"Not that grateful."
"I didn't mean it like that." I braced myself for whatever punishment he dished out. As long as it didn't involve more food, I figured I could handle anything. "Heard of Eye-on-I?"
"Uh-uh."
The name sounded vaguely familiar as an image of a full-page glossy ad from the in-flight magazine sprung to mind. Something had grabbed me: cute kids posing with cuter animals? Half-naked men doing housework? It'd come to me eventually.
He raised an eyebrow and stared at me like I came from another planet. Which I did, and I had every intention of getting back to Planet New York as soon as humanly possible. My cover was blown and there was no way this Bond Girl was staying around to face the fallout.
"Eye-on-I is India's number one Internet provider. We do it all. Hosting, domain stuff, IT bundling, the works."
Uh-oh. Top IT guys would have loads of resources available to their spying, prying eyes. No guessing how he'd sprung our scheme.
I plucked at the hem of my tunic, fiddling with the embroidered crystals, worrying about the punishment dished out to fiancee imposters.
"We?"
"My partner, Drew Lansford, and I. Graduated with MBAs from Oxford, went into business soon after. India's IT industry was about to take off and we jumped on for the ride."
Fascinating trivia, but I had no idea of its relevance to my penance. I managed a tight smile. Get it over with already.
"I have the world's top IT resources at my fingertips, including online PIs and experts able to infiltrate any site, which is how I found a picture of Amrita and information about her."
He'd used a private investigator and a hacker? Desperate, and so far ahead of Rita's scheme it made us look like schmucks.
Anger slashed through my nerves. What right did he have to invade Rita's privacy? "Aren't you a clever dick?"
He grinned like a naughty schoolboy caught with his hand in the ladoo jar, and I couldn't help but like him. Damn, he had class. He could've made a fool of me in front of his family and the assembled hordes but he hadn't. Perhaps I should be grateful rather than abusive.
His brow creased as he pretended to ponder, before snapping his fingers under my nose. "Yeah, my IQ isn't bad, which brings me to my proposition."
I envisioned nasty connotations when guys said the P-word, yet when Rakesh stared at me with a mischievous glint in his eyes, I almost laughed. "Why don't you fill me in? You're going to anyway."
"My plan's simple. I keep my mouth shut about your deception, you score me an introduction to Amrita."
"What?"
"I want to meet Amrita. In person."
"Why?" Call me thick, but I didn't understand.
"I'm intrigued by a woman who'd go to such lengths to ditch me." He shrugged and took three steps, which constituted pacing in the small foyer. "Any woman with that much daring is worth meeting."
His face lit up and I thought, Wow. Here's a smart, funny, understanding, gorgeous guy who's into my best friend.
Closely followed by, What's the catch?
I'd learned from my mistakes. No way would I dismiss or justify suspicious behavior from a guy ever again. "Why don't you jump on a plane and go meet her? Why perpetuate this sham?"
His eyebrows shot up like I'd proposed he scale the Taj Mahal in his underwear.
"Because if this gets out, her parents lose face, Amrita's marriage prospects are irrevocably damaged, and, worst, she'll be ostracized from the Indian community." He shook his head and crossed his arms. "I refuse to be responsible for that, even though she sent an imposter in her stead to dump me."
I'd better add Upstanding and Moral to his growing list of attributes.
"Not to mention my family will bear the brunt of gossip and scandal." For a moment his mutinous expression relaxed and I glimpsed vulnerability. "My dad's got a heart condition. Nothing serious, but he could do without the stress."
I sighed and stopped plucking at the crystals embroidered on my tunic's hem. "I can't fault your motivations but I feel like I'm a bit player in a sweeping Bollywood saga."
He made a fake movie clapboard with his forearms and snapped it shut, an action I'd seen a hundred times while watching the extras on DVDs. "You're not a bit player; you're the star attraction, Amrita."
The thought of continuing this charade left me cold, but his reasons made sense. I couldn't stand the thought of my best friend being dragged through a scandal that might taint her reputation in her community-something she should've thought of before we started down deception road-so I'd do this. So much for our foolproof scheme. Rather than ditching Rakesh as planned, I now had to play the devoted fiancee during my stay. And arrange a meeting between Rakesh and Rita. Fun. Not.
"Okay, I'm in."
We shook on it, co-conspirators in a game I hoped wouldn't end in tears.
chapter three.
After I agreed to Rakesh's plan, he became my new best Bombay buddy. He stuck by my side during the party from hell (a hundred of the Ramas' closest relatives and friends each wanting a piece of me), fended off his mom, charmed Anjali, and generally made me like him more.
Then I met Drew.
