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Authors: Rochelle Alers

Hideaway

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Hideaway

ROCHELLE

ALERS

NATIONAL BESTSELLING AUTHOR

A Hideaway Novel

Hideaway

© 1995 by Rochelle Alers

All rights reserved. The reproduction, transmission or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including xerography, photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, is forbidden without written permission. For permission please contact Kimani Press, Editorial Office, 233 Broadway, New York, NY 10279 U.S.A.

 

 

IN LOVING MEMORY OF MY
FLORIDA ANCESTORS…

The Jameses and the McLearys—
for their pride and determination

and

Marie Tuggle—
for her beauty and her strength

 

The wicked bring on themselves the suffering
they try to cause good people.


Proverbs
21:18

Contents
 

Copyright

Prologue

PART ONE

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

PART TWO

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Epilogue

Prologue
 

“Y
es, Joan?” Martin Cole asked when he heard his secretary’s voice on the intercom.

“Mr. Kirkland is here to see you,” Joan informed her boss in her usual competent manner, “and, Martin, I want to remind you that you have a luncheon appointment with your father at twelve-thirty.”

Martin, rising to his feet, laid aside the file he had been studying. “Send Mr. Kirkland in. Then call my father and let him know I’ll be late. Tell him to have a drink on me, but wait to order lunch.”

A smile creased Martin’s face the moment Joshua Kirkland stepped into his office. Joshua’s deeply tanned skin, shimmering pale green eyes and grim expression went unnoticed as Martin spied the large envelope under his friend’s arm. He extended his hand. “Welcome back. How did it go?”

Joshua shifted the envelope to shake Martin’s hand. “Well enough, but I could use a drink right now.”

Martin nodded although the last thing he wanted was to turn this meeting into a social drinking session. He’d been waiting two weeks for the information he was certain Joshua had gathered for him.

“Brandy or scotch?” Martin asked, moving over to a credenza
stocked with the finest imported wines and liqueurs. He glanced over his shoulder at the tall, slender man now seated on a leather chair beside his desk.

“Scotch, straight up,” Joshua replied.

Martin poured a double shot of premium aged scotch into a glass, then prepared a splash of brandy for himself. His footsteps were muffled on the thick carpeting in the spacious sun-filled office which towered above West Palm Beach’s populous and traffic. Florida was enjoying its warmest winter season in years.

Joshua took the glass, raising it in a salute before draining its contents quickly. He stared at the prisms of light in the multifaceted glass for several seconds. His transparent gaze shifted to Martin’s arresting face, his stoic expression unchanged.

“Have your drink first, then take a look at this.” He handed Martin the envelope.

Martin tossed off the brandy, grimacing as a burning sensation exploded in his chest. He ran a finger under the flap of the envelope, spilling its contents out on the desk.

The natural color drained from Martin’s dark face, leaving it a sickly, sallow, yellowish shade. He closed his eyes, but the images on the black and white photographs littering his desk continued to attack him. He could see Parris Simmons’s haunting face, and that of a young child. It had only taken a glance to know who the child was.

“I take it you didn’t know about the child?”

Sagging weakly to a chair, hands gripping the armrests for support, Martin felt weak. How could he feel hot and cold at the same time?

“Martin? Are you all right?” came Joshua’s voice when he didn’t respond.

“Josh,” Martin finally whispered. His voice came out ragged, weak. His hands were shaking, but there wasn’t anything he could do to stop them as he picked up the photos.

“Where is she?”

“Parris lives in New York. Westchester County to be precise.”

“Is she married?”

Joshua let out his breath slowly, noting the return of healthy color to Martin’s face. “You asked me to locate Parris Simmons and I did.”

Despite his shock, Martin smiled. Joshua Kirkland only did what he was ordered to do. No more, no less. There were times when he believed the man was a machine. In the seventeen years he had come to know him, he never saw an outward display of emotion. It was as if there was no room in Joshua’s life for love, laughter, or even anger.

“Give me some more background information on the lady, Martin, and I’ll let you know what I’ve come up with.”

Martin leaned over and pushed a button on the intercom. “Joan, hold all my calls, and cancel my appointment with my father. I’m unavailable for the remainder of the afternoon.”

