he picked up then stood to unlatch the hooks that held the doors open to his interior office. Absorbed in the conversation, his Japanese flawless, he didn’t so much as acknowledge her.
  Holly indulged in a tiny sigh. Well, love at first sight on her part or not, Connor Knight was oblivious. Newly divorced from his socialite wife when Holly had started working for him, he’d looked right through her, and every other woman who’d crossed his path since, as if she didn’t exist. She was a highly dependable machine to him, period.
  Confident the call with Mr Tanaka would tie him up for some time, she made one last check through the details for the staff and children’s Christmas parties. This year she’d excelled herself. The cafeteria, transformed into a fairy grotto, looked stunning and at six-thirty Connor would be playing Santa Claus to the children.
  A wry smile played around Holly’s lips as she cast her gaze in the direction of the glaring red Santa suit that hung on the antique brass hat stand in the corner. Mr Knight Senior had insisted Connor play Santa this year, claiming his arthritic knee made it difficult for him to attend to the task and how important it was someone from the family took on the role. Oh, Connor had argued vociferously against it, but once his father made up his mind there was no refuting it—especially not from his youngest son.
  It was probably the only time she’d witnessed her boss at a total disadvantage.
  “Hell.” A deep voice from behind made her spin around in her chair. “He doesn’t really expect me to wear that, does he?”
  “I think you’ll make a wonderful Santa, Mr Knight.”
  “Hmph.” The disgust on his face was self-evident. He thrust a dicta-tape at her together with clutch of papers. “Transcribe this for me straight away. Oh, and before you do, check the boardroom is free and tell the team we need to meet in there in half an hour.”
  “Trouble?” Holly enquired, mentally shifting his appointments to free him up for the rest of the morning. It had to be serious if the whole legal team was being called in.
  “Nothing we can’t handle. Timing’s a bit of a blow though.” He cast a baleful glance at the Santa suit, draped limply on the hanger. “I don’t suppose…”
  “He’s not going to let you get out of it.” She shook her head sympathetically.
  “No, he won’t.” Connor huffed out a breath and pushed a hand through his immaculately cut and styled hair, sending several strands into unaccustomed disarray.
  Holly stifled another smile. This whole Santa thing had sent the cool, calm and sophisticated Connor Knight for a loop, and this from a man she’d seen face down entire battalions of international lawyers over land and property deals.
  She’d never have dreamed that the prospect of a steady procession of children queuing to take their turn seated on his knee would elicit such a nervous response.
  Still, who was she to ponder? Children made her nervous too and, unlike so many of her peers, Holly had put her biological clock firmly on hold. At twenty-six the rest of her life stretched long and lonely ahead of her. There’d be no kids in her future, at least not until she had some answers about her past. 
  She hated this time of year. All the fun and gaiety of the festivities served to remind her of everything she didn’t have—had never had. Knowing she’d ensured everyone else’s fun tonight would have to be sufficient to buoy her through the harrowing, bleak emptiness of the holiday break until she could bury herself back in work.
  Holly sighed again, and bent to the task at hand. Regretting her decision was not negotiable. Maybe she’d grow old in this chair, or one just like it in another office in another city, but she’d be the best Executive PA on the planet. That would have to be panacea enough.
  Shrieks of laughter echoed around the room as the clown she’d hired made a fool of himself yet again. Everything was going like clockwork right down to the last juggling ball. Holly took a quick look at her watch. Five minutes until Santa time. He should be here by now. Maybe he was having trouble with the suit.
  She turned to her assistant, Janet, a quiet young woman not long out of business college but already showing every sign of making a great PA herself in time.
  “If I’m not back in five minutes with Mr Knight, give Charlie the Clown the nod to carry on a little longer, will you?”
  “Is there anything else I can do to help?”
  “No, I’m sure we’ll be fine. Santa probably got a late phone call.”
  In the elevator Holly mentally ticked off the order of the evening, everything had to run like clockwork. Irritation drummed at the back of her mind. As much as she sympathised with Connor’s reluctance to play Santa tonight, he had an obligation to the kids. An obligation he had no business putting off. If he’d bailed on those excited children downstairs she’d be giving him a piece of her mind, boss or not.