I'd exchanged air-kisses and empty hugs with Pooh, Diva, and Shrew for the required two minutes. I'd fake-smiled for camera flashes coming from all directions, and bade farewell to the rest of the family, including my new mommy. After telling Anjali I'd meet her outside, I sighed in relief I'd made it through the evening relatively unscathed-discounting Rita's betrothed blackmailing me-when a tall figure stepped from the shadows of the Ramas' sprawling veranda while I waited for Buddy to bring the car around.
"Hey, Drew. You're late. Come meet Amrita." Rakesh didn't stumble at my name, earning him further brownie points.
He'd been the consummate performer all night, the adoring fiance without crossing boundaries. I'd been a mess. My jaws ached from smiling, my head ached from my hair pulled into a tight bun, and I couldn't wait to drop the charade and head back to Anjali's, but I fixed one more polite, fake smile on my face and turned to meet Rakesh's business partner.
"I've heard so much about you." Drew Lansford moved into the light and my smile faltered as I stepped back in time.
High School. Brad Stoddard, first love. The guy had stolen my heart at the cafeteria checkout and proceeded to toy with it for months. He'd teased me, sleazed me, and almost pleased me, but I'd chickened out before he could round third base and our one brief, passionate night had ended there. Brad had never spoken to me again.
Facing his adult doppelganger transported me back to that night in Manhattan. We'd made out in the back of Brad's grungy wagon, surrounded by McDonald's wrappers and Coke cans. I'd been high on the fumes of his dad's Old Spice he'd slathered on, oblivious to the stale pizza crusts lying in scrunched boxes on the floor. The joys of youth.
"Hi." One syllable more than I thought I'd manage considering Drew's uncanny resemblance to Brad, while registering the intelligent blue eyes, the messy brown hair tumbling over his forehead, and the slight dimple in his right cheek.
He had a serious Hugh Grant thing going on, complete with British accent. Super hot. I'd sat through Four Weddings and a Funeral; Notting Hill; Bridget Jones's Diary; and Love, Actually several times, wondering why the oddly foppish guy who talked with a plum in his mouth had me salivating.
"Congratulations." He thrust his hands into designer denim pockets while I tried not to ogle the charcoal T-shirt clinging to a chest that could hold its own in a roomful of GQ models.
I gaped at him like an idiot-blame it on my recall, which had me almost sniffing for a hint of Old Spice-wondering what I'd done to deserve congrats.
"Yeah, Amrita is thrilled about our engagement." Rakesh's pointed glare reminded me of our bizarre pact. The fake engagement to limit his dad's stress and keep the Indian community grapevine happy until he visited New York in a few weeks and met his real fiancee. Riiiight...
He wasn't asking much, to continue what I'd set out to do without dumping him or alienating his family. I'd asked him what would happen if the unthinkable happened, and he hit it off with Rita and they fell for each other. He'd glossed over it with a 'my folks will be so thrilled to see their only son married they won't worry. Besides, I'll say you were Amrita's lovesick friend who went behind her back and tried to win me over for yourself.' All very logical, except for what Anu would do to me if she believed her golden boy's little white lie. I had a feeling Mama Rama wouldn't take kindly to thieving best friends or the deception I'd tried to perpetuate.
I did a 'right back at you, Rakesh,' complete with faux smile. "Thanks. Are you coming to the wedding?"
"Wouldn't miss it for the world." Drew sounded genuine but the way he stared at me, intense, brooding, like I'd make off with the Rama valuables, set my spidey senses on high alert. Why did I get the feeling he wasn't entirely happy with his friend's pending nuptials? Or worse, the reason behind his reluctance had something to do with me?
It might've been the lack of warmth behind his smile, the lack of emotion in his eyes, but I knew I'd have to watch him. Or he'd be watching me.
I hated being painted as a deceiving desperado but Rakesh was so glib, so assured, I didn't want to rattle his confidence. Besides, what were the odds Rita would fall for him? Slim-to-none. I was worrying about nothing.
The way I saw it, Rakesh would make my remaining stay in Mumbai a lot easier. I had another ally now and could relax without having to pretend to be the Bitch of Bombay for his family.
Increasingly uncomfortable with Drew's intense stare, I blurted, "I wonder what's keeping Auntie."
My plan for Drew to head into the house failed when Rakesh craned his neck to look inside. "I'll go check." His affectionate tweak on my cheek earned a glare from Drew that Rakesh missed as he headed inside.
"So." Drew leaned against the wall, arms folded, expression grim.
"So." I straightened my shoulders and did a Pantene commercial hair-toss to show I didn't give a damn. It bombed, considering I'd worn my hair in a bun.
By the groove slashing his brows, he wouldn't have been impressed even with my hair loose. This guy didn't like me.
His frown deepened. "Are you a Robbie Williams fan?"
