contemplatively to his mouth, before lowering it to the table again. His regard was still impassively on her. Then, as if reaching a decision, he got to his feet.
Alexa did likewise. OK , she thought, thatâs it. No deal. Well, so what? Imogen will be cross with me, but actually Iâm glad heâs decided against me .
She wondered why she felt so certain of that, but knew she did. Sheâd work out later just what that reason was. Then it came to her.
Because itâs simpler. Easier. More straightforward.
Yet even so she felt her mind sheering away. And necessarily so. Now was not the time to analyse why a feeling of relief was going through her not to be painting Guy de Rochementâs portraitâor why the feeling running just beneath the surface of that relief was something quite, quite different.
Regretâ¦
No! Donât be absurd, she admonished herself sternly. Itâs just a commission, thatâs all. Youâve done dozens, and youâll do dozens more. Just because unlike all the others this one is young and ludicrously handsome, it means nothing at all. Nothing.
He was speaking, and she cut short her futile cogitations.
âWell, Ms Harcourt, I think we have reached the end of our necessary exchange, donât you?â
Guy de Rochemont was holding his hand out to her. She made herself take it, ignoring the cool of his touch and dropping it again the moment social convention permitted.
âQuite,â she agreed crisply. She picked up her bag, ready to turn and leave.
âSo,â Guy de Rochemont continued, âI will have my PA phone your representative and arrange my first sittingâshould it prove possible within the restraints of our respective diaries.â He paused a moment. Just the fraction of a moment. âI trust that meets with your approval, Ms Harcourt?â
Was that amusement in his voice again? A deliberate blandness in his gaze? Alexa found her lips pressing together as her thoughts underwent a sudden and complete rearrangement.
âYesâthank you,â she answered, and her voice, she was glad to hear, was as crisp as ever.
âGood,â said her latest client, as if the word closed the transaction. And then, as if Alexa had just ceased to exist, he looked past her. His expression changed. âGuy! Darling!â
A woman sailed up to him, ignoring Alexaâs presence as if she were invisible. A cloud of heavy scent surrounded the woman even as her slender braceleted arms camearound Guy de Rochemont to envelop him. Alexa caught an impression of tightly sheathed black silk, long lush black hair, and a tanned complexion. Moreover, the womanâs features were definitely familiar. Who was she? Oh, yes, Carla Crespiâthat was it. An Italian femme fatale film actress who specialised in sultry roles. Alexa hadnât seen any of her films, as they werenât to her taste, but it would have been hard not to have heard of the woman at all.
She turned to go. It was par for the course that a male of Guy de Rochemontâs calibre would have a woman like that in tow. Someone high-profile, high-maintenance, who would, above all, adorn him. A trophy woman for an alpha-plus male.
She heard the woman launch into a stream of rapid Italian, pitched too loud for private conversation and therefore, Alexa assumed, designed for public consumptionâdrawing attention to herself, to the man she was with. Tucking her handbag firmly under her arm, Alexa left her to it and departed.
She felt strangely disconcerted.
And it annoyed her.
She would have felt even more disconcerted, and certainly more annoyed, had she realised that behind her Guy de Rochemont had disengaged himself from Carla Crespi and was looking after Alexaâs departing figure as she threaded her way across the room.
His eyes were very slightly narrowed and their expression was speculative. With just a hintâthe barest hintâof amusement in their