The Price Of His Redemption. Carol Marinelli

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The Price Of His Redemption - Carol Marinelli Mills & Boon Modern

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gave him nothing, no rest, nowhere to hide, and Daniil, with everything to prove, fought back with all he had.

      The other boys were cheering while trying not to, as they did not want to alert the workers.

      Roman was at his fiercest, and though Daniil did his best to match him it was he who tired first. He moved in and took Roman in a clinch. He just needed a moment to rest but his brother shrugged him off.

      Daniil went in again, holding on to his twin so that Roman couldn’t punch him, doing his best to get back some breath before he commenced fighting again.

      Roman broke the clinch and the fight restarted, both blocking punches, both taking the occasional hit, but then Daniil thought he was gaining ground. Daniil was fast and Roman rarely needed to rest but it was Roman who now came in for a clinch and leaned on his twin. Daniil could hear his brother’s angry breathing but as he released him, instead of giving Daniil that necessary second to centre, Roman hooked him, landing an uppercut to Daniil’s left cheek and flooring him.

      Daniil came round to stunned faces. He had no idea how long he’d been knocked out but it had been long enough to have everyone worried.

      Everyone except Roman.

      ‘See,’ Roman said. ‘I do better without you, shishka.’

      The staff had noticed that some of the dorms were empty and, alerted by the mounting cheers, had started running to the room where Daniil now lay, trying to focus.

      Katya, the cook, took him into the warm kitchen, calling to her daughter, Anya, to bring the box of tape. Anya was in there, practising her dance steps. She was twelve and went to a dance school but for now was home for the holidays. Sometimes she would tease the twins and say that she was fitter than them.

      Anya still had dreams and thought she would dance her way out of here.

      Daniil had none now.

      ‘Hey, what on earth were you doing?’ Katya scolded. She gave Daniil some strong, sweet black tea and then she tried to patch up his face. ‘The rich family don’t want ugly...’

      * * *

      Daniil sat on a bed just a few days later, seemingly a million miles from home.

      In the car he had looked at the small houses and shops as they’d passed them and when the car had turned a corner he had seen in the distance a large imposing red-brick residence. They had been driven down a long driveway and he’d stared at the lawns, fountains and statues outside the huge house.

      Daniil hadn’t wanted to get out of the car but he had, silently.

      The door was opened by a man in a black suit who looked, to Daniil, to be dressed for a funeral or wedding but his smile was kind.

      In the entrance Daniil stood as the adults spoke over him and then up the stairs he was led by the woman who had twice come to the orphanage and who was now his mother.

      At the turn of the stairs there was a portrait of his new parents with their hands on the shoulders of a smiling dark-haired child.

      He’d been told that they had no children.

      The bedroom was large and there was only one bed, which looked out to vast countryside.

      ‘Bath!’

      He had no idea what she meant until she pointed to a room off the bedroom, and then she had gone.

      Daniil had a bath and wrapped a towel around himself, just in time, because there was a knock at the door. It opened and she approached him with an anxious smile. She started to go through his things and kept calling him by the wrong name.

      He wanted to correct her and tell her his name was pronounced Dah-neel, rather than the Dae-ne-yuhl she insisted on using, but then he remembered the translator explaining that he had a new name.

      Daniel Thomas.

      That woman, his mother, had rubber gloves on, and his clothes, his shoes were all being loaded into a large garbage bag that the man in the suit was holding. She was still talking in a language he didn’t understand. She kept pointing to the window and then his cheek and making a gesture as if she was sewing and after several attempts he understood that she was going to take him to get his cheek repaired better than Katya had done.

      He stared at the case as she disposed of his life and then he saw two pictures, which Daniil knew that he hadn’t packed. Roman had slipped them in, he must have.

       ‘Nyet!’

      It was the first word he had spoken since they had left Russia and the woman let out a small worried cry as Daniil lunged for the photos and told her, no, she must not to get rid of them and neither could she touch them.

      His mother had fled the room and the man in the suit stood there for a while before finally coming to sit on the bed and join him in looking at the photos.

      ‘You?’ He had pointed to Daniil and then to one of the boys in the picture.

      Daniil shook his head. ‘Roman.’

      The old man with kind eyes pointed to his own chest. ‘Marcus.’

      Daniil nodded and looked back at the photo.

      Only then did Daniil start to understand that Roman didn’t hate him; he had been trying to save him.

      Daniil, though, hadn’t wanted to be saved.

      He had wanted to make his way with his brother.

      Not alone, like this.

       CHAPTER ONE

      TECHNICALLY, LIBBY TENNENT LIED.

      She had made it through the gold glass revolving doors and had walked across the impressive marble floor and was just at the elevators when a uniformed security guard halted her and asked where she was going. ‘I have an appointment with Mr Zverev,’ Libby said.

      ‘Perhaps you do, but before you can take the elevator, first you have to sign in at Reception.’

      ‘Oh, of course,’ Libby responded airily, trying to look as if she had simply forgotten the procedure.

      Everything about the place was imposing.

      It was a luxurious Mayfair address and, even before the taxi had pulled up at the smart building, Libby had realised that getting in to see Daniil Zverev might not prove the cinch that her father had insisted it would be.

      Libby walked over to the reception desk and repeated her story to a very good-looking receptionist, saying that she had an appointment to see Mr Zverev, silently hoping that the woman wouldn’t notice that the appointment was, in fact, for her father, Lindsey Tennent.

      ‘And your name?’

      ‘Ms Tennent.’ Libby watched as the receptionist typed in the details and saw that her eyes narrowed

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