Heiresss pregnancy scand.., p.4

Heiress's Pregnancy Scandal, page 4

 

Heiress's Pregnancy Scandal
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  Then she wondered whether she should have said that. Maybe this was just another tour laid on by the hotel, with her own personal chauffeur? But she didn’t think that—not now. Not any longer. Not after sharing steak and ice-cream at a roadside diner.

  This isn’t about his job, or even mine. This is about us.

  She felt the now familiar skip of her heart rate, telling her she was glad—glad that that was what it was about. Then she realised Nic was speaking again.

  ‘You can give me another physics tutorial on the way there,’ he said. ‘The elementary version, that is.’

  There was a smile in his voice, and in hers as she answered. ‘Physics is usually simple—it’s just the maths that’s hard!’

  He laughed, that low, gravelly sound that she was getting used to sending a little frisson through her—a frisson that she felt again as, gaining the hotel’s rear car park, he helped her step down, retaining her hand just a fraction longer than was necessary. Then he was opening a side door and they were heading down a deserted corridor towards the lobby.

  As they did, a service door opened and someone emerged. He glanced at Nic as they headed past.

  ‘Evening, boss.’

  Nic acknowledged him with a brief nod, and as the staff member passed by, Fran murmured, ‘Boss?’

  ‘He’s on my team,’ Nic answered smoothly.

  They arrived at the elevators. Nic was glad that no other members of his staff were around, and without waiting to be invited he stepped inside the lift with her.

  ‘I’ll see you to your room,’ he said.

  Fran made no demur, but suddenly, out of nowhere, she was supremely conscious of the confined space of the elevator, of Nic’s closeness to her, of her own heightened sense of the moment. Would he try and kiss her? She tensed, not knowing whether she wanted him to or not.

  He made no move on her, however, just waited until she had opened her room door and was turning to bid him goodnight, finding it hard to take her eyes from him when she was this close to him.

  His hand splayed against the doorjamb, enclosing her. ‘Thank you for tonight,’ he said. ‘It’s been good.’

  There was a low note in his voice, a huskiness, and a smile—she could hear it, see the slight curve of his mouth, the dip of his long, long lashes over those blue, blue eyes. And then, while she was still gazing up at him, his mouth was lowering to hers.

  It was a kiss like none she’d known. Slow, deliberate, and for one purpose only. To tell her what she could have if she chose to.

  She gave herself to it, her eyelids fluttering closed, feeling her shoulders sag against the door, her hands slacken as her whole being became focussed on the sensation he was drawing from her.

  It was like a kind of silken velvet, moving over her leisurely, tasting, exploring, taking his time. And then, without her even realising, he was deepening the kiss, easing her lips apart. Letting her taste, enjoy his tasting, enjoy what there was between them. What more there could be.

  She felt arousal flare within her, more powerful than she had ever felt, more intense, more sensuous, and she yielded her willing mouth to his, feeling the pleasure of it until, it seemed like an age later, he was drawing back from her, gliding his mouth over her, skimming leisurely over her parted lips, a velvet withdrawal.

  He lifted his head and her eyes fluttered open, looked into his gaze. So close...so very close to hers. She felt dazed, dizzy. He smiled, seeing her reaction to his kiss, liking it.

  He stepped away, giving her a little space. ‘Goodnight, Doc Fran,’ he said, but there was intimacy in the way he said it. ‘Sleep well.’

  She gave a reply, and then he was turning away, heading back down the corridor. She watched him reach the elevators. Felt dizziness inside her still.

  Knew that whatever this man wanted of her she wanted it too.

  * * *

  Nic did not sleep well that night in the suite he’d reserved for himself at this, his latest multi-million-dollar acquisition. He lay sleepless, gazing at the shadowed ceiling, one arm crooked behind his head, feeling a mix of restlessness, satisfaction and anticipation.

  Dio, but how he’d wanted to stay with her! That kiss had been like dipping his finger into a pot of honey to taste the sweetness, and it had told him she had found it just as pleasurable as he had. But it had also told him, just as every instinct since he’d first set eyes on her had told him, that she was not a woman to be hurried. She was no hedonistic party girl. She was a mature, highly intelligent woman, who would make her decision in her own time, in her own way, about indulging in a romance with him.

