In the Brazilian's Debt

Home > Other > In the Brazilian's Debt > Page 17
In the Brazilian's Debt Page 17

by Susan Stephens


  ‘Don’t think about it,’ she urged. ‘Just act on instinct.’

  ‘If you say so,’ Chico murmured dryly.

  Their mouths were almost touching, and before he did as she asked he kissed her in the way she loved to be kissed. She would never tire of Chico kissing her, just as she would never tire of stroking him, or mapping his powerful muscles and the wide spread of his shoulders. He was so bronzed, so hard, so big, so perfect. Turning her, he found her with his hand, and as she arched her back to make it easy for him he entered her again, making his strokes deep and regular, and slow, so they could both savour each lazy thrust. She exclaimed shakily as his hand worked skilfully to the same easy rhythm.

  ‘Don’t hold back,’ he growled against her neck. ‘We’ve got all night, so why not indulge yourself?’

  She didn’t need any more encouragement, and let go, her muscles convulsing around him as she gratefully and powerfully lost control.

  When she woke dawn was streaming in through the windows. She was in Chico’s arms, and he was watching her. She had no idea how many times they’d made love, only that each time had been better than the last.

  ‘Well?’ he murmured. ‘Are you ready for the new day?’

  He was doing something incredible—and not just with his hands—so all she could manage was a sleepy moan of agreement.

  ‘Brazen hussy,’ he murmured, pressing his hand into the small of her back to make her even more available to him.

  ‘Barbarian,’ she countered as Chico took her buttocks in a firm grip and began to move.

  And now one of his big hands had moved to tease her nipples, while the other worked rhythmically on the heat at her core. She was a slave to sensation, and Chico was the master of seduction. It wouldn’t have mattered if she’d been wearing armour rather than lying naked in his bed, nothing on earth could have stopped the wave of sensation that roared up inside her and spilled out in screams.

  ‘What’s this?’ he murmured later when she was quiet. He’d caught one fat tear on his fingertip and was staring at it in surprise.

  She would have to go home after the graduation. She would have to leave him.

  ‘We will never be parted again, Lizzie Fane,’ Chico told her as if he could read her mind. ‘We’ve spent too long apart already.’

  ‘But—’

  ‘I told you, no buts. We’re going to do this thing together, you and me. We’re going to rebuild the Rottingdean estate and make it the go-to place for polo training and polo ponies in Europe, and we’re going to change the lives of hordes of children, while we keep this place right up there too.’

  ‘But how are we going to do that, when Scotland and Brazil are half a world apart?’

  Chico smiled. ‘The world’s a small place when we have private jets, and teams with people like Maria and Annie in them, and we have the Internet at our command. Believe me, it can be managed, Lizzie.’

  ‘Managed between us,’ she confirmed. ‘Just thought I should check,’ she added, smiling, when Chico shot her a look.

  ‘We’ll make a great team, too,’ he confirmed. ‘Though you still have a lot to learn,’ he added after a moment’s thought.

  ‘Like you have a lot to learn about Rottingdean?’

  Chico’s answer was to roll her on the bed. ‘I’m going to start as I mean to go on. You can give me a full rundown on the estate as we continue our activities.’

  ‘On the contrary, Senhor Fernandez,’ she said, wriggling free. ‘I would hate you to think you must carry the burden of leadership alone.’

  ‘Am I arguing?’ Chico said, his mouth curving in a contented smile as Lizzie mounted him and pinned him to the bed.

  EPILOGUE

  THERE WERE NO windswept plains peopled by wild men and magnificent horses as Chico and Lizzie had temporarily swapped their home in Brazil for their home in Scotland for this, the most important day of their lives.

  The weather was being kind to them in the leafy glen where Rottingdean House sat like a symbol of longevity, surrounded by snow-capped mountains under a sky of silver-blue. Lush green grass, purple heather and rich black peat took the place of swaying pampas grass, and, instead of mountain lions and wolves, a noble stag with ten-point antlers stood guard over the glassy loch. The only sound to break the silence was the eagle’s stirring cry as it soared from its eyrie on the first hunt of the day, but now the skirl of the pipes set the scene as the entire village turned out to toast the newly-weds, as they walked back in a winding procession to the big house from the small kirk in the village where Chico and Lizzie had exchanged their marriage vows.