“What about the Jeffries meeting?” the secretary questioned.

“Cancel it!” His tone had taken on the sharp edge Joan rarely heard. She did not argue with him.

Martin could not pull his gaze away from the photographs. Memories came rushing back to open wounds he’d allowed to heal with time. His head came up slowly, and he found Joshua watching him and waiting for him to speak. Martin didn’t know how to begin to tell him about the woman who once held his fate within her hands, but decided he’d start at the beginning. That way it would be easier.

“I met Parris at an engagement dinner party ten years ago…”

Chapter 1
 

M
artin Diaz Cole was thoroughly bored; bored with the people gathered in a private room at a Palm Beach restaurant, bored with the woman standing by his side and bored with her incessant nonsensical chatter.

“Will you please be a darling and get me another glass of white wine, Martin,” the petite brunette crooned, her tiny hand thrusting an empty wineglass at him.

Ignoring her request and the outstretched glass, Martin’s attention was momentarily diverted. His dark eyes were fixed on a woman who appeared to float into the room.

His gaze took in everything about her in one quick penetrating glance. This woman, this stranger, and a stranger she was because he knew every one of the guests Jon Grant and Brittany Alexander had invited to their engagement party.

She was tall, at least five-eight, and incredibly slender. The off-the-shoulder white dress ended several inches below her long shapely legs, clinging to and outlining the curve of her full breasts, narrow waist and slim hips.

Staring at her, Martin experienced an emotion he hadn’t felt in years: lust. No, he thought, it was more like a craving. He saw something he wanted, and there weren’t too many things he wanted that he did not get.

“Martin,” the brunette wailed, her lovely features distorted in distress as she noted the direction of his attention.

“Excuse me, Sonia,” he apologized softly, making his way across the room, leaving a pouting Sonia to find another fawning male to do her bidding. He watched as Brittany hugged the woman before pulling back and showing her the diamond ring on her finger.

His own hands were thrust into the pockets of his black linen slacks as he waited patiently for Brittany to notice him. Brittany glanced his way and he smiled at her.

Brittany tossed back a head of naturally waving ash-blond hair, gesturing. “Martin, please come meet a friend of mine. Parris and I were roommates at college. Parris Simmons, Martin Cole. Martin’s Jon’s best man,” she said to Parris, not pausing to take a breath.

Stepping closer to Parris, Martin stared down at her upturned face. Her golden-brown skin was deeply tanned from the Florida summer sun and radiated a natural glow of good health which did not come from makeup. Her chemically-straightened dark shiny hair was styled in a flattering shag-cut feathering around her face and neck. Naturally arching eyebrows and thick long black lashes framed a pair of eyes that were a clear brown with just a hint of dark green in their mysterious depths. Her nose was short and rounded at the tip and her mouth was full, temptingly curved, and Martin found Parris to be the most beautiful woman he’d ever met.

Extending a slender hand, Parris gave him a tight smile. “It’s nice meeting you, Martin.”

It took several seconds before he reacted to her polite greeting. The low husky timbre of her voice was not what he had expected from her. The dulcet throaty tones were like a fog, cloaking and enveloping in a sensual web of raw seduction.

He grasped her hand, holding it firmly before releasing her fingers. “The pleasure is all mine,” he replied, finding his own voice.

“You’ll get a chance to talk to Parris later, Martin,” Brittany promised. “I want to introduce her to Jon.”

Martin nodded, staring at Parris as she walked away with Brittany. He spent the next twenty minutes chatting with some of the other guests until he garnered Brittany’s attention again.

“I want you to seat me next to Parris,” he said quietly.

Brittany’s pale gray eyes widened with his request. “No, Martin.”

“Why not?” he countered.

“She’s not like that.”

“Not like what, Brittany?”

She exhaled audibly. How could she explain to her fiancé’s best friend that Parris Simmons was not like the women Martin Cole usually dated.

“She’s different,” she explained, a need to protect her friend surfacing. “She’s not like the women you men pass around whenever you tire of her.”

Martin’s face darkened under his deeply browned olive complexion. Running a hand through the thick curling black hair falling to his shoulders, he glanced down at the highly polished toes of his imported slip-ons and smiled.