  She covered the distance from the elevator bank to his corner office in record time and knocked sharply before pushing through the doors. The head of anger she’d built up propelled her into his office with a flurry. But her words stalled in her throat, like a horse frozen at the starting gate, and she halted mid-stride.
  Connor Knight stood, half-dressed, in the middle of his office. The garish red trousers of his suit hung loosely on his hips, threatening to drop lower if he so much as moved a muscle.
  Holly dragged her eyes upwards, her throat as dry as the Sahara and a deep-seated throb pulsed through her body. Lord have mercy, she thought as her gaze swept across the disturbingly bare tanned expanse of his chest, to the powerful width of his shoulders above it and to the strong column of his neck. It was amazing what Armani could hide, she thought as she forced herself to look him in the eye, hoping the surge of energy that rocketed with heated awareness through each nerve ending wasn’t apparent on her face. If her internal temperature was anything to go by, she should be glowing like a beacon.
  She took a steadying breath. What was she here for again? Oh yes, that’s right. Santa.
  “Five minutes, Mr Knight.”
  “Yeah, I know. Damn suit’s too big. Help me stuff some cushions in here. I’m sure the kids of today still expect a bit of meat on their Santas.”
  “I imagine so,” she agreed, and swept up an armful of the soft cushions from the long, comfortable sofa in his office. “Will these do?” she asked.
  “As good as anything. Here,” Connor slid his hands behind the band of the trousers and held them away from his waist. “You stuff and I’ll hold.”
  He had to be joking. Holly hesitated and swallowed against the constriction in her throat.
  “What are you waiting for?” He shot her a glance, a tiny frown pulling his dark brows together briefly, his impatience clear.
  Of course, he had no idea of his effect on her. To him she wasn’t a woman with needs and desires. She was just his PA. Besides, as his PA, why wouldn’t she be called upon to stuff cushions in her boss’s trousers?
  “I suppose this is what you meant in my job description, when you said ‘and other duties as required from time to time’?” Keep it light she told herself. Just keep it light.
  Surprise skated over his features at her words. Holly inwardly groaned. Why on earth had she said that?
  His eyes suddenly crinkled at the edges and he laughed—a rusty sound, as if he didn’t do it often enough. “Yeah, something like that. Although, I don’t think HR had this scenario in mind.”
  Holly returned a nervous smile and forced herself forward. Warmth radiated from his bare torso, or was that just the flush of heat in her cheeks? She fought to quell the tremor that threatened to vibrate through her and, with a stern silent warning to herself not to look down, she carefully eased the first cushion between his ridged abdomen and the red satin.


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THE CEO'S CONTRACT BRIDE

CHAPTER ONE

  "Six weeks until the tender closes, mate."
  Declan Knight leaned back his office chair and grimaced at his youngest brother's words as they
echoed down the telephone line. He shot an irritated glance at his Rolex - yeah, six weeks. He
could count off the seconds he had left to find the finance he needed to pull this project off.
  "Don't remind me," he growled.
  "Hey, it isn't my fault Mum put that stipulation in her will for our trust funds. Besides, who'd
have thought you'd still be one of New Zealand's most wanted bachelors?"
  Declan remained silent. He sensed Connor's instant discomfort over the crackling line.
  "Dec? I'm sorry, mate."
  "Yeah, I know." Declan interrupted swiftly before his brother could say another word. "I gotta move on."
  Move on from the reality that he hadn't been able to save Renata, his fiancée, when she'd needed him most. For a minute he allowed her face to swirl through his memory before fading away to where he kept the past locked down - locked down with his guilt.
  "So, you want to go out tonight? Have a drink maybe? Show the Auckland nightspots how to have a really good time?" Connor's voice brought him back instantly.
  "Sorry, previous engagement." Declan scowled into the mouthpiece.
  "Well, don't sound so excited about it. What's the occasion?"
  "Steve Crenshaw's prewedding party."
  "You're kidding, right? Watch-the-paint-dry Steve?"
  "I wish I were kidding." The pencil Declan had been twiddling through his fingers snapped - the two pieces falling unheeded to the floor. His staid and übercautious finance manager was marrying the one woman in the world who was a constant reminder of his failure, and his deepest betrayal - Renata's oldest and dearest friend, Gwen Jones.
