The Helen Bianchin Collection (Mills & Boon E-Book Collections) (80 page)

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Authors: Helen Bianchin

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Erotica, #Collections & Anthologies, #Contemporary Women, #General

BOOK: The Helen Bianchin Collection (Mills & Boon E-Book Collections)
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Seconds later Nicki held out the receiver. ‘Daddy wants to talk to you.’

Well, I don’t want to talk to him. ‘Not now, darling, I’m busy.’

Nicki’s eyes rounded in surprise, for Shannay was only folding clothes, and Marcello must have heard, for his voice came clearly through the mouthpiece.

‘Take the phone, Shannay.’

She swore softly, and saw her daughter’s eyes dilate even further, then she collected the receiver and prepared to play polite.

‘Marcello.’

‘Nicki said you’re unwell.’

Whatever happened to
hello?
She kept her voice even. ‘I’m fine.’

‘Have you seen a doctor?’

‘I’m a pharmacist, remember? I do have a reasonable knowledge of ailments and appropriate medications.’

‘Are you pregnant?’

The query came out of left field, and surprised her … although, on reflection, she had to wonder
why.

‘I’m fine,’ Shannay reiterated, refusing to fabricate or confirm, then she handed the receiver back to Nicki and exited the room on the pretext of delivering a small stack of folded clothes to the bedroom.

She could hear Nicki’s voice in the background, and she moved into the bathroom and began running Nicki’s bath.

Employing delaying tactics, she rearranged items on the marble-topped vanity until Nicki entered the bathroom.

‘Why didn’t you want to talk to Daddy?’

‘We talk via email,’ she explained carefully as she helped undress her daughter. Brief sentences conveying updates on Nicki.

It took a few days to gather the courage to arrange an appointment with an obstetrician, and she didn’t know whether to smile or cry following his examination.

‘Congratulations, my dear. You’re about halfway through your first trimester.’

The remainder of the day passed in a daze, and she settled Nicki with Anna, then drove to the pharmacy, praying that if they weren’t busy she might be able to persuade John to let her finish early.

Shortly after nine she was on the point of considering a tea-break when the electronic buzzer sounded as someone entered the pharmacy.

Shannay glanced up towards the entrance with a ready smile in place … and froze. For walking towards her was the last person she expected to see.

The tall, broad-shouldered male frame was achingly familiar.

Attired in black jeans, a white collarless shirt undone at the
neck and a butter-soft black leather collarless jacket, Marcello bore a distinct resemblance to a dark warrior.

Why was he here … and why
now?

All her fine body hairs lifted in sensory recognition, and there was nothing she could do to prevent the surge of blood pulsing through her veins.

It was a magnetic reaction and, try as she might, she was unable to prevent the way she was drawn to him.

His eyes captured and held her own, his features sculptured into almost savage lines, his sensual mouth bracketed by slashing grooves.

He looked dangerous, his eyes almost obsidian in their darkness as he drew close.

Shannay’s emotional heart went into meltdown, rendering her almost boneless as she experienced a mix of fear and elation, hope and dismay.

He didn’t glance towards John when he spoke, yet the words were for him alone.

‘My wife is ceasing work, as of now.’

It wasn’t a question, merely a statement of his intent.

Shannay looked at him in shocked surprise. ‘You can’t just walk in here and—’

‘You’re leaving.’

‘The hell I am.’

‘You can walk, or be carried. It’s immaterial.’

John started forward. ‘Now look here—’

Marcello speared him with a forbidding glance. ‘I understand you regard Shannay as a friend. But this is between me and my wife.’ He shifted his attention back to Shannay. ‘I suggest you collect your keys.’

‘No.’ The next instant she gave a startled yelp as he reached forward and lifted her over one shoulder, then he indicated
the room at the rear of the pharmacy. ‘Shannay’s belongings are there?’

What was it between men? Silent signals, male recognition? Whatever, she became aware John retrieved her bag and passed it into Marcello’s possession.

‘Thank you.’ He turned towards the door. ‘We’ll be in touch.’ Then he walked calmly outside, paused beside a limousine, murmured something to the driver, then bundled her into the rear seat.

‘What in hell do you think you’re doing?’ Her voice held restrained fury as he leant across and fitted her safety belt before tending to his own.

‘Taking you to a hotel.’

