Authors: Amanda Carpenter
his sleek brows. He sighed, and bent his head to rub at the back of his
neck. 'Caprice, what am I going to do with you?'
'You could always go back to New York,' she said tightly. 'Start
dating women there, if you've stopped. Less commuting that way.' It
should have come out flippant, but instead it sounded choked.
He stepped nearer, and everything in her body tugged her towards
him, but she wouldn't move. Then gentle fingers stroked her cheek
and jawline, moving under her hair to tuck it back. 'I don't go for
casual dating,' he said softly. 'It bores me. It's shallow, and needlessly
expensive, and emotionally unrewarding.' She couldn't help herself,
and rubbed her cheek against his hand, much like she had last
Saturday, when things between them had changed to become
confusing, upsetting.
Sexual.
His hand was opening to cup her cheek when she jerked her head
away, flushing darkly. His hand dropped to his side. 'Will you see me
tonight?' he asked, quite calmly.
She gave a little, incredulous laugh at his persistence, unamused and
dying instantly. 'I'm going to a party,' she half whispered, and scuffed
her shoe in the grass. 'Everybody's going.'
'Who's taking you?'
She could have lied again. She could have dredged up a last-minute
escort; she was popular enough for that. She could have prevaricated
in a thousand ways, but her mind was frozen and her lips were
already shaping, in a thread of whisper, 'No one.'
His hand came under her chin, fingers caressing her skin, and then he
lifted her face to stare into her huge eyes. 'When shall I pick you up?'
he asked firmly.
For a long moment she searched his eyes, seeing nothing but
determination and steadiness. 'Seven,' she said.
'See you tonight,' he told her, and before she could move or ascertain
what he was going to do, he bent and swiftly kissed her on the
mouth. She watched him walk away, her mind a whirling blank.
After some time, realising she was alone, she bent to pick up the
racquet and popped the ball back into its container, and then headed
slowly back for the house. Inside, she met her mother, who detained
her with a hand on her arm.
'Dear, wasn't that Pierce who just drove away?' Irene asked.
'Yes.' She attempted a tentative tug to get herself free, but her mother
was having none of it.
'What an extraordinary amount of attention he's been paying you!
And how flattering, to have him fly down from New York on the
weekends! Tell me, are you seeing him again?'
'He's taking me to the party tonight, but it doesn't mean anything,'
she told Irene, and finally managed to pull herself free. 'Please, don't
make more out of it than there really is. I may never go out with him
again!'
'Nonsense, he's such a handsome, polite young- man!' her mother
marvelled. Caprice felt something surge up inside of her, and pinched
her lips against it. 'And everybody knows how successful the
Langston family business is! Why, your Pierce is a very good catch -'
'Is that all you can think of, Mother?' she burst out, shocking Irene to
silence. 'My God, he could be a child molester or a wife beater, for
all you know of him! You've talked with him once, and you've met
him twice, and all you can see are his money and his looks! Doesn't
anything else matter to you?'
Her voice rang through the hall. For a moment, mother and daughter
stared into each other's eyes, widened, both stricken, and then
Caprice whirled and ran up to her room, to lock herself into privacy.
Again, she was dressed and downstairs on time, having no use for
senseless dallying. Her parents were just preparing to leave, clad in
formal evening attire and looking splendid. Ricky had left some time
before, as he was escorting a young girl his own age. Caprice knew
her, and was secretly amused at his choice, for she was every bit his
match in wits and was quick with sharp retorts. His usual style was
the brainless, ornamental type. She rather thought she should
seriously fear for his heart.
She wished her parents a stilted farewell, for Irene was steadfastly
not looking at her and Richard was clearly aware of it and quite
puzzled. As they left, she shut the door behind them, and checked the
time on the clock in the hall. She had forsaken her wristwatch for the
evening, as she was dressed in sleek midnight blue, which was
gathered off one slender shoulder and fell in straight, severe lines to
mid-calf. The only ornamentation she wore was a winking silver
anklet atop her thin-strapped, blue sandals which raised her a good
three inches higher.
She checked her make-up carefully one last time, and the doorbell
rang. Furious at her leaping heart, she took two calming breaths, and
then went serenely to answer the summons.
But she was in for another leap in heart, for Pierce's appearance
seemed to destroy her composure. Blade, straight-cut legs, hands
tucked carelessly into his pockets with the suit jacket pulled back,
revealing a tight waistcoat and bow tie stark against the white of his
shirt, hair immaculate, face unsmiling, seeming remote, all this she
took in at a glance.
His eyes swept over her, black sparkling bright, and widened. 'I see
you're ready.'
She swallowed past something in her throat. 'Let me get my wrap and
bag,' she said, and hurried back to the den to retrieve them. He
stepped into the hall while he waited, and then stood back from the
door as she joined him. The familiar gesture of his hand to her back
escorted her to the car, and they started to the Cauleighs'.
'You look absolutely lovely,' he said quietly, after she had given him
directions.
She was thankful for the darkness in the car, for she blushed like a
gauche sixteen-year-old 'So do you,' she said, surprising herself and
him.