  "Maybe you should ask him for some tips on how to find a wife."
  Declan's lips tweaked into a reluctant smile as he heard the suppressed laughter in his brother's voice. "I don't think so," he answered.
  "You're probably right. Okay then. Don't do anything I wouldn't do. Ciao, bro'."
  Declan slowly replaced the receiver. It wasn't that he was short of women, in fact the opposite was true, but he sure as hell didn't want to marry any of them. There wasn't a single one who wouldn't expect declarations of undying devotion - devotion he was incapable of giving.
  He'd been there, done that. He would bear the scars forever. Losing Renata had been the hardest thing in his life. He was never going down that road again. And he wasn't going to make promises he knew he couldn't hold to. It just wasn't his style, not now, not ever.
  If he hadn't had his business to pour his energies into when Renata had died he may as well have buried himself with her. In some ways he probably had, but it was a choice he'd made, and one he stuck to.
  He spun out of his chair and headed for the shower in the old bathroom of the converted Art Deco building, thankful - not for the first time - that he'd kept a fully functional bathroom in the office building. It gave him no end of pride to base the administrative side of his work here - his first completed project - the one his father had said would never succeed.
  The house had been in a sorry state of repair, stuck in the middle of what had once been a residential area and which had slowly been absorbed by the nearby light-industrial zone. It had been just the sort of project he'd needed to get his hands on, literally, and had given him the opportunity to showcase his talents to restore and convert historical buildings for practical as well as aesthetic means. Cavaliere Developments had come a long way from the fledgling business he'd created eight years ago - and had a long way further to go if he had any say in the matter.
  As he peeled off his work clothes, bunching them into a large crumpled ball in his fists, he wondered for the hundredth time if maybe he hadn't bitten off more than he could chew with the Sellers project. Buying the building outright wasn't the problem, he could do that without a blip on his financial radar. But converting it to luxury apartments, reminiscent of the era the building was constructed, took serious bucks. Bucks his board of directors, now headed by his father, would never authorize.
  He'd worked out a way he could do it, though, a way to skip past any potential stonewalling by the board, and had liquidated everything he owned - his house, his stock in his father's company - everything, except his car and this building. He'd even temporarily moved in with his other brother, Mason, to minimize his expenses. But without the buffer of more funds his dream would be out of the running before he could even begin.
Declan rued, not for the first time, how easily he'd let his father take control of the board of directors when Renata died. How, in his grief, he'd let Tony Knight capitalize on his situation and take the seat of power for the one thing Declan had left that still meant anything. The old man had called most of the shots ever since. The board would never sanction taking on a loan the size he needed to make this job work.
  But he had to make it work. He just had to. Somehow he'd get his hands on the money to make this dream come alive. After that, he'd resume control of his own company. It was all that mattered anymore, that and ensuring that he never laid himself open to being so weak that he'd lose control ever again.
  Gwen Jones snapped her cell phone shut in frustration and drummed her fingers on the steering wheel of her car. If she couldn't put a halt to her wedding proceedings she'd be out of more than the deposits, she'd be out of her home, too. It had been Steve's idea to mortgage her house, and she'd reluctantly agreed, on the condition they only draw down sufficient funds to cover the wedding and some additional renovation costs on the late-nineteenth-century villa. But now he'd drawn down the lot and skipped the country. She'd never be able to cover the repayments on her own and she'd be forced to sell the only true home she'd ever known.
  How could he do this to her?
  Gwen flipped the phone open again and stabbed at the numbers, silently willing her maid-of-honor and hostess for tonight's celebrations, Libby, to be off the line. But for the sixth time in a row she went straight to Libby's answer phone, and there was no point in leaving another, even more frantic, message. Worse, there was no one answering at Cavaliere Developments. Even the cell number given in the message at Cavaliere rang unanswered before switching to the out-of-office auto service.
  She raked impatient fingers through her long blond hair and tried to ignore the burning sensation in her stomach. Somehow, she had to be two places at once - but which was the most important? Cancelling her pre-wedding party for the forty or so friends Steve had said they couldn't afford to invite to the wedding, and which was due to start within the hour, or telling Declan Knight that his finance manager, her fiancé, had just fled the country after clearing out Cavaliere Developments' bank account along with her own?
