by Brenda Joyce
A man entered the room, startling him. Tall, thin, I and grim, he carried a silver tray, and on it was one J glass, which looked as if it contained his favorite spirits, bourbon. "Who the hell are you?" Slade asked mildly.
"Brinks, sir." The man had a distinct British accent, as perfectly impassive expression, and an equally impassive intonation.
Regina was on her feet, wringing her hands. "Slade, this is Brinks." She hesitated. "Your butler."
"I see." He took the glass. "Thank you, Brinks."
Brinks said, "Will there be anything else, sir?"
Slade looked at Regina. "Ask my wife."
Brinks said, "Madam?"
"No, thank you. Oh-" She swallowed. "Slade, will you be ready to eat in forty-five minutes?"
He gazed at her. "I can be ready in forty-five minutes."
"Brinks, tell Monsieur Bertrand that Mr. Delanza is home and we shall dine at nine."
"Very good, madam." Brinks left.
Slade still gazed at his wife.
"I hope you are not too upset," she said breathlessly.
"I've been upset all day."
"You have been?"
He set his glass down. "I sent you a note but you didn't send a reply."
Her eyes widened. "I didn't realize you expected one."
"I did."
"I'm sorry."
"What's going on here, Regina?"
"I… I came over to see if you needed anything." She drew herself up defensively. "After all, I am your wife."
'’You're making that clearer by the minute," he said.
She looked worried. "This place was such a… such a bachelor's suite."
He had to smile. "I imagine you're putting it mildly."
"Well, yes," she confessed. "I could not turn my back on your home! So I hired a maid, a butler, and the chef. I stole Monsieur Bertrand from the Crockers." She gave him a guilty but so-sweet smile. "But I believe he will be worth it."
"If the smells coming out of that kitchen are any indication, I would say so."
She looked at him hopefully. "Would you like to go upstairs and change into something more comfortable?"
He realized that she hadn't answered his question. What was going on? His gut was tight, even aching. Had she changed her mind about the divorce? It seemed so. It seemed as if she had come to his home and was there to stay. It appeared that she had taken the final step, made the final decision, absolving him of the responsibility to do so, ensuring their reconciliation. He was thrilled, he was dismayed. It was all happening so fast.
She was regarding him anxiously. The last thing he wanted to do was to disappoint her, or push her away. If she wanted him to go upstairs-and he imagined there were a few changes awaiting him there, too-he would. Impulsively he took her chin and kissed her softly on the lips. Then he wheeled abruptly and bounded up the stairs.
In his bedroom he paused on the threshold, wondering about her, about them. His utilitarian bed was gone. In its place was a king-sized brass bed, done up luxuriously in burgundy. How in hell could she have known that burgundy was one of his favorite colors?
He moved closer. As he tested it with his hand, imagining her there, in it, he saw the silk velvet-lapelled smoking jacket she had laid out for him. He never wore the garment, which had been a gift from Xandria a long time ago. He saw that she had put a similarly unused air of slippers on the floor beside it. His heart, which ad been beating unsteadily ever since he had spotted her there in the parlor, seemed to flip hard.
Slowly removing his tie, shirt, and jacket, he inspected the room. She had put a lace cloth on the dreary wood table by the window and a vase of fresh-cut lilies in its center. Their scent permeated the room. The decanter on the bureau, which had been almost empty, was refilled. The glasses on the tray were clean; taking a closer glance, he realized that they were also new. In fact, he didn't recognize the silver tray, either.
Soberly he walked into the bathroom. He found all of his toiletries neatly laid out on another large, unfamiliar silver tray. She had placed a potted fern in the corner, and snowy-white towels hung from a brass ring which he had never seen before. She had also changed the single set of curtains, which had been somewhat mildewed. The new curtains were striped in burgundy and white.
She had made a lot of changes in his home, changes that were for the better. But he was frowning. How had she paid for all of these changes? He couldn't and h wouldn't undo them, not for a few dollars, but he ha just made the decision not to take her inheritance an here she was spending it recklessly on him. Yes, h was pleased by her thoughtfulness, more than pleased, thrilled-but dammit, he could just see where this was going to lead them. Into a tunnel without light.
"Slade?"
Slipping on the smoking jacket, he jerked at the sound of her voice. Her hesitant tones brought him to the bed room doorway. "Are you angry?" she asked.
"No."
She looked relieved.
