She hadn’t let herself think of Paolo with a woman in his
life. Seeing him touch Isabella made sharp talons rip into
her from the souls of her feet right up to the base of her
throat. Of course he had women in his life. They all did.
Isabella cast a look between them, trying to read what may
have happened during the infamous disappearance of Ryan
Bradley’s wife into the rarely used penthouse of his close
friend the night before Captain Bradley’s death was
revealed.
Paolo maintained a stoic expression. Nothing, his flat
gaze said.
Lauren had perfected the same poker face and baldly
showed it to Isabella.
While remaining burningly conscious that her waistline
would soon reveal their big, fat lie.
“I can only stay a few minutes,” Lauren excused, thinking
that must sound bizarre considering she’d obviously spent as
many hours on her appearance as every other woman here.
“Would you be very offended if I claimed a dance? I only
wished to say hello to Paolo as I was passing through New
York. He’s been so kind.” She choked a little on the
adjective.
Had it been pity that had prompted him to make love to
her? The thought had been lashing her like a whip since
he’d given in with a shudder and a curse. Her hand longed
to go to her waistline in an attempt to protect her
developing baby from such a pitiable start.
“Of course,” Isabella said magnanimously. “And please
accept my sincere condolences.”
Appearances again. It seemed Lauren was just as guilty
as the rest of the world. Sickly guilty, if she let herself
dwell on it, which she tried not to. She woke in a cold
sweat too often, worrying her husband’s death was her fault.
He hadn’t been happy about her request for a divorce. Had
it made him extra reckless when foiling those terrorists?
Pressing the suspicion to the back of her mind, she accepted
the condolences for the sake of Ryan’s family, squeezed
Isabella’s hand with appreciation and avoided the delving
look Paolo turned on her. Ten minutes, she swore to
herself. Then she could wrestle herself out of this dress
and all the other confines of her life. She would be a
butterfly emerging from a chrysalis, able to fly into places
she’d never dreamed when she’d been a lowly silkworm tied by
emotional threads to her grandmother’s estate of maple
trees.
“Why here then?” Paolo asked as he steered her toward the
dance floor, his tone growling with disapproval. “If you
only wanted a few minutes of my time?”
“I—” She had to pull herself together as he set
confident hands on her, leading her into a waltz. It had
been years since she’d taken the lessons, imagining dancing
with Ryan in Vienna when she joined him there, but the trip
had never materialized. Nothing truly exciting had ever
happened to her.
Except discovering she was pregnant with this man’s baby.
Lauren faltered, searching her memory for the steps and
searching for a clear thought in the haze that closed in
with Paolo’s disconcerting presence.
Wide shoulders filled her vision. His clean-shaven jaw
tempted her lips to lift and taste. He’d been stubbled and
masculine and hot, so unquenchably, passionately hot.
Demanding when he took control. Skilled and confident and
ravenous. Like a wild animal let out of his cage, running
her to ground and feasting on her.
Her breath shortened and sexual heat suffused her, making
her quiver, filling her nostrils with his familiar scent.
It had only been the one night. How could she know his
dark, espresso scent so well she could find him blindfolded
in this heavily perfumed crowd?
“You’re making a fool of yourself,” he muttered.
The words sliced through her, withering a very sensitive
nerve. She knew she lacked experience and sophistication.
Why else had her husband cheated on her? Paolo didn’t need
to rub it in, though.
Lauren flashed him a livid glance from eyes that burned,
but he wasn’t looking at her. He wasn’t aware she was
melting under his touch.
“Be a merry widow for your next husband,” he said
scathingly. “Ryan deserves better.”
Ryan had lived a double life.
“He had his mail delivered to his mother’s,” she said,
shying at the last moment from shattering Ryan’s precious
image. He was dead and he’d died with honor even if he
hadn’t entirely lived so. “The invitation was forwarded in
a packet they sent to me.”
It had been post-marked the day Ryan had gone missing.
The engraved envelope was one she’d seen annually and always
wound up throwing away because her husband had never been
home to take her.
“Initially it only meant that you’d be in New York. I
wanted an appointment to see you in your office, but your
schedule was booked and my grandmother’s closet is full of
dresses like this. When else would I wear one?”
Pride had made her do this. Pride and a perverse desire to
thumb her nose at expectations and propriety. Frances
Hammond had come home pregnant with her head held high.
Lauren Bradley intended to leave the same way.
She lifted her chin, daring him to take that away from her.
Nothing. Not one iota of reaction. Only a disinterested,
“Why did you want to see me?”
The moment of truth. She waited until he’d spun her so her
back was to the majority of the crowd, making lip-reading
from across the room less likely. “I needed to tell you
that I’m...” She found the Italian word she’d looked up
special. “Incinta.”
If the language switch caused him any confusion, he
didn’t show it. In fact, he showed little reaction at all,
beyond one contemptuous glance down his nose.
“Congratulations. Whose is it?”