Hot Nights with...the Italian. Lucy Gordon

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Hot Nights with...the Italian - Lucy Gordon Mills & Boon M&B

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lowered lids. ‘Not the response I had hoped for, carissima.’ His drawl held amusement. He glanced past her at the clock. ‘However, I see it is still early, so maybe I will forgo the coffee and persuade you to join me in a little gentle exercise instead. Would you prefer that?’ Another pause. ‘Or has the kitchen suddenly become more attractive to you after all?’

      She said thickly, ‘Bastard,’ and scrambled out of bed with more haste than dignity, grabbing at her robe. She was followed to the door by the sound of his laughter.

      Once in the kitchen, she closed the door and leaned against it while she steadied her breathing.

      Renzo had been winding her up, she thought incredulously, subjecting her to some light-hearted sexual teasing, and it was a side of him she hadn’t seen before.

      Or not since the night of her birthday dinner, she amended, swallowing, when his eyes and the touch of his mouth on her hand had asked questions she’d been too scared to answer and once again she’d run away.

      A girl does not have to be in love with a man to enjoy what he does to her in bed. His own words, and he clearly believed them.

      But it isn’t true, she thought, her throat tightening. Not for me. Simply wanting someone isn’t enough, and never could be. I’d have to be in love to in order to give myself, and even then there’d have to be trust—and respect as well.

      Things that Renzo had probably never heard of as he swanned his way through life from bed to bed.

      Besides, he didn’t really want her. She was simply a means to an end. But what happened on their honeymoon obviously still rankled with him. For once his seduction routine hadn’t worked, and with his wife of all people.

      His pride had been damaged, and he couldn’t allow that, so now he didn’t only want a son from her, but an addition to his list of conquests. To have her panting to fall into his arms each time he walked through the door.

      Well, I don’t need this, she thought fiercely. I’ve no interest in his technique as a lover, and I won’t let myself be beguiled into wanting him. It’s not going to happen.

      I’m going to be the one that got away. The one that proves to him, as well as myself, that there is life after Lorenzo Santangeli.

      She filled the kettle and set it to boil, noting with rebellious satisfaction that there was no fresh coffee. So he’d have to drink instant and like it.

      She spooned granules into a beaker, then glanced around her, wondering what would happen to her little domain when she returned to Italy. It was hardly likely she’d be able to retain it as a bolthole when her role as Santangeli wife and future mother became too much to bear.

      Although she supposed she could always ask. Because she’d need somewhere eventually, after she’d given Renzo his heir and became surplus to requirements.

      In fact, she could impose a few conditions of her own on her return to him, she thought. Let him know that her acquiescence to his wishes now, and later, was still open to negotiation.

      Not just a place to live, she told herself, but a purpose in life, too. For afterwards …

      In painful retrospect, she’d worked out that any plans she might have for her eventual child—the bond she’d once envisaged—would be little more than fantasy.

      She’d seen the stately nurseries at the Santangeli family home, and knew that once she’d given birth her work would be over. There’d be no breastfeeding or nappy-changing for Signora Santangeli. The baby would be handed over to a hierarchy of doting staff who would answer its cries, be the recipients of its first smile, supervise the tooth-cutting and the initial wobbly steps, with herself little more than a bystander.

      So she’d be left to her own devices, she thought bleakly, in Julia’s classic phrase. And would need something to fill her time and assuage the ache in her heart.

      And quite suddenly she knew what it could be, what she would ask in return for her wifely compliance.

      Simple, she thought. Neat and beautiful. Now all she required was Renzo’s agreement, which could be trickier.

      The coffee made, she carried the brimming beaker back to the bedroom. But it was empty, the covers on the bed thrown back.

      He was in the adjoining bathroom, standing at the basin, shaving, a towel knotted round his hips and his dark hair still damp from the shower.

      ‘You haven’t wasted any time.’ Self-consciously she stepped forward, and put the beaker within his reach.

      ‘I wish I could say the same of you, mia cara.’ His tone was dry. ‘I thought you had gone to pick the beans.’ He tasted the brew and winced slightly. ‘But clearly not.’

      ‘I’m sorry if it doesn’t meet your exacting standards.’

      Damn, she thought. In view of what she was about to ask, a more conciliatory note might be an improvement.

      He rinsed his razor and laid it aside. ‘Well, it is hot,’ he said. ‘And I am grateful for that, at least. Grazie, carissima.’

      And before she could read his intention, or take evading action, his arm snaked out, drawing her swiftly against him, and he was kissing her startled mouth, his lips warm and delicately sensuous as they moved on hers.

      The scent of his skin, the fragrance of the soap he’d used, were suddenly all around her, and she felt as if she was breathing him, absorbing him through every pore, as he held her in the strong curve of his arm.

      And she waited, her heart hammering, for his kiss to deepen. To demand …

      Then, with equal suddenness, she was free again. She took an instinctive step backwards on legs that were not entirely steady, the colour storming into her face as she met his ironic gaze.

      ‘So,’ he said. ‘We make progress, mia bella. We have not only shared a bed, but I have kissed you at last.’ He collected his razor and toothbrush, and put them in his wash-bag, then walked to the door, where he paused.

      He said gently, ‘You were worth waiting for, Maria Lisa,’ and went out, leaving her staring after him.

      If there had to be only one door in the flat with a bolt on it, she was glad it was the bathroom.

      Not that she would be interrupted. Instinct told her that Renzo would not try to make immediate capital out of what had just happened, but would leave her to wait—and wonder.

      Which, of course, she would, she thought, gritting her teeth.

      She’d always known it would be dangerous to allow him too close, and she could see now that her wariness had been fully justified.

      He was—lethal, she thought helplessly.

      Yet even she could see it was ridiculous to be so profoundly disturbed by something that had lasted only a few seconds at most.

      Her only comfort was that she had not kissed him back, but had stayed true to her convictions by remaining passive in his embrace.

      But he was the one who stopped, a small, niggling

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