Rumours: The One-Night Heirs: The Innocent's Secret Baby (Billionaires & One-Night Heirs) / Bound by the Sultan's Baby (Billionaires & One-Night Heirs) / Sicilian's Baby of Shame (Billionaires & One-Night Heirs). Carol Marinelli. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Carol Marinelli
Издательство: HarperCollins
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Жанр произведения: Современная зарубежная литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780008900977
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knowing that the fragile Maria could never survive the fallout?

      Gino was still shouting from the corridor. ‘I stood by her all these years!’

      Raul sat thinking. He knew he could contest this in court—or he could wait till he and Bastiano were outside and fight. This time to the bloody end.

      He chose the latter.

      Outside, the sun seemed to chip at his skull and he felt like throwing up—and then Bastiano stepped out, also wincing at the bright afternoon sun.

      ‘So,’ Raul said by way of greeting, ‘the gossip in the valley was wrong.’ He watched as Bastiano’s brow creased in confusion, and then he better explained. ‘As it turns out—you were the whore.’

      The court attendees spilled out onto the street, the guards hovered, and a police vehicle drove slowly past. Raul saw that Marco was at the wheel.

      As it slid out of sight Raul knew that if Marco was summoned to a fight outside the courthouse the response time would be slow.

      They stared at each other.

      Raul’s black eyes met Bastiano’s silver-grey and they shared their mutual loathing.

      ‘Your mother…’ Bastiano started, and then, perhaps wisely, chose not to continue—though that did not stop Raul.

      ‘Are you going to tell me to respect her wishes?’ Raul sneered. ‘You knew she had this money—you knew…’ He halted, but only because his voice was close to faltering and he would not allow Bastiano to glimpse weakness.

      He would beat Bastiano with more than his fists.

      Raul cleared his throat and delivered his threat, low but strong, and for Bastiano’s ears only. ‘Collect promptly…pay slowly.’

      It was an old Italian saying, but it came with different meaning on this day.

      Bastiano might have collected promptly today, but he would pay.

      And slowly.

      Their eyes met, and though nothing further was said it was as if Raul had repeated those words and he watched as his threat sank in.

      Raul would keep his word—the vow he had made by his mother’s grave.

      Every day he would fight Bastiano—not with fists but with action, and so, to the chagrin of the gathered crowd, who wanted the day to end in blood, Raul walked away.

      Bastiano might have got a payout today, but Raul would take his mother’s inheritance and build a life from it far away from here.

      And in the process he would destroy Bastiano at every opportunity.

      Revenge would be his motivator now.

       CHAPTER SEVEN

      LYDIA KNEW EXACTLY where she was even before her eyes had opened.

      There was constant awareness of him, even in sleep. Hearing his deep breathing and feeling his warm, sleeping body beside her, Lydia thought it was the nicest awakening she had ever had.

      She chose not to stretch, or pull herself out of this slumberous lull. The mattress felt like a cloud, and the room was the perfect temperature, because even with the bedding around her waist she was warm.

      Raul’s back did not make pleasant viewing.

      Oh, it was muscled, and his shoulders were wide, and his black hair narrowed neatly into the nape of his neck. All was perfect except for the scars.

      And there were a lot of them.

      There was the ugly, thick vertical one that was untidy and jagged and ran from mid-shoulder to waist.

      But there were others that ran across his back.

      Thin white lines…row upon row.

      She had asked him about his back last night.

      Lydia lay there trying to recall his answer.

      There hadn’t been one.

      And she did not ask with words this time—instead with touch, for while she had been looking at his back her fingers had inadvertently gone there.

      Raul felt the question in her touch and loathed the fact that he had fallen to sleep on his side, and he rolled onto his back.

      ‘I’m sorry I asked,’ Lydia said.

      ‘Then why did you?’

      ‘Because when I’m with you I seem to forget to be polite.’

      A phone rang, and this time it wasn’t Lydia’s. The battery had finally given out.

      Raul reached over and swore, even before he had answered the call and then he spoke for a few minutes and lay back down—but this time he faced her.

      ‘We overslept.’

      ‘What time is it?’

      ‘Midday.’

      Lydia’s eyes widened in surprise. ‘Did you miss your plane?’

      ‘No, it is missing me. That’s why Allegra rang. She’s going to reschedule.’

      He stared at her and Lydia found out then why she had thrown herself at him last night.

      It was the correct response to those black eyes, Lydia realised, because her desire was still the same.

      ‘Sorry I didn’t tell you I was a virgin.’

      ‘It’s a miracle you still are.’

      She didn’t want to be, though.

      How heavenly to be made love to by him, Lydia thought, though she said not a word.

      He reached out a hand and moved her hair back from her face, and still nothing was said. Lydia liked sharing this silent space with him.

      No demands—just silence.

      He thought again of all she’d told him—how she had sat at breakfast yesterday and given him that dark piece of her past.

      And they were back in that place, together again, only this time it was Raul who spoke.

      ‘I got into a fight at my mother’s funeral. At the cemetery.’

      ‘Oh, dear.’

      She smiled—not a happy one, just a little smile at their differences.

      And he gave a thin smile too.

      ‘With whom?’ Lydia asked.

      ‘Her lover.’

      And it was at that moment, when he didn’t name Bastiano, that Raul, for the first time, properly lied.

      Oh, last night it had technically been a lie by omission. She had been angry and confused and there had been good reason for him not to disclose. But now they were in bed together, facing each other and talking as if they were lovers, and Raul knew at his base that he should at that moment have told her.

      Yet he did not want her to turn away.

      Which she would.

      Of course she would.

      ‘When did you find out that your mother was having an affair?’ Lydia asked.

      ‘Right after she died,’ Raul said. ‘I didn’t believe it at first. My mother was very religious—when she was a girl, growing up she had hoped to be a nun…’

      ‘Why didn’t she?’

      ‘She got pregnant at sixteen.’

      ‘With you? By your father?’

      ‘Of course.’ Raul gave a nod. ‘It wasn’t a happy marriage, I knew that, but I was