Modern Romance November 2016 Books 1-4. Cathy Williams
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‘Can’t you just...issue a denial?’
Dante stared into her soft grey eyes and felt close to exploding. ‘You think it’s that simple?’
‘We could say that I was... I don’t know...’ Helplessly, Willow shrugged. ‘Joking?’
His mouth hardened, and now there was something new in his eyes. Something dark. Something bleak.
‘A denial might have worked, were it not for the fact that some enterprising journalist was alerted to the Di Sione name and decided to telephone my grandfather’s house on Long Island to ask him for his reaction.’ His blue eyes sparked with fury as they captured hers with their shuttered gaze. ‘And despite the time difference between here and New York, it just so happened that my grandfather was suffering from insomnia and boredom and pain, and was more than willing to accept the call. Which is why...’
He paused, as if he was only just hanging on to his temper by a shred.
‘Why I received a call from the old man, telling me how pleased he is that I’m settling down at last. Telling me how lovely you are—and what a good family you come from. I was trying to find the right moment to tell him that there is nothing going on between us, only the right moment didn’t seem to come—or rather, my grandfather didn’t give me a chance to say what I wanted to.’
‘Dante...’
‘Don’t you dare interrupt me when I haven’t finished,’ he ground out. ‘Because using the kind of shameless emotional blackmail he has always used to ensure he gets his own way, my grandfather then told me how much better he’d felt when he heard the news. He said he hadn’t felt this good in a long time and that it was high time I took myself a wife.’
‘I’m sorry.’ She gave him a beseeching look. ‘What else can I say?’
Dante felt a feeling of pure rage flood through him and wondered how he could have been stupid enough to take his eye off the ball. Or had he forgotten what women were really like—had he completely wiped Lucy from his memory? Had it conveniently slipped his mind that the so-called fairer sex were manipulative and devious and would stop at nothing to get what it was they wanted? How easy it was to forget the past when you had been bewitched by a supposedly shy blonde and a sob story about needing a temporary date which had convinced him to go to the damned wedding in the first place.
He stared at the slight quiver of Willow’s lips and at that moment he understood for the first time in his life the meaning of the term a punishing kiss, because that was what he wanted to do to her right now. He wanted to punish her for screwing up his plans with her thoughtlessness and her careless tongue. He watched as a slow colour crept up to inject her creamy skin with a faint blush, and felt his body harden. Come to think of it, he’d like to punish her every which way. He’d like to lay her down and flatten her against the floor and...and...
‘Are you one of those habitual fantasists?’ he demanded hotly. ‘One of those women who goes around pretending to be something she isn’t, to make herself seem more interesting?’
She put her coffee cup down so suddenly that some of it slopped over the side, but she didn’t even seem to notice. Her hands gripped the edge of the table, as if she needed its weathered wooden surface for support.
‘That’s an unfair thing to say,’ she breathed.
‘Why? Because you’re so delicate and precious that I’m not allowed to tell the truth?’ He gave a short laugh. ‘I thought you despised being given special treatment just because you’d been ill. Well, you can’t have it both ways, Willow. You can’t play the shrinking violet whenever it suits you—and a feisty modern woman the next. You need to decide who you really are.’
She met his eyes in the silence which followed. ‘You certainly don’t pull your punches, do you?’
‘I’m treating you the same as I would any other woman.’
‘Oh, but that’s where you’re wrong, because you’re not!’ she said with a shake of her head. ‘If I was any other woman, you would have had sex with me last night. You know you would.’
Dante felt the heavy beat of a pulse at his temple and silently cursed her for bringing that up again. Did she think she would wear him down with her persistence? That what Willow wanted, Willow would get. His mouth hardened, but unfortunately, so did his groin. ‘Like I told you. I don’t sleep with virgins.’
She turned away, but not before he noticed the dark flare of colour which washed over her cheekbones and he felt his anger morph inconveniently into lust. How easy it would be to vent his feelings by giving her what she wanted. What he wanted. Even now. Despite the accusations he’d hurled at her and the still-unsettled question of how her indiscretion was going to be resolved, it was sexual tension which dominated the air so powerfully that he couldn’t hardly breathe without choking on it. He couldn’t seem to tear his gaze away from her. She looked as brittle as glass as she held her shoulders stiffly, and although she was staring out of the small basement window, he was willing to lay a bet she didn’t see a thing.
But he did. He saw plenty. He could see the slender swell of her bottom beneath the dark denim. He could see the silken cascade of her blond hair as it spilled down her back. Would it make him feel better if he went right over there and slid down her jeans, and laid her down on the kitchen table and straddled her, before feasting on her?
He swallowed as an aching image of her pale, parted thighs flashed vividly into his mind and he felt another powerful tug of desire. On one level, of course it would make them both feel better, but on another—what? He would be stirring up yet more consequences, and weren’t there more than enough to be going on with?
She turned back again to face him and he saw that the flush had gone, as if her pale skin had absorbed it, like blotting paper. ‘Like I said, I’m sorry, but there’s nothing I can do about it now.’
He shook his head. ‘But that’s where you’re wrong, little Miss Hamilton. There is.’
Did something alert her to the determination which had hardened his voice? Was that why her eyes had grown so wary?
‘What? You want me to write to your grandfather and apologise? And then to give some kind of statement to the press, telling them that it was all a misunderstanding? I’ll do all that, if that’s what it takes.’
‘No. That’s not what’s going to happen,’ he said. ‘It’s a little more complicated than that. My grandfather wants to meet the woman he thinks I’m going to marry. And you, my dear Willow, are going to embrace that role.’
The grey of her eyes was darker now, as if someone had smudged them with charcoal and a faint frown was criss-crossing over her brow. ‘I don’t understand.’
‘Then let me explain it clearly, so there can be no mistake,’ he said. ‘My grandfather is a sick man and anything which makes him feel better is fine with me. He wants me to bring you to