Second-Time Bride (2 page)

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Authors: Lynne Graham

BOOK: Second-Time Bride
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He had level dark brows, cheekbones sharp enough to cut concrete, an aristocratic blade of a nose, lustrous tawny eyes and a head of glossy black hair, now ruthlessly suppressed into a smooth cut and infinitely shorter than she recalled. His hard-boned features were intensely male, his wide, beautifully shaped mouth pure sensual threat. He could smile and steal your heart with one scorching, teasing glance...but
that
had been the boy, not the man, Daisy reminded herself painfully.
She flinched as Nina Franklin gave an explosive little shriek of annoyance and thrust the mobile phone back into her capacious bag.
‘I can't stay!' she told Alessio furiously. ‘Joss needs me now. I could scream but how can I refuse? He's done me too many favours. You might as well let me out here. I can walk to the studio faster than you can get me there in this traffic! Look, I'll try to make it over to the house before you leave.'
‘Relax...it's not important,' Alessio murmured soothingly.
‘I could strangle Joss!' the blonde exclaimed resentfully, and then her green eyes landed on Daisy and hardened to accusing arrows of steel. ‘If
you
had been on time, this wouldn't be happening!'
‘Perhaps you would prefer to cancel and make a fresh appointment?' Daisy suggested with an eagerness she couldn't conceal.
‘No, I'll keep this one,' Alessio drawled.
Stiff as a small statue, Daisy quite deliberately averted her gaze as the limousine stopped; the other woman slid out, but not without many regretful mutterings and an attempt at a lingering and physical goodbye that had car horns screeching in protest as the lights changed.
Of course
they were lovers. Daisy's fine features were clenched fiercely tight. The intimacy between them was blatant.
Viewing a house together... Were they getting married? Her stomach twisted as she pondered that idea for the first time. For some reason she suddenly felt as if somebody was jumping up and down on her lungs. The door slammed again, sealing her into unwanted isolation with Alessio, and Daisy stopped breathing altogether.
‘It's been a day for unpleasant surprises,' Alessio commented grimly.
Daisy finally got up the courage to look at him again, her strained violet eyes unguarded. ‘Is that why you felt that you had to take it out on me?'
‘You are not one of my happier memories. What did you expect?' Hard eyes regarded her pale face without any perceptible emotion at all.
‘I don't know...' Daisy whispered unevenly. ‘I just never expected to see you again.'
‘Look on this as a once-in-a-lifetime coincidence,' Alessio urged with chilling contempt. ‘As greedy little bitches go, you're still top of the list in my experience! I would go some distance to avoid a repeat of this encounter.'
In the pin-dropping silence which ensued, Daisy turned bone-white. Her appalled gaze clung to his set dark features and the cold hostility stamped there. He made no attempt to hide the emotion. Shock rolled over her in a revitalised wave. He despised her; he
really
despised her! But why? Why should he feel like that? Hadn't she let him go free? Hadn't she given him back what he'd wanted and needed and what she should never have taken? Hadn't that single, unselfish action been sufficient to defuse his resentment?
‘But it is some consolation to learn that you're now poor enough to be forced to earn a living,' Alessio acknowledged, his cold eyes resting on her like ice-picks in search of cruelly tender flesh.
‘I don't understand what you're getting at... I've always worked for a living. And how can you call me a greedy bitch?' Daisy suddenly lashed back at him, shock splintering to give way to angry defensiveness.
Alessio emitted a sardonic laugh, his nostrils flaring. ‘Isn't that what you are?'
‘In what way was I greedy?' Daisy pressed in ever growing bewilderment. ‘I took nothing from you or your family.'
‘You call half a million pounds nothing?'
A furrow formed between her delicate brows. ‘But I refused the money. Your father tried very hard to make me accept it but I refused.'
‘You're a liar.' Alessio's eloquent mouth twisted with derision. ‘My father was not the leading light in that deal. You made the demand. He paid up only because he was foolishly trying to protect me.'
‘I didn't demand anything...and I didn't accept any money either!' Daisy protested heatedly.
Alessio dealt her a look of complete indifference that cut like a knife. ‘I don't even know why I mentioned it. That pay-off was the tacky but merciful end to a very sordid little affair.'
Daisy bit the soft underside of her lower lip and tasted the acrid tang of her own blood. The pain steadied her a little. Alessio's father, Vittorio, had obviously lied. Clearly he had told his son that she
had
accepted the money. And why should that lie surprise her? The Leopardi clan had loathed her on sight. His parents had tried hard to hide the fact when Alessio was around, but his twin sister, Bianca, had shown her hostility openly. Daisy stared into space, her whole being engulfed by a powerful wave of remembered pain and rejection.
In the swirling oblivion of that tide of memory she relived the heady scent of lush grass bruised by their lovemaking, the kiss of the Tuscan sun on her skin and the passionate weight and urgency of Alessio's lean body on hers. Broken dreams and lost innocence. Her eyes burned, her small frame tensing defensively. Why had nobody ever told her how much loving could hurt and destroy? By the time she had found out that reality, the damage had been done and her reward had been guilt and despair. A ‘sordid little affair'? No, for her it had been so much more, and it was in the divergence of outlook that the seeds of disaster had been sown...
The clink of glass dredged her back from her dangerous passage into the past. Her lashes fluttered in confusion as Alessio leant lithely forward and slotted a brandy goblet between her nerveless fingers. ‘You look like you are about to pass out.'
Faint colour feathered then into Daisy's drawn cheeks. She watched him help himself to a drink from the cabinet, every movement calm and precise. He did
not
look as though
he
was about to pass out. Although if he ever found out about Tara he might well make good the oversight. Hurriedly, she crushed that disturbing, foolish thought. Alessio had never wanted their baby.
