Read The Helen Bianchin Collection (Mills & Boon E-Book Collections) Online
Authors: Helen Bianchin
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Erotica, #Collections & Anthologies, #Contemporary Women, #General
This was getting out of hand. âLookâ'
âNo,' Ana declared emphatically. â
You
look. I don't want to wake up one morning and hear Brad has somehow got to you and you're just another statistic in the assault and battery records.' She leaned forward and caught hold of Rebekah's hands. âI was
there
, remember? When you walked out on him, and afterwards.' Tears filled her eyes. âJace is the first man you've dated in a long time. Only to have Brad emerge out of the woodwork and stalk you.' A tear escaped and rolled down her cheek. âNo one,
no one
is ever going to hurt you again. Ever.'
Rebekah felt her stomach curl into a tight ball at her sister's distress. âAna, don't. I'm OK. The police have arrested him.'
âSure, you're OK. Bruised ribs, multiple contusions. Not to mention shock and trauma.' Her voice rose. âI hate to think what would have happened if he'd dragged you inside the apartment. Or if Maisie and George hadn't been home.'
She caught the fierce determination apparent, and stayed any further protestâ¦for now.
She
might be the victim, but Ana was hurting too. âYou haven't shown me the latest print-out of the babe's ultrasound. Or the radiographer's video clip.'
Ana offered a shaky smile. âChanging the subject won't change my mind.' She stood to her feet and extended her hand. âCome on. Let's go see pictures of your foetal niece or nephew.'
It helped to take both their minds off the earlier part of the evening, and it was there Luc found them rewinding the video tape for the third or fourth time.
âTime to call it a night for both of you, hmm?'
Rebekah caught the way his features softened as he took Ana's hands in his and gently pulled her to her feet. He would, she knew, ease his wife's apprehension and be there for her when she stirred through the night.
An ache began deep inside at the thought of being able to sink into the comfort of a man's arms, have his lips brush her forehead, trail over her cheek and settle on her mouth.
âYou're to rest tomorrow,' Ana insisted as they ascended the stairs. âSuzie is competent, and we'll manage. Coming into the shop is a no-no. OK?'
âI'll see how I feel in the morning.' It was a compromise at best, and Ana shot her a dark glance as if divining her thoughts.
âI mean it.'
Rebekah caught her sister's hand and gently squeezed it. âI know you do.'
âPetros has made up the front guest suite for you, and you're to sleep in. Just come downstairs whenever you feel like breakfast.' Ana's features sharpened a little. âAre you sure you're OK?'
âYes,' she reassured. In truth every bone in her
body ached. âI'm going to have that sedative, hop into bed, and sleep like a baby.'
She did take the sedative, and she did sleep for a few hours, only to wake in the early dawn hours feeling as if her body had been pummelled like a punching bag.
Which it pretty much had, she conceded as she slipped gingerly out of bed and made for the
en suite
.
She snapped on the light and examined her face in the mirror. A bit of concealer would cover the emerging bruise. As to the rest of herâ¦she lifted the nightshirt and grimaced at the swelling on her ribs, the blueish-purplish colour, and knew she was fortunate none of the ribs was broken. Shallow breathing was the order of the day for a while.
There were scratches on her arm, a large, reddish welt on one forearm.
Not nice, not nice at all. But the swelling would subside, the bruises yellow and disappear. Give it a few weeks and all that would remain was the memory.
Rebekah checked her watch and saw it was much too early to dress and go downstairs. Returning to bed and trying to sleep wasn't an option, so she switched on the bedside lamp and leafed through a few glossy magazines Petros had thoughtfully provided.
Rebekah waited until Luc left the house at eight, saw Ana follow him minutes later, then she quickly gathered up her bag and moved quickly downstairs.
Petros was in the midst of clearing the dining-room table, and he turned as she entered the room.
âGood morning,' he greeted warmly. âI trust you slept well? Ana insisted I shouldn't disturb you.' His gaze took in the bag. âWhat can I get you for breakfast?'
It would be useless to say she wasn't hungry. âOrange juice, toast and coffee will be great.'
