Bartaldi's Bride. Sara Craven
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I feel a subsequent engagement coming on, she thought grimly. Or at least a migraine. If not a brain tumour.
She fought to keep her voice level. ‘Thank you. I—shall look forward to it.’
He said gently, ‘You are too gracious,’ and turned his attention back to Violetta, whom he treated with a charming deference bordering on flirtation. And she, of course, was lapping it up with roguish decorum.
Clare sat rigidly in her chair, clutching her glass as if it was her last hold on sanity—or safety.
Because she was suddenly frightened again. Because she didn’t believe that he was motivated by any concern for her well-being, or remotely interested in restoring her raincoat to her. There was more to it than that.
Back in Barezzo, she’d experienced the power of this man. And she’d dared to antagonise him. The money he’d offered her was the merest drop in the ocean when compared with his total wealth. But that didn’t mean he’d enjoyed seeing it torn in pieces and thrown at him.
It had seemed a grand gesture at the time. Now she was afraid she might live to regret it. Because he was not a man to shrug off that kind of affront—especially from a woman.
Something warned her that behind the smile and the silken elegance was steel. And beyond the steel lurked pure pagan.
She knew it as well as she knew her own reflection in a mirror. And she hoped she would only encounter the steel.
Angelina appeared in the terrace. ‘The telephone for you, signora. It is Monsignor Caprani.’
‘I will come.’ Violetta rose to her feet, and Guido Bartaldi stood up too. ‘No, no, Marchese, please stay. I shall not be long. And in the meantime Clare will be glad to entertain you.’
‘Alas, I must get back.’ His regret sounded almost genuine, Clare thought, seething. ‘My uncle is expected from Venice some time this evening. But I shall look forward to welcoming yourself and the signorina to my own small world tomorrow. Arrivederci.’ He took Violetta’s hand and raised it to his lips. ‘Until then.’
When she had fluttered back into the house, he turned and looked down at Clare, who stared back inimically.
‘Per Dio.’ His mouth twisted. ‘I think if I was dining here tonight, I would ask to have my food tasted.’
She said huskily, ‘What’s going on? What do you want?’
‘As to that,’ he said slowly, ‘I do not think I have quite made up my mind. But when I have, Chiara, be assured you will be the first to know. Now, wish me goodnight.’
Before she could resist, he reached down and pulled her up out of the chair and on to her feet in front of him, and only a few inches away.
He bent towards her, his gaze travelling from her frightened eyes to her parted lips.
She heard herself breathe, ‘No.’
He laughed softly. With his free hand, he touched her cheek, running a questing thumb down the line of her throat, and she shivered and burned under his touch.
His fingers reached the neckline of her dress and hooked under it, urging the delicate fabric off her shoulder. Baring it. She felt his breath warm on her skin, then the brief, delicate brush of his lips along her collarbone.
He whispered, ‘You are temptation itself, mia bella.’
Then she was free, and her dress was gently replaced. And before she could move or speak Guido Bartaldi had gone, walking away down the terrace steps into the twilit garden.
Clare stood, her arms wrapped around her body, her pulses shuddering uncontrollably. He had barely touched her. Her brain had registered that fiercely. But she felt, just the same, as if she’d been branded. That her flesh now bore some mark of his possession.
And this, she knew, was only the beginning.
In response to some hidden switch inside the house, the shaded lamps on the terrace came on, and instantly moths appeared, drawn by the lights and flinging themselves against them.
She thought, I know how they feel…
Violetta returned. ‘Has the Marchese gone? Such a pity.’ She sighed. ‘If I were only twenty years younger. Sit down, cara, and Angelina will freshen our drinks.’
Clare sat, principally because her legs were shaking under her.
A thought occurred to her.
She said, ‘Violetta, what’s the scent that you put in my bathroom? The one I’m wearing?’
‘But I was telling you about it, dear one. It’s Bartaldi’s own “Tentazione”. Why?’ Her godmother gave her a shrewd glance under her lashes. ‘Did he recognise it?’
‘Yes,’ Clare said bitterly. ‘Yes. I’m afraid he did.’
Dinner was not the relaxed, comfortable meal that Clare had anticipated after all.
For all her very real sophistication, Violetta was clearly thrilled to have received an invitation to the Villa Minerva, and eager to discuss it exhaustively.
‘It is a very old house,’ she said. ‘Parts of it are said to date back to the time of the Etruscans, who, as you know, cara, fought the Romans for supremacy and lost.’
Pity, Clare thought, crumbling her bread. If they’d won the Bartaldis might never have seen the light of day.
‘You’ve never visited there before?’ she asked.
‘No,’ Violetta returned regretfully. ‘But here at Cenacchio we are not exactly near neighbours to Veraggio. We move in our own circles.’
‘Then it’s a pity we agreed to go,’ Clare argued. ‘Particularly if it’s a long way away.’
‘The Marchese is aware of the inconvenience, and is sending a car for us.’ Violetta sighed happily. ‘He thinks of everything.’
She sent Clare a twinkling look. ‘I think I have you to thank for this pleasant invitation, dear one.’
Clare bit her lip. ‘I can’t think why,’ she said constrainedly.
‘But naturally he wishes to make amends for all the confusion and unpleasantness of today.’ Violetta nodded. ‘He seems full of remorse for the hasty judgement he made.’
He’s full of something, Clare thought broodingly. But I don’t think it’s repentance.
‘Naturally, I have seen the Marchese at various social functions,’ Violetta continued. ‘But, as he says, he is not in the region very often. Perhaps when he marries, and has a family, that will change.’
She paused. ‘Although his estates are excellently run in his absence, I understand. His manager, Antonio Lerucci, is said to be a charming young man, and most loyal and efficient.’
She