  There was no contest. As much as she dreaded facing him, she had to tell Declan.
  She shifted gear and crawled another half meter forward, cursing once more Auckland's southern motorway gridlock that held her helpless in its grip, and tried to console herself the Penrose exit was only a short distance away.
  By the time she pulled her station wagon up at the kerb outside Cavaliere Developments' offices the sharp burning in her stomach had intensified. She slammed her car door shut and, walking with short swift steps to the front of the building, popped an antacid from the roll in her bag.
  Declan Knight hated her already, but when he heard what Steve had done... They didn't still shoot the messenger, did they? Her stomach gave a vicious twist, wrenching a small gasp of pain from her throat. She had to pull herself together.
  The sparsely designed single-storey building, so typical of houses built in New Zealand during the late twenties, loomed in front of her. The old front lawn had been converted into car parks, but some of the gardens had been kept and edged the front of the building. Standard roses and gardenias scented the summer evening air.
  She forced one foot in front of the other until she reached the entrance and dragged a steadying breath deep into her lungs before pushing open the front door to the reception area.
  "Hello?" She waited, one hand clutching the straps of her bag while the other settled against her stomach as if doing so could calm the galloping herd of Kaimanawa wild horses that pranced there.
  Nothing.
  He had to be here. His distinctive classic Jag was still parked in the driveway that ran down the side of the house. Steve had just about bent her ear off covetously extolling the virtues of the black 1949 XK120. She could recite every statistic about the vehicle, from its butter-soft leather upholstery to the horsepower rating under the hood. The car was the perfect accessory for the man Declan Knight had become and the man Steve, she now knew, had envied with every bone in his body. With Declan's aura of success, devilish smile, long hair and cover-model body, he was a must on every society matron's guest list and came complete with a different woman for every day of the week.
  Quite a different guy to the one Renata had so excitedly introduced her to just over eight years ago. Quite a different guy to the one who, blinded by grief, had reached for her in the awful dark days after Renata's death, and then, with the lingering scent of their passion still in the air, had accused her of seducing him. He had cut her as effectively from his life as a surgeon removes a cancerous growth.
  Her mouth flooded with bitterness at the memory. She swallowed against the sour taste and resolutely pushed the past aside. Their actions had been a complete betrayal of Renata's memory. Thinking about it sure wouldn't help now. The only thing she could do was fulfil the promise she'd made as Renata sliced through the rope that threatened to pull them both to their deaths - to look out for Declan where she'd failed to do so for her dead friend.
  Gwen looked around the empty reception area. For a Friday it was unnaturally quiet, but, of course, instead of hanging back for an end-of-week drink, everyone was on their way to her party. Everyone except the groom. She had to get through this as quickly as possible and then let Libby know the wedding was off. Oh, Lord, today was a total nightmare with no respite within her grasp.
  She popped another antacid and her heart skittered in her chest. Maybe she'd even missed Declan altogether - he could've taken a ride with someone else. No, not with the front door still unlocked, she rationalized.
  Focus, she admonished herself, you can't afford the luxury of falling apart now. Gwen gripped the handle of her bag and strode through the front reception and down the hallway that led to the private offices. She hesitated as she reached the office Steve had used. At the lightest touch the door swung open.
  It looked so normal inside. No clue to show that the man who'd worked here until lunchtime today had been on the verge of fleeing the country, his job and his fiancée. She pulled the door shut behind her, wishing she could as effectively close the door on her troubles. She wouldn't find the help she needed here.
  Somewhere at the back of the house she heard a faucet snap closed.
  "Hello? Is anyone here?" she called out.
  As she reached the end of the hallway an erratic squeaking penetrated the air, as if someone was wiping a cloudy mirror with his hand. She laid her ear against the nearest door. The noise peppered the silence again with its staccato screech, setting her teeth on edge. She hesitated, her hand resting against the painted surface of the door. Should she knock?
  Suddenly the door swung inwards, pulling her off balance. Wham! She crashed face first against a bare wall of male torso. She dropped her handbag in shock and her hands flung upwards to rest against a bare chest. Her senses filled with the aroma of lightly spiced, warm, damp skin, dizzying her with its subtle assault. Of their own accord, her eyes fastened to the slow rise and fall of the broad, tanned expanse of skin in front of her. To the flat brown nipples that suddenly contracted beneath her gaze.
