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Jilt Trip
Jilt Trip
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Jilt Trip

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Jilt Trip
HEATHER MACALLISTER

Jilt Trip

Heather MacAllister

www.millsandboon.co.uk (http://www.millsandboon.co.uk)

Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Epilogue

1

THE ORGAN PLAYED softly. Gardenias scented the air. The sunlight of a warm Galveston June day filtered through the stained-glass windows. Bridesmaids gathered in the vestibule of the church. Guests murmured in anticipation.

And the groom’s pager beeped. Again.

“Damn!” Carter Belden slapped the button in annoyance, then remembered the somber presence of the Reverend Royer waiting to lead him toward the altar. “I beg your pardon.”

Reverend Royer’s eyebrows knit together. “Perhaps you could, er, turn off the sound for the duration of the ceremony?”

“Of course,” Carter murmured. Glancing at the number on the pager’s display, he exhaled. “It’s my office. I’ll have to call in.”

“Mr. Belden!”

“My best man isn’t here yet,” he reminded the open-mouthed minister. “This could be from him.”

Reverend Royer shook back the sleeve of his robe and checked his watch. “He’d better hurry or he’ll miss the ceremony!”

“We’ve got a few more minutes, don’t we?”

“Y-yes, but—”

“Stall, if you have to.” Carter was already striding through the groom’s anteroom toward the church’s administration area.

Robe flapping, Reverend Royer hurried after him. “But what shall I tell the bride?”

His hand on the doorknob, Carter paused. “Tell Dee Ann it’s business. She’ll understand.”

Dee Ann might understand, but Carter didn’t. He’d always known he had a loyal and dedicated staff of fellow workaholics, but did they really expect him to conduct business moments before he took his place at the altar?

This had to be an emergency, but that’s what he’d thought the four other times they’d paged him this morning. He knew they weren’t thrilled about his marriage to the daughter of a business competitor, but they should come to the wedding anyway, damn it.

Saunders, at least, should be here. He was Carter’s lawyer, good friend and supposedly the best man.

Where was he?

Probably trying to persuade Nikki Morrison to come.

Slowing his pace, Carter visualized his petite dynamo of a comptroller, with her green eyes and the freckles that showed no matter how she tried to cover them up.

Ah, Nikki…Carter smiled. Well, maybe he could understand if Nikki didn’t want to come, though she’d seemed to accept his approaching nuptials with her usual calm professionalism.

Closing the glass door to the church reception area, Carter reached for the phone on the desk and quickly punched out the number. Through the intercom system, he could hear the organ music. It didn’t sound like the bridal march yet.

“Carter?”

It was Nikki’s voice, tense and breathless.

His collar suddenly felt tight. “What’s going on, Nikki? Where’s Saunders?”

“Are we too late?”

Carter exhaled through his teeth. “In three minutes, I’m supposed to be standing at the altar with Saunders. Where in the hell is he?” He winced and looked around to see if anyone had overheard. Apainting of an unknown saint stared at him reprovingly. Carter turned his back.

“Carter?” A different voice.

“Saunders? Where in the…world are you?”

“We’re in the car.” The lawyer sounded weary.

“Don’t start without us.” His chuckle fell flat.

At least Saunders hadn’t been in an accident. Yet. “It would serve you right if you did miss my wedding.”

“No!”

The chorus of no’s startled him. “Are Julian and Bob in the car with you?”

“Yes.” Nikki’s voice came through the wires again.

“But I saw Bob’s wife and kids here.” What was going on?

“Carter, wait for us. You’ve got to listen to what we’ve found.”

“This isn’t about your takeover—”

“Shh! We’re on the cellular.”

Carter clamped together his lips in frustration. Cellular phone conversations could be overheard by anyone with a radio and they all knew not to discuss business on one. It wasn’t like him to forget.

“Just wait until we get there,” Nikki pleaded. “I’ve got to talk with you before you marry Dee Ann.”

“She’s right,” Saunders broke in. “Don’t do anything before hearing us out.”

“This is unbelievable.”

Behind him, he heard a tapping sound on the glass windows. Turning, Carter saw Reverend Royer and Miss Hicks, the wedding coordinator. Both wore identical expressions of alarmed urgency.