  And if she did, as he burningly hoped she would, it would not be conducted here at the hotel. He liked it that to her he was not Nicolo Falcone, and if they stayed here it was bound to come out at some point. That encounter in the corridor had been a warning of that inevitability. No, better that they took off to somewhere he was not known, so that he was still simply Nic Rossi to her.

  Nic Rossi—his birth name, abandoned so long ago, when he’d first set out to forge his glittering empire, echoed in his mind. It had been strange to use it again. As strange as remembering the way he’d revealed so much of his own deep feelings and his passionate beliefs to her in that very first conversation he’d had with her the previous night. His belief never to accept what life had dumped you with—to make someone new of yourself by effort and dedication and determination.

  His thoughts moved on. Back to the familiar territory of his empire-building. He ran through his latest ambitions to launch a flagship hotel in Manhattan. It wouldn’t be easy, let alone cheap to achieve, but he’d do it in the end. He always did. Always. The determination to succeed in business never left him.

  And to succeed on more pleasurable fronts too.

  His thoughts went back to the breathtakingly beautiful, entrancing blonde, the oh-so-lovely Doc Fran, alone in her lonely bed—alone for one last night.

  He smiled, anticipation filling him again.

  * * *

  ‘Oh, wow!’ Fran breathed, her eyes widening at the sight appearing before them as the SUV gained the low brow of a hill, revealing what was beyond.

  It was like something out of a sci-fi film—other-worldly—with a vast matrix of huge dish antennae, angled upwards to catch the faintest radio whisper of distant stars, each one set on rails for moving into precise position.

  The whole place was perimeter-fenced, but they drove up to the visitor centre, where Fran identified herself as from her university and promptly got the attention of one of the technical staff to show them around.

  Nic was as impressed as anyone would be by the engineering feats achieved, but understood scarcely a word of their erudite exchanges. He was content just to see how the animation in her face, the interest in her keen, intelligent eyes, only enhanced her beauty, her appeal to him.

  As they finally left the array she was fulsome in her thanks. He gave her his slashing smile. ‘This morning was your treat—this afternoon is mine. But you’ll enjoy it, I promise you.’

  She did, too—though she gasped breathlessly as Nic showed her just why it was his treat.

  They drove on another forty miles or so to a reservoir lake with a water resort, where they lunched at a waterfront café. Then Nic led her out along the jetty and hired the leanest, meanest motorboat available.

  And hit the accelerator.

  Fran’s breath and speech were blown far behind her, her hair streaming, her hands clutching at the rails as the boat flew across the lake, the bow hitting the water’s surface as if it was concrete. Italian words broke from her—and she heard Nic laugh, realised he could understand her expletives, and her description of him as a certifiable maniac who would kill them both.

  ‘No way! You’re safe as a baby!’ he yelled at her, in the same language, his face alight with laughter.

  He bombed across the width of the lake, slewing around in a huge arcing curve of water that caught the sun’s rays in a million rainbows before racing back towards the jetty again.

  Within reach of it he slowed and turned to Fran. Her hair was a wild tangle, her eyes alight with laughter. Nic let his arm slide around her shoulder and pulled her against him.

  ‘Fun?’ he asked.

  He didn’t really have to ask. It was visible in her face.

  She let her head rest on his shoulder, feeling it strong beneath her cheek. ‘Most fun ever,’ she said.

  ‘Happy to please you,’ he said, and dropped a kiss on her forehead.

  Such a slight gesture, such a slight tightening of his arm around her... They sat beside each other, his other hand on the wheel, guiding the boat lightly on the water as if he were Cesare on one of his thoroughbreds.

  Fran’s eyes flickered slightly, and she wondered why, of all things, she was thinking of Cesare now.

  Nic saw it, saw her expression change. ‘What is it?’ he asked quietly.