He put his arms around her and held her hard. Already his body pulsed urgently. "This is like a dream, Regina," he said quietly.
She looked up at him, blinking back tears. "You like it?"
"I like it," he said hoarsely, wanting to say so much more yet unable to. He took her mouth without warning, smothering her gasp of surprise.
Then she laughed happily, burrowing closer. "And… the bed?"
"Let's test it," he whispered, shaking. "Let's test it now."
"We can't!" She was aghast. "Monsieur Bertrand will quit before he has even started!"
"Regina, please," Slade said, lifting her in his arms. "Let me make love to you now."
She was silent, clinging to him.
"I need you," he whispered. Laying her down on the bed, he caught her face in his hands. "How I need you!"
"I need you too, Slade," she whispered, tears in her eyes. She started to speak and then bit her lip.
"No," he cried, sliding his hands over her shoulders. "Say it! Don't hold back. Tell me. Tell me you love me- even if it's only for now."
"Slade…"
He rained kisses on her throat, panting, his hands moving down her body. "Regina?"
"I do," she moaned. "God, I do. I love you, Slade."
Chapter 24
The next few days passed quickly in a haze of happiness. Regina had not exactly intended to move in with Slade by organizing his home and staff, yet that was precisely what happened. After a fabulous supper, proving that Monsieur Bertrand was worth every penny, she again found herself in Slade's arms and in his bed. When she fell asleep after several impassioned hours, he did not awaken her to send her home. She was surprised to wake up that next morning with him-but more than a little pleased.
She expected Slade to remark upon their reconciliation. He did not. Perhaps, because they were married, there was no point in bringing up the unhappy past. He was the
one who had refused her request for a divorce, after all. Perhaps he was afraid of where too blunt a discussion might lead. Regina was. She was on tenterhooks. But she did know one thing. She did not want to return to her uncle's-she belonged in Slade's home, she belonged at Slade's side. She did not even want to leave his home in order to retrieve her belongings. The situation was too delicate. Slade saved her from having to do so. Over breakfast-in bed-he casually suggested he send a servant to fetch her things. Enthusiastically Regina agreed. It seemed as if they had reached an understanding to carry on with their marriage after all. Yet somehow the unspoken pact seemed tentative and tenuous.
During the next few days Slade did not treat her as a wife, but as a bride. He gave himself a holiday from his work in order to squire her about the city. It was a honeymoon which Regina would never forget. He took her to Little Italy and introduced her to pasta, which she now craved. On the Embarcadero they dined at Maye's Oyster House on fresh seafood and raw oysters, washed down with iced beer. The Castle-Observatory on Telegraph Hill was not to be missed. They attended a show at Lucky Baldwin's Academy of Music, which they so enjoyed they returned for a second performance.
They took the Marin ferry to Sausalito and cycled on Siamese-twin bicycles along the shore. They went horseback riding in Golden Gate Park and boating on Stow Lake. One afternoon they even went to the Sutro baths. Regina had never seen anything like it. There were six kinds of bathing-salt, fresh, warm, cold, deep, and shallow-and the museum there was filled with charming curios and contests for people of all ages. Slade talked her into trying the slide, which was one of the most thrilling experiences of her life.
And during it all was their passion. It had not faded one whit. Slade was a merciless man. He did not like being confined to their bedroom and he admitted it candidly. Regina tried not to remember making love in their carriage, not once but on two separate occasions, and she tried not to remember his hot kisses behind the slide at the Sutro baths. He had made love to her on Ocean Beach, too, in a hurried but thoroughly satisfactory manner, and they had just escaped discovery. And he had taken her in the ruins of an old mission just south of the city.
Thinking about him made her breathless. Thinking about him made her wish that he was home today and not at the office. She blushed scarlet with another vivid recollection. Yesterday Slade had insisted that they stop at his office to pick up a contract, one he wanted to read that evening. Yet once in his office he had not even bothered to look for the papers. Instead, his smile promising, he had pushed her on top of his desk, sending files and folders flying to the floor. He had lifted her skirts, kissing away her protests, and made love to her on top of his paperwork. Regina fervently hoped that no one had any idea just what had been going on in his office that day. She suspected that Slade's assault had been well-planned; that he had never intended to retrieve a contract at all.
He was impossible. How she loved him. If only she could be sure that he loved her, too.
