Pasting on a pleasant smile that concealed the anxiety coiling deep within her, she scooted her chair back from her rolltop desk and stood. “Thank you, Liz,” she said, giving the other woman her cue to leave.

Liz hesitated briefly, her gaze darting toward the open door in what Paige could only construe as a subtle warning. The discreet, unspoken signal had Paige wishing she were a mind reader. Something in their plan had changed, but what?

Too soon, Liz exited the room. As they’d devised that morning, a decorative doorstop propped at the base of the door kept the office open, enabling the other woman to monitor the situation. Grateful for the modicum of safety, Paige forced herself to approach the ruthless man who’d had her husband murdered, a man who was out to claim a million-dollar necklace at any cost to the people involved.

He was nothing like the sinister, villainous criminal she’d envisioned. The man was tall, his tailored Italian suit fitting a physique slighter than the heavy, muscular build she had expected. His thick black hair was cut precisely, his eyes just as dark as those gleaming strands. His gaze, although sharp and assessing, radiated warmth, as did his benevolent smile. He appeared suave, obviously wealthy, and very…normal. Like any other businessman she’d ever met.

He extended a manicured hand toward her. “Paige Montgomery, I presume?” he queried, his voice deep and congenial.

“Yes.” She didn’t want to touch him, but to ignore his offered hand would be unacceptable. Shoring up her resolve, she politely slipped her hand into his. “It’s nice to meet you, Mr. Carranza.”

His eyes sparkled with the kind of persuasive charm designed to captivate an unsuspecting woman. Luckily Paige knew enough to distrust this man.

“Considering we’ll be doing business together please call me Victor,” he insisted.

The double meaning of his words “doing business together” sent a wave of apprehension sweeping through her. When she gently pulled her hand from his grasp he didn’t resist. “I do hope you find the boutique to your liking.”

“I’m afraid I’m not the one you need to impress.” He leaned close, winked, and added in a low, conspiratorial tone, “I brought the critic with me.”

Before Paige had time to decipher that comment, a sleek, catlike woman stepped into the room, dressed in a racy-red, form-fitting halter dress that hugged her curves from breasts to thighs. Her endlessly long, tanned legs gave way to feet clad in red stiletto heels. A glittering ruby-and-diamond necklace, much too extravagant for daytime wear, encircled her neck, matching the teardrop earrings in her lobes and the jeweled bracelet adorning her wrist. In contrast, Paige felt like an old-fashioned matron in her conservative, doublebreasted suit in a pale shade of sage.

This was the warning Liz had tried to give her, she realized. Even before Victor introduced her, Paige’s stomach churned with the knowledge of who this woman was.

“Ah, there you are, pussycat,” Victor said affectionately. “Come here and meet the owner of the Wild Rose.” He waited until the gorgeous woman stood by his side before making the unnecessary introductions. “Paige, I’d like you to meet my fiancee, Bridget Piroux.”

Paige desperately tried to keep her composure and act normal, which wasn’t an easy feat considering she was meeting the woman with whom her husband had had an illicit, deadly affair. Curiously, she’d thought that when this moment came she’d experience jealousy or some other violent emotion, but all she felt was renewed anger at Anthony’s duplicity. This woman was proof that her marriage to Anthony had been a sham based on lies and deceit-if that hadn’t been evident before, it was now.

She smiled amicably, but didn’t offer her hand. “It’s nice to meet you.”

The other woman gave her head a haughty shake, and her long sable hair rippled down her back in a silky cascade. Dark, exotic green eyes that tipped up at the corners scrutinized Paige from head to toe. Full lips, painted the same shocking red as her dress curled into a smug smile. “Ummm, a pleasure,” she purred.

“So, what do you think of the place, pussycat?”

Bridget hooked an arm through Victor’s, pressing so close her breasts quivered and threatened to spill from her low-cut bodice. “Darling, the boutique is absolutely charming!” she gushed, playing the pampered fiancee to the hilt. “The shop is classy and the outfits are more stylish than I’d expected. Why, it would be like having one great big closet full of clothes!”

Under different circumstances, Paige would have found the other woman’s fatuousness amusing, but there was a shrewd intelligence in her eyes that belied her dim-witted, spoiled routine.

Victor caught the hand that had slipped intimately beneath his suit jacket and brought it back into sight. “How long do you think it will hold your attention before you grow bored with it?”

Laughing throatily, she trailed a long, crimson nail along the front of his shirt. “Does it really matter, as long as it keeps me busy during the day while you’re working?”

“No, I suppose it doesn’t.” He sighed and looked back at Paige with a shrug that said he was helpless to resist this woman’s wishes. “I guess we’ll be discussing numbers.”

Paige prayed her surprise didn’t reflect on her face. She honestly hadn’t believed his supposed interest in the boutique would go beyond a preliminary inquiry. And what perplexed her even more was that, so far, neither one of them had glanced at the picture on the wall. Wasn’t that their real purpose for being here?

“All right,” Paige said, playing along with the ruse. She waved a hand toward the pair of tweed chairs and end table that made up a small sitting area next to her desk. “Please, sit down and we’ll discuss my price and terms.”

Victor took one of the chairs, but Bridget strolled to the opposite side of the office from where the portrait hung. She stopped at a bookcase filled with catalogs, specialty books and other business periodicals. Retrieving a thick book of fashion designs, she casually flipped through the pages.

“I’m afraid she doesn’t care for the dealing part of business, and leaves the final decision in my hands,” Carranza said, explaining Bridget’s disinterest.

More likely she wants to case the joint, Paige thought, but feigned indifference. “I understand.”

Opening the button on his suit jacket, he reclined back in his chair. “First, I’d like to ask why you’re selling the boutique.”

The personal question threw her, though she managed to sustain an outward calm. “Excuse me?”

“I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to be so blunt.” He smiled his apology. “But what I’d like to know is if the Wild Rose is financially secure.”

“It turns a decent profit. In fact, it’s doing extremely well.” Not sure where this conversation was heading, but wanting to maintain a businesslike air, she offered, “I can have my accountant send you a financial statement if you’d like.”

“If the boutique is solvent, why would you let it go?” he asked, as if he hadn’t heard her last remark or was ignoring it for more consequential information. “Is there something we should know about, a reason why you might be, well, unloading the shop…”

Paige was beginning to find this conversation entirely too bizarre, as if Carranza really did have an interest in the boutique, which was ridiculous. These pragmatic questions weren’t what she’d anticipated, and her honest answer to his question-that she was severing all ties to Miami and opting for solitude and simplicity-weren’t t appropriate in this situation.

Think pretentious and pampered, Paige. That’s what they expect from you. “Oh, no, it’s nothing like that,” she said, punctuating her remark with light, frivolous laughter. “The boutique is a responsibility I no longer want. I’m recently widowed, and I’ve been thinking of doing some traveling.” Straight to Connecticut.

“Alone?” His smile was affable, his tone conversational, but there was something in the depths of his gaze that made her feel anxious-as if he was subtly prying for intimate answers that had nothing to do with the sale of the boutique and more to do with the ostentatious woman she was supposed to be.

Out of the corner of her eye she noticed Bridget watching her, waiting for her response, her fingers stroking the dazzling ruby-and-diamond necklace Paige highly suspected had been smuggled through Carranza’s organization.

Paige’s face warmed, and she hoped they’d both mistake the flush for embarrassment and not the uneasiness it

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