didnât mean she had to put up with being on the receiving end of his attention. Not that she had any reason to be concerned, anyway. There was only one outcome from his assessment. He would be seeing a plainly dressed, unadorned woman who was making not the slightest attempt to enhance her looks to please the male gender, and signalling thereby on all frequencies that she was not on any manâs menu. Even that of a man who could quite clearly take his pick of the worldâs most beautiful women.
She wondered whether he would take offence at the way sheâd responded to his question. Tough. She didnât need the commission, and ifâand it was, she knew, a very big ifâshe took it and ifâand that was probably an even bigger if, because a man like him wouldnât care to be answered off-handedlyâhe commissioned her anyway, she was most definitely not going to pander to the man. Yes, he would doubtless cancel sittingsâbecause all her clients did to some extent or anotherâand that was understandable given the demands on his time because of his high-powered business life, and it was something she could cope with. But there was no way he was going to get the slightest pandering to, or her begging for the commission, or anything like that, thank you very much! She offered a service, a degreeof skill and artistry. If a client wanted to buy it, that was that. If notâwell, that was that too.
She met his gaze dispassionately as she finished speaking. For a moment he did not answer. She did not break her gaze, merely held his, looking untroubled and composed. The brilliance of his eyes seemed veiled somehow, as if he were masking something from her.
His reaction, she thought. I canât tell whether heâs annoyed, or indifferent, or what. I canât see into him.
Again, it wasnât something that was unusual for her, given the calibre of her clients. Powerful men were not transparent to the world, and indeed that air of elusiveness, of restrained power, was something that usually went into her portraitsâshe knew, with a slight waspishness, that it was a form of flattery by her, to portray them as inscrutable.
But with Guy de Rochement the masking was, she felt, more pronounced. Perhaps it was because his was such a remarkably handsome face, so incredibly, overtly attractive to women. Womenâany womenâwould expect to see some sort of reaction to them in his eyes, even if it were only polite indifference. But with Guy de Rochement nothing at all came through of what he was thinking.
She felt a tug of fascination go through herâthe eternal fascination of an enigmatic manâand then, on its heels, a different emotion, a more chilling one.
He keeps apart. He holds back. He shows only what he wants to show, what is appropriate for the moment.
Then, abruptly, he was speaking again, and her attention went to what he was saying. What his face was suddenly showing.
She could see quite plainly what it was.
It was amusement.
Not open, not pronounced, but there all the sameâinthe narrowing of his eyes, in the indentation of his sculpted lips. And more than amusement there was something else, just discernible to her. Slight but distinct surprise.
Alexa knew why. Heâs not used to being answered like thatâand not by a woman.
She felt a sliver of satisfaction go through her. Then was annoyed with herself for feeling it. Oh, for heavenâs sake, what did she care whether this man was or was not used to having someone answer him like that?
âYou do not believe in pitching, do you, Ms Harcourt?â The subtly accented voice was dry.
Alexa gave the slightest shrug. âTo what purpose? Either you like my work and wish to engage me, or you do not. Itâs a very simple matter.â
âIndeed.â The voice was a dry murmur again. One narrow, long-fingered hand reached out to close around the stem of a martini glass and raise it