And she was not sure. His passion for her was boundless, so Regina could not help thinking that he must be fond of her as well. Yet men had mistresses all the time, mistresses they dismissed in the blink of an eye. Regina could not understand it, but it was evidence that a man did not need love to feel passion. She wished that Slade would tell her, just once, of the feelings he had for her. But he did not.
And to compound her worry was the fact that, despite the excessive physical intimacy they shared, there was little emotional intimacy outside of the bedroom. Slade was not giving all of himself to her. She was certain that he kept some sort of guard up around her, that he was careful to restrain his feelings, that he did not want to become too involved with her, his own wife. Slade had gotten a declaration of love from her, but Regina was beginning to fear that she would never get such a declaration from him.
She told herself that it was unimportant and that she could live without it, as long as she had him. But she could not stop herself from yearning for more.
When Slade returned that night after his first day at work since they had reconciled so subtly, Regina greeted him at the door herself. She was all smiles. Seeing her, he smiled just as widely.
She took his briefcase and his arm, pulling him into the foyer. "Hello! How was your day?" She leaned close, dropping the briefcase.
Slade took her shoulders in his hands. "Is this the greeting I'm going to get every day when I come home?"
"Yes," she whispered, her palms sliding along his strong neck.
"I guess there's something to be said for marriage," he joked, kissing her. Regina clung to him. It felt as if days had passed, not hours, since she had last seen him.
When the long, scandalous kiss had ended-after all, servants were about-Regina pulled Slade into the salon. "I have something to show you!" “I’ll bet," he said wickedly.
She gave him a look, then pointed at the couch.
He went still, his smile fading. He eyed the couch, which was covered with different swatches of fabric. "What's that?"
"Samples," she said happily. "I'll do your suite first. In our new home on Franklin Street. What do you think?" She rushed to the couch and held up a swatch of moss-green velvet. "For a soft, comfortable reading chair? And this-for your sofa? And of course, I know how you like burgundy, so I thought maybe you'd like this for the bed." She waved a paisley print and regarded him eagerly.
Slade said nothing.
Regina put down the fabrics, her own smile vanishing. "You hate it? All of it?"
"No, I don't hate it."
"I don't understand."
His jaw flexed. "We're not going to move into the Henessy place."
She was stunned. "But why not?"
He said tightly, "Because I can't afford it."
Regina stared. Finally she shook the cobwebs free from her brain. "Of course you can! We have my inheritance, remember? Father will be here any day now, and he'll transfer the funds to your bank and-"
"No."
She blinked. "Excuse me?"
"I said no."
"I don't understand, Slade." Not liking his hard, closed expression, she sat down on several of the samples. She began to tremble.
"I'm not going to take your inheritance."
"What?"
He paced across the room to pour himself a drink. "I don't want to take your money."
It sank in. A thrill swept through her. He did not want her money, not now, when he had married her for her money in the first place. "Why not?" she whispered.
He glanced at her. "I have pride. I don't want to use my wife or her money."
"Oh, Slade." She stood, wringing her hands. It couldn't be all pride. He cared for her.
Regarding her darkly over his glass, he sipped his bourbon.
&
nbsp; In the next instant, the enormity of what he was doing-the ramifications-struck her hard. "But-Mira-mar? You need the money to save Miramar!"
"I've borrowed some funds from Charles."
Regina sat back down, trying to think. "So Miramar is safe?"
"It won't be easy." He stared at her. His tone seemed to hold a warning. "The next five years will be tight. We'll have to live simply, frugally. But by then I hope to start showing a decent profit."
"I see." Regina gazed at him. "Isn't it silly to live like that when we have all the money we could ever need-"
"No. I said I'm not taking your money and I mean it." Her temper flared. "This is ridiculous! And what about the Henessy place?"
"We'll close it up. Maybe I'll sell it. I'm thinking about it. If I don't, in five or ten years we'll be able to open it and use it for vacations and weekends. Until then, if you want, I can keep this house for you to use when you come to the city."
"Slade." She stood. "This is ridiculous. We have a fabulous home and I'm not going to allow you to sell it!"
He faced her. "You're not going to allow me to sell it?"
She knew she should back down, but she would not. "No."
He stared, not responding, anger hardening his expression.
She was trembling, she did not feel brave, but she forged on. "And to close it up for ten years! Please reconsider. You knew I was an heiress when you married me-you married me because of it! Why should we struggle and live like paupers if we don't have to? It's ridiculous!"