Valentino's Love-Child. Lucy Monroe

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Valentino's Love-Child - Lucy Monroe Mills & Boon Modern

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expect to see.”

      “They are ripening on the vines now. Nonno said they will be ready to harvest when he gets back from Naples maybe.”

      “If your grandfather says it, than I am sure he is right.”

      “He is a master winemaker,” Giosue said proudly.

      “Yes. Do you help with the harvest?”

      “Some. Nonno takes me into the fields with him. Papa does not work the fields, but that is okay. Nonno says so.”

      “Your father’s gift is for the business side of things, I think.”

      “Nonno says Papa is very good at making money,” Giosue replied artlessly.

      Faith laughed. “I’m sure he is.”

      “He can support a family. Nonna says so.”

      “I’m sure he can.” Was Giosue matchmaking? Faith held in the smile that wanted to break over her features. She did not want to hurt Giosue by making him think she was laughing at him.

      “She thinks he should marry again. She is his mama, he has to listen to her, I think.”

      It was really hard to bite back the laugh at that, but she did not think Tino would share his son’s view on this particular subject. “What do you think, Gio?”

      “I think I would like a mother who is not so far away in Heaven.”

      She couldn’t help it. She reached out and touched him. Just a small pat on the shoulder, but she wanted to hug him to her. “I understand, Gio. I really do.”

      He cocked his head to one side. “You never talk about family.”

      “I don’t have any.” Her hand slid down to her stomach. She hadn’t. Before. But now, maybe she did.

      “You have no mama, either?”

      “No. I prayed for one, but it was not God’s will.” She shrugged.

      “Do you think I will have another mother?”

      “I hope so, Gio.”

      “Me, too, but only if I could love her.”

      Smart boy. “I’m sure your father wouldn’t marry a woman you couldn’t love as a mama, too.”

      “She would have to love me also.” Giosue looked at her through his lashes, worrying his lower lip with his teeth.

      Sweet little boy. “You are very lovable, that would not be a problem, I’m sure.”

      The next group of children came rushing into the room along with Giosue’s teacher, who was apparently looking for her missing lamb.

      “I will see you tonight?” he asked as crossed the room to join his teacher at the door.

      “Yes.”

      He was grinning as he exited the room.

      So, Tino’s son was matchmaking. With her. And seemingly, he had Tino’s tacit approval. Unbelievable. The prospect terrified her as much as it thrilled her. Had she suffered enough? Was she done being alone?

      Somehow, she couldn’t quite picture it.

      If nothing else, Tino was allowing her into another aspect of his life. The most important one to him. That was so huge, she could barely wrap her mind around it.

      The fact that he was doing so without knowing about the baby boggled her mind even more.

      He might not love her, but she had a different place in his life than any woman had since the death of his wife six years ago.

      Faith concentrated on the strains of classical music filling her Mini. At least, she tried to. She was extremely nervous about this dinner. She shouldn’t be. Over the past year, they’d discovered that she and Tino were compatible in and out of bed. She and Giosue got along great in the classroom as well. It should all be good.

      Only, telling herself that didn’t make the butterflies playing techno music in her stomach go away. This was the two of them together. Tino and Giosue. The three of them really.

      How they interacted would dictate a big chunk of her future; she was sure of it. Tino had to be testing the waters and, as absolutely inconceivable as she found that, it sort of fit in with his odd behavior lately.

      He’d called her again today. She’d missed the call and when she’d tried to return it he’d been in a meeting. His message had simply said he’d been thinking of her.

      Seriously strange.

      If he’d said he’d been thinking of sex with her, she wouldn’t have been surprised at all. The man had the libido of an eighteen-year-old. Sex was a really important part of his life. Important enough that he pursued it even though he had said he never wanted to remarry or get serious with a woman.

      But he hadn’t said he was missing the sex. He’d said he was missing her. Well, they would be together again soon enough. And then they would see what they would see.

      Her phone rang, playing his distinctive ring tone. She never answered when she was driving, so she forced herself to ignore it. Besides, she was almost to Grisafi Vineyard. He could say whatever he wanted when she got there. Most likely, he was calling to see where she was.

      But she wasn’t late.

      Well, not much, anyway. Maybe ten minutes. He had to be used to her sketchy time-keeping skills by now. It was one of the reasons that she loved living in Sicily. Tino was very un-Sicilian in his perfect punctuality and rigid schedule keeping. She’d teased him about it more than once.

      He’d told her he had no choice, doing business on an international scale. She suspected it was in his nature and that was that.

      She couldn’t see Tino changing for the convenience of others, not even when it came to making money.

      She turned down the long drive that led to Casa di Fede. Faith House. She’d thought it was neat the house shared her name when she’d first come to visit Agata. Later, when she realized Tino lived here, she’d seen it as an indication they were meant to be together. Even if it was temporary.

      Thinking about the coincidence sent another bubble of hope fizzing through her. Maybe it meant something more than what she’d thought. He and his family were wrapped around her life, and she was threaded through his, in ways neither had anticipated or even wanted at first.

      She pulled up in front of the sprawling farm house. It had been in the family for six generations and been built onto almost that number of times until it had two master suites, one in its own wing with two additional bedrooms. There were four more bedrooms in the rest of the house, a formal salon, a family entertainment room that opened onto the lanai beside the oversize two-tiered pool and spa area, a huge kitchen, a library and two offices.

      One was Tino’s, and the smaller, less-organized one was his father’s. Agata used the library as her office

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