“I don’t want to sleep with her Brittany,” he replied softly. “I just want you to make certain we’re seated together when we sit down to eat.”

Brittany stared at the man whose devastatingly dimpled smile was hypnotic. She was always astounded by Martin’s masculine beauty. His African-American-Cuban ancestry had afford him exquisite dark-brown coloring, large dark eyes, sweeping black eyebrows, high cheekbones, a thin delicate nose and a full sensual mouth which made him almost too beautiful for a man. He had it all—looks and money.

“You’re not lying to me, are you?” she asked him.

Twin dimples creased the lean tanned cheeks of the man with the curly black hair and winning smile. “No.”

She didn’t understand him. Martin usually had women fighting one another for his attention. At twenty-nine he was one of the most sought-after bachelors along Florida’s Gold Coast. Women usually chased Martin Diaz Cole, not the other way around.

“Okay,” she conceded. “But if you try …”

“You worry too much,” Martin interrupted. “I’ll take good care of her.”

He spent the remainder of the cocktail hour totally entranced by Parris Simmons. He watched her as she smiled and flirted with many of the single men who appeared as equally entranced as he. He ignored all that was going on around him, studying the woman who had cast a spell over him without her being aware of it.

Everyone filed into an adjoining room at the restaurant as waiters announced that seating was prearranged and directed each guest to their assigned table.

Parris searched her table, locating her name on a place card and a large dark-brown hand pulled out a chair for her. She glanced up to find Martin Cole standing beside her.

“Miss Simmons,” he said, his mellifluent voice soft and caressing, as he offered to seat her.

“Thank you,” she replied shyly, permitting him to seat her. He sat down next to her and she sucked in a lungful of air. Being in Martin’s presence was like his walking into a room and using up all of the oxygen from the other occupants. He left her gasping and feeling lightheaded.

She had read about Martin and occasionally heard his name mentioned by several of the interior designers she worked with, but he had been just that—a name. This tall man looming over her by more than half a foot was intoxicating.

She remembered an article branding him as “the brash, young Rupert Murdoch of the Caribbean.” He had acquired large tracts of land throughout the Caribbean the way Rupert Murdoch acquired newspapers and television networks.

Martin’s business acumen had netted his family holdings untold wealth and power while the Cole name had become synonymous with the importation of tropical produce, private villas and vacation resorts throughout Central America and the Caribbean.

Business Week, Money
and
Forbes
magazines had all reported the meteoric rise of the Cole influence in the world of Latin American finance. The articles noted that Martin had inherited
his business expertise from his Cuban-born maternal grandfather who once owned the largest cigar-producing plantation in pre-revolutionary Cuba, and his own father. Samuel Claridge Cole was the great-great-great-grandson of African-American slaves, who after the Civil War went into business cultivating the crop that their disenfranchised ancestors grew and picked: cotton. The cotton crop gave way to peanuts and finally to soybeans.

After taking a surreptitious glance at Parris’s profile, Martin stared at her ringless fingers. “Are you also into art?” he asked, initiating conversation. She arched a questioning eyebrow. “Brittany said the two of you were college roommates,” he reminded her. If she went to college with Brittany, then that meant they were about the same age—twenty-two or twenty-three, he calculated quickly.

“No, I’m an interior decorator.” Both she and Brittany had attended the Savannah College of Art and Design. Brittany majored in art history while she studied design.

“And I know what you do,” she said, watching a flush darken his face.

He arched his sweeping black eyebrows. “And just what is it I do, Parris?” There was a slight rolling of the double r’s in her name when he said it.

Her hazel-colored gaze was fixed on his mouth. “You’re…” She hesitated, hoping to come up with an appropriate description of his business activities. Calling him a corporate raider or shark was a compliment.

He leaned closer. “I’m a what?”

“An oppressor of human beings,” she said instead.

He laughed softly. “I’m a businessman, Parris. Everything I do is legal and ethical.”

“You own plantations. Your companies make slaves of people because they’re only paid pennies a day.”

His large eyes widened until she could see their black depths. “The companies my family owns pay adequate wages.”

“Slave wages?”

“It appears as if you’ve been misinformed, or perhaps you’d
like to subsidize their
pennies
.” A hint of a smile touched his mobile mouth. “I think we should talk about this later, and…”

“I won’t be around later,” she cut in. “I’m only here for the dinner.”