One eyebrow arched. âMight I suggest some fruit and cereal? Eggs with a little ham or bacon? A croissant, perhaps?'
âYou're bent on spoiling me.' She took a seat and poured herself a glass of juice. There was fruit on the table, and she selected a banana, peeled and ate it.
âBut toast and coffee is fine.'
There was a folded newspaper near by, and she flicked through the pages, read the headlines, her horoscope for the day, and scanned the comic strips. By which time she'd eaten two pieces of toast and had almost finished her second cup of coffee.
Rebekah retrieved her cellphone and punched in the relevant digits to summon a taxi, and she was relaying the address when Petros re-entered the room.
âYou intend going somewhere this morning?' the manservant asked as he began clearing dishes.
âI need to go back to my apartment and feed my cat.'
âLuc would be most upset if I allowed you to take a taxi. I'll drive you, whenever you're ready to leave.'
âNonsense.'
âPlease, in this instance I must insist. If you'll tell me which company you called, I'll ring and cancel.'
It seemed easier to capitulate, and twenty minutes
later she slid out of the four-wheel-drive Petros used for transport.
âI'll wait until you're ready to return.'
He wasn't going to like the next part at all. âI intend remaining at the apartment, Petros.'
His lips pursed in visible disapproval. âLuc and Ana will be most displeased.'
âI promise I'll ring and explain.' Ana she could handle, and Ana would handle Luc.
Fait accompli.
Besides, in less than half an hour she'd be at the shop.
âMs Rebekah, I don't think this is a good idea.'
She offered him a sweet smile. âThanks for the lift.' Then she turned and used her key to enter the main lobby.
Home,
she breathed as she entered her apartment. There was no place quite like your own, and Millie bounded towards her, curling back and forth around her ankles, purring in delighted welcome.
The apartment looked achingly familiar, and she moved through it, straightening a vase on the chiffonier as she made her way to the kitchen.
Fifteen minutes later she'd fed Millie, changed into work clothes, and was on her way to the shop.
âYou aren't supposed to be here,' Ana remonstrated the instant Rebekah walked through the door.
âI know everything you're going to say,' she responded firmly as she crossed to the work table and stowed her bag. âBut I'd rather be doing something constructive than swanning on the chaise lounge, idly flipping through the pages of a magazine.'
Take control.
Hadn't that been the essence of any
professional advice she'd ever received? âOK, where are we at?' she queried briskly.
âYou've got the morning,' Ana conceded, trying for a fierce look that didn't quite come off. âThen you're going home.'
âI've got the day,' Rebekah corrected gently. âAnd I'll go home when I'm ready.'
âYou're impossibly stubborn.'
âAnd I love you, too.'
Suzie looked from one to the other. âAre you two going to fight, then make up? Or is this serious stuff and I should take five to let you sort it out alone?'
âStay,' Rebekah and Ana ordered in unison.
âIf you insist. Shall I mediate, or referee?'
âNeither.'
The phone rang, and Ana declared
sotto voce
, âSaved by the bell.'
The morning was busier than usual with a number of customers coming in from the street. It was late morning when Rebekah took a quick check of their stock and reached for the phone to place an order, then arrange for the courier for delivery.
The electronic buzzer heralded the arrival of another customer, and she glanced towards the door, then stilled as Jace entered the shop.
Shock, surprise were just two of the emotions she experienced. Not the least was speculation as to why he was here when he was supposed to be in Cairns. Had his meetings concluded earlier than he'd anticipated? Yet if so, why wasn't he in Brisbane?
For a moment her gaze locked with his as he stood exuding a silent power that was vaguely frightening.
She watched as he moved towards Ana and offered an affectionate greeting, then he turned and moved towards the table where Rebekah was in the midst of gathering sprays of orchids into a large bouquet.
The nerves inside her stomach gave every impression of performing a series of complicated somersaults, and her fingers faltered as he paused within touching distance.
What could she say? Anything would be superfluous, so she didn't even try as she bore his raking appraisal.
