Sara Craven Tribute Collection. Sara Craven
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She paused. ‘So we made a deal—marriage in return for financial support and reasonable access.’
Hester gave her a long look. ‘This sounds more like a business arrangement than a relationship.’
‘Yes,’ said Flora. ‘That’s exactly what it is—and nothing more.’
There was a loaded silence, then Hester said carefully, ‘May I just recap here? I’ve known you for years, Flo, and you’re not the promiscuous kind. You never have been. But this is the man for whom you suddenly and spectacularly dumped Chris, remember? Not only that but you allowed this Marco Valante to sweep you off and have unprotected sex with you. He’s made you act completely out of character ever since you met, so “business arrangement” hardly covers it.’
‘And I told you that the whole thing was a disastrous mistake.’ Flora made herself meet her friend’s concerned gaze. ‘On both sides,’ she added. ‘So we’re just trying to make the best of a bad job.’
‘But all this civilised behaviour doesn’t include having dinner with the guy?’ Hester shook her head. ‘It sounds to me as if you’re running scared, Flo.’
There was another taut silence, then Flora sighed defeatedly. ‘Very well, then. Call him back and tell him we’ll be there. I presume he’s staying at the Mayfair Tower?’
‘You know he is.’ Hester gave her a swift hug. ‘Besides, the food there is bound to be better than the ham salad we had planned—especially when you’re eating for two now,’ she added slyly.
Flora gave her a constrained smile. ‘Please don’t remind me.’
Marco was waiting for them in the bar, meeting Flora’s fulminating look with equanimity and no overt air of triumph.
Hester was wary to begin with, but was soon blinking under the full force of his charm.
He was relaxed, amusing and attentive to Flora, without undue fuss. And, apart from offering her his arm as they went into the dining room, he was scrupulous about avoiding physical contact with her.
He should have been an actor, Flora thought sourly as she sipped her sole glass of vintage champagne.
But she couldn’t fault him as a host, and the food and wine were delicious.
The only awkward moment occurred at the end of the evening, when he was seeing them to a waiting taxi. Acutely aware of Hester’s expectant gaze, Flora allowed him to take her hand and kiss it.
He said softly, ‘I’ll call you tomorrow, carissima,’ and bent to kiss her cheek.
It was the merest brush of his lips, but her whole body surged in a response of such force that she nearly cried out.
She murmured something, then stepped back, avoiding his gaze.
‘So,’ Hester said, as they drove home. ‘You still maintain this marriage is just a business arrangement?’
‘Yes,’ Flora said defensively. ‘What of it?’
Hester shrugged. ‘Just that, when questioned, nine out of ten women said that, given the chance, they’d rip his clothes off and drag him into bed. And the tenth was in her nineties and short-sighted.’
She groaned. ‘God, Flo, he exudes sex like lesser men do aftershave. I felt it when I first saw him and it wasn’t even directed at me. Also, he’s seriously rich and definitely powerful. So—why the arm’s length treatment? Are you completely mad?’
‘I certainly was,’ Flora returned shortly. ‘Which is why I’m in this appalling mess now. And I’m not going down that path again. Ever.’ She hesitated. ‘I do have my reasons, Hes.’
‘Then I have to admire your will-power, even if I don’t understand it.’ Hester took her hand and gave it a comforting squeeze. ‘And I wish you luck, honey, because something tells me that you’re absolutely going to need it.’
And as she lay awake that night, trying unsuccessfully to ignore the demands of her unsatisfied body, Flora was forced to concede unhappily that Hester could well be right.
THE ring was plain, gold, unflashy and made no overt statement, but each time Flora moved her hand she was acutely aware of its presence—and its significance.
She was now Marco’s wife, legally if in no other way.
And she had to admit reluctantly that so far he had kept his word unfalteringly about that.
She had dreaded that on her arrival at the castello she would be expected to occupy the tower rooms again, even if she did sleep there alone, but to her relief she had been given another suite on the opposite side of the building, large and airy and decorated in light pastels.
‘You may, of course, change anything you wish,’ Marco had said courteously as she’d looked over her new surroundings.
‘It’s totally charming. I wouldn’t want to alter a thing,’ Flora had returned with equal politeness.
But it had been a tricky moment, because Marco had reacted with surprising heat when Flora had refused point-blank to sell her business.
‘I’ve worked hard to build it up.’ She’d faced him defiantly. ‘And I can keep in touch on an everyday basis via the internet. I intend to fly home once a month for consultancy purposes.’
He was frowning darkly. ‘Is that wise—when you are pregnant?’
‘I’m perfectly fit,’ she said. ‘And anyway, it’s not up for negotiation. I’m going to need my job to go back to—later.’
A muscle flickered at the side of his mouth. He said coolly, ‘There is no need for you to work again. I have said I will make financial arrangements for you and the child.’
Flora lifted her chin. ‘All the same, I love my job, and I prefer to maintain my independence. Also I’ve managed to find additional help, so I shan’t have to knock myself out in the coming months.’
During the inevitable flurry of preparations for the wedding she’d heard on the grapevine that a young designer called Jane Allen was looking for a change of scene. Flora had met her, liked her immediately, established it was mutual, and that she would frankly relish being flung in at the deep end, and signed her up on the spot.
But Marco, she knew, had not been appeased in the slightest.
On a happier note, she had been touched by the warmth of her reception at the castello. All the staff from Alfredo downwards seemed genuinely pleased by her return as the Signora.
She’d been agreeably surprised to discover that Ninetta had gone, along with her brother, and presumably was now in Rome with the Contessa, so that particular fly had been removed from the ointment.
And it saved me having to fire her,