At nineteen, Alessio had been able to think of an awful lot of things he wanted but they had not included a baby. So, knowing that, why on earth had she let him marry her? And yet the answer to that was so simple. She had honestly believed that he loved her... deep down inside...even though he hadn't been showing it any more. It was amazing what a besotted teenage girl could persuade herself to believe, she conceded painfully.
‘And you are wearing odd shoes,' Alessio remarked in a curiously flat tone.
A feeling of unreality was starting to enclose Daisy but she also sensed that Alessio was not as in control as he wanted to appear. She surveyed her feet, saw one black court shoe, one navy. It didn't bother her. In the midst of a nightmare encounter, unmatched shoes were a triviality. She drained the brandy in one gulp. It sent fire chasing into the chilled pit of her stomach. She swallowed convulsively. ‘I wasn't supposed to be working today. I came out in a hurry.'
‘You've cut your hair.'
Daisy lifted an uncertain hand halfway to her shoulderlength bob of shining silver-blonde hair, connected with brilliant eyes and wondered why time seemed to be slowing up, why they were now having this curiously stilted conversation when barely a minute ago they had been arguing. ‘Yes. It's easier to manage.'
Alessio was running that narrowed, gleaming gaze over her slight figure in a manner which made her feel incredibly hot and uncomfortable. A wolfish smile gradually curved his hard mouth as he lounged back with innate grace in the seat opposite. ‘You don't seem to have much to say to me...'
She wasn't about to tell him that he was still gorgeous. Even as a teenager he had known that and had shamelessly utilised that spectacular combination of smouldering dark good looks and animal sex appeal to his own advantage. He had used it on Daisy—dug his own grave, really, when she thought about it. She had been agonisingly naive and had fallen like a ton of bricks for him, defenceless against that polished seduction routine of his.
‘You're still full of yourself,' Daisy told him helplessly.
A faint darkening of colour accentuated the slant of his chiselled cheekbones, his tawny eyes flaring with momentary disconcertion.
She loosed a sudden laugh, sharp in its lack of humour. ‘But then why shouldn't you be?'
‘What's that supposed to mean?'
‘I think it means that you should get me out of this car before I say something we both regret,' Daisy admitted tightly, feeling all the volatile emotions she had buried so long ago rising up inside her without warning.
Alessio slung her a knowing look redolent of a male who knew women and prided himself on the fact. ‘You never forget your first love.'
‘Or what a bastard he was...' The assurance was out before Daisy could stop it.
Alessio's long, lithe frame tensed—a reaction which gave her a quite extraordinary surge of satisfaction. Shimmering eyes lanced into her with stark incredulity. ‘How can you say that to me?'
‘Because being married to you was the worst experience of my life,' Daisy informed him, throwing her head high.
‘I beg your pardon?'
‘And, believe me, I didn't require a financial bribe to persuade me into a quick exit! You were domineering, selfish and completely insensitive to what I was going through,' Daisy condemned in a shaking voice that steadily crept up in volume in spite of her attempt to control it. ‘You left me at the mercy of your totally monstrous family and allowed them to treat me like dirt! You stopped talking to me but that did not stop you
using
my body whenever you felt like it!'
Alessio was transfixed. There was no other word for his reaction. The Daisy he had married would never have criticised him. In those days, Daisy had crept around being quiet and apologetic while silently, miserably adoring him, no matter what treatment he handed out. Alessio had accepted the adoration as his right. She hadn't had the guts to stand up to him then, not when she had mistakenly blamed herself for the fact that he had
had
to marry her.
‘In fact you went into a three-month-long sulk the same day that you married me! And the minute your obnoxious family saw how you were behaving they all jumped on the same bandwagon. I didn't just have one person making my life a living hell, I had a whole crowd!' she spelt out fiercely. ‘And I don't care how any of you felt; I was only seventeen and I was pregnant and I did not deserve that kind of punishment!'
Daisy fell silent then. She was shattered, genuinely shattered by the bitterness that had surged up in her and overflowed. Until now she had not appreciated how deep her bitterness ran. But then she had not had an opportunity to vent those feelings before. Within forty-eight hours of her miscarriage, Vittorio Leopardi had presented her with divorce papers. And, sick to the heart from all that she had already undergone and Alessio's cruel indifference, she had signed without a word of argument.
‘So, when you took the money and ran, you thought it was your due,' Alessio opined grittily.
She stole a dazed glance at him from beneath her feathery lashes. His darkly handsome features were fiercely taut. ‘I ran but I didn't take any money,' she muttered wearily, and then wondered why she was still bothering to defend herself. When it came to a choice between her word and his father's, she had no doubt about whose Alessio would believe. And it wouldn't be hers.
‘I despised you for what you did,' Alessio admitted with driven emphasis. ‘And to listen now to you abusing my family makes me very angry.'
‘I doubt if I'll lose any sleep over that.' Yet Daisy's heartbeat suffered a lurch when she met that anger brightening his hard gaze. Her chin came up, defying the sudden chill of her flesh. She had said her piece. She had waited thirteen years to say it and there wasn't a single word of it which she could honestly have taken back. How could he still behave as if he had been the only one wronged?
When she had discovered that her miscarriage had not been quite what it had appeared, she hadn't dreamt of bothering Alessio or his family with what would have been very bad news in their opinion. Indeed, still loving Alessio as she had, she had felt positively heroic protecting him from such an unwelcome announcement. He had wanted neither her nor their child, so she had taken care of the problem. She had kept her mouth shut, let the divorce proceed without interruption and brought her baby into the world alone. Alessio
owed her
! He had been able to get on with his life again, unhampered by all the many adult responsibilities that had become hers at far too young an age.

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