Rescuing Diana (17 page)

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Authors: Linda Cajio

BOOK: Rescuing Diana
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“I’ve got all the proof I need,” he said. “Since I started this, I’ll finish it. Somehow. And today.” She smiled at his defense of her, until he added, “I believe that will make us even.”

“Wait a minute, Adam,” Dan said, laying a restraining hand on his brother’s arm. “Jim will need a few days just to transfer the codes onto a disk so he can put the game on the bulletin boards.”

“Get to the point,” Adam said shortly.

Diana was all too aware of his obvious impatience to be gone, and it added to her pain and guilt.

Dan made a face. “His timetable for Diana’s payment is probably about the same as the time he needs to get the game ready for the bulletin boards.”

“Probably,” Diana agreed in disgust. “And another day or so for the worm—”

“You didn’t!” Dan said, a huge smile on his face.

Diana grinned, realizing that her one protective measure on the print-out might buy them time for whatever Dan had in mind. She turned to Adam and Angelica. “Before I printed out the program I added a little protection called a worm, a routine that makes the game destroy itself when
it’s run. When the print-out was stolen. I didn’t think about it because all anybody had to do was look at the codes and realize it was a talking adventure game. Then that idea could be stolen. But it will take Jim a while to find my worm, remove it, and get the game running properly.”

“And in the meantime,” Dan added, “you sell the distribution rights to the game. Then Jim is in a lot more trouble than just breaking and entering, which is probably the worst he can be charged with now. Hold a press conference first thing Monday and publicly announce the sale. Also announce it on all the electronic bulletin boards. Maybe even give a little preview of the game—just enough to make it instantly recognizable. No bulletin-board systems operator will accept the game anonymously then.”

“Do you still want the game?” Angelica asked him.

“Of course I still want the game.”

She held out her hand. “Give me a dollar. With the understanding that terms and further payment will be negotiated at a later date.”


Reasonable
terms and
reasonable
payment,” Dan said with a grimace, pulling out his wallet.

“Oh, we’ll be reasonable,” Angelica said sweetly as she took the dollar.

“You’ll bleed me dry,” Dan grumbled, then said in awe, “A speaking adventure game. I’ll be damned!”

Angelica held up the dollar. “We herein witness on this day the transfer of rights to Starlight Software to distribute the game in question. The contracts will be predated just to be safe, and let’s all pray we don’t have to perjure ourselves in court.”

Everyone laughed. Except Adam.

He nodded curtly at his brother and Angelica. “You two get started on whatever you have to do for this. Diana, though, is still vulnerable to a possible personal attack. I’ll be staying with her until the press conference. Then my responsibility in this is over.”

Twelve

Adam turned out the last of the living-room lights and settled on Diana’s white-and-gray-striped sofa. He sighed. This certainly wasn’t where he’d envisioned spending the first night of his weekend.

Disgusted with his thoughts, he turned his mind instead to the events of the morning. Each remembered step of Diana’s “investigation” of him only brought more pain. And he welcomed it. He had been so damn honorable with her. He had known making love with her meant commitment, and he had been more than ready for that step. He had loved her.

He still did.

He knew he should feel nothing toward her now. Underneath that innocence was a first-class schemer, who had used him. It hurt even to admit that. He thought of how he’d been toweringly angry at her believing Angelica’s accusation. But while driving back to Oakland, he’d calmed himself enough to think. He had eventually realized
how his brother’s machinations could have caused Diana’s confusion. So he’d dragged Dan back here to prove his innocence to her. And then he’d discovered the real truth.

All this time she had thought he’d been playing her for a fool, and she had deliberately played him for one. And she’d done it damn well, he acknowledged, because he felt like the world’s biggest fool right now.

There was only one disturbing question that continually found its way through his anger. Why had she made love with him the night before? Surely she hadn’t meant to go that far. Her inexperience had been obvious and genuine from the beginning. And yet she had given herself so freely and with such joy. With—

Don’t be a fool again, he ordered his heart. Of course she didn’t love him. That didn’t make any sense at all, considering the revelations of the morning. But still …

He lay down on his side, trying to get comfortable on his makeshift bed. He thought of the double bed upstairs and its beautiful single occupant, and cursed fervently. He sternly told himself that he only felt this one final responsibility to Diana. He refused to admit he hadn’t been able just to walk away this morning. Instead he reassured himself that she needed a protector one last time, and he’d only elected himself to the post since he’d been the one to first provoke Griegson.

In a way, it was the final proof of his innocence and honor, he decided, grimacing. And Diana hadn’t protested. In fact, she hadn’t said much of anything to anybody, and least of all to him. All afternoon and evening she’d been hidden away
with her computers, getting together a preview of the game for Monday’s press conference. Angelica and Dan had worked like fanatics to call the press and also settle the details of the agreement between Starlight and Diana. Adam scowled. All he’d done was revise the sketches for the hotel annex and wander around the house checking the locks. Tomorrow and Sunday didn’t look to be any different either. Still, Dan’s first telephone call had been to the magazine Griegson worked for. Word of the conference must have reached Griegson by now. Things might perk up anytime, Adam thought, smiling grimly. And he was very much looking forward to it.

Thinking again of the excellent sleeping accommodations upstairs, he groaned.

It was going to be a long weekend.

The next evening Diana sighed, and listlessly pushed at the spaghetti on her plate. Her stomach churned at the idea of actually eating.

“Are you planning to starve yourself?” Adam asked brusquely from across the small kitchen table.

She shook her head and forced herself to take a bite of the dinner he’d made. She managed to swallow, although her stomach protested violently. Adam was right, she thought. She’d barely touched anything yesterday, and today had been worse.