  In spite of protesting that she was allergic to weddings, and that she would prefer to remain in the background throughout, when they arrived back at the house it was Danny who caught the bride’s bouquet. Lizzie had made sure of it. ‘Though you can’t leave me yet,’ Lizzie insisted. ‘Not now you’re my right-hand man, so to speak. I’m going to need you around.’

  ‘Feed me enough chocolate and I’ll see what I can do,’ Danny promised, her cheeks flushing red as Tiago came towards her. ‘The one thing I don’t want,’ she added to Lizzie in a heated whisper, ‘is a wild polo man.’

  ‘They’re not so bad,’ Lizzie reassured her with a glance at Chico, who was doing the rounds of people she’d known all her life, and with whom he was already on the easiest of terms. Chico got on with everyone, she reflected happily.

  ‘Give me a pipe and slippers man any day of the week.’ Danny sniffed. ‘And now, if you will excuse me, I have some mild-mannered folk to catch up with.’

  ‘You’ll be back,’ Lizzie predicted with a smile, noticing how Tiago was watching her friend as Danny slipped away into the crowd.

  It was a thrill for Lizzie to see that, instead of uncertainty, there was cause for celebration at Rottingdean. And to see Maria being brought into the fold by Annie and all the other women in the village made her confident that the two worlds could be combined.

  The log fire was blazing in the hall, and people were flowing back and forth through the newly renovated rooms. There was still a lot to do, and they would have to close the house for a while to complete the improvements, but for now there were colourful, seasonal decorations—berries, twigs, and flowers—and that most important diploma hanging over the door of Lizzie’s office. Her grandmother would be pleased, Lizzie thought, because the estate was safe for the next generation, and the next. In fact, the next generation was growing happily and well, according to the doctor she had visited with Chico to confirm her pregnancy. Stroking her stomach, she wondered how long it would be before this next generation sat in a basket saddle on the back of their mildest Shetland pony.

  It had all turned out well in the end, she reflected. Even the end-of-term match had gone well. They’d won.

  ‘Of course they won,’ was all Chico had said. ‘What do you think I’ve trained you to do? To lose?’

  As if she didn’t know—anything less than a win was unthinkable for him. But she’d forgive him. For every arrogant comment and autocratic stare, Chico’s personality was balanced with kindness and care.

  ‘There will be reels and dancing,’ she warned him when he came up to her side.

  ‘So long as we don’t have to stay too long,’ he growled, dropping kisses on her neck as he held her lightly.

  ‘Don’t you ever think of anything else?’

  ‘Do you?’

  ‘Must you ask me such difficult questions on our wedding day?’

  ‘Only one more,’ Chico promised, smiling wickedly.

  ‘Which is?’ Lizzie demanded as they linked fingers.

  ‘Will you live with me and be my love, for ever, Lizzie Fernandez?’

  As their bodies were only a hair’s breadth away, and the temptation to bring them a lot closer was overwhelming her in hot, hungry w
aves, she could only say yes.

  ‘I do agree. We shouldn’t stay too long at the party,’ she said, reaching for Chico’s hands. ‘For ever,’ she pledged, standing on tiptoe to kiss her wild polo man.

  ‘I’m pleased with your decision,’ he said as he lifted Lizzie into his arms.

  ‘Hey—I thought we’d stay a while.’

  ‘Did I say that?’ Chico frowned.

  Lizzie pulled back to give him a look, but Chico had turned serious.

  ‘We must thank Eduardo and your grandmother for bringing us together,’ he declared, heading for the stairs.

  ‘I hope they’re looking down on us,’ Lizzie agreed softly.

  Chico thought about this for a moment. ‘For now, that’s okay, but when we reach the bedroom?’ He shrugged.

  ‘You’re such a barbarian,’ Lizzie murmured with satisfaction, snuggling close.

