The Yuletide Engagement & A Yuletide Seduction (5 page)

BOOK: The Yuletide Engagement & A Yuletide Seduction
12.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Very well, Patrick,” she bit out abruptly. “I'll come to the party with you—”

“I knew you wouldn't let me down!” Patrick beamed, seeming to forget his resolve as he pulled her into his arms to hug her.

Ellie pulled back, looking up at him warningly. “I'm not doing this for you,” she reminded him firmly.

“No, of course you aren't,” he accepted lightly, but he still grinned broadly, looking far too attractive for Ellie's peace of mind. For the sudden rapid beat of her heart. For the heated longing that coursed through her body. For the way she wanted to just throw caution to the winds and kiss him if he wasn't about to kiss her!

She really would have to get a grip on her emotions where Patrick McGrath was concerned. Because to fall in love with him wouldn't only be ill-advised—it would be pure madness!

CHAPTER FIVE

“N
OT
a word,” Ellie cautioned Toby when he looked up from reading the Saturday newspaper as she came into the kitchen, dressed warmly for going out, needing only to pull her coat on when the time came. “Not one word, Toby,” she repeated as he continued to look at her. “You aren't my favourite person at the moment,” she added, and dropped down onto one of the kitchen chairs to wait.

Toby returned her gaze with too-innocent blue eyes. “I can't imagine why you're in such a bad mood, sis.” He shrugged unconcernedly. “You know how you love shopping.”

Ordinarily she did. But today wasn't ordinary. As Toby very well knew.

She glared across the table at her brother. “I think working for Patrick is having a bad effect on you,” she muttered bad-temperedly. “You're becoming as sneaky as he is!”

Toby chuckled softly. “You forgot ‘underhand', ‘secretive', and—'manipulative', wasn't it?” he prompted lightly.

They were all the names she had called her brother this morning, after he had asked her how the previous evening had gone!

“You forgot ‘too clever for your own good',” she reminded him heavily, but her mood began to thaw slightly.
“You really should have told me, Toby.” She shook her head disgustedly.

“But then you wouldn't have gone to the dinner last night. At least, not with Patrick,” he reasoned. “And that would have been a pity.”

Ellie eyed him suspiciously. “Why?”

“Hey, look, Ellie, in case you've forgotten Patrick and I are two of the good guys,” Toby pointed out protestingly. “Gareth is the bad guy—remember?”

Oh, yes, she remembered. She also remembered that look of triumph on Gareth's face the previous evening when George had stood up to announce the younger man's engagement to his daughter, Sarah.

“He doesn't deserve Sarah, Ellie—let alone you!” Patrick had muttered disgustedly at her side.

Which was why, when the Delacorte family—and Ellie—had all been chatting together at the end of the evening, Patrick had been only to happy to suggest that Ellie accompany Sarah the following day, when she shopped for a new dress to wear to the party tomorrow evening!

“Ellie has just been complaining that she has nothing to wear either,” Patrick had told his young cousin happily.

Ellie glared up at him; she might have said something along those lines, but as Patrick must know only too well Sarah was the last person she wanted to go shopping with.

“I don't mind coming with you, Sarah,” Gareth put in—rather hastily, it seemed to Ellie. A brief glance at Patrick, his expression knowingly satisfied, showed her that he thought so too.

“It's very sweet of you, darling.” Sarah gave her new
fiancé's arm a grateful hug, the emerald and diamond engagement ring twinkling brightly on her left hand. “But you know how you hate shopping. Besides, I want the dress I'm wearing tomorrow evening to be a surprise.”

“I thought it was the wedding dress I wasn't supposed to see until the day?” Gareth frowned.

“It is, silly.” Sarah laughed huskily. “I just—wait and see,” she dismissed excitedly, before turning to Ellie. “I think it would be lovely for the two of us to go shopping together tomorrow, don't you?”

It was obvious from Sarah's completely confident expression that she didn't expect Ellie to refuse. And, with Patrick looking at Ellie with the same expectation, what choice did she have? Absolutely none.

Which was why she was sitting here now, dressed warmly in jeans and a thick sweater, waiting for Sarah to pick her up so they could drive into town together.

“I remember,” she answered Toby heavily. “Until Patrick told me last night I had no idea how worried George and Mary are by the relationship.” She shook her head.

“Strange how these things come around in circles, isn't it?” Toby said ruefully. “Your dastardly ex-boyfriend engaged to Patrick's cousin,” he explained, at Ellie's questioning look.

Ellie winced at having Gareth described as her ex-boyfriend; she just wanted to forget she had ever known him. Which was impossible in the present situation.