Her face lit with scandalised disbelief. ‘No, you’re not!’ She leaned forward. ‘Driver, take me to Applecross.’ She supplied the street address, and caught a glimpse of familiar features in the rear-vision mirror and was unable to hide her disbelief. ‘Carlo?’

‘I’m sorry. I have orders.’

Shannay turned towards Marcello and lashed out at him with her hand, uncaring where it landed … as long as it did.

Except he caught it mid-flight, and pressed their joined hands down to his side.

‘Nicki is asleep, Anna is happy to stay with her overnight, and there’s a bag containing a change of clothes in the boot.’

He’d already been to the apartment?

‘Why?’

‘I imagine it’s self-explanatory,’ Marcello drawled, and she curled her fingers into his, then dug her nails in hard.

‘You can’t
do
this.’

She caught a flash of white teeth as he smiled in the dim light. ‘So—bite me.’

She wanted to, badly. And she would, the instant they were alone. Meantime she refused to speak to him, or even look at him during the drive into the city.

Carlo pulled into the entrance of one of the city’s luxurious hotels, popped the boot, retrieved two overnight bags and handed them to the hovering concierge.

‘I’ll call you in the morning,’ Marcello indicated as Carlo opened the rear passenger door for Shannay to alight.

For a moment she considered refusing to budge, except making a fuss would gain nothing at all.

‘I hate you for this.’ Her voice was little more than a sibilant whisper as he led her through the foyer to a bank of lifts.

‘Let go my hand,’ Shannay demanded tightly when they alighted on a high floor.

‘Soon.’

He was taller, and indisputably faster on his feet … so where did he think she’d escape to? She threw him a dark look and stood in mutinous silence as he inserted the card, freed the lock, then drew her inside.

With economical movements he deposited both bags, removed the
do not disturb
tag and hung it outside the door, then closed the door and slid home the safety chain.

‘You’d better have a good reason for behaving like a …’ Words temporarily failed her. ‘Barbaric beast,’ she added with considerable heat.

He was too controlled, his eyes too impossibly dark, except she was too angry to heed their caution.

‘Why don’t you sit down?’

‘I don’t
need
to sit.’

Marcello shrugged out of his leather jacket and threw it over the back of a nearby chair.

‘A drink? A cup of tea, perhaps?’

He was being too polite, and she sent him a venomous glare. ‘Cut to the chase, why don’t you?’

‘Then you can leave?’ His drawling voice resembled pure silk being razzed by a sharp steel blade. ‘I don’t think so.’

‘What is this?’ Her dark eyes flashed with latent fire. ‘A duel to the death?’

He smiled, although there was a distinct lack of humour apparent. ‘You possess a fanciful imagination.’

Her chin lifted in open defiance. ‘You’re holding me here against my will.’

Marcello regarded her steadily, his gaze that of a jungle animal watching its prey. ‘Are you pregnant with my child?’

Shannay was suddenly speechless, and it took several seconds before she found her voice. ‘You flew from Madrid to ask that of me?’

‘If you recall,’ he drawled with silky indolence, ‘you refused to give me an answer on the phone.’

Angry beyond belief, she searched for words, any words. ‘You’re
unbelievable.’

‘You’re evading the question.’ His voice assumed the quality of silk, and her features became waxen-pale.

‘What if I say
no?

‘It won’t make the slightest difference.’

‘To
what?’
she demanded, almost at the end of her tether.

‘How this plays out.’

So this was it … crunch time.

‘In a matter of weeks the divorce will be finalised.’

‘No, it won’t. I’ve had my lawyer notify yours of our reconciliation,’ Marcello informed and obtained a degree of satisfaction at her shocked expression. ‘Copies of the announcement in the Spanish media provided sufficient proof.’

‘But that was merely a sham,’ Shannay protested, eyes
wide with dismay as she searched frantically for the exact words quoted … hadn’t Marcello simply acceded “anything is possible”? How could that be construed to be a positive confirmation?

She watched with startled surprise as he reached for his overnight bag, extracted a slim packet, opened the flap and handed the contents to her.

‘I’d like you to look at these.’

Shannay told herself she wasn’t interested, but the coloured photograph of a house caught her attention, and she felt herself drawn to it, unable to ignore her admiration for the beautiful, sprawling two-storeyed mansion set in spacious grounds overlooking what appeared to be a lake.

