Only then did she hesitate.
Taking in her surrounds, green eyes darting, she fleetingly looked a fraction lost, and only then did Xante fathom that she wasn’t a guest.
The hotel was practically in lockdown. Xante had brought in many extra staff to ensure that his important guests’ privacy was respected. Fans would remain outside, and journalists, however heavily disguised, were at this moment being politely turned away. But this woman, seemingly without prearrangement, had waived scrutiny and waltzed in as if she owned the place.
Certain people did not require a passport, Xante knew, and this lady appeared to be one of them.
She was strolling around the foyer, looking at the artwork on display, presumably waiting to meet someone. Xante’s head was full of questions, which meant he required answers—and quickly, please! It was the hallmark of his success.
‘That lady.’ Xante checked with his concierge, the one person in the place who would certainly know. ‘Who is she?’
Albert was talking to a couple, telling them about numerous shows that were on at the West End, before swiftly moving to his desk to check ticket availability. A brilliant multi-tasker, Albert still managed to deliver the required information to his boss as the theatre agent placed him on hold.
‘Karin Wallis,’ Albert said in low tones, and Xante frowned at the familiar name. His life was too busy to read the who’s who of London, Paris or Rome, or wherever his schedule dictated that he be, and he relied on people like Albert to do the groundwork for him.
‘Is she famous?’ The name was familiar. Xante’s brow furrowed as he tried to place it.
‘She’s from one of England’s most famous families,’ Albert murmured. ‘They regularly grace the social pages.’
‘And?’ Xante pushed, because Albert never volunteered gossip—he always wanted to be asked!
‘The parents died a couple of years ago. The brother’s a bit of a rogue, but charming; the younger sister attends boarding school.’
‘What about Karin?’ Xante was tired of squeezing out information. ‘What do you know about her?’
‘Well, the press refer to her as “the Ice Queen”.’ Albert gave a tight smile. ‘They would argue that the name merely refers to the numerous ski trips the lady takes—she’s just returned from one in Switzerland—however…’ Albert gave a small cough to show he was uncomfortable discussing such things and reluctant to give his boss advice; it was a dance they performed regularly.
‘Go on,’ Xante invited.
‘Frankly, sir, you’d be wasting your time with her. No one gets close to Karin Wallis.’ Always discreet, Albert immediately terminated the conversation as the couple reapproached the desk. ‘It shouldn’t be much longer now, sir…’ Even if Xante was his boss, the guests came first—that was the reason Xante employed him, after all.
Xante nodded, heading to Reception, where he checked in with the floor manager, reminding him that he wished to be informed whenever one of the team arrived.
The Ice Queen!
How Xante wished he had time to rise to Albert’s unwitting challenge today. Impossibly good-looking and obscenely wealthy, Xante Rossi had no trouble attracting women. Raised on a Greek Island by his widowed mother, Xante had fought hard just to exist, scavenging for food in the overflowing bins outside the restaurants where the rich tourists ate, scouring the fishing nets for their rotten remains. His father’s death had devastated him, but on that wretched day, all those years ago, something else had happened that had frightened the nine-year-old Xante.
He had been at the beach, waiting for news with uncles, cousins and friends, whilst his mother had been back at the house, keeping vigil, praying for a miracle. Then the boat had returned with its grim load.
An uncle who had been fishing with Xante’s father had broken the harsh news to him, letting the small boy cry for a while before telling him that now he must be strong. The priest had gone to break the news to his mother.
He couldn’t remember the walk home. Maybe they had gone in a car; Xante truly couldn’t recall.
What he did recall though was the shock of walking into the house and seeing his mother dressed head to toe in black.
She’d only been in her twenties, but that day, in Xante’s eyes, she’d aged two decades.
All the colour, all the vibrancy, was wiped away for ever. On that fateful day, he’d lost not just his father but his mother’s laughter too. How he had wanted it back. Had wanted her to dress again in pretty floral skirts and white, cotton tops; had wanted her hair in curls instead of hidden behind a black scarf; had wanted her to wear make-up again and had wanted to smell her sweet perfume.
But those days, like his father, had gone for ever.
His mother, the house, shrouded in grief.
But at fourteen Xante had found a diversion.
He’d been tall for his age, good-looking even then, and the tourists that had flocked to his home town had provided rich pickings. The older kamaki boys had told him that, having mastered the art of kissing, it was time to move on to the mountains. Riding up on his scooter with a pretty girl who’d worn vibrant colours and make-up, and who’d laughed at his jokes and held tight to his waist, Xante had finally found freedom from the stuffy confines of home.