He laughed, the first she'd heard since that rather grim morning
encounter, and her spirits lightened unaccountably. They were soon
pulling up to the Cauleighs' house, which was ablaze with outside
lights and new arrivals. When he smoothly parked beside the road,
though there were several parking places still available alongside the
long driveway, she questioned him about it, to which he drily replied,
'My dear, I have no intention of being blocked in till the wee hours of
the morning.' He switched off the engine, and turned in his seat to
look at her from under level brows. 'I want to talk to you, later this
evening. I'd like to leave the party early.' When she didn't answer
right away, he lifted an eyebrow. 'Well?'
'Well, what?' She turned to open her car door, and was stopped by his
hand on her wrist. 'We'll just have to see.'
'That's no answer.' He was implacable, not about to let her slide on
this one.
She raised cool brows to him, and replied lightly, 'But then I never
said I would give you an answer. What I said was, we shall see.'
His mouth tightened ominously, but when she tugged her arm, he let
her go, and so they went to the party.
She knew almost everyone invited, but Pierce, having lost touch with
people in Virginia now for several years, had to be introduced to
quite a few. When Caprice caught sight of Roxanne, she excused
herself from Pierce's side and made her way over to the brunette, who
was looking particularly vibrant in a cocktail dress of deep cherry
red.
Roxanne flashed her a bright smile, pulled away from Kurt, and said
in a low undertone, 'Thought you weren't going to be seeing him any
more.'
Caprice felt the flush that washed over her features as a burning hot
sensation. 'It's—hard to explain,' she murmured. 'He's—It just
happened this morning.'
'I see.' The brunette's eyes rested on her, bright, piercing, not
unkindly. 'Don't hurt yourself, babe.'
Caprice's Jaw clenched. 'I'm trying to avoid that at all costs,' was her
grim muttered reply. She said a quick goodbye, with the promise of
getting together later to talk, and then she began to make her way
back to Pierce, who was leaning against the back of a chair while
talking with an older gentleman, whose young wife clung to his arm
and gazed with wide-eyed fascination at the younger man. According
to the rumours, she had married the older man for his money, and
from the way her eyes ate Pierce up, every lean inch of him, the
rumours were true.
Half-way across the large, crowded room, Caprice bumped into a
man who backed up unexpectedly. Quick hands shot out to steady
her toppling balance, and she laughed as she said, 'A good thing I
didn't have a drink in one hand! Emory! How are you?'
Emory's blond brows shot up, and delight lightened his whole
countenance. 'Caprice! We were looking for you.' He gave her an
affectionate hug. 'I have some good news.'
She turned her head, and looked into Petra's friendly eyes. Her grin
turned naughty, as her eyes shot swiftly down to the other woman's
left hand. A large engagement ring winked brightly, and as Petra saw
the direction of her gaze, she brought up her hand and displayed the
diamond for Caprice's approval. 'Well, it's about time!' she
exclaimed, laughing again. 'You know, he almost gave up on you!'
'Yes,' replied the other girl, with mortification. 'He told me all about
it. It was a stupid misunderstanding from the very start. And I want to
apologise to you. I was thinking some very nasty things about you
that weekend. It was all jealousy, and very unfair. I'm so sorry.'
'Nonsense,' said Caprice lightly, reaching up to Emory's tie to twitch
at it mischievously. 'You thought precisely what I wanted you to
think, my dear. I deserved every wicked thing you thought.'
As she walked away, she was treated to the sight of Petra actually
whooping, while Emory's face bore a most ludicrous expression of
surprise.
Somehow, after being from Pierce's side for more than a half hour, it
became easier and easier to find some excuse to stay away. She
flitted from person to person, flirting with every man in the room,
regardless of age, and was actually beginning to enjoy herself. A
small cluster formed around her in one corner, where she stayed for
some time, chattering away. Occasionally she would scan the room
to see where Pierce was, and he always seemed to be deep in
conversation with someone, and quite often that someone was
feminine, which, she told herself, was a very good thing. That way
she didn't have to feel guilty for deserting him, as she would if he'd
been left stranded and at a loss.-
But he was handling himself quite well, almost too well. She hadn't
expected anything else, necessarily, for he was too mature and poised
to do otherwise. But did he have to look so content without her
company? Didn't he feel the slightest bit jealous?
Her party smile slipped for a moment, and badly. She wasn't enjoying
herself at all, at all, and she wanted to go home. Then the young man
who was talking to her said something with a questioning note at the
end of it, and she dragged herself back and racked her memory for
what it was that he had said.
The Cauleighs' house was bursting with people. The Langstons were
present, including Jeffrey, who avoided her gaze and kept discreetly
away from wherever she happened to be. She noted it with some
wryness, as he'd always been annoyingly attentive before, and she
couldn't help but wonder if this new behaviour was because he knew
she was seeing Pierce, or because of shame for how he had acted two
weeks ago. Her luck with the Langston brothers did not seem to be
running well at the moment.
Then she turned her head, by pure chance, and caught her mother's
troubled gaze resting on her. They stared at each other from across
the room, wordlessly. 'Excuse me,' said Caprice to her attendant,
cutting through what he'd been saying in mid-sentence. Even as he
blinked and shut his mouth, in somewhat belated response, she was
making her way over to Irene and Richard.
Irene turned to her husband and said something in his ear, to which
he nodded, and he left her side without seeing Caprice. Mother and
daughter then stood side by side for a few moments, without
speaking.