It was his unapproachable attitude that had caused her loss of appetite. He was entitled to punish her with his brooding and his coldness. It was the least that she deserved for the way she had hurt him. But how was she supposed to sit
across the table from the man who would walk out of her life in two days, and be expected to eat too? That was asking too much of anybody.

“The spaghetti’s delicious,” she finally said, smiling tremulously. “So is the sauce. What’s the recipe?”

“Two large jars of SauceKing with onions,” he replied. The corners of his mouth turned up slightly.

Praying his smile indicated a tiny easing of his anger, she risked a stronger one of her own. “I’ve used that brand and it never tasted this good.”

“It’s all in the secret herbs,” he said, and took a bite of his own dinner.

“Secret herbs?” Good Lord, she thought in amazement, he was actually talking to her. Even teasing her a little.

He nodded. His gaze dropped to her breasts, hidden beneath a cotton shirt, then quickly refocused on her face.

His silence continued, but Diana was satisfied. He had finally spoken to her—even if it was only for a moment—and without being forced by circumstances to do so. And if he’d talked to her once, then he’d talk to her again. Maybe, just maybe, he’d eventually be willing to hear her apology. It was hard to dismiss his looking at her breasts as a sign of renewed interest in her, but she didn’t hold out hope for anything more than his accepting her apology. To do so would be foolishness, and she knew it.

To her surprise, her stomach growled a loud request for nourishment. Taking it as a second good sign, she dug into her spaghetti with gusto.

It was almost two o’clock in the morning when
Diana finally gave up on the idea of sleep. With a sigh, she propped the pillows behind her and sat up.

She silently berated herself for disappearing into her workroom after dinner. At the time she had thought it wiser not to press her luck with Adam. Maybe if she had, though, he would have lost control of his tightly held anger. After he had finished yelling at her, they might have been able to reach some level of understanding.

Diana laughed mirthlessly. Not pressing her luck was a very nice excuse for her full-scale retreat this evening. She figured she had a choice. She could continue the little forays of civility like the one at dinner, until the short time she had left with him was gone. Or, if she wanted to come to terms with him within the next twenty-four hours, she could do something drastic.

As she rejected several different ideas, she realized she’d never be satisfied with just an “apology accepted” before his good-bye. She wanted him—in her life and in her bed. She realized, too, that she’d do anything to get and keep him there. Although her experience with men was limited to one, she sensed that the Adam Robertses of this world were few. And more the fool she’d be if she didn’t try her damnedest to get him back.

A thought occurred to her, and she grinned. Actually. Adam would be a fool to let
her
get away. After all, she was sweet, innocent, financially independent, and completely in love with him. What more could a man ask for? The true facts were becoming clearer and clearer.

Adam was definitely in need of a rescue.

Diana tossed back the sheet and scrambled out
of bed. As she headed for the bathroom, she decided the simplest and most dramatic way to rescue him from a life without her was to seduce him. She forced away her panic at the thought. Sophisticated women were gutsy, even in situations of great emotional risk. This would be the greatest emotional risk she’d ever endured, but she wouldn’t allow that to stop her. One had to risk everything to gain everything.

Twenty minutes later, as she tiptoed out of her bedroom and down the dark hallway, Diana reminded herself to turn on a lamp once she was downstairs. Adam should at least see the seductive Diana, for goodness’ sake! She hoped the nightshirt with its bawdy saying was seductive enough. She hadn’t owned a nightgown in years. She really had to get a new wardrobe, with lots of feminine lingerie. Adam would probably like that.

She froze, suddenly aware that someone was quietly climbing the stairs. The carpet runner muffled his footsteps, but they still sounded louder than pounding hammers to her frightened ears. Trying to calm herself, she realized that the person on the stairs had to have gone through the living room, where Adam was sleeping. But Adam wouldn’t have let Jim get this far, unless …

“Adam!” she screamed.

Then she screamed again when the person rushed the rest of the way up the stairs.

“I’ve got him, Diana!” Adam shouted, slamming her back against the wall. “Call the police!”

“I will … if you take … your arm … from my throat,” she managed to gasp out.

The band of iron squeezing off her air supply instantly vanished, and she slumped in relief
against the wall. The man was determined to take years off her life one way or another, she thought with irony.

“Are you okay?” he asked, pulling her into a hard embrace. “Did the bastard hurt you?”

“No, the bastard didn’t hurt me,” she said, winding her arms about his waist. He was only wearing a pair of briefs, and she buried her face against his furred chest. “You only scared me half to death coming up those stairs.”

“You scared me half to death screaming like that,” he whispered, hugging her even more tightly against him. “We’d better get out of here and call—”

“Adam,” she broke in, pushing slightly away from him to look at his face. “I screamed because I thought you were an intruder.”

“But you were coming to get me.”

“To rescue you.” She paused, then decided to take advantage of the opportunity to confess the truth. The whole truth. “For two days I’ve been walking around here like a little mouse, afraid to make you more angry with me than you already are. But I’m sick of this wall I’ve put between us, and I can’t stand it any longer. I’m sorry I was so suspicious of you in the beginning, and I’m sorry I’ve acted so stupidly about everything. And most of all I’m sorry I hurt you. But you need rescuing if you think I’m just going to let you walk out of my life on Monday! I love you, dammit, and no amount of righteous anger on your part will change that!”

“I’m not angry with you,” he said calmly.

“You’re not?” she exclaimed. She searched his
eyes, but it was too dark to read the expression in them.

His answer came when his mouth covered hers in a searing kiss. Her blood throbbed through her veins, and she clung to him, not quite believing he really was in her arms.

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