by Anne Weale
“I can’t believe I’m hearing this. I thought this was a merchant bank... not a marriage bureau.”
Letter to Reader
Title Page
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
Copyright
“I can’t believe I’m hearing this. I thought this was a merchant bank... not a marriage bureau.”
“It is a bank, and I am its chairman,” Reid said calmly.
“You wouldn’t be for much longer if your shareholders heard what you’re suggesting. They’d think you were out of your mind. You can’t buy a wife.”
“It isn’t the usual method of acquiring one,” he agreed, going back to his chair. “But these are unusual circumstances. I have neither the time nor inclination to follow the traditional course. You are in urgent need of someone to straighten out the financial shambles you find yourself in. If you agree to marry me, your mother won’t have to move and you won’t have to worry about her future. I’ll take care of that. Think it over, Francesca. When you’ve had time to assess it, I think you’ll agree it’s an eminently sensible plan.”
Dear Reader,
For twenty years, with my husband, usually in late spring and early fall, I’ve been crossing the range of mountains that separates France from Spain.
There are many different ways to cross the Pyrenees, from the sweeping curves of the autopista at the Mediterranean end to the narrower, more twisting minor roads in the central and eastern sections. We’ve tried most of them, including the route through the tiny principality of Andorra.
In between times, flying to London to meet my editor, often I’ve had an eagle’s view of inaccessible valleys so high up that the snow never melts. It never ceases to amaze me that the long, uncomfortable, perilous journey of earlier centuries can now be accomplished in two hours by air. Even by car, it takes only a few days. We like to do it slowly, picnic-lunching in woods or by the banks of streams, spending the night at quiet country hotels.
On a recent journey, it struck me that it was time to write a book about these magical mountains that, if not as remote as they once were, still retain a feeling of tranquillity long lost in more populous areas.
A short time later I happened to catch a brief glimpse of a tall, striking man and a beautiful girl, both wearing shorts and walking boots. I shall never know who they were...and they will never know they were part of the inspiration for the story you’re about to start reading.
I hope you enjoy it.
The Bartered Bride
Anne Weale
TORONTO • NEW YORK • LONDON
AMSTERDAM • PARIS • SYDNEY • HAMBURG
STOCKHOLM • ATHENS • TOKYO • MILAN • MADRID
PRAGUE • WARSAW • BUDAPEST • AUCKLAND
CHAPTER ONE
EXPECTING him to be a middle-aged toad, Francesca was surprised when the man who rose from behind the large orderly desk was a tall dark thirtysomething, not precisely handsome but undeniably personable.
‘Ms Turner...please sit down.’ He gestured to the chair on the outer side of the desk and waited until she was seated before resuming his own seat.
She knew nothing about him, except that his name was Reid Kennard and he occupied a large office on the highest floor of a prestigious office block in the City.
This area of London was one of the world’s great money markets. Judging by his discreetly luxurious surroundings, this man was one of the market’s moguls.
To Fran, until very recently, money had been something she spent with careless extravagance on clothes for herself, presents for others and anything else she wanted. Now the supply had dried up. That was why she was here in the formidable presence of this well-built six-footer whose physique didn’t match her mental image of a top-level financier.
All she knew about him was that Mr Preston, her late father’s lawyer, had said that Reid Kennard wished to see her and might be able to help her and her mother out of their predicament.
Predicament being the understatement of the year, Fran thought wryly, leaning back in the comfortable leather chair and automatically crossing her legs, remembering a moment too late that this was a no-no in the books of advice on how to impress interviewers.
The movement caused Mr Kennard to shift the focus of his cold grey gaze from her face to her shapely knees and then to her slender ankles.
Fran was accustomed to men admiring her legs furtively or openly according to temperament. Reid Kennard belonged to the latter group, but whether his frank appraisal was appreciative, critical or indifferent it was impossible to tell. He had the most deadpan expression she had ever come across. It made her nervous. She wasn’t used to being nervous. She didn’t like it.
The appraisal didn’t last long, perhaps not more than three seconds. Leaning forward, his forearms resting on the edge of the desk and his long-fingered hands loosely clasped, he returned his gaze to her face.
‘You’re in trouble, I hear.’
Lacking any regional or social accent, his voice gave no clue to his background. Self-assured and brisk, it was a voice she could imagine giving decisive orders people would jump to obey.
Had she met him in surroundings not indicative of his occupation, and been asked to guess it, she would have surmised that he held a senior rank in one of the special units of crack fighting men called to the world’s trouble spots when drastic action was the only solution. He had an air of contained physical power. A man of action rather than a desk-bound number-cruncher.
‘Yes,’ she agreed, ‘we are. Since my father’s death, my mother and I have discovered that instead of being comfortably off we’re extremely hard up... virtually penniless.’
‘Not penniless,’ he said dryly. ‘The watch you’re wearing would pay the grocery bills of an average family for several months.’
