in ages? And at some fancy restaurant?

They’d play-act for the night. Help each other through situations neither much wanted to be in. And yeah, it would be more fun to have him to talk to through the dreaded pub catch-up.

“I have to warn you that despite appearances on the train this morning, I’m not an extrovert,” she confessed. “I’m not going to be the life and soul of your dinner party.” It was the criticism Corey had always leveled—that she wasn’t party-girl enough, that her conversation was too geeky.

“I know that already. If you were an extrovert, you would have joined in on the second rendition. It took you until the eighth. It will be perfect. We can sit and talk.”

“What if we run out of conversation?”

“We won’t. But if we did…” That slow smile.

“I’m leaving in a week and I’m not interested in…” she trailed off, lifting her hand in a small gesture.

It was a total lie—of course she was interested. But she didn’t really believe he would be—and even if he were, could she handle the performance anxiety? She’d be too aware to enjoy it.

“It’s just drinks, just dinner. Nothing heavy.”

“No dancing?” She teased, remembering his stumbling movement on the train, liking the way it made him that bit more human and less Greek god-like.

A rueful look crossed his face as he shook his head.

Then common sense hit, scuppering any idea they could pull this off. “But we don’t know each other and what if your aunt asks things I should know but of course I won’t?”

“Here’s the beautiful thing,” he said. “You speak no Spanish, right?”

“Right.”

“And obviously no Catalan either. My aunt speaks very little English. It doesn’t matter what you say. She can’t ask difficult questions.”

“So we met…”

“On a train.” He shrugged. “We got stuck between stations, our eyes met and it was so amazing the world started singing. We started talking. It went from there.”

Oh, my. That was what had happened in Nina’s mind. It cemented her decision—and with that certainty came confidence. “If I’m going to be your girlfriend, I’m going to act like it. I spent almost a year as someone’s fiancée and was never treated like it.”

His lips firmed, his customary serious, impassive expression returning. “What do you want me to do?”

“Hold my hand. Look like you—” she broke off, suddenly embarrassed.

“Like I—?” Now one corner of his mouth quirked.

“Want me. Not that you do, of course,” she said hurriedly, her skin starting to sizzle with mortification. “But could you just look like it?”

Right now, he looked stunned. “Your fiancé didn’t want you?”

“He didn’t want to show it.” They’d been together so long anyway—from first-year university right through their degrees and really, it was a convenience thing—for him, anyway. And then there was the fact he’d been getting his needs met elsewhere all the way along—because apparently she didn’t do it well enough for him.

Silence hung between them for too long.

“I don’t mean anything tacky,” Nina finally added, her moment of confidence shot. “We wouldn’t kiss or anything. I just don’t want to be ignored.” Yeah, now she was dying inside.

He moved around the counter, his eyes never leaving hers, as he came close enough for her to feel his breath on her skin. “I will look at you and they will all know how desperate I am to get you alone. That I cannot wait to have you naked in my arms. That there is no one else in the world for me and nothing more important to me than you. That I can’t believe how lucky I am to have you in my life.”

Even though she knew he was acting up a part, her breath hissed out between her teeth. “Okay, that would work.”

“I’ll be your strong, silent lover,” he promised. “I won’t let you down.”

She was instantly convinced. But she was going to have to remember that this was pretense. A couple of white lies for one night—for fun and for pride. To make two difficult situations easier. No harm could come of it, right?

“What’s the dress code?” she asked faintly.

“Just that, a dress.” His glance skittered down to her legs. He was definitely a leg man. Her thighs quivered and her blood pulsed around her body far too quickly.

“Where’s the pub you’re meeting these people?” he asked.

“You’ll meet me there?” She swallowed. She wished they could go there together.

He nodded. “I’m done at the wharf. I can meet you there whenever you want.”

“You’ve finished work?”

“I’ll do more from home.”

So he wasn’t heading into one of those high-rise banking headquarters now for the next few hours? She thought about arranging to meet him early, but she didn’t want them to be the first one there. Last to arrive, first to leave was her plan. “Baker Street?”

“Yes.” He confirmed that he lived in one of those exclusive, cost-a-gazillion apartments in the grand, old stone buildings.

Nothing like the three-to-a-room shoebox she shared with an assortment of Australians, New Zealanders, and South Africans—several streets back from the Tube station.

“Tell me the time and I’ll be there,” he said. “We’ll stay for a while and show them how happy you are and then we’ll go to dinner and show my aunt how settled I am. And we’ll enjoy ourselves far more than we thought we could. It’ll be a laugh.” He shot her a sideways look. “You can quote more Shakespeare to me.”

Nina smiled and obliged then and there. “So you’re not worried ‘that truth will out’?”

Four

Eduardo laughed as he shook his head. This would have to be the craziest thing he’d done in years—as it clearly was for her, too. She was interested, yes. Trying not to be, yes. Wary, yes. But she was also intrigued. And though she might work in a store filled with jewels of every color, none sparkled the way she did. Her blue eyes were beautiful, almost navy, and filled with life and emotion. He recalled her smile on the street as she walked, her laughter

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