  Declan Knight. She remembered the taste of him as if it were yesterday.



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Copyright © 2006-2008 by Yvonne Lindsay. All rights reserved.
Cover art copyright © by Harlequin Enterprises Limited
Excerpts from: The Boss's Christmas Seduction, The CEO's Contract Bride, The Tycoon's Hidden Heir by Yvonne Lindsay
Copyright (c) 2006-2007 by Dolce Vita Trust
Permission to reproduce text granted by Harlequin Books S.A. All rights reserved.
® and ™ are trademarks of Harlequin Enterprises Limited and/or its affiliated companies, used under license. Trademarks marked with a ® are registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office, the Canadian Intellectual Property Office and/or other countries.

 
 
THE TYCOON'S HIDDEN HEIR

  “It’s quite simple, Helena. If you don’t assign control of Brody’s half-share of the business to me
within the next thirty days I will take every step to ensure the world knows exactly how you and
my father met. Let’s see how your precious son copes at that exclusive boarding school of his
once everyone knows that juicy tidbit.”
  He knew? How on earth had he found out? Helena’s stomach lurched. Despite how careful
she’d been to conceal her past, it was something she’d known could come out of the woodwork
any time in the last twelve years. That it should be from Patrick’s eldest son, Evan, shouldn’t
have come as a surprise.
  Her heart ached for Brody. He had only just settled back at boarding school and had been
troubled since Patrick’s sudden death - easily upset and reluctant to leave her. Understandable,
all of it, of course. She was already worried about how he’d cope at school during this difficult period of adjustment. If Evan spread his poisonous secret Brody’s life would become a living hell. She would not let that happen.
  But what on earth was she to do? Already entrenched in the company as Marketing Director, from the day of Patrick’s fatal heart attack, Evan had exerted his power as new part owner of Davies Freight and taken over Patrick’s chair and the decision making processes that fell to the Managing Director. She’d been unable to stop him, and with the demands of dealing with Brody’s grief, not to mention her own, she hadn’t had the energy left to fight back in the boardroom. She’d finally returned to the office this week where it hadn’t taken long to discover Evan had completely taken over.
  Evan had never appreciated or understood his father’s love of the cut and thrust of the industry, or his cautious plans for expansion. No, all he saw was an easy ticket to maintain his plush lifestyle and the quickest way to get rid of her. Of course, on paper, he could be seen to have gone through the motions - pitching new contracts, renewing old ones - but deeper analysis had shown the truth. If Evan was permitted to keep on his current path the business would be bankrupt within a year.
  She’d grown up having to scrape together every penny. There was no way she would let that happen to her son.
  A look of scorn slid across her step-son’s face making it patently clear that no matter how coldly polite he’d been to her while his father was alive; the gloves were most definitely off now. Helena’s fingernails bit into her palms as she struggled not to whack him hard across his smug features. No doubt he hoped she’d do exactly that. With his connections, he could press assault charges and see her son removed from her care. Then he could do whatever he wanted with Brody’s share of the company. Yeah, he’d like that all right, but it sure wouldn’t happen this side of hell freezing over. Not while she still had breath in her body.
  What scared her most was if Evan discovered the full truth he’d delight in ripping his much younger half-brother to shreds. With the resources he had at his disposal she knew he’d have people digging for dirt on her - the fact he’d found out how she and Patrick had met was just one example of how far he was prepared to go to find anything to discredit her and help him reach his avaricious goal. She had to protect her son, no matter what, and at the same time to somehow find the courage to honour Patrick’s last wishes to the letter.
  Helena swallowed back the tears that threatened. When she’d met Patrick she’d been prepared to accept his help in return for her companionship in marriage. She’d never dreamed she would learn to love him. She missed her husband more than she could ever have imagined - his steady hand on the tiller of their world, his gentle encouragement to strive for her dreams, his unadulterated enjoyment in the child born within the first year of their marriage. He’d always boasted Brody had made him young again. Not young enough, unfortunately, to see the fast-growing boy much past eleven years old.
  “So?” Evan’s sneer jerked her back to cold harsh reality. “What do you say?”