  ‘Yes, I am,’ Chico agreed. ‘Aren’t you glad?’

  * * * * *

  Keep reading for an excerpt from THE REAL ROMERO by Cathy Williams.

  We hope you enjoyed this Harlequin Presents title.

  You want alpha males, decadent glamour and jet-set lifestyles. Step into the sensational, sophisticated world of Harlequin Presents, where sinfully tempting heroes ignite a fierce and wickedly irresistible passion!

  Enjoy eight new stories from Harlequin Presents every month!

  Connect with us on Harlequin.com for info on our new releases, access to exclusive offers, free online reads and much more!

  Other ways to keep in touch:

  Harlequin.com/newsletters

  Facebook.com/HarlequinBooks

  Twitter.com/HarlequinBooks

  HarlequinBlog.com

  http://www.harlequin.com/harlequinexperience

  CHAPTER ONE

  ‘AMELIA? IS THAT Amelia Mayfield?’

  Milly pressed the mobile phone against her ear, already regretting that she had been stupid enough to pick up the call. How many more instructions could Sandra King give about this job?

  She was going to be a chalet girl! Two weeks of cooking and looking after a family of four! Anyone would think that she was being primed to run the country. It wasn’t even as though she hadn’t done this before. She had, two years ago, for three months before she’d started the hotel job in London.

  ‘Yes.’ She sighed, allowing her eyes to drift over the pure, dazzling canvas of white snow all around her. It had been a fantastic trip, just the thing to clear her head and get her mind off her miserable situation. She had travelled in style and she had enjoyed every second of it. It was almost a shame that she was now in the back seat of the chauffeur-driven SUV with her destination only half an hour away.

  ‘You haven’t been picking up your phone!’ The voice down the other end was sharp and accusatory. Milly could picture the other woman clearly, sitting at her desk in Mayfair, her shiny blond hair scraped back with an Alice band, her long perfectly manicured nails tapping impatiently on her desk.

  Sandra King had interviewed her not once but three times for this job. It was almost as though she had resented having to give the job to someone small and round with red hair when there were so many other, more suitable candidates in the mix: girls with cut-glass accents, braying laughs and shiny blond hair scraped back with Alice bands.

  But, as she had made clear with unnecessarily cruel satisfaction, this particular family wanted someone plain and down to earth, because the last thing the señora wanted was a floozy who might decide to start flirting with her rich husband.

  Milly, who had looked up the family she would be working for on Google after her first interview, had only just managed not to snort with disbelief because the husband in question was definitely not the sort of man any girl in her right mind would choose to flirt with. He was portly, semi-balding and the wrong side of fifty, but he was filthy rich, and she supposed that that was as compelling an attraction as being a rock star. Not that she was in the market for flirting with anyone, anyway.

  ‘Sorry, Sandra...’ She grinned because she knew that Sandra didn’t like being called by her first name. It was ‘Ms King’, or ‘Skipper’ to the chosen few. The other girls in the exclusive agency that dealt specifically with part-time positions to the rich and famous called her Skipper, one of those silly nicknames that Milly guessed had been concocted in whatever posh boarding school they had all attended.

  ‘The service has been a bit iffy ever since I left London...and I can’t talk for long because my phone’s almost out of charge.’ Not strictly true but she didn’t need yet another check list of the various things the special family ate and didn’t eat; or the favourite things the special little kids, aged four and six, insisted on doing before they went to bed. She didn’t need to be reminded of what she could and couldn’t wear, or say or couldn’t say.

  Milly had never known people to be as fussy with just about everything. The family for whom she had worked two years previously had been jolly, outdoorsy and amenable.

  But she wasn’t complaining. They might be fussy but the pay was fabulous and, more importantly, the job removed her from the vicinity of Robbie, Emily and heartbreak.

  She had managed to push her ex-fiancé, her best friend and her broken engagement out of her head, but she could feel them staging another takeover, and she blinked rapidly, fighting back tears of self-pity. Time healed, she had been told repeatedly by her friends, who had never liked Robbie from the start and, now that she was no longer engaged, had felt free to let loose every single pejorative thing they had thought about him from day one.