A muscle bunched at the edge of his jaw, and she saw his eyes harden briefly, then he lifted a hand and trailed light fingers over her cheek.
âGet your bag,' he commanded gently. âI'm taking you home.' He pressed his thumb over her lips as they parted to voice a refusal. âNo argument.' He increased the pressure slightly. âI'll carry you out of here if I have to.'
Rebekah removed his hand, only, she suspected, because he let her. âYou don't have the right to give me orders.'
âIt's a self-appointed role.' His voice was a silky drawl that feathered sensation down the length of her spine.
Everything faded from her peripheral vision. There were just the two of them, fused by an electric aware
ness that had everything to do with heightened sensuality. Right now she didn't need or want it.
âGo away.'
âNot a chance.'
âJaceâ'
âDo you really want to do this the hard way?'
He was capable of implementing his threat despite any resistance on her part, and, given the choice, she'd opt for dignity over embarrassment.
âHow did youâ?'
âFind out where you were?' he completed. âIt was a process of elimination. First Luc, then Petros, and Ana.'
Rebekah moved slightly, shot her sister a dark glance and was met with a blithe smile. It was nothing less than a conspiracy, and one where the odds were stacked against her.
âThere's a lot of work to get through.'
âNothing Suzie and I can't handle,' Ana assured.
âThere you go,' Jace drawled with hateful ease. âNow collect your bag and we'll get on our way.'
âI have the van. And there is no
we
.'
âArguing this back and forth isn't going to change a thing.'
âSo concede defeat and follow you like a little lamb?' She refrained from adding
to the slaughter
⦠To no one, least of all this Greek-born American, would she admit she ached all over, her head thumped with pain, and she was fast approaching the need for serious time out.
âI have the car double-parked outside,' Jace informed as she reached for her bag.
âI hope the traffic officer has issued you with a
ticket.' She offered Suzie a wry smile, brushed her lips to Ana's cheek, then preceded Jace from the shop.
âNone of this is
your
business,' Rebekah declared as he eased the car out from the busy thoroughfare. She was unsure whether to be relieved or disappointed there hadn't been a parking-violation ticket attached to his windscreen.
âWrong. My involvement with you started all this.'
âWhat
involvement
?'
âDon't split hairs,
pedhaki mou
.'
The affectionate âlittle one' got to her as she turned towards him. âYou mean you postponed business meetings and flew back to Sydney because you felt
responsible
? That's ridiculous.'
He met her gaze and held it for a few seemingly long seconds. âIs it?' He returned his attention to negotiating traffic. âI don't think so.'
âI fail to see the reasons for everyone's concern. I'm OK.' She was tempted to tell him there had been more damaging attacks in the past, only to refrain from the admission.
âSure you are,' Jace discounted in a dry, mocking tone. âYou were barely standing up in there, pale as a ghost, your eyes dark with pain.' There was underlying anger apparent. âWhat were you trying to prove?'
Should she tell him the truth? âI didn't want to sit and brood.' And I didn't want to be alone, she added silently.
Jace swept the car into the entrance adjacent her apartment.
âHere's fine.' She already had her hand on the door-clasp.
âThe hell it is.' He eased the car down the incline leading to the underground car park, and indicated the security lock. âGive me your key.'
âThere's no need for you to personally see me to my apartment door.'
She was a prickly young woman, and one he wanted to kiss senseless one minute and shake sense into the next. âJustâ¦do it, Rebekah.'
âI don'tâ'
âYour ex-husband has been released on bail.' Rebekah stilled at his words, then drew in a slight breathâ¦anything other than
slight
hurt like hell. âWhy am I not surprised?'
Brad's mother was a rich society matron who engaged high-ranking lawyers to protect her only son. On the past two occasions Wilma Somerville had rushed to his defence, blamed Rebekah for instigating the attacks, and threatened dire consequences if an official complaint was filed.
The next time Ana took matters into her own hands and persuaded Rebekah to press charges, only to have Wilma's lawyer release him hours later on bail and later persuade judge and jury Brad was a well-educated, caring man who simply needed a course in anger management. A hefty fine, and he was free.