Emily couldn’t think. She was in new territory and she liked it. A kiss like this was completely outside her experience. She groaned, and lifted her head higher, surrendering herself completely to the experience.
Her hands ran across his shirt, across his muscular chest, and then lower, down his sides. She pulled at the fabric desperately, needing to touch him. To feel him. Emily wanted… something she didn’t understand. Her legs were so weak she felt like they might give way beneath her.
“Someone will see us,” she whispered frantically, but her hands finally broke through and her fingers teased the bunching muscles of his chest.
“Good,” he breathed against her, moving his mouth to the sensitive flesh at the base of her neck.
Her laugh was a trembling noise in the night air. “I can’t get fired.”
“Ah,” he grinned, and through the fabric of her apron and blouse, he padded his thumb across one of her taut nipples. “But then I would have you to myself for the night, no?”
Desire swirled inside of her; a galaxy she couldn’t escape. How nice it would be to say ‘yes’. To forget about the burdensome responsibilities she carried with her; the boy who depended on her not just for food and accommodation, but life and time. How nice it would be to pretend, for just one night, that she was free to make decisions such as this without thinking them through to the final degree. But his words were the beginning of an antidote. “No.” She pushed at his chest a little, her eyes finding his. Her pupils were dilated, her lips were swollen. Sabato was aching with a need to have her. “I have to go back inside.”
His world was tipping in a way he found impossible to understand. “Why?”
“Because I’m at work.” And for so many other reasons. Her breath was heaving from her body in ragged desperation. Her knees still shivered with weakness and her nipples were straining at the fabric of her shirt.
Still, she knew what she had to do; it was up to her to put an end to this. She’d been an adult for longer than her time, and sometimes being mature meant ignoring your own wishes for the sake of someone else. She thought of Andrew and plucked strength and courage from somewhere. “I don’t know if you were born with the proverbial silver spoon, or if you actually have a job. But this is my work. It’s important to me.”
“Agnes, wait.”
Emily’s heart was racing. She felt ashamed, and devastated, and desperately lustful all at the same time. “No,” she groaned, her cheeks flushed. Her fingers were still curled into the fabric of his shirt. “I have to go back inside.”
“I understand.” He spoke as he might have to a horse that was on the verge of bolting. He reached down and laced his fingers through hers. He was gentle now; reassuring. “When do you finish work?”
“Five o’clock.”
Sabato frowned. “Tomorrow morning?”
“Yes.”
His eyes narrowed with disapproval, and though he didn’t speak, Emily understood what he was objecting to. Defensively, she added, “It’s just a double shift.”
He didn’t like it. This waif of a girl shouldn’t be working twelve-hour days. “Come to my room when you finish.”
Emily shook her head but her mind was screaming yes, yes, yes! His words were sending need and want through her blood. Her cheeks were flushing in anticipation and her eyes were wide. “I really shouldn’t.”
Sabato had never before experienced rejection. Certainly not from a woman. And certainly not from a woman he’d wanted with this magnitude. “Give me one reason. One reason why you shouldn’t come and finish what we just started.”
Emily’s smile was wistful and her voice soft. “I can give you several. Firstly, I’m not interested in a … relationship with anyone. I have enough going on in my life to make it impossible. Secondly, we literally just met. I don’t know if I’ve taken the staff elevator all the way to the twilight zone, but I don’t go in for the kind of thing you’re suggesting. I don’t even know your name, so there’s no way I’d consider going to your room. You could be a bloody axe murderer for all I know.”
Sabato’s laugh sent waves of pleasure rippling through her. “I assure you, I’m not.”
“And third,” Emily continued as though he hadn’t spoken, lifting a finger to his lips to silence him; and her voice trembled with the magnitude of what she was about to reveal. “I’ve never been with anyone before. I’m a virgin. So I’m pretty sure that you don’t really want the complication of being with me. Am I right?”
CHAPTER TWO
She was wrong. So, so wrong. Sabato watched her go with a sense of complete surrealism.
A virgin. In this day and age, at her age, was impossible to understand. She was certainly younger than him; he would have guessed her to be in her early twenties. But still, what had happened in her life to curtail any of the normal teenage experimentation?
His eyes sought her out across the room. She was collecting glasses, her cheeks pink, her lips still a little swollen from their kiss.