Although she had felt slightly warmed by Patrick's comment last night— “He doesn't deserve Sarah, Ellie—let alone you!” Quite what he had meant by that she wasn't sure, but again it had sounded as if there might be a compliment in there somewhere.

A compliment she would be wise to ignore, if she had any sense. And, after her recent disappointment over Gareth, she ought to have a lot of sense!

Except…

She had felt quite shy as Patrick had driven her home last night, wondering exactly how they were going to say goodnight to each other. Not that they had been out on a genuine date or anything—even less so than she had initially realised!—but Patrick
had
kissed her earlier in the evening.

She hadn't known whether to be disappointed or relieved when, having walked her to the door, he'd bent to kiss her lightly on the cheek before telling her he would call for her at eight o'clock the following evening.

“There's no point in getting there too early,” he had added grimly.

“None at all,” she agreed with a grimace.

“And don't worry about the shopping expedition with Sarah tomorrow,” he told her with a grin. “Just be yourself and nothing can go wrong.”

Which was okay for Patrick to say—but Ellie did not relish the thought of having to listen to several hours of Sarah telling her how wonderful Gareth was. It promised to be a very trying afternoon.

“Buy something blue, Ellie,” Patrick had added huskily. “The same blue as your eyes.”

Once again Ellie felt warmed by the fact that he had even noticed what colour her eyes were!

“Oh, and by the way—” he turned before getting into his car “—Anne and Thomas are my parents; Teresa's my younger sister.”

Oh, great. She was going to meet all of Patrick's family tomorrow evening, too.

 

“T
HAT
dress is perfect on you, Ellie,” Sarah told her admiringly as Ellie came out of the changing room.

It might be, but a brief glance at the label whilst in the changing room had shown Ellie that the price was perfect too—for bankrupting her!

She should have known the other woman would want to go to a designer shop for her own outfit. In fact, Sarah had already picked out a gown—an emerald-green sheath that perfectly matched the emerald in her engagement ring—and had only returned to try the dress on after alterations.

The dress she had persuaded Ellie to try on was indeed the blue that Patrick had suggested, its material pure silk, with a fitted, mandarin-style collar and short sleeves.

“With your dark hair swept up like it was last night, and some kohl around your eyes, you'll look positively exotic, Ellie,” Sarah enthused.

The gown was beautiful, it was also more glamorous than anything Ellie had ever worn before. Dared she buy it?

“Patrick is going to be bowled over when he sees you in this,” Sarah added encouragingly.

She wasn't sure she wanted Patrick “bowled over” when he saw her. Where could any relationship between the two of them ever go? Nowhere, came the resounding answer. And yet a part of her so wanted the dress—if only to see if she
could
bowl Patrick over…!

“Why don't you think about it while the two of us have a cup of coffee?” Sarah proposed as she saw Ellie's uncertainty.

“Good idea,” Ellie accepted with a certain amount of relief.

Although she wasn't so sure it
had
been a good idea once the two women were seated in a coffee-shop further down the street and the conversation naturally turned to Sarah's engagement!

“It was all a bit—sudden, wasn't it?” Ellie suggested lightly as she stirred sweetener into her coffee.

“Mmm,” Sarah acknowledged thoughtfully. “I've quite enjoyed this last year—the modelling and having my photograph on the cover of magazines but you know, Ellie, it's a very lonely sort of life too. I missed my friends, the family,” she added wistfully. “Most of all the family. Marriage, the possibility of having my own family, suddenly seemed the right option.”

But, as Ellie knew only too well, Gareth most certainly wasn't the right man to share that option!

“You're only twenty-one, Sarah,” she teased. “There's plenty of time for that once you've done all the other things you want to do with your life. Didn't you once mention that you wanted to do some fashion designing of your own?”

“I've already done some,” Sarah told her excitedly. “I had totally forgotten in the excitement of the last few weeks,” she went on ruefully, “but I'm waiting for Jacques, the designer I worked with in Paris, to tell me what he thinks of them.”

Ah. So Sarah hadn't completely given up on her life in Paris after all…

“That sounds interesting,” Ellie encouraged. “Do you think that will affect your engagement to Gareth?”

Sarah looked startled. “I must admit I hadn't given that much thought.” She grimaced. “This being engaged and having to think of another person is all new to me,” she added self-derisively. “But I would really like
to follow it through if Jacques thinks I have any talent at all.”

Again, this was encouraging, Ellie thought; it showed the other woman wasn't yet quite so tied up in her relationship with Gareth that she had given up on her own ambitions.