Martin felt his pulse quicken. “You don’t live here?”

Parris almost laughed at his startled expression and she gave him what she called her best “kool-aid grin.” It was apparent Martin Cole was used to having women at his beck and call.

“No.” What she didn’t tell him was that she didn’t live in Palm Beach, but in neighboring West Palm Beach.

She turned her attention to the man on her right, giving him a sensual smile while Martin’s dark eyes gleamed like glassy volcanic rock.

He listened to the haunting sound of her low voice as she conversed with the other man. He saw Brittany smile at him from another table across the room.

Brittany was surprised when he didn’t return her smile but she did register frustration on his handsome face. It was apparent his charm had been lost on Parris. There was no way she could reveal to him that the last thing Parris wanted was to become involved with a man—even if that man was the enviable Martin Diaz Cole.

Several courses were served before Martin solicited Parris’s attention again. He pointed to the full glass of wine at her place setting. “You don’t drink.” His query sounded more like a statement than a question.

She turned and stared at him. “Not very much.”

“You should at least try it. It happens to be an excellent vintage.”

“I’ll pass on the wine tonight.”

Leaning closer, he pressed his shoulder to hers, the fragrance of her scented body lingering in his nostrils. “Are you always this charming?” he whispered.

He registered her slight intake of breath and the rapidly beating pulse in her throat. He had gotten a response from her.

Parris bit down on her lower lip, praying the heat in her face would subside quickly. When was she going to stop punishing
other men for her ex-husband? she thought suddenly. Perhaps she had been too hard on Martin.

Resting her chin on her hand, she offered him a warm, open smile. “You should see me when I really turn it on,” she teased.

“Oh really?”

She nodded, lowering her lashes. “Really.”

“That should be something to see.” He hit his forehead with the heel of his hand. “I forgot. I’ll never get the opportunity to see it because you’re only here for the dinner.”

She sobered quickly. She knew she wouldn’t see Martin again until Brittany’s wedding. Brittany and Jon were to be married on September twenty-eighth, and that was four weeks away.

“I’ll see you at the wedding,” she reminded him.

He studied her face thoughtfully for a moment. “I suppose I’ll have to wait until
then
, won’t I?”

Parris saw an open invitation smoldering in the depths of his eyes, and decided to ignore it. “Yes, Martin,” she whispered.

His jaw tightened noticeably. He had to find out what it was about her that drew him to her.

Brittany was right. Parris was not like the women he usually dated. They were older and appeared much more worldly than the woman sitting next to him. And more likely than not they were the sisters, cousins, nieces, and a few of them, daughters of business associates.

“Is this your first time meeting Jon?” Martin asked.

“Yes, even though I feel as if I’ve known him as long as Brittany has. Brittany and I keep in touch by phone.”

“Where do you live?”

“West Palm Beach.”

“That’s only…”

“I know,” she cut in. “It’s only a few miles away, but I don’t have much time for visiting friends. My job takes me out of the state for at least twenty days each month.”

And when she returned home it was to a furnished studio apartment. She sold her car because it sat in her landlady’s garage
for four months without her moving it. Now, whenever she needed to go somewhere she called a car service.

“What do you decorate?”

“Corporate offices. I select everything: desks, chairs, tables, lighting and accessories.”

He registered the breathless quality of her voice and the excitement lighting up her eyes as she spoke. Like him, she enjoyed her career.

“Do you like the traveling?” he questioned.

“It depends on the place and the time of the year,” she replied honestly. “Hawaii is always nice, as is Puerto Rico. Arizona and Nevada in the summer are always brutal, but staying in the best hotels with all of the amenities makes up for it.”

Martin waited while a waiter removed their dishes before serving the next course. He was fascinated with Parris. She was different from the other women because she had talent to go along with her perfect face and body. It was the first time he discovered all three components in one woman.

“Take me, for instance,” he said, resuming their conversation. “You seem to know about my line of business. How would you decorate an executive office for me?”

“It’s not that easy.” She gave him a warm smile. “Your executive style must harmonize with the image of your company while it lets you show your individuality. It must set you off but not dominate you, reflect you but not overpower you.”

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