Underneath the photograph was another, even more magnificent, and there was a third with views out over the ocean.

Yet it was the first photograph she returned to, and she glanced up at him with open curiosity.

‘Why are you showing me these?’

‘The first house is at Peppermint Grove, the remaining two at Cottesloe and Cottesloe Beach respectively.’

Expensive real estate.
Very
expensive real estate, she perceived.

‘We have an appointment to inspect them tomorrow.’

A soundless gasp escaped her lips. ‘Excuse me?’

‘You heard.’

She had, but the implication of them failed to compute. Why would he be interested in Perth real estate?

He watched her conflicting emotions and barely restrained himself from hauling her into his arms.

The past few weeks had been hell. He’d eaten at his desk, barely slept and literally turned his life upside down as he had liaised with Perth real-estate agents, selected three of the most
suitable properties after viewing them via an internet visual tour, then he’d flown into Perth yesterday, consulted with lawyers, accountants, viewed the three properties and a few more purported to be worthy of inspection, organised Nicki’s care with Anna … and had Carlo drive him to collect the reason for all this.

Shannay.

‘We can do this by arguing half the night away,’ Marcello began with deliberate patience. ‘Or you can listen until I’m done.’

She looked at him, really looked at him, and saw the fine lines of tiredness fan out from each corner of his eyes, the faint shadowy smudges evident.

Heaven knew she was weary as pregnancy took hold of her body and drained some of her energy to nurture the tiny foetus developing inside her womb.

Together, what hope did they have?

Yet there was an instinctive feeling … some deep intrinsic knowledge hovering just beneath the surface.

His presence here … dared she even hope, let alone think what it might mean?

It was crazy, but the stress and tension that had consumed her for the past few weeks began to ebb, as if her subconscious recognised something she had yet to acknowledge.

Dared not envisage in case she might have it wrong.

‘You have my heart,
querida.

For a few seconds she almost forgot to breathe.

‘Always,’ Marcello added gently. ‘There has never been anyone else since the day I met you.’

She opened her mouth, only to close it again as he held up a hand.

‘Please … hear me out. There are words I need to say. Not all of them good.’

She had nothing to lose. Absolutely nothing, and she simply inclined her head.

‘Penè made things difficult for you, conspiring initially with Estella to cause trouble.’

Wasn’t that the truth!

‘I thought we could get beyond the resulting fracas, but you were adamant our marriage was doomed.’

‘I left, because to remain would have been impossible.’

‘I was angry,’ Marcello continued. ‘You ignored my phone calls and refused to respond to every one of my messages. Within a year Ramon developed pneumonia and suffered a heart attack. Soon after he was diagnosed with cancer, and it was necessary for me to take control.’

Marcello’s responsibility would have been enormous. Remorse and a degree of guilt sat uncomfortably on her shoulders.

Timing, distance, misunderstanding. Each rational in hindsight, Shannay admitted.

‘With your refusal to acknowledge any form of contact, I had little recourse but to accept you intended to make a life on your own.’ He paused, and a muscle tensed along the edge of his jaw. ‘Until fate played a hand with Sandro and Luisa’s impromptu visit to Perth, their sighting of you at a local carnival and the discovery you had a child. Indisputably my child.’

Shannay relived that moment as if it were yesterday. ‘I vowed revenge. Contriving to use everything in my power to have you revisit Madrid … and ultimately seduce you. To take hold of your emotions and crush them to dust beneath my feet.’

The knowledge sent pain arrowing through her body, and his voice softened as he glimpsed the shadows evident in her eyes.

‘Except I couldn’t do it. The woman I’d turned you into in my mind didn’t exist. The reality was the young woman I fell in love with, the beautiful girl with integrity and a loving heart who fought against me and her own emotions … as I struggled to deal with my own.’

His mouth twisted with deliberate cynicism. ‘Ironic, isn’t it? When it came to revenge … I lost. As Ramon warned I would.’

Her eyes sharpened. ‘Ramon?’

‘My grandfather saw more than anyone gave him credit for. He’d glimpsed what was in your heart, and knew my own.’

What came next was painful. ‘Nicki’s abduction became the catalyst. I only had myself to offer in a bid to keep you with me.’ He lifted a hand and let it fall to his side. ‘And it wasn’t enough.’

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