“I'm sure Gareth will understand if we have to wait a while before getting married,” Sarah added dismissively.

Ellie thought the other woman was being slightly optimistic concerning Gareth's patience in that direction—after all, the sooner Sarah was his wife, the sooner his position at Delacorte, Delacorte and Delacorte was secured—but wisely she didn't voice any of those doubts to Sarah.

She did, however, relay the conversation to Patrick when he arrived to collect her that evening.

“You look wonderful, Ellie.” He stood back to look at her appreciatively.

Ellie felt warmth in her cheeks at his praise. “Patrick, didn't you hear what I said? Sarah—”

“Still has plans to become a fashion designer,” he finished dismissively. “That's great. But—”

“Just ‘great'?” Ellie persisted frowningly. “Don't you realise this could be the way to drive a rift between her and Gareth?”

“Well, of course I realise that,” he confirmed lightly. “He isn't going to like the idea of a delayed marriage at all.”

“Exactly,” Ellie said with satisfaction. “Which is good—isn't it…?” she added uncertainly when Patrick didn't look as thrilled by the news as she had been earlier.

“Very good.” He nodded. “But at the moment I'm more interested in the way you look, Ellie. That dress is—you look wonderful,” he said again.

Ellie had given in to impulse and gone back to the shop to buy the blue silk gown, aware that it was costing a small fortune but for the moment not caring. She had also swept up her hair and applied kohl to her eyes, as Sarah had suggested. The finished effect was pretty good, even if she did say so herself. And it was also good that Patrick liked the way she looked this evening. Wasn't it…?

That was the particular problem she had at the moment. There was no denying that she was attracted to Patrick, that she more than liked being in his company, but at the same time she was still very much aware that their relationship was nothing but a sham. It certainly wouldn't do for either of them to forget that. Because once this situation had been sorted out she and Patrick would go back to being strangers—perhaps occasionally mentioned to each other by Toby, but other than that strangers.

The fact that Patrick was once again dressed in evening clothes, and it made her heart flutter just to look at him, was not something Ellie could allow herself to dwell on!

There was also the matter of the large flat white box he had carried in under his arm…

“You told me off yesterday evening for repeating things,” she reminded him dryly.

“Telling you how beautiful you look in that dress deserves to be repeated,” he said unrepentantly, his gaze still appreciative. “It's blue too,” he added with satisfaction.

“Shouldn't we be going?” Ellie prompted sharply, after a glance at her wristwatch, not particularly wanting to get into a conversation about why she had chosen this particular gown. “After all, there's politely late and then there's just bad manners!”

Patrick laughed softly. “You sound like my mother!”

Great! Just the person she wanted to be likened to!

“Oh, no, you don't.” Patrick removed the heavy winter coat from her hand as she would have put it on, throwing it back over a chair before laying the white box on the kitchen table and removing the lid. “I bought you a present today,” he told her lightly, folding back the tissue paper in the box.

“A present?” Ellie gaped. “For me? But—”

“For you,” Patrick repeated firmly, taking something black and woollen out of the box. “It's a pashmina. It's made from the soft wool of goats in Northern India—”

“I know what it's made from,” Ellie cut in dazedly, staring at the soft woollen shawl. She also knew that it was very expensive! “Patrick, you really shouldn't have—”

“I really should,” he told her firmly, shaking out the long shawl to drape it decorously about her shoulders. “You deserve something in the way of thanks for what you're doing. Think of it as an early Christmas present. Besides,” he added as she would have protested again, “that black coat does absolutely nothing for you,” he told her dryly.

Or for the image of the woman who was to be his partner for the evening, Ellie realized ruefully.

Not that he wasn't right about her long black winter coat; it had been bought more for warmth rather than
as any sort of fashion statement. It was just the fact of Patrick having bought her a gift—an expensive one at that—that was so disturbing. And it might be Christmas in just over a week's time, but Patrick wouldn't have been buying her a present anyway…

BOOK: The Yuletide Engagement & A Yuletide Seduction
12.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Mindfulness by Gill Hasson
A Man in a Distant Field by Theresa Kishkan
The Unsuspecting Mage by Pratt, Brian S.
Sons by Pearl S. Buck
Rebels by Accident by Patricia Dunn
A Texas Family Reunion by Judy Christenberry
Between the Alps and a Hard Place by Angelo M. Codevilla
KW 09:Shot on Location by Laurence Shames
The Eye of the Abyss by Marshall Browne
Shadows of the Workhouse by Jennifer Worth