  “I can’t answer you now, Evan. It’s too soon.”
  “Don’t underestimate me, Helena. You and the brat are just a blip on my radar. I’ll leave now, but remember I will have what’s my due - one way or another.”
  Helena couldn’t bring herself to rise from her chair to even see him from her home, couldn’t trust herself not to resort to the old Helena and to fly at him, giving vent to her rage. No, if there was one thing she’d learned the hard way in the past twelve years it was to think first, act second. Evan knew the way out; she only wished he’d stay there.
  The hollow echo of the front door resounded through the house and the tension slowly ebbed from her shoulders. God, she’d thought she was tough but it would take more than tough to see her through this. It would take a miracle. She drew in a deep breath and rose from the chair. There was work to be done, and plenty of it. First, she had to arrange an appointment - one she’d been dreading. She couldn’t ignore Patrick’s final instructions any longer.
  Her heart twisted with regret that her sweet, generous husband had understood the reality of his eldest son’s true nature, that he’d known that this situation would come to pass.
  Half an hour later Helena let the telephone receiver fall back haphazardly into its cradle. Mason Knight was nigh on impossible to track down. She couldn’t give up though, he was the one man Patrick had said would be able to help her, the one man he’d insisted she ask and, coincidentally, the last man on earth she wanted to seek out for help.
  The secretary at his office had said he was out of Auckland and refused to give any further information, but Patrick had mentioned something about a holiday home on the Coromandel that Mason used as his bolt hole when he needed to escape the city. She’d lay odds on him being there so that’s where she had to go.
  A warning trickle of dread ran down her spine and for a moment Helena questioned whether she was doing the right thing. As intimately as they’d known one another that one and only time, the man was a virtual stranger. How would he react when she turned up on his doorstep and asked for help? Over the years he’d made it perfectly clear to her how much he detested her, and had avoided seeing Patrick when she too would be there.
  Could she stand it if he slammed the door in her face and left her to deal with Evan on her own? And what of Brody?
  There was only one thing for it. She had to get to the isolated Coromandel Peninsula address she’d found in Patrick’s rolodex. For a minute she rued the fact that Mason Knight couldn’t have built his mini-palace somewhere like Pauanui, a popular playground for New Zealand’s wealthy and somewhere she was familiar with. But it was probably best not to have any chance of being recognized in his presence. It wouldn’t take much mental arithmetic before tongues would start to wag and minds to speculate. She couldn’t do that to Brody, no matter what.
* * *
  Mason looked through the wall of floor-length glass that faced out to the ocean and drank in the wild beauty of the scene. He loved this place and not just because it was his own personal testament to the first million he’d ever made. He’d never grow tired of the sight of the native bush, as it hugged the hillside on its gentle drop towards the sea, or the sea’s ever changing mood. It’d been too long since he’d come here to recharge.
  When he woken at five a.m., his mind still fogged with sleep, he’d known it was time to clear his diary and get away from the city, and all its demands, for the weekend. Okay, so it had taken some juggling, and a few extra grey hairs for his secretary, but he’d walked out of the office at two-thirty this afternoon without a backward glance. Now the weekend stretched before him, gloriously empty. His to do with whatever the hell he wanted.
  He lifted a glass of red wine in a silent toast to the view then put it to his lips and relished the flavor of his favorite merlot - an indulgence he saved only for these stolen weekends here at his hideaway. His mouth twisted into a wry smile. Of course, Patrick had always teased him that the only thing to make a runaway weekend perfect was spending it in the company of a special person. But Mason had no such special person in his life. He had neither the time, nor the inclination to weed through the gold diggers, the publicity seekers, the schemers.
  Realistically, of course, he knew that not all women were like that - his sisters-in-law being perfect examples and hell bent on putting what they believed were suitable marriageable candidates across his path. What was it about happily married people that made them want to see everyone in the same state, he wondered. It was like an epidemic over the past couple of years. His eyes rested briefly on the snapshot of his growing extended family taken at their last gathering. Who would’ve thought he’d be an uncle twice over by now?
  Marriage. His lip curled slightly at the thought. While his brothers, Declan and Connor didn’t seem to have any complaints it certainly wasn’t a state he was in any hurry to embrace. What he enjoyed now was the company of suitable escorts from his personal list. Sophisticated women who made no emotional demands on him at all. Cut and dried - just the way he liked it.