He had been found out, of course. The school had written to his mother about his poor attendance, and she had called for his uncle, who had located him on the mountain in a rather compromising position. Then Xante had been hauled back home and beaten to within an inch of his life, his mother screaming of the shame he had brought to their family name.
It had put an end to his mischief for a while.
Xante had buckled down at school, and his grades had picked up, but always the mountains had called him.
And still, even today, Xante remembered that surge of triumph he had felt in his kamaki days when he had eked a delicious response from virgin flesh, or had aided a lonely housewife to escape the drudgery of the marital bed and discover her most intimate secrets again.
Ice Queen! Xante smiled to himself; there was no such thing.
Still, he was far too busy for distraction today. He took a seat in the guest lounge, where his computer demanded his attention. Coffee was automatically served, but Xante couldn’t help but observe the woman in question as she walked into the room.
The vigilant head-waiter immediately guided her to a seat, and for the first time Xante realised she was nervous. Xante read women easily; he had grown up mastering the skill. And, though most would have missed it, Karin Wallis was certainly nervous. Her eyes were darting around the room as she entered, but there was such poise to her that most wouldn’t have noticed; all they would have seen was an elegant woman walking in gracefully.
Heads turned as she passed.
Elite sportsmen, who could have and did have the most beautiful women by their sides, noticed her just as Xante had. There was nothing sleazy about it. The women all looked too; there was just something about her that merited more than a passing glance.
Breeding.
That was the word.
Her fine, porcelain features, the elegant way that she sat—her legs slightly to the side, and crossed neatly at her slim ankles—were all noted by Xante.
She wasn’t a hotel guest, of that he was now sure. There was no laptop at her side, either, and she wasn’t checking her watch as if to meet anyone. In fact, she took the proffered menu, and when Xante heard her crisp, well-schooled voice order tea and a sandwich he realised she intended to eat alone.
His phone bleeped. The call was an important one, as it always seemed to be these days, so he took it, speaking in Greek with his broker. He instantly forgot about the blonde, his mind back on business now—until she stood up. It was a move that unwittingly cost Xante an inordinate amount of money, and he ended the call telling his broker that he would deal with the fallout himself, before promptly switching off his phone.
She was wandering around the room, staring intently at the small memorabilia-display on the far wall. She’d lost weight recently, Xante surmised. She was wearing a smart, charcoal suit, but her skirt hung just a fraction too low on her slender hips and her jacket was too wide for her shoulders. Still, she was generously curved where it mattered. At the top of those slender legs was a pert bottom, and as she undid her jacket she unwittingly revealed a glimpse of cashmere bosom. It had been unwitting, as there was a slight prudishness to her that appealed to Xante—because, from his extensive experience, there was no greater pleasure than feeling the uptight come undone.
Yes, prudish described Karin Wallis perfectly. She wore little make-up to accentuate her fine features; her thick, blonde hair sat on the nape of her neck, coiled into a low bun. Her cashmere jumper was worn high on her neck, her skirt low on her knees, and her shoes were just a little too flat and heavy to really set off such magnificent legs. But still she was stunning. Still Xante had to look away, reaching for a newspaper and pretending to read for a full five minutes before it could be considered decent to stand.
Busy or not, Xante decided as he crossed the room, there was always time for a beautiful woman.
Karin didn’t actually know what she was doing here, or even what she was going to do now that she was.
It had been four weeks since she’d realised the rose was missing. She’d confronted her brother Matthew and had found out that he’d sold it. She’d agreed to sell off yet another painting, an ornate dresser and her late mother’s favourite earrings to pay for their sister’s final year of schooling—not realising that when she had signed the documents he’d deliberately beguiled her and had added the jewelled rose to the document too.
The ruby-encrusted rose that had been awarded to her grandfather the year the England rugby team had won every game they had played was so much more than a trinket. It had been her grandfather’s prized possession—Karin’s too. So many times she had escaped the chaos at home to go and spend some time with her widowed grandfather at Omberley Manor, the home she and Matthew now lived in. There had been many afternoons spent listening to the wonderful tales of his glory days, and Karin remembered each one with love. By the time Karin was fifteen, her grandfather had long since washed his hands of his wayward son and wife, and had told Karin that the rose would be hers on his death. For Karin the rose was the last link to her grandfather and to the great man he had been. It also represented everything her family could have been. And, if she protected her sister from the truth just a little while longer, it was a symbol of everything Emily might one day become.
Karin had been frantically searching for the rose for weeks. Next week she had a formal function to attend at Twickenham to celebrate her grandfather’s achievements, and it was assumed she would bring the jewel with her, but every attempt to trace it had proven futile. All she knew was that the rose had been sold to an anonymous bidder—the buyer, apparently, had insisted on anonymity—and Karin didn’t even know if it was a he or she.