  She looked at him, easing away a little, but not freeing herself. ‘I’m thinking of the man I nearly married,’ she said.

  Nic stilled. It was impossible to think of her married, or even engaged—taken by another man. Not when he wanted her himself so much.

  ‘What happened?’ he heard his voice asking. He heard the tension in it, but didn’t know why it was there.

  ‘I broke it off,’ she said. ‘I’d just been offered a research post out on the West Coast, working with a Nobel Laureate, and I couldn’t resist it. And I was pretty sure,’ she added slowly, ‘that Cesare was involved with someone else anyway.’

  ‘Then he was nuts,’ said Nic bluntly. ‘Nuts to prefer someone else to you.’

  She gave a little laugh. ‘Thank you,’ she said. ‘But he and I...we never—well, you know. It wasn’t an affair that we had. It was a—Well, I guess a kind of expectation. We’d known each other all our lives. It would have worked, him and me.’

  ‘Cesare?’ mused Nic, registering the Italian name, which she’d pronounced in the Italian way. ‘So—back in the old country?’

  ‘Very much so,’ she said dryly, thinking of just how sizeable a chunk of ‘the old country’ Cesare’s estates covered.

  Nic eased the throttle again. He didn’t want to know any more about the guy that she’d nearly married and hadn’t. Right now he wanted to be the only male in her vision, her thoughts.

  Her desires.

  At a much slower pace he nosed the boat forward again, keeping his arm around Fran, where he wanted it to be.

  ‘Let’s see what’s at the far end of the lake,’ he said.

  * * *

  The sun was lowering by the time they handed the boat in. Nic turned to her. Her hair was still windblown, her skin sun-kissed even with sun-block. She looked effortlessly lovely.

  ‘What next?’ he asked.

  His eyes were light on her, the question in his voice putting the decision in her hands. The choice of what was to happen—or not—between them now.

  Fran’s expression flickered. ‘It’s a long way back to the Falcone,’ she observed. ‘Maybe too far?’ Her glance went to the resort motel that was set back on a low bluff.

  ‘Not in the Falcone league,’ Nic said, ‘but it looks passable.’

  He kept his voice neutral, not wanting to show his satisfaction that she was indicating they should stay there together. As he so wanted.

  Fran gave a wry smile. ‘There speaks a loyal employee of the famous Falcone chain!’ she answered lightly.

  Then she nodded, as if making a silent decision for herself. Maybe thinking about Cesare, talking about him, had confirmed her feelings. Told her that whatever it was that was happening between her and Nic, she wanted it to happen.

  ‘OK...’ She took a breath. ‘Let’s go for it.’

  Even so, she booked separate rooms at Reception—and not just because anything else might have seemed too...obvious. She definitely needed a bathroom and a bedroom entirely to herself—her wind-tangled hair and water-splashed day-worn clothes were a disaster.

  Gratefully spotting a small retail outlet, inset into the lobby, she plunged in.

  It was a good hour before she was ready to meet Nic in the motel’s bar. As he rose to greet her, she laughed.

  ‘Snap!’

  They had both, it seemed, availed themselves of the retail outlet’s offerings—and not just shampoo and toiletries for her, and a razor for him. They were both now wearing tee shirts bearing the name of the lake, Fran’s in pink and Nic’s in blue.

  But where Nic was making do with the chinos he’d been wearing all day, Fran had found a wraparound cotton skirt in white seersucker that floated gracefully to mid-calf to replace her water-stained Bermuda shorts. Her newly washed hair tumbled over her shoulders, and her only make-up was a touch of mascara and lip gloss.

  She knew Nic’s eyes were warm upon her.

  But then, hers were warm on him, too. He was cleanly shaven, damp hair feathering at the nape of his neck, and the deep blue tee shirt matched his eyes and lovingly moulded his torso. But he was no muscle-bound Adonis. That innate air of Italian style he possessed was overwhelming—the kind of automatic male display that she was used to seeing in her countrymen. It was not vanity, or showing off, but it came instinctively to them.

