A Forbidden Affair. Yvonne LindsayЧитать онлайн книгу.
then there was that amazing energy between them. She deserved to find out if those sparks were real, didn’t she? Wouldn’t it be some solace for the night she’d put up with?
“Your place is fine.”
Actually, anywhere but home was fine.
“Great.” He smiled, the action sending a sizzle of anticipation thrilling through her veins.
Sore feet and the prospect of a hangover were the furthest things from her mind as Nate took her hand and led her toward the exit. And if thoughts of “danger” or “risk” occurred to her, she brushed them aside. Tonight was a night for taking chances.
And besides, what was the worst that could happen?
Two
Nate caught Raoul’s eye as he led Nicole away, giving his friend a nod. He briefly saw Raoul’s answering wink before the expression on the other man’s face changed to one of shocked recognition. Nate fought back the smug smile that pulled at his lips.
In all the years he’d spent imagining how he would bring Charles Wilson to his knees, he’d never once imagined this scenario. But then, he’d never imagined taking Charles Wilson’s daughter in his arms and feeling such a searing sense of attraction, either. With such a ripe opportunity before him, he’d be a fool not to make the most of it—in every way possible. Still, he had to be careful. It wouldn’t do to put the cart before the horse. He could just as easily be calling a taxi to take Nicole home after their drink, but something inside him told him that was very unlikely.
He reached in his pocket and pressed the remote to the low-slung silver Maserati that waited for them at the curb.
“Very pretty car,” Nicole commented as he held open the passenger door for her and she folded her delicious long legs into the passenger bay.
“I like to travel in style,” he answered with a smile.
“I like that in a man,” she answered, her lips curving in response.
He just bet she did. She’d never wanted for anything and every part of her life had been to the highest standard. It stood to reason that Nicole Wilson’s demands of her men would be high. It was a gauntlet he relished picking up.
Unlike Nicole, Nate knew what it was like to struggle—his father had been a living example of the concept for most of Nate’s childhood. After Charles Wilson had kicked him out of the business they’d built together, it had taken years for Thomas to reestablish his credibility and build a company of his own. Nate had watched as his father poured his everything into his fledgling business in an attempt to provide something, anything, to the woman he’d accidentally gotten pregnant and the son their liaison had borne. And while Thomas had done his best to shield his only child, the experience had left its mark, resulting in two rules that Nate had lived his life by ever since. Rule one: be very careful who you trust.
Rule two: all’s fair in love and war.
Nate slid into the driver’s seat and started the car, maneuvering it smoothly toward Hobson Street and the entrance to the North Western motorway.
“You’re a Westie?” Nicole asked.
“After a fashion,” he answered. “I have a couple of places. Karekare is where I call home. You still want that drink at my place?”
His challenge hung between them in the dark interior of the car. He shot her a glance and saw her press her lips together and swallow before answering.
“I’m all good. I haven’t been out to Karekare in ages.”
“It’s still pretty much the same. Wild and beautiful.”
“Like you?” she asked, her eyes gleaming as she shot him a glance.
“I was thinking more along the lines of you.”
She laughed, the sound filling the cabin of his car and making his gut tighten in anticipation.
“Oh, you’re good. You know all the right things to say to salve a wounded soul.”
“Wounded?” he probed.
“Just family stuff. Too complicated and too boring to bring up now,” she hedged.
Was all no longer well in the Wilson household? Nate wondered. He’d made it his business to know what happened within Wilson Wines and he’d heard of the return of the prodigal son. Had Judd Wilson’s arrival served to uplift the mantel of golden child off Nicole’s shoulders?
“We have a long drive,” Nate pointed out as they entered the motorway and his car picked up speed. “I’m willing to listen if you want to talk about it.”
“Just the usual,” she said with an attempt at flippancy. An attempt that failed judging by the tone of her voice.
“Sounds serious,” he commented, keeping his eyes looking forward out the windscreen.
She sighed, the sound coming from somewhere deep down inside her. “I had a fight with my dad. At the risk of sounding clichéd, he doesn’t understand me.”
“Isn’t that a parental prerogative?”
She laughed, a short, sharp sound in total contrast to the last time she’d done so. “I suppose so. I just feel so used, you know? I have spent my whole life trying to measure up, to be the best daughter, the best workmate, the best—well, everything. And he thinks I should settle down and have babies! As if. You know, I think he values a paper clip on his desk more highly than he does me. I’ve spent the past five years helping him to keep our family business thriving and he tells me it’s a nice hobby for me.”
“I suppose this argument is what led you to the club tonight?”
“Too right it is. I couldn’t stay under his roof another second. Oh, no, wait. It’s not his roof anymore, nor mine. He’s gone and given it all to my dear long-lost brother.” She expelled an angry huff of air. “I’m sorry, I’m always letting my mouth run away with me. I shouldn’t have said that. Just pretend you didn’t hear that last bit, okay? I think we should change the subject. Talking about my family is just going to spoil my mood.”
“Whatever the lady wants, the lady gets,” Nate replied smoothly, even though his curiosity burned to know more about the Wilson family home situation.
“Now that’s more like it.” Nicole laughed in response. “A girl could get used to that attitude.”
“What, you mean that isn’t always the case?”
Nicole swiveled slightly in her seat and stared at him. “You say that as if you think you know me.”
“You misunderstand me,” he said smoothly. “I just would have thought that a woman like you would have no trouble getting what she wanted.”
She gave an inelegant snort, then change the subject. “Tell me about your home. Are you overlooking the beach?”
He nodded. Partly in concession to her change of subject and partly in answer to her question. “I’m on a slight rise looking out onto Union Bay.”
“I’ve always loved the West Coast. The black sand beaches, the crazy surf. There’s something so, I dunno, untamed, unpredictable about it all.”
“You surf?”
She shook her head. “No, always been too chicken.”
Somehow she didn’t strike him as the type of woman to be afraid of anything, and he said as much.
“Some boundaries I just never pushed. I grew up as an only child with a parent who could be pretty strict. Sometimes my dad took overprotectiveness a little far.”
“Only child? You mentioned a brother?”
“He lived with our mother up until recently. And how on earth did we get back on that awful topic again?”