‘I shan’t be wearing it much longer.’ She looked down at the stylish Cartier watch her parents had given her for her eighteenth birthday. ‘But I don’t mind that. I can cope with the change in our circumstances. It’s my mother I’m worried about. She’s not young. She has never worked. She—’
He interrupted her. ‘Nor have you, I understand. The press describe you as a playgirl.’
‘The press puts labels on everyone...not always accurate. It’s true I’ve never had a job. There was no point. My father was rich...so we thought. I wasn’t brainy enough to train for one of the professions. I don’t have any special bent. The most useful thing I could do was help to keep other people employed, not take a routine job someone else needed.’
‘You don’t have to justify your butterfly existence to me, Ms Turner. But without any work-experience, you’re not going to find it easy to start supporting yourself, particularly not at the level you’re accustomed to.’
‘Presumably you didn’t ask me here to tell me what I already know,’ she replied, with a flash of irritation.
There was something about his manner that put her back up. He hadn’t smiled when he greeted her. Beyond standing up when she was shown in by his secretary, he hadn’t done anything to put her at ease.
‘Why did you send for me?’
Rising, he picked up a file lying on the top of his desk. He walked round to hand it to her. ‘Have a look through that.’ He strolled away to a window looking out on a vista of rooftops. He stood with his hands behind him, the right hand clasping the left wrist.
The file held plastic pockets containing illustrations taken from magazines and the glossier kind of catalogue. Mostly they showed pieces of
sculpture, paintings and other objets d’art. There were also several photographs of horses, an aerial view of an island off Scotland and a picture of a small French château.
Half turning from the window, he said, ‘They’re all things that caught my eye over the last few years. Some of them are now mine. I’m in the fortunate position of being able to indulge my acquisitive impulses...as I expect you did before your father died.’
‘Not on this scale,’ said Fran. She couldn’t see where this was leading.
As she glanced enquiringly at him, Reid Kennard returned to his desk, resting one long hard thigh along the edge of its polished surface and folding his arms across his chest.
‘There’s one picture in there you’ll recognise. Carry on looking.’
Intrigued, she obeyed, turning the pages more rapidly than before. Suddenly, with an indrawn breath of surprise and puzzlement, she stopped. She hadn’t expected to see a photograph of herself.
It had been taken at a party for socialites. She was wearing a figure-hugging dress of black crushed velvet and showing a lot of sun-tanned cleavage, having recently returned from a winter holiday in the Caribbean.
‘What am I doing here?’ she demanded, baffled.
‘You, I hope, are going to be my next major acquisition, Ms Turner.’ For the first time a hint of amusement showed in the hard steel-grey eyes and flickered at the corners of his wide, chiselled mouth.
Inconsequently, it struck her that his mouth was at variance with the rest of his features. It was the mouth of a sensualist in the face of a man who otherwise gave the impression of being supremely self-disciplined.
But it was the meaning of his extraordinary statement, rather than the contradiction between his mouth and his eyes that preoccupied her at the moment.
‘What do you mean?’ she said warily.
‘I need a wife. You need financial support. Do you understand the word fortuitous?’
‘Of course I do,’ she retorted, her long-lashed green eyes sparkling with annoyance at the implied aspersion on her intelligence.
It was true she had been considered a dunce by most of her teachers and had never done well in examinations. But that was because she hadn’t been interested in the things they wanted her to learn...grammar, maths, physics and incredibly tedious bits of history, all of them taught in a way guaranteed to send most normal teenagers—particularly the sort of restless, hyperactive teenager she had been—into a trance of boredom.
She said, ‘It means happening by chance...especially by a lucky chance. But I can’t see anything lucky about my father dying of a massive coronary in his middle fifties with his business on the rocks and his wife destitute,’ she added coldly.
Matching her coldness, he said, ‘In my experience, most people make their own luck. Your father’s lifestyle wasn’t conducive to a long healthy life. As a businessman, he took too many risks for a man with responsibilities.’
‘Did you have dealings with him?’
She knew next to nothing about her father’s business life. Since her late teens he had spent little time with his family. It was years since he and her mother had shared a bedroom. Fran knew there had been other women.
‘Not directly. But after seeing that picture, I made a point of finding out more about you. I was on the point of making contact when your father died and I put the matter on hold. In the light of subsequent events, I’ve adapted my original plan to deal with things more expeditiously. If my information is correct, you have no relationships with men in train at the present time?’
‘How did you find that out?’
He said coolly, ‘I had you investigated...a reasonable precaution in the circumstances. Marriage is a very important contract. When people are buying a house, they have searches made by surveyors and lawyers. I had you checked out, very discreetly, by a private detective. You may want to run a similar check on me. For the time being my secretary has prepared a file which will give you most of the information you need.’
Retrieving the file she was holding, he placed another slimmer folder on the edge of the desk in front of her.