  ‘You look so Italian,’ she heard herself say as they took their happy hour cocktails over to a table looking out across the darkening lake. She studied his face consideringly. ‘I wonder where the blue eyes come from? Some Norman ancestor way back...rampaging through the peninsula to make a kingdom for themselves?’

  Nic thought about it and liked the idea. He’d made his own kingdom—the Falcone kingdom—deliberately choosing that new name for himself because it made him want to fly high, swoop down on his prey, fly ever higher.

  ‘What about your grey eyes and blonde hair?’ he asked in return. ‘Are they from your English mother?’

  She nodded, not wishing to elaborate about her parentage, aware that she did not want to bring that side of her into what was happening now. Here, with Nic, she was ‘Doc Fran’—she smiled inwardly at his amusedly bestowed moniker—and that was all she wanted to be.

  The fact that her mother, Lady Emma, would consider it incomprehensible that her daughter might want to take off as she had with someone who worked in hotel security was irrelevant to her. Her whole other identity, as Donna Francesca, was also irrelevant, as it always was when she was here in the USA, whether it was in her university department, or now, here, with Nic.

  And Nic was—well, just Nic. And she didn’t want him any other way. He had a strength to him, a quality to his character that was as evident as his physical strength. It lay beneath the casual, laid-back attitude—a sure knowledge of his own worth, but without any need to display it. She liked him all the more for it.

  He was asking her, now, how she had become an astrophysicist, and she answered readily.

  ‘I fell in love with science at school, because it explained everything about the world. And physics and astronomy just captivated me,’ she said. She paused, then heard herself add, ‘My family was less enthusiastic.’ She frowned, her mouth setting. ‘My father came round, because he’s always been very indulgent with me, but my mother—’

  She broke off. She was saying more than she wanted to. More than she ever said to people, admitted...

  ‘Wanted you to marry and settle down to be a wife and home-maker?’ Nic finished for her. The name of the rejected former fiancé hovered in his head but he pushed it aside.

  Fran nodded heavily, taking a mouthful of her strawberry daiquiri. ‘Yes,’ she said briefly.

  For all that her home would have been a vast medieval castello, and she would have been a contessa, Nic had nailed it.

  She took a breath. ‘Oh, they’re proud of me now, but my mother hasn’t forgiven me for ditching Cesare—’

  She broke off, and Nic did not pick her up on it again. He didn’t want her remembering the man she hadn’t married.

  She was speaking again, and he realised she’d turned the conversation to him. That was something he didn’t want either. But it was too late to halt her.

  ‘What about you, Nic? How did you come to be where you are in life now?’

  He paused, his tequila mid-way to his mouth. He lowered it again slowly, his eyes veiled.

  ‘Well, it wasn’t thanks to my schooldays,’ he heard himself saying.

  His voice sounded grim. Bleak, even to his own ears.

  ‘What I learnt at school was how not to get beaten up or corralled into running drugs for the gangs.’ His mouth tightened and he looked across at Fran. ‘I left as soon as I could and went to work. It was a fancy hotel and I was way down in the basement!’

  His expression changed now, his eyes clearing.

  ‘But it changed everything for me,’ he said. ‘I was earning money—not much, but it was my own, through my own efforts. And I could see, for the first time, a future for me. Something I could make for myself, of myself. Out of the nothing I’d been handed at birth, despite all the expectations that I’d amount to nothing!’

  She heard the vehemence in his voice and it resonated with her—their defiance of what had been expected of them, each in their very different ways.

  ‘What about your parents?’ she asked. Her voice was sympathetic, admiring of the way he’d fought and won his grim battles.

  Nic’s mouth twisted, and he reached for his tequila, taking a deep draught. ‘My father wasn’t there—I never knew him. He cleared out before I was born. And my poor mother—’

  He broke off again. Took another mouthful of tequila.

  ‘Well, let’s just say that she had a bad time with men. The final man landed her in hospital.’ His eyes darkened. ‘I put him in hospital too—and never regretted it!’ His expression changed again, the darkness lessening. ‘Although she was an invalid she lived long enough to see me make good, and I’ll always be grateful for that.’

 

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