she said briskly. “Shall we start?”
“That would be excellent.”
She turned on her heel and launched into a description of the three floors of the building leased by the company. She knew Raoul well enough to know he wouldn’t need any description of Kane Haley, Inc. He was the sort of man who would have investigated the accounting company from top to bottom before he ever considered taking the position as its Chief Financial Officer.
It almost made her smile. Kane Haley had probably felt as if he was being interviewed for the job, rather than the other way around. Of course, the whole thing would have just amused Kane, and it certainly hadn’t blinded him to Raoul’s exceptional qualifications for the position.
Darn it.
When they were finished touring the fourteenth floor, they stopped in front of the elevators. Raoul had suggested they simply take the stairs, but Julia couldn’t reveal that her doctor had recommended no climbing until after the baby was born, so she’d said they were mostly for emergencies.
Normally she didn’t babble, but the continuing amused glint in Raoul’s expression and the memory of their past relationship was turning her logical brain into mush.
They stepped inside the empty elevator car, and no sooner had the doors closed than Raoul pressed the Hold button.
“Bien-aimée,” he said softly. “It has been a long while.”
Julia’s heart skipped a few beats. “Not so long. Just two or three months,” she tossed off, as if she didn’t have a clear idea how much time had passed. Fat chance. She had a biological reminder growing in her womb, telling her exactly how long it had been since they’d last seen one another.
“Over six months,” he corrected. “June was a beautiful time in your nation’s capital.”
She kept her gaze glued to the Hold button he was depressing. “We’d better get going, or someone will think the elevator is broken.”
“They will simply think the machine is slow.”
“Raoul—”
“Julia,” he mocked, using her same exasperated tone. “It is good to hear that you remember my first name.”
Unaccustomed heat bloomed in her face. “I remember.”
“As do I.” He lifted his free hand and stroked the curve of her cheek. “I remember many things.”
“Please, Raoul. It was nice, but it was just one of those temporary things.” Guilt nearly made Julia choke on the words, because, while she had intended things to be temporary between them, she’d deliberately done everything possible to ensure he’d give her a child.
It was my last chance to be a mother.
Julia bit on the inside of her mouth, knowing she deserved that small stab of pain. Raoul hadn’t been her last chance for motherhood, but the longer she’d waited, the smaller her chances would have gotten. Endometriosis didn’t always result in infertility, but it was a common result of the condition. She’d gone to the conference still in shock after hearing the bad medical news, and when she’d met Raoul it had seemed like the answer.
“I did not choose for it to be so very temporary. You are the one who made this decision.”
Raoul didn’t look amused now, but angry, and she could well imagine him as an imperious desert ruler of old. She should have known it would irritate him, not getting to be the one who broke things off. Men liked to be in control, which was why she didn’t want her child’s father involved in their lives.
She’d had enough experience with overbearing, dominating men who thought they ruled the universe just because fate had given them a particular set of chromosomes. Her military father was a case in point. Sure, not all men were like that, but she hadn’t had any luck telling who was a control freak and who wasn’t.
“We really have to be going,” she said. She tried pulling his hand from the button, but he held fast. “Raoul, let go.”
“We must talk.” Raoul watched the changing expressions in Julia’s face and wondered why she had been so adamant about ending their affair at the conclusion of the conference. Even now she fascinated him, stirring his body in a way that made it imperative that he wait before leaving the privacy of the elevator car. It would not be prudent to allow anyone at Kane Haley, Inc., to see his undisguised response to another employee.
“We have nothing to talk about,” Julia snapped.
A flicker of admiration crept through Raoul. At any time Julia was glorious, but angry? Gold flashed from her hair and eyes, color brightened her silken skin and she breathed deeply, emphasizing the womanly part of her that he’d already enjoyed so much. He drew a harsh breath of his own, exerting control over his unruly body.
“Nothing?” he asked. “Perhaps you would like to explain why you gave me an incorrect phone number.”
Julia’s eyelids dropped, concealing the hazel gold of her eyes. “Did I?”
“You know you did. Although the lady at the dry-cleaning establishment was quite cordial, I did not wish to speak with her, I wished to speak with you.”
“You could have called the company and gotten the number.”
“Since it was obvious you did not wish to speak with me, I respected your wishes. Now I question if that was the correct decision. You are being very evasive, Julia.”
“I told you—”
“Yes,” Raoul interrupted impatiently. “You told me many things. Some I have chosen to ignore.”
“That’s arrogant.”
“Isn’t that what you expect? The sheik who is as arrogant as his royal Arabian heritage?”
“It’s not your royal anything making you arrogant,” Julia returned. “It’s…” She stopped, clearly feeling she’d already said too much.
“Ah, yes. You do not think well of my sex, I think.”
“It isn’t necessarily your sex I was thinking about. In some ways that part is impressive.” Her gaze flicked downward for a brief moment, and he grew hard again.
She was impudent.
And sweetly naughty.
In the old days of his country a woman such as Julia would have been a disgrace, but no longer. As a youth his grandfather had embraced new ways of thinking about women, and for two generations they had been free to speak their minds in Hasan.
Sometimes that wasn’t always a blessing.
“I still do not understand why you wished such a temporary arrangement,” he said. “It doesn’t seem to be your nature.”
“Of course it is.”
Despite the denial, her gaze shifted once again, this time in evasion, and Raoul sighed.
“You are not promiscuous, chère.”
Julia glared. “Stop calling me…French things.”
He suppressed a smile, demanding control of his mouth. French endearments came naturally to him. Though his grandmother had spent far more years in Hasan than in her homeland, she remained exquisitely French, from the tips of her toes to the top of her perfectly coiffed head. He had spoken her native language from the time he was in his cradle and was named for Grand-mère’s own father.
“Julia, the fact remains that you are not the type for such casual encounters.”
“That’s ridiculous. You know nothing about me and don’t have a clue about my romantic life.”
He smiled knowingly. “A man knows when a woman has not been intimate for a while. There is a certain hesitation in her body when he—”
“Never