Sweet Madness. Sharon Kendrick
‘Fran!’ as though someone had just told him he’d won the national lottery. ‘Just one minute,’ he said, then put his hand over the receiver. ‘Phone my secretary tomorrow. Start date—when? A fortnight?’
‘A month.’
He shook his head. ‘A fortnight. I’ll see you then.’ And he gave her a polite nod of dismissal, continuing his conversation with ‘Fran’—whoever she was—the knockout redhead he’d been with in the restaurant probably, thought Sam with unwelcome resentment.
She left the studio, trying to walk normally across the vast floor area, which was difficult when she knew that those enigmatic eyes were watching her, wondering why she should not be feeling like whooping for joy that she’d just landed a job with one of the world’s greatest photographers.
Because joy was too strong a word to describe her feelings. Too strong and too simple.
She’d never come out of a job interview like this before, as churned up inside as if someone had just put her through the wringer. But then she’d never met a man like Declan before.
A brilliant man who was so abrasive, so unsettling.
And sexy as hell.
‘WHY didn’t you warn me?’ Sam swung round to face Robin accusingly, the large silver hooped earrings she wore swaying wildly, like swings in a bird-cage.
‘Warn you about what?’ asked Robin, mock-innocently, a grin on his face.
‘Him! Declan Hunt. He’s unbelievable.’
‘I did warn you—I told you that he was a genius. And a bastard. I thought that three years of working in the States might have tamed him a little, but apparently not.’
Something in Robin’s eyes prompted her next question. ‘What’s he like?’
He shrugged. ‘Who really knows with Declan? He’s an intensely private man. I gave him his first job, you know. It’s funny—even at eighteen I knew that he had the talent to go right to the top, to outclass anyone else of his generation.’ He smiled at her. ‘So he’s offered you the job, huh? And naturally you’ve accepted.’
Sam shrugged, knowing that she would never share with Declan Hunt the kind of easygoing working relationship she had with Robin. ‘I’d be a fool not to, wouldn’t I?’
‘I don’t think so, but then I’m biased, aren’t I? I’d rather have you stay here, with me.’
Sam smiled at Robin Squires. Though at fifty he was around two decades older than Declan, he too wore the ubiquitous denim. His broad cockney accent was an affectation, since he came from one of England’s most aristocratic families, and it was this that set him apart—since many clients were still impressed by someone who not only took good pictures, but had a title, too.
She shook her head regretfully. ‘Oh, if only I could—anything for an easy life—but this girl’s career is demanding to take off, and Declan Hunt provides the world’s best launching pad.’ She frowned. ‘He told me that my being a woman worried him, that he finds them emotional to work with.’
Robin looked at her quickly. ‘He said that?’ He picked up an eyeglass to scan a whole sheet of tiny ‘contact’ photographs, and remarked almost casually, ‘You know that Gita used to be his assistant?’
Sam opened her mouth, then shut it again. ‘Gita?’ she verified. ‘His assistant? Your Gita?’
Robin put down the eyeglass. ‘There’s only one Gita.’ He gave a kind of blank smile. ‘Isn’t there?’
Yes, indeed. Robin’s exquisite Indian wife had been the model of her decade, retiring much too early, according to the pundits.
Gita.
With those wide dark-brown-velvet eyes that a man could lose himself in, silky skin the colour of milky coffee, and long, aristocratic limbs. And as Lady Squires, Robin’s wife, she now had a different career—that of society beauty. Her two homes were always being featured in magazine and newspaper articles. And no race meeting was considered anything if Gita was not there, wearing one of the millinery creations for which she was famous.
These days she rarely ventured near Robin’s studio, and on the few occasions that Sam had met her she had found her stunning, aloof—and very slightly terrifying.
Sam frowned. ‘I had no idea that Gita did photography before she started modelling.’
‘Why should you have known? It was way before your time, and it’s not something that I particularly broadcast. Anyway, she wasn’t his assistant for very long. Declan saw her potential, decided she was wasted behind the lens—he took some shots and the rest, as they say, is history. They became overnight successes, and never looked back. In the beginning, she wouldn’t let anyone else photograph her, which only added to his, and her, mystique.’ He shot her another glance. ‘You knew that they were involved, didn’t you? Emotionally, as well as professionally?’ He spoke the words quickly as if to get them over with, like a child gulping down a particularly nasty dose of medicine.
Sam shook her head, surprised by the sudden, inexplicable lurching of her heart. ‘No. No, I didn’t.’ She was curious to know more, and yet, at the same time, strangely reluctant to hear it. ‘Was it—serious?’
Robin gave a laugh which sounded forced. ‘Very. The beautiful couple with the world at their feet. They could have been the Taylor-Burton combination of the photographic world.’
‘But I don’t remember reading anything about it,’ said Sam slowly.
‘You wouldn’t have done. Declan is a man who guards his privacy well. He managed to keep the affair out of the tabloids, much to Gita’s chagrin. She is—’ he gave a rueful smile ‘—a keen self-publicist.’
‘So what happened between them?’ Sam was bursting with a need to know, then realised that Robin might consider it prying. ‘Unless you’d rather not talk about it?’
But he shook his head. ‘Our hero became disillusioned with the glitzy world of glamour photography and decided to do something meaningful with his life. This caused fireworks with Gita. She wanted a man at her side, not on the other side of the world. She gave Declan an ultimatum, which basically boiled down to if he did go and work in a war zone then it was all over between them.’
‘And he . . .?’ asked Sam tentatively.
Robin laughed. ‘Declan’s not a man you can tame, or bribe. He went right ahead with his plan. Naturally, being Declan, he excelled at photo-journalism, too. As you know, he became something of a national hero, when his war photographs were taken up by news agencies all around the world and were credited with achieving peace negotiations, where everything else had failed.’
‘And—Gita?’ probed Sam hesitantly.
‘Oh, Gita.’ He paused. ‘I’m afraid that the war lost him Gita, because while he was out getting shot at she decided to marry me.’
‘But—why?’ said Sam, without thinking, then saw his face and could have kicked herself. ‘I’m sorry, Robin—I didn’t mean—’
He shook his head. ‘I had something which Gita wanted.’
‘What do you mean?’
He laughed. ‘Oh, come on, Sam! A title. She’s an ambitious lady, is my beautiful Gita, and marriage to me meant instant entry into the English aristocracy.’
‘But wasn’t Declan your—friend?’ she asked haltingly.
Robin gave a wry smile. ‘In as much as anyone could be a friend to Declan. He isn’t like other people. There’s something that sets him apart. Even Gita said that. You mean did I feel bad about stealing his girl?’ He laughed again,