‘I can’t believe I’m hearing this. I thought this was a merchant bank...not a marriage bureau.’
Fran’s eyes were both baffled and angry. He didn’t look like a crazy person. In his expensive suit and diagonally striped silk tie—perhaps the emblem of one of those old boys’ networks which still wielded so much influence—he looked eminently sane and sensible. But he must be out of his head to believe he could buy a wife as casually and easily as everything else in the file he was putting away in a drawer.
‘It is a bank and I am its chairman,’ he said calmly.
‘You wouldn’t be for much longer if your shareholders heard what you’re suggesting. They’d think you were out of your mind. You can’t buy a wife.’
‘It isn’t the usual method of acquiring one,’ he agreed, going back to his chair. ‘But these are unusual circumstances. I have neither the time nor inclination to follow the traditional course. You are in urgent need of someone to straighten out the financial shambles you find yourself in. If you agree to marry me, your mother won’t have to move and you won’t have to worry about her future. I’ll take care of that. Think it over, Francesca. When you’ve had time to assess it, I think you’ll agree it’s an eminently sensible plan.’
For some reason his use of her first name detonated the anger which had been building inside her. Despite the red glints in her chestnut hair, it was rare for Fran to lose control of her temper. But she did now.
Jumping up, she said fiercely, ‘I don’t need to think it over. Nor would any sane person. I’m furious you’ve made me come here, thinking I’d hear something useful. This trip to London has been a complete waste of time. I’ve a damned good mind to write to your board of directors and tell them they’ve got a nutcase in control.’
Without waiting for his reaction, she marched to the big double doors of solid mahogany and yanked one of them open. Glowering at the startled secretary at her desk in the outer sanctum, she slammed it resoundingly behind her and returned to the private lift which had brought her up to this rarefied level of the building.
‘Is everything all right, Mr Kennard?’
His PA didn’t know why he had sent for Francesca Turner, but she knew there could be no justification for the girl to emerge from his room scowling like one of the snake-haired Furies in classical mythology.
A conservative fiftysomething who had been promoted to PA while the late Sir Miles Kennard was chairman, Miss Jones knew enough about Ms Turner to conclude she was thoroughly spoilt.
Perhaps Mr Kennard had told her a few home truths. Although diplomacy was one of his many skills, when it was appropriate he could be outspoken, even ruthless. He was a much tougher man than his father. And needed to be. The world was a harsher place now than when she had joined the bank as a junior secretary almost thirty years ago.
‘Everything’s fine, Miss Jones, thank you.’
Although he was always formal, sometimes he gave her a smile which was far more rewarding than the casual use of her first name. That he should smile now surprised her. She had expected Ms Turner’s ill-mannered exit from his presence to leave him in one of his forbidding moods.
As his visibly baffled PA withdrew, it crossed Reid’s mind that Barbara Jones and Francesca Turner were about as dissimilar as any two women with roughly the same background could be.
The only child of middle-aged parents, Miss Jones had spent her adult life caring for them in their old age. She was the most selfless, reliable, deserving person he knew. The only rewards she could expect were the satisfaction of duty well done and a modestly comfortable pension.
Francesca represented the opposite extreme. It seemed likely she had never performed an unselfish act in her life. Unfairly, she had all the assets his PA lacked: a beautiful face and figure, a vibrant personality and a high degree of self-confidence, partly inborn and partly the result of an expensive él
itest education.
Although Reid could usually predict how most people would react to any given circumstance, not having met Francesca he hadn’t been sure how she would respond to his proposition. On the whole her spirited reaction had pleased him.
It showed that she was hot-tempered, impulsive and combative. At the same time it revealed that she wasn’t a coward, willing to clutch at any straw to save herself from having to grapple with the gritty realities of switching from rich girl to poor girl.
From the moment she had entered the room, he had known that the shots in the social pages of the glossies hadn’t given a false impression. In reality she was even more attractive than she looked in her photographs.
Although his main motive for marrying was not the customary one, it wasn’t his plan to have the kind of relationship where physical pleasure was something found outside the marriage. The extra-marital liaisons engaged in by many of his peers were not on his own agenda. In his view there was no reason why a practical marriage shouldn’t include good sex.
Taming that pretty firebrand until she ate out of his hand was a challenge he hadn’t foreseen but expected to enjoy.
Contrary to what she had angrily told Reid Kennard, Fran had another reason for coming to London: to pack all the personal belongings in her father’s London pied-à-terre. This was now in the hands of an estate agent who expected to sell it quickly. Whatever price it fetched wouldn’t help Fran and her mother. It would go towards paying off George Turner’s numerous creditors.
The flat was near Marble Arch, part of a low-rise block built on the site of a large private mansion. All the trees had been carefully preserved, making the gardens surrounding the block seem an oasis of peaceful greenery in the heart of the noisy metropolis.