Dangerous Enchantment. Anne Mather

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Dangerous Enchantment - Anne  Mather


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windscreen as they neared the roadhouse. Manuel locked the car, and walking round to her side, slid his arm through hers, gripping her wrist. Tonight he was wearing a dark, fur-lined overcoat over his dark suit, and Julie found herself wondering why dark men were infinitely more physical than fair ones. She glanced up at him, and surprised a smile on his face, and said:

      “You think you’re very clever, don’t you?”

      His smile widened, revealing the ivory whiteness of his strong teeth. “Now why should you think that, I wonder?”

      “Because it’s true. You were determined to date me tonight – why?”

      “I was at a loose end,” he said disconcertingly. Then his grip tightened momentarily. “No woman walks out on Manuel Cortez!”

      Julie frowned. “You mean … Saturday night? I didn’t walk out on you. I just didn’t consider your conversation good taste.”

      “A lot of the things I do are not ‘good taste’,” he remarked dryly. “Does that put me down in your book?”

      “As I’m quite sure that you don’t care one way or the other what I think, I won’t answer that,” she replied, and released herself from his hold as they entered the foyer.

      They left their coats and then the head waiter advised them that a table had been arranged for six-thirty if they would care to have a drink beforehand. A delightful olde-worlde bar opened from the hall, the bar strung with coloured lights, while a roaring log fire burned in the grate, illuminating the wooden seats and carved wooden tables. Without asking what Julie would like Manuel ordered the drinks, while Julie took one of the wooden seats in one corner and warmed her hands in front of the fire. She was not unaware of the limitations of the blue shift dress and said, when Manuel joined her.

      “I really ought to have changed, you know. These are my working clothes.”

      Manuel smiled. “You look all right to me. Did you telephone your mother?”

      “Yes. In the cloakroom. I told her I’d run into an old school friend whom I hadn’t seen for years. I’ve asked her to explain to Paul too.” She sighed. “I don’t like lying to people.”

      “Then why didn’t you tell your parents the truth? Or am I too disreputable to be seen about with?”

      Julie chuckled. “Of course not! Actually Dad adores your music. Particularly when you play the guitar. He has a lot of your records.”

      “Is that so?” Manuel looked a little bored now, and Julie fell silent. How on earth would she keep him amused? she thought a little wildly. And why had he asked her out? After all, it was quite a price to pay, having to take her out for the whole evening just to satisfy his ridiculous boast! She couldn’t believe there was any other reason.

      The room was deserted apart from a couple of men playing darts at the far end of the bar. It was too early for the bar trade; the cars in the car-park must belong to the diners, she thought idly.

      Manuel, who had been seated opposite her, rose to his feet and came to sit on the low seat beside her.

      “Now,” he said, “what’s wrong? Why so thoughtful? Are you bored?”

      His nearness disconcerted her. “Of … of course not,” she denied stammeringly. “I’m a little bemused, that’s all, with the firelight.”

      His eyes mocked her. “And you’re a little afraid, aren’t you?” he murmured. “Why?”

      Julie shrugged. “Why should I be afraid?” she countered bravely.

      Manuel raised his dark eyebrows. She noticed his lashes were much longer than her own and thickly luxuriant.

      “Well, I guess because you think I’m going to make love to you,” he replied softly. “Don’t worry, I won’t.”

      Julie, who had felt herself melting at the drawling sound of his voice, stiffened now, and straightened her back and took a swift drink of the liquid in the glass. Then she put the glass down on the table hard and gasped:

      “Lord, what was that?”

      “A cocktail. My own special recipe. Don’t you like it?”

      “It’s like fire-water!” she cried indignantly.

      His eyes darkened. “Very appropriate … for a man who is partially Indian,” he muttered, his voice cold suddenly. “Excuse me. I will see if our table is ready.”

      Julie stared after him. What had she said? She had not known of his ancestry, and besides, what did it matter? She shrugged. Well, at least she knew how to cool him off, she thought, feeling ridiculously like crying.

      When he returned, however, he was his old urbane self, and she half-wondered if she had imagined the anger in his voice earlier. The dinner was, as he had predicted, delicious, and Julie, who appreciated good food and who suddenly felt starvingly aware of the emptiness of her stomach, ate well. There was a different wine for every course, and a warmed brandy glass with a little of that fiery liquid to complete the meal with their coffee. The restaurant had filled up considerably since their arrival and Julie noticed how Manuel avoided direct contact with people who would be bound to recognize him.

      When the meal was over, and they were smoking cigarettes with their coffee, she said:

      “Thank you, anyway. I enjoyed it.”

      “Good. So did I, surprisingly.”

      “Why surprisingly?”

      “Well, I half expected you to be one of those creatures who pick and choose everything that is put before them, and continually watch their figure. Isn’t that the usual thing?”

      July smiled. “Well, as yet I’m lucky. I can eat what I like. Does Miss Arriviera pick and choose?”

      His expression darkened for a moment, and then he shrugged his broad shoulders. “Dolores has to watch her weight for obvious reasons; dancers must be very careful.”

      Julie nodded, and he said: “Why were you discussing me … or rather Dolores with your colleagues at work? Are you the kind of girl who tells her friends everything that you do? Will you regale them with stories of tonight, exaggerated, of course, to heighten the illusion?”

      Julie flushed. “I don’t suppose I shall mention this at all.” She felt very small suddenly, and wished she could explain her reasons for acting as she had; for talking about him as she had done to rid herself of the aching feeling she had felt at the knowledge of his association with Dolores Arriviera.

      He studied her appraisingly, and then said: “I believe you won’t. Julie Kennedy, you intrigue me.”

      “Do I? Why?” Julie’s stomach turned over.

      “I’m not sure. But you have a very devious mind; perhaps that’s it. I don’t know. Come, have you finished? We should be leaving.”

      “But … but it’s early!” Julie glanced at her watch. It was barely eight o’clock.

      “I know, but you forget I have a living to earn. I am appearing in the ten-thirty cabaret at Guardinos.”

      Julie’s heart dropped several inches. She had not imagined when he suggested she should have dinner with him that there was any question of them not spending the whole evening together. She had accepted that it would be an early meal, but even then she had not imagined he would leave her so early. Why, Paul was not calling for her until seven-thirty, and the party at his friend Patrick’s would not begin much before nine. She felt an angry resentment at Manuel’s highhanded treatment of her, and she rose abruptly to her feet and went to collect her coat from the cloakroom with ill grace.

      Manuel was standing in the foyer talking to the commissionaire when she emerged, and in spite of her anger she could not quite squash the thrill of pleasure it gave her to know he was waiting for her.

      The Ferrari was warm and untouched by the


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