Huh?
I could blame the late hour, delayed jet lag, or the sheer lunacy of what I was doing but I had a hankering to flip Drew the finger and run after my fake fiance.
"You've heard of Robbie Williams?" He spoke slower, like I couldn't keep up.
Jeez, what was it with English people? Did they think no one on the other side of the Atlantic had a brain? "I saw him live at Carnegie Hall. He's awesome."
Awesome? Awesome? Sheesh, memories of Brad must've resurrected my scintillating vocab from back then, too.
"You're familiar with all his songs? Even the swing ones?"
Duh. Hadn't I said as much? Where was Rakesh? I'd kill him for leaving me here with the equivalent of the British Gestapo. After protecting me all night he'd left me in small-talk hell when all I wanted to do was crawl under my mosquito net and hide for the next ten hours.
I darted frantic glances at the door, wishing for Rakesh, Anjali, or even the dreaded stepsisters to save me from this. "Yeah, I'm one of Robbie's biggest fans."
"You'd know my favorite song, then? 'Have You Met Miss Jones?'"
I choked and covered it by a combined cough and fake sneeze.
He grinned, and in the wan light I could've sworn his eyes glittered with triumph.
Rakesh had confirmed the importance of utmost secrecy: one leak and the fiasco could blow up in our faces. Yet something about Drew's cocky expression screamed he knew I was a fraud and was enjoying taunting me way too much.
"Not a bad choice. Personally, I prefer 'Something Stupid' from that CD." Could be the theme song to my life lately. "Though Nicole Kidman singing that duet with Robbie? Debatable. She should stick to acting. Her singing career taking off is as likely as a reunion with Tom. I mean, Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman married? There's a mismatched couple. Inevitable split. The height difference, you know. He has to be at least a foot shorter than her."
I blathered, hoping he'd get tired and leave me the hell alone.
No such luck.
"I'm onto you." He spoke so softly I almost missed it as he took a step toward me, invading my personal space, a lot more personal with him in it.
"Onto me?"
"Quite the little actress." His head jerked toward the house. "So you fooled the hordes in there, including the usually astute Anu? What I want to know is why."
And what I wanted to know was where the hell did this guy get off, thinking I'd explain myself to him? He might be used to snapping his fingers and having minions jump to his tune at work but the bossy, demanding thing he had going on? Left me cold.
I'd love to tell him where to stick his questions, but alienating Rakesh's business partner probably wasn't the smartest thing to do.
That's when it hit me.
Why not have a little fun at Drew's expense? Rakesh knew the truth, and what Drew didn't know wouldn't hurt him. Let him postulate in that posh English way of his, and when I'd had my fun, I'd casually tell him the truth and watch him squirm.
My plan could be shot down any second if he actually confronted Rakesh but I didn't think Drew would do that. With that stiff upper lip, I seriously doubted he'd risk losing face with his business partner by prying into personal stuff.
Me, on the other hand, he seemed content to grill. I didn't like him delving into a situation that didn't concern him. In reality, my plan was less about fun and more about teaching Mr. Inquisitive a lesson.
I bit back a grin. "You're onto me." I snapped my fingers. "Better stay away in case you become embroiled in my devious plot."
Buddy screeched to a halt in front of us at that moment, and I heard Anjali shrieking her good-byes to all and sundry.
Drew stared at me through narrowed eyes and I wiggled my fingers in a taunting wave. "See you around."
"This isn't over." He stepped back as Anjali descended on us in a flurry of sari, smiling at Drew and whisking me down the steps before I had a chance to reply.
Breathing a sigh of relief as I slid onto the worn leather seat of Anjali's battered Beamer, I slammed the door, shutting out Drew's tuneful whistling rendition of "Have You Met Miss Jones?" and wondering what the hell I'd got myself into this time.
An hour later, in the comfort of her lounge room, I filled Anjali in on the new plan. Pensive, she sipped her chai and popped another ladoo into her mouth. "All things considered, the evening went well, don't you think?"
I'd rather not. Think, that is. The more I did, the more convinced I became I was starring in a Bollywood extravaganza where the lying heroine gets her just desserts-no pun intended-in the end, and I'd muck up my lines any moment.
"Mmm," I mumbled, sipping the ayah's special masala chai, a mouthwatering concoction featuring cardamom and cinnamon and cloves, vowing to try Gloria Jean's chai when I returned to New York-in ten days, twenty-three hours, and thirty minutes, exactly. Who's counting?
"You fooled that upstart Anu good and proper." Anjali chortled into her cup like a witch peering over her cauldron. "Stupid cow."
"She didn't seem too bad."
I hoped this would get a reaction and reveal her vendetta against the Rama woman.