an amazing improvement.'
Her face warmed, but she said nothing.
She still didn't understand or trust this
volte face
. And even now her reprieve might only be temporary, she reminded herself. He was only at arm's length. Perhaps he was just lulling her into a false sense of security. Whatever, she could not afford to relax.
A fact apparently not lost on him. He said softly, 'You're like a wire stretched to snapping point.'
Chellie sent him a fulminating glance. 'Does that really surprise you?'
'No.' he said. 'What does puzzle me is how you come to be in this hellhole. I'm sure you'll tell me it's none of my business, but, as a life-choice, it seems a seriously bad move.'
'Choice?' she repeated with stunned disbelief. 'Are you mad?' Her voice rose. 'Do you honestly think that if it had been down to me I'd ever have set foot in a place like this?'
'If that's truly the case,' he drawled, 'why do you stay?'
Her hands gripped each other until they ached. 'Because I can't leave,' she said in a low voice. 'I have no money, no passport, and no other option.'
His brows lifted. 'Were you robbed?'
'Mama Rita took my passport.' Chellie bent her head. 'Someone—someone else had my money. As a result I was turned out of my hotel room, and they kept my luggage.'
She paused. 'I'd been suffering from a virus, anyway, so I wasn't exactly thinking straight'
Quite apart
, she thought,
from realising that Ramon had walked out on me. Left me broke and stranded
.
But she couldn't afford to think about that—about her sheer criminal stupidity. Or she might break down—lose it completely in front of this stranger.
Instead, she straightened her shoulders. 'I knew I needed to find the British consul pretty urgently,' she went on. 'So I stopped this police car to ask the way.' 'Not very wise,' he said.
'So I found out.' She shivered. 'At first the policeman threatened to jail me for vagrancy. Then he seemed to relent. He said the consul's office was closed for the day, but he'd take me somewhere safe in the meantime.'
She tried to smile. 1 can even remember feeling grateful to him. Only he brought me here, where I've been ever since.'
'Hardly your lucky day.' His voice was expressionless.
'No,' Chellie admitted tautly. 'But I know there are worse places than this, because Mama Rita has already threatened me with them if I don't do as she says. I could have ended up in one of them instead.'
And it could still happen
…
Her voice broke slightly. 'You know—I—I really be-lieved she was going to let me sing my way out of here. We had this deal—in writing.' She attempted a laugh. 'How naive can you get?'
His tone was dry. 'Mama Rita is a woman who believes in exploiting all the assets at her disposal.' He paused. 'The only question is—do you intend to stay here as one of those assets?
'You mean—why don't I run away?' Chellie shook her head. 'With no passport I wouldn't get very far. And she'd simply find me and bring me back—or hand me over to her friend Consuela,' she added, shuddering.
He said softly, 'In an ideal world, how far would you like to run?'
She lifted her chin. 'For preference—to the other side of the universe.'
He said, 'I can't promise that—but there's always St Hilaire, instead.'
Her brow creased. 'Where is that? I've never heard of it'
'Hardly surprising,' he returned. 'It's in the Windward Islands, and not terribly big. I'm taking a boat there for its owner.' He paused, giving her a level look. 'You could always go with me.'
Chellie stared at him. She said uncertainly 'Go—with you?' She shook her head. 'I—I don't think so.'
'Listen,' he said. 'And listen well. I may be the first man to pay for your company, but I certainly won't be the last. And the next guy along may not respect your delicate shrinkings. In fact, he could even find them a turn-on,' he added laconically. 'And expect a damned sight more pleafrom you than I've had. Are you prepared for that?'
Colour flooded into her face.
Elizabeth Amelia Barrington