for the benefit of potential clients. The seminar, so far as Stark was concerned, had been the easy part. It was the socializing afterward that he had dreaded. He always dreaded the social stuff.
No more. Desdemona had taken care of everything.
“You're going to have a hard time getting rid of this bunch,” Dane remarked. “They're all having a good time.”
“I'm telling you, McCallum, the decision to hire a professional caterer was the best idea I've had since I worked out the basic theory behind ARCANE's programming.”
“I'm not sure I'd go that far.”
“I would.” Stark was feeling almost euphoric with success. “Desdemona's operation runs like clockwork. There hasn't been a single glitch. And all I had to do was authorize the check. This is the way to do it, McCallum. Don't know why I didn't think of it earlier.”
Dane's mouth curved. “Sort of like having a wife-in-name-only, would you say?”
Stark was pleased with the analogy. “Exactly. All the convenience, none of the hassle.”
“And none of the fun?”
“I wouldn't know about that part.” Stark took a swallow of wine from his glass. “I've never managed to get myself married.”
“You don't know what you're missing.” Dane cast a speculative glance at Desdemona, who was busy on the other side of the room. “Then again, maybe you aren't missing a damn thing. Maybe you've got it all.”
“What's that supposed to mean?”
Dane shrugged. “You're a smart man. Everyone knows that. A smart man can get just about anything these days without having to pay full price.”
Stark followed Dane's gaze to where Desdemona stood talking to an earnest-looking corporate manager who worked for an Eastside firm. Nervous about his own abysmal social skills, Stark had asked her to act as hostess and mingle with the guests when necessary. She had been subtle about it, but Stark had noticed that no one in the room had been left on his or her own for long.
He watched her as she guided the manager to a small group and introduced him. Then, with a vivacious smile, she moved across the room to round up another stray.
Her smile made Stark's insides twist with excitement. It was not the first time.
Desdemona was wearing a sleek little black dress that skimmed her body in interesting places but somehow managed to appear modest. Her red curls were restrained with a black velvet ribbon. Several fiery ringlets had escaped to dance around her small, nicely shaped ears. Her jewelry consisted solely of a pair of sparking earrings. She managed to look simultaneously cool and hot. Touchable and yet untouched.
Stark recognized the tight, clenching sensation that seized his lower body. It was pure, unadulterated arousal. Along with it came a primitive possessiveness. The feeling hit him when he realized Dane was staring at Desdemona just as attentively as he was. Dane's blatant interest in Desdemona stirred the hair on the back of his neck.
“Go find your own caterer,” Stark said.
Dane gave him a knowing grin. “Like that, is it?”
Stark did not reply. The question had been simmering inside him for the past two weeks. Longer than that, if he was truthful. He had not been able to put Desdemona completely out of his mind since the night of his botched wedding.
He had known things were serious when he had realized that thoughts of her were interfering with his concentration. Under normal circumstances, nothing ever interfered with his concentration.
Stark gazed thoughtfully at Desdemona, wondering if he had misread the warmth in her eyes. He knew he was not very good at interpreting the various subtle sexual cues that women used. Nevertheless, he could have sworn that she was as interested in him as he was in her.
“Not to change the subject,” Dane murmured, “but have you heard from Pamela yet?”
“Who?”
Three hours later Desdemona saw her two assistants out Stark's kitchen door. Henry went first with a load of glassware.
Vernon Tate, the new
Marjorie Thelen
Kinsey Grey
Thomas J. Hubschman
Unknown
Eva Pohler
Lee Stephen
Benjamin Lytal
Wendy Corsi Staub
Gemma Mawdsley
James Patterson and Maxine Paetro