He shook his head. Damn, who would have believed it? She certainly wasn't his type.

'Rusty will be my sixth husband. You never count Miguel.'

'Do you know a tall, slim redheaded woman wearing a gray silk dress?' Nick asked.

'Why?' Dina's voice trembled slightly.

'She's standing just a few feet away watching us.'

Dina swirled around, her most dazzling smile in place. 'Addy, darling, do come over and meet my Nicky.'

He surveyed darling Addy from the top of her curly red hair to the tips of her gray leather heels. Thick, unruly flame-red hair. Plain but expensive two-inch heels. A neat little gray silk dress covered her model-thin body. It didn't cling or drape; it simply covered. Despite the fact that this woman obviously didn't dress to attract men, Nick found her very attractive. Even though he truly liked women, all women, he usually preferred sexy blondes with round curves.

Darling Addy stared at him intently, as if she were trying to gauge the extent of his personal relationship with Dina. She seemed interested in him, but not enthralled the way so many women usually were. He didn't know exactly what it was about him that piqued female interest, but he wasn't about to deny himself the pleasures of being considered a Romeo.

'Oh, Nicky, do say hello to Addy McConnell, Rusty's daughter.' Dina glanced nervously back and forth from Addy to Nick. 'Addy, this is my brother-in-law, Nick Romero. He's flown in from Florida just for my engagement party.'

Smiling, Nick held out his hand. 'Ms. McConnell.'

She stared at his hand for several minutes, then offered hers. 'Mr. Romero.'

When he didn't immediately release her hand, she tugged gently. He held fast, pulling her closer. When she was only inches away, he gazed into her eyes, almond-shaped green eyes—cat eyes—framed by thick reddish- brown lashes. 'On closer inspection, I see a definite resemblance to your father. Same hair, without the gray. Same eyes, only brighter. And you're much prettier than Rusty. Your mother must have been quite a beautiful woman.'

'She was, but I don't look anything like her. I'm pure McConnell. Through and through. Just ask Daddy.' Addy jerked her hand out of Nick's. 'We're pleased that you could fly in and share this special night with Dina. Will you be staying here at the house?'

'No,' Dina said, her lips puckered in a seductive pout. 'I told him there was more than enough room, but he booked into a hotel. Wasn't that naughty of him?'

'You should have stayed here.' Addy nodded toward the house. 'This place is almost as big as a hotel and there's no one living here right now except Daddy, Dina and Brett.'

'Brett Windsor's living here?' Nick asked.

'Brett's considering some local investments. He'll be getting his own place soon.' Dina patted Addy on the arm affectionately. 'Brett thinks the world of Addy, but she won't give him the least little bit of encouragement.'

'Is that right?' Nick tried to keep the sarcastic tone out of his voice. He'd just bet that Brett thought the world of Addy. He thought the world of Rusty McConnell's millions was more like it. Brett Windsor had inherited half of his father's estate and Dina had inherited the other half. That had been fourteen years and two husbands ago. Nick doubted if either one of them had a dime of Ashley Windsor's six-million-dollar legacy.

Dina glanced toward the French doors where the man in question stood. 'There's Brett now. I should go and assure him that Nicky isn't a rival, shouldn't I, Addy?'

'By all means.' Addy waved at Brett, who flashed her a brilliant smile and waved back at her. 'I'll entertain Mr. Romero.'

'What?' Dina laughed, fluttering her eyelashes. 'Nicky, you behave yourself with Addy. After all, she's my Rusty's only child and he adores her.'

'I promise to be on my best behavior.' Nick glanced at Addy, wondering what she thought of her father's fiancee.

'I'll hold you to that.' Giving Nick a flirtatious smile and Addy an affectionate pat on the arm, Dina sauntered toward her third husband's son.

'Your brother was one of Dina's husbands?' Addy asked.

'Her first husband.' Nick realized that this woman didn't like Dina, and her curious green eyes said that she wasn't sure she liked him either.

'Then you've known her for a long time?'

'Since I was fifteen, and I'll be forty-four soon.'

'She seems very fond of you.'

'She is.' Nick noticed the surprised expression on Addy's face. Had she been expecting a denial? 'But then, Dina is very fond of a lot of men.'

'And, if my father is any indication, a lot of men are fond of Dina.'

Nick reached out and took Addy's hand, slipping her arm through his. She didn't resist. Grasping his cane in his other hand, he walked them toward the French doors. 'Will Dina be your first stepmother?'

'If Daddy marries her, she will be.'

'You don't like Dina?'

'Dina and I have an understanding,' Addy said, hesitating before entering the house again. 'We tolerate each other. In front of Daddy, we're always cordial.'

'If it's any comfort to you, Ms. McConnell, Dina probably won't be a part of your life for more than a few years. As you already know, her track record in the marriage department isn't very good.'

'Daddy's crazy in love with Dina, despite her—er—track record.'

They stepped inside the house, into the throng of celebrants, into the midst of bright lights and loud music and the hum of hundreds of voices. People filled the downstairs of Rusty McConnell's three-story mansion.

When Addy took several steps away from him, Nick reached out, detaining her by grasping her slender wrist. 'If I could dance, I'd ask you for the next one.' He almost laughed when he saw the look of surprise on her face.

'Why would you do that?' she asked, a genuinely puzzled look in her eyes.

'Because I'd like to hold you in my arms.' Nick knew what women liked to hear, and he'd always had a knack for saying the right thing, for pushing the right buttons. He was adept at using words to achieve his goal, and he usually meant most of what he said. He never blatantly lied to a woman or made promises he didn't keep.

'You're wasting your time flirting with me, Mr. Romero. I'm immune to charming men.'

The moment she spoke, he realized that he had indeed meant what he'd said to her. He did want to hold her in his arms. For some odd reason he felt that Addy McConnell needed someone to hold her, to care about her, to protect her. Stupid notion. Why would the heir to a multi-million-dollar aerospace firm need a crippled ex-DEA agent to take care of her? 'Some charming man broke your heart?'

'Some charming bastard married me for my daddy's money.'

Her smile was as deadly cold as any Nick had ever seen. This woman truly was immune to charm. Did she hate men? he wondered. All men? Or just the charming ones?

'His loss, I'd say.'

'Yes, it was,' Addy agreed, then walked away from Nick.

He didn't follow, but he watched her. She was tall. At least five ten or eleven in her two-inch heels. Rusty McConnell was Nick's height. Six three.

Addy was slender, but not too skinny. Her shoulders were broad, her waist tiny and her hips well-rounded. She paused by the side of a voluptuous creature in a red sequined dress, whose frosted blond head barely reached Addy's shoulder. Apparently the woman was a close friend. She and Addy were laughing.

Nick noticed how very different the two women were. The blonde was his type—bold and sexy and bosomy. So why did she pale beside Addy? Nick couldn't understand what it was about this redhead that made the blood run hot in his veins. The blood in her veins was probably mixed with ice water. And she didn't have any breasts, at least not enough to fill out the front of her plain little silk dress. She was small but no doubt firm. He guessed that her nipples were a pale coral to match the peachy tint of her creamy gold complexion. He wanted to see those small breasts, those tight little nipples.

Вы читаете Paladin's Woman
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