  On the one hand, their negative comments had been bolstering and supportive. On the other, they had shown up her utter lack of judgement.

  ‘In that case,’ the well-bred, disembodied voice informed her, ‘I’m afraid I have to inform you that the job has been cancelled.’

  It took a few seconds for that to sink in. Milly had been busy being distracted by the unfortunate turn of events that had catapulted her life from sorted and happy to humiliated and up in the air.

  ‘Did you hear what I just said, Amelia?’

  ‘You’re kidding, aren’t you? Please tell me that this is a joke.’ But Sandra King was not the sort who had a sense of humour. Any joke, for her, would be foreign territory.

  ‘I never joke,’ the other woman said, on cue. ‘The Ramos family has pulled out at the last minute. I only took their phone call a few hours ago and, if you had picked up your phone instead of letting it ring, you would not have wasted your time travelling.’

  ‘Why? Why is it off?’ Visions of slinking back into the flat she had shared with Emily, risking bumping into her one-time best friend clearing her stuff before she took off to America with Robbie, were so horrifying that she felt giddy.

  ‘One of the kids has come down with chicken pox. Simple as that.’

  ‘But I’m only half an hour away from the lodge!’ Milly all but wailed.

  They had left the exclusive village of Courchevel behind and the car was wending its way upwards, leaving the riff-raff of the lower slopes behind as it entered the rarefied air of the seriously rich. Hidden, private lodges with majestic views; helipads; heated indoor swimming pools; saunas and steam rooms by the bucket load...

  There was an elaborate sigh from the end of the line. ‘Well, you’ll have to tell the driver to swing round and head back, I’m afraid. Naturally, you will be compensated for your time and trouble...’

  ‘Surely I can spend one night there? It’s getting dark and I’m exhausted. I have a key to the place. I can use it and make sure that I leave the lodge in pristine condition. I need to sleep, Sandra!’

  She couldn’t get her head round the fact that the one thing that seemed to be working in her favour, the only thing that had worked in her favour for the past couple of horrific, nightmar
ish weeks, was now collapsing around her feet like a deck of cards, kicked down by one of the odious rich kids from the family who had bailed at the last minute. A wave of hopeless self-pity threatened to engulf her.

  ‘That would be highly irregular.’

  ‘So is the fact that my job here has been cancelled at the last minute, when I’m fifteen minutes away from the lodge—having spent the past eight hours travelling!’

  She could see the lodge rearing up ahead of them and for a few seconds every depressing, negative thought flew from her head in sheer, wondrous appreciation of the magnificent structure ahead of her.

  It dominated the skyscape, rising up against the blindingly white snow, master of all it surveyed. It was absolutely enormous, the largest and grandest ski lodge Milly had ever seen in her life. In fact, it was almost an understatement to classify it as a ‘lodge’. It was more like a mansion in the middle of its own private, snowy playground.

  ‘I suppose there’s little choice!’ Sandra snapped. ‘But for God’s sake, Amelia, pick up when you hear your phone! And make sure you don’t touch anything. No poking around. Just eat and sleep and make sure that when you leave the lodge no one knows you’ve been there.’

  Milly grimaced as she was abruptly disconnected. She leaned forward, craning to get glimpses of the mansion as it drew closer and closer to her, until the SUV was turning left and climbing through private land to where it nestled in all its splendour.

  ‘Er...’ She cleared her throat and hoped that the driver, who had greeted her at Chambery airport in extremely broken English and had not said a word since, would get the gist of what she was going to say.

  ‘Oui, mademoiselle?’

  Milly caught his eye in the rear-view mirror. ‘Yes, well, there’s been a slight change of plan...’

  ‘What is that?’

  She sighed with relief. At least she wouldn’t have to try and explain an impossible situation using her limited French, resisting the temptation to fill in the gaps by speaking loudly. She told him as succinctly as possible. He would have to stay overnight somewhere and return her to the airport the following day... Sorry, so sorry for the inconvenience, but he could phone...

 

‹ Prev