Carter shrugged and pointed to the telephone. Miss Hicks opened the door. “Mr. Belden, we’re behind schedule.”

“Just a moment,” he murmured into the receiver. Mustering a soothing smile, Carter said to the coordinator, “Tell everyone I’ll pay for overtime.”

“Money isn’t the point, Mr. Belden. Time is.”

The corners of Carter’s smile drooped cynically. In his experience, money was usually the point. “Have the photographer take some more pictures of the blushing bride.” Dee Ann liked being photographed.

“He’s videotaping in the balcony.”

“He can’t be taping much without me, can he?”

Miss Hicks pursed her lips.

Carter tried another smile. “My best man is running late.”

“There are two weddings scheduled this afternoon after yours,” Reverend Royer informed him. “It is June, you know.”

“If you run late, they’ll run late,” Miss Hicks added.

Carter would have offered to pay for their overtime, as well, but he knew it wouldn’t matter. “Do you hear this, Nikki?” he asked into the phone.

“Tell them to start without you.”

“Very funny.”

“You’re doing a great job of stalling,” she said. “We’re just a few blocks away.”

“I’m hanging up the telephone now, Nikki. I’m turning off my pager. You’ve got ten minutes. No more.” He hung up the telephone.

“Ten minutes?” He smiled at the minister and the wedding consultant, who both looked at their watches, then at each other. They were starting to get on his nerves. It was his wedding, too. What were they going to do, hold the ceremony without him?

“I’ll inform the organist and Miss Karrenbrock.” Miss Hicks hurried into the bowels of the church.

Carter turned off his pager. Instantly, it beeped.

As he stared at it, Reverend Royer reached beneath his robe and smiled apologetically. “Mine this time, I’m afraid. As long as we’re waiting…?” He gestured toward the telephone and Carter stepped out of the way.

Shoving his hands into the pockets of his gray morning suit, Carter strolled back to the groom’s anteroom.

DeeAnn would be furious, though she’d never show it. A cool blond Texas belle, Dee Ann understood perfectly the relationship between men, business and the money to pay for designer clothes and personal trainers. It had been bred into her. The epitome of a corporate wife, she would never interfere in his business affairs.

But that didn’t mean she wouldn’t expect compensation for her tolerance.

Carter didn’t mind. It amused him to watch her try to manipulate him and to allow her small victories now and then.

He could afford them.

Marrying Dee Ann was the best idea he’d had in a long time. She would make a fabulous wife and that’s what he wanted: an old-fashioned arrangement where she managed home and hearth, and he concentrated on making the money to pay for it. Although he enthusiastically supported women’s rights, he also recognized that he couldn’t be the type of husband a career woman needed.

He’d tried it once already with disastrous results. With both partners concentrating on their careers, nobody concentrated on the marriage.

Carter wasn’t going to make that mistake again.

It wasn’t fair to ask a woman to give up her career, but Dee Ann made no secret that she considered marriage and community service a career. Carter admired her for her honesty. He also knew that they wouldn’t need a second income like many families. Dee Ann would find fulfillment in her work on the boards of various charities, and he was willing to support her endeavors. It was the perfect blending of needs and wants.

Yes, they’d have a good life together.

That is, if Saunders and the others ever got here.

Carter paced in front of the window of the small anteroom and forced himself not to look at his watch. He wanted to sit down, but that would wrinkle his suit. Instead, he checked his appearance in the wall mirror.

His boutonniere was wilting. He had no idea how the rest of him appeared. Of course, if his best man were here, he could tell him how he looked, straighten his cravat, make certain his pants cuffs weren’t turned up, that sort of thing.

The organist was playing something Carter had heard already. Thank heaven it wasn’t the processional.

He patted his pocket, reassured by the lump Dee Ann’s wedding ring made. How fortunate he’d decided to hold on to it since clearly Saunders’s skills as a best man left much to be desired.

“Carter? You in here?” Aflushed Saunders peered inside the room.

“Glad you could make it,” Carter drawled, to hide his relief.

“What is this place?” Saunders grimaced as he took in the room and its “furnishings.”

“The groom’s dressing area,” Carter told him with a sweep of his hand.