Название | Heading For Trouble! |
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Автор произведения | Linda Miles |
Жанр | Современные любовные романы |
Серия | |
Издательство | Современные любовные романы |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn |
Morgan settled herself inside the enormous, exarticulated-lorry tyre, which she’d taken from the scrapyard just in case as being a better size for an adult. Pressing her elbows close to her sides, she gripped the inner rims of the tyre with her hands and took careful aim for the sand-hill. She gave a shove with her feet, tucking them quickly together as the tyre rolled forward. And she was off.
The tyre raced down the slope, turning over and over and over. Morgan’s head swam as the world inside swept by in a revolving blur. There was a dull thud as the tyre struck the foot of the sand-hill; any second now it would keel over as it ran out of steam. But it didn’t seem to be losing much speed.
The tyre rolled forward another foot or so, hesitated, and then began to roll down the other shoulder of the mound.
And now everything seemed to happen very fast. The tyre trundled briskly down the lane used by trucks for dumping sand, miraculously avoiding the ruts and potholes which might have stopped it. The gate at the end of the lane was open; the tyre cleared the crossroads at a single bound. It plunged, with stomach-churning abruptness, down the next slope, descended a pitted, rocky stream bed in a series of sharp, jarring bounces, soared over a drainage ditch at the foot of the hill and swept across the main road.
There was a scream of brakes.
The tyre took one final bound and came to rest in the marshy, rain-sodden ground below the road.
There was a blessed absence of motion. There was silence. And then there was the sound of a car door opening, and footsteps. Morgan extracted herself slowly, unsteadily from the tyre.
‘Just what the hell did you think you were doing?’ It was a man’s voice, oddly familiar.
Morgan was now standing up to her calves in oozy mud—the same mud that was, she discovered, liberally plastered over the sarong, leotard and what she could see of her plait. She squelched forward, while the ground swayed and dipped and threw her to her knees in the mire.
‘Are you all right?’ he asked belatedly.
Morgan staggered to her feet again. She fixed her eyes on the stranger. Was it a stranger? The face was familiar. Sardonic, black-browed...
Morgan’s head began to swim again. A voice inside it was saying, You idiot, you idiot, you idiot. Who else but fan-plagued Richard Kavanagh himself would want to keep his presence a secret? She should have known who Elaine’s mystery guest would be—and, if she had, wild horses could not have dragged her where he might remember the last time they’d met.
Morgan didn’t dare look at the car, where Elaine was no doubt waiting in icy rage. She looked down at the sarong; to say it looked like an old teatowel would have been to pay it a brass-faced compliment. She brushed ineffectually at a large clod of mud and grass, smearing it down the long line of her hip. What on earth was she going to do?
‘Are you all right?’ he repeated, adding, ‘You bloody fool,’ not so sotto voce for good measure. No, there was no mistaking him. Prudence might have suggested keeping her eyes down, giving him no chance to look her full in the face. Morgan raised her swimming head.
‘Richard Kavanagh, I presume?’ she said sarcastically, looking him straight in the eye. And she wondered dazedly what had hit her.
For the past three years she’d been shouting objections at the handsome, arrogant face whenever it had appeared on the screen; familiarity should long ago have robbed it of the power to surprise her. The black slash of brow, the eyes like burnished steel, the imperious, high-bridged nose and cynical mouth—features as much his trademark as the savage irony of his questions—were an undeniably potent combination, but she should have been used to them by now, for heaven’s sake. She’d seen them probably hundreds of times—not exactly blind to their appeal, of course, but amused because they were so obvious.
Well, she wasn’t laughing now. In the split second when their eyes met, the air between them seemed to crackle with electricity; she should have dragged her eyes away, but they seemed to have a will of their own. It was suddenly hard to breathe. And for what seemed an eternity but could only have been the space of a heartbeat she stared, enthralled, at the dark, piratical face gazing down at her.
In that instant of breathless concentration she was attuned to even his slightest change of expression—to the faint frown which greeted her cheeky remark, the sudden glitter when the brilliant eyes registered unerringly that swift spark of attraction.
Morgan could have sworn that she cared nothing for what Richard Kavanagh might think of her, but at his look of cold contempt she flinched violently—and struggled again for balance. And now the ill-used sarong seemed to feel that it had had enough; its knot parted, and it slid from her hips, down her long legs and into the mud, leaving a trail of slime in its wake.
The leotard covered rather more of her anatomy than the average swimsuit, but the look in Kavanagh’s eyes made her feel as if she had stripped to the skin. She bent instinctively to retrieve the cloth from the mud.
The sudden movement was too much for her reeling head. Morgan swayed wildly from side to side, and at last fell headlong into his arms.
For an instant the world stopped pitching and heaving as she came to rest against a body which seemed to be all muscle. She was aware again, fleetingly, of that strange, uncomfortable breathlessness. And then her head began to swim again as Richard Kavanagh deliberately disengaged the hands which clutched at him. Hands like iron bands clasped her wrists and held her at arm’s length. And as he steadied her the world came into focus again and Morgan stared at him in blank dismay.
On setting out for a weekend in the country, Richard Kavanagh had, she realised, done what most civilised adults would have done. He had changed before he’d left London so as to be presentable when he arrived. Specifically he had changed into a charcoal-grey linen jacket, grey trousers, a dark blue shirt and painted red silk tie—all of which were now streaked with mud and a green slime which clashed horribly with the colour scheme.
If she was honest she didn’t give a brass farthing for the inconvenience to Mr Richard Kavanagh, but what on earth would Elaine say when she saw him?
‘Oh, Mr Kavanagh, I’m terribly sorry!’ she gasped. ‘But I’m sure it will come out. If you’ll let me have them I’ll be happy to have them cleaned.’
‘Oh, for God’s sake!’ In his exasperation he swung his arms wide, then in even greater exasperation caught hold of her again as she tilted sideways. ‘It’s very kind of you,’ he said with withering sarcasm, ‘but I’m actually rather attached to them. I didn’t bargain on handing out souvenirs to the natives, so I’m afraid I only packed for one.’
Morgan stared at him uncomprehendingly. While she tried to gather her wits he proceeded to favour her with a trenchant condemnation of her manners, morals and intelligence with impressive fluency, not to mention a colourful vocabulary unrestrained by the decencies of the screen. After what seemed an hour, but could only have been a few minutes, he brought himself under control.
‘I’m delighted that you like the programme,’ he said very softly. He had stopped shouting, and there was somehow something even more unnerving in the sheer effort that went into confining himself to this silky, ironic tone. ‘But I’m afraid that doesn’t make me your personal property; and it certainly doesn’t give you the right to endanger the lives of anyone who has the bad luck to be on the roads.
‘Just out of curiosity I’d be interested to know exactly what you expected to get out of this ridiculous exhibition. Was I supposed to oblige you behind the nearest bush?’ The grey eyes flickered over her in bored dismissal. ‘Or were you just hoping I’d autograph the tyre?’
Morgan stared at him, open-mouthed. Of all the arrogant, conceited, self-satisfied... ‘You think I’m one of your fans?’ she said incredulously.
The cynical gaze showed not a flicker of self-doubt. ‘Oh, were you hoping to break into television? I think you’ve picked the wrong industry, you know; perhaps you should think of Hollywood.’ He paused, with the impeccable timing which