  Mason strolled across the room to flip the light switch. It grew dark early this time of year. The wind was coming up. Good. He loved a howling winter storm. Nothing like it to blow the cobwebs from your mind and re-energize your soul. He had everything here he needed, and if the power went out, so be it. Nothing would mar the perfection of his all-too-infrequent time away from work, alone.
  Buzz, buzz!
  Mason froze. Nothing but the intrusion of an uninvited guest, he thought, as the gate intercom’s strident warning bounced about the high raftered ceiling. Who the hell could it be? He hadn’t even told his secretary where he was headed when he walked out the office door. Sure, his brothers or his dad would figure this was where he’d come if they tried to contact him at home, but they would respect his privacy. One thing was for sure; whoever was at the gate wasn’t welcome.
Buzz, buzz, buzzzzzzzzz!
  With a muttered expletive Mason put his glass of wine down on the heavy pine coffee table and walked over to the intercom console on the far side of the room. He leaned one forearm against the wall and depressed the ‘talk’ button with a dangling finger.
  “Yeah, what?” he snarled into the speaker.
  “Mason? Mason Knight?”
  His skin chilled as he recognized the husky lilt of the woman’s voice. How the hell had she tracked him here and, more importantly, why?
  “Can we talk? I really need to see you.”
  “We have nothing to talk about, Mrs Davies.”
  “Don’t switch off. It’s important, or you know I wouldn’t be here. Mason? Please?”
  Oh yeah, she injected just the right amount of pathos into her tone. Any other man would leap to her aid. Any other man but him. But then not everyone knew what a little schemer Helena Davies was, or how little she’d valued her wedding vows. He’d often wondered just how many times she’d cuckolded Patrick since that night and the thought still made his blood boil.
  “It’s for Patrick. Just give me five minutes,” she finished.
  Mason’s heart gave a twist. Patrick Davies, the one man he’d admired unreservedly - until he’d married Helena. He warred with his desire to switch off the intercom, go out onto the deck and be buffeted by the rising wind and pretend he’d never begun this conversation. But despite Patrick’s appalling taste in wives, he owed it to both the man and his memory to hear her out.
  “Five minutes only. Come on up.”
  He hit the button to unlock the gate then strode through the house to the front door and threw it open to wait for her arrival. She didn’t take long. He could hear the strain of the car’s motor as the transmission dropped to a lower gear to climb the steep, unsealed private road. His whole body tensed as the taxi drove onto the flagstone covered apron outside the house.
  Taxi? He stifled a groan. Only Helena Davies would bring a taxi for the two and a half hour drive from Auckland to this spot on the Coromandel. The woman threw money around like there was an unending supply. He watched as she handed a fistful of hundred dollar notes to the driver then alighted from the vehicle. His stomach tensed. She still looked good, he noted bitterly, although a bit paler and a bit thinner than the last time he’d seen her. In the dark emerald colored suit, buttoned just high enough to expose a hint of perfect creamy breast, and with her brown-red hair tightly twisted to the back of her head, she played the grieving widow well.
  “A taxi, Helena?”
   “And what’s wrong with that? I’ve recompensed him, and then some.” Her glittering green eyes met his gaze and clashed. Every nerve in his body went on full alert.
  “Just seems a bit extravagant, don’t you think? Especially when you can drive any one of Patrick’s cars yourself.”
  “I don’t drive anymore. Not since… Well, anyway, I never got my confidence back behind the wheel.” Her eyes drifted away from his face and fixed on a spot somewhere behind him.
  Acid burned low in his belly. Like he needed the reminder of that night right now.
  The taxi driver swung through the circular turning bay at the front of the house and disappeared back down the drive. What?
  “Hey, where’s he going?”
  “Back to Auckland.” Helena’s voice held an underlying thread of steel.
  The tightness in his gut ratcheted up another notch as, in a few graceful steps, she closed the distance between them. Her perfume reached out to tantalize his nostrils - a bit sweet, a bit spice. His body stirred with unwelcome interest. He hated that she could still do that to him.
  “You said five minutes.” He bit the words out as if he’d chipped them from stone.
  “I lied.”


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