He felt himself harden with need. She was a virgin and all he could think about was bringing her to his bed.
The blonde woman, Pia something or other, he’d been speaking to earlier came into view. He regarded her analytically now. She looked so plastic. So false. So utterly unappealing. Her body would be all skin and bone, her skin soft but cold. She wouldn’t come alive for him in the same way the waitress had.
Hell, he was running on libido alone.
The Master of Ceremonies performed a perfunctory introduction, calling Sabato’s attention back to the stage. “Not many hospitals can boast a benefactor as dedicated nor generous as Sabato Montepulciano. For the last five years he has been our principle fundraiser, solely responsible for the construction of the new research institute. In addition to this, his generosity has enabled us to employ ten nurses who are able to visit paediatric patients in regional areas. Please, join me in welcoming to the stage the man who has made this evening possible, Sabato Montepulciano.”
Emily, curious, risked meeting the eyes of the handsome stranger she’d been with earlier. He must be somewhere in the crowd, but she’d been pointedly focussing only on a foot or two in front of her. Now though, interested to see the man who owned the hotel, she looked straight at the stage. And straight into Sabato’s mocking gaze.
Now you know my name, his eyes were taunting her.
She fumbled a glass, catching it right before it hit the ground. She swore under her breath and replaced it on the table. Yes, she knew his name. And she also knew that he was Mister Moneybags himself. Owner of the hotel. Owner of just about the whole damn world.
“Good evening. I hope you are all enjoying yourselves. I know it’s already been a very special night for me.” Emily’s cheeks burned. He was looking straight at her. “But the night is young, there is still time to make it a night to truly remember.” His smile was dripping with sex-appeal. Emily’s insides slicked with red-hot desire. She couldn’t take it any more. She almost ran back into the kitchen and pressed her back against the wall.
Her breath was being pulled from her as if by force. “You are okay?” The French chef.
“Oh. I’m fine, thanks.” She straightened off the wall, her heart thumping heavily.
“Did you enjoy your dinner?”
Emily thought guiltily of the platter of nibbles she’d eaten earlier. She’d been so confused that she’d barely tasted them. “Delicious,” she responded with a smile.
Rhonda appeared from the main area. “Auction’s happening now. Agnes, you’re fine to finish up. Thanks for helping us out of a jam tonight.”
Emily had never been more grateful. She was pretty sure she’d spend the whole night thinking about Sabato Montepulciano and the effect he had on her, but at least she could now put some physical distance between them.
And if she hadn’t?
Would she have been at risk of falling under his spell and into his bed?
She lifted her hands distractedly to her lips, touching her ti
ngling mouth with awe. His kiss had been unlike anything she’d ever known.
She took her apron off distractedly and hooked it against the wall, then she pressed the button to hail the lift.
The elevator descended and with it, Emily’s feet came back to earth. Within minutes, she was behind her housekeeping cart, going through her regular duties. And even though nights weren’t as busy as the mornings, when all the rooms had to be cleaned and freshened, she had enough to keep her distracted. Enough to keep her mind from wandering to thoughts of Sabato Montepulciano.
At least, she should have.
“How’d you go up there?” Ewan found her somewhere just before five in the morning. Emily was rounding out her shift, and though she was exhausted, she was also still reverberating with a new frequency of pleasure. Her body had been made to feel things she’d never known possible. A door had been opened, and her body was slowly unfurling through it.
“Heck, what are you still doing here?” She jumped, unplugging one of her earpieces. She was putting away linen in the enormous store room. It was a job she usually loved, for the order she could create. But not that night.
“We’re short staffed across the board.”
“Just as well Andrew’s got musical camp, then,” Emily smiled, switching the music off on her iPhone and slipping it back in her pocket.
“Yes, talk about flukey timing.” He reclined against one of the benches, close to her. “So?”
“So?” She prompted, reaching for the last bale of towels.
“Did you like it? Waitressing?”
“Oh.” Her cheeks flushed. Sabato’s dark eyes loomed into view. “Yeah. It was nice to do something different.”
“See. I told you you’d be fine.”
She nodded. “It wasn’t as bad as I thought. Mostly they were too wrapped up in their own conversations to notice me.”
I see the way you look at these vapid women. Her heart turned over. She forced a smile to her lips.
“I find that hard to believe,” Ewan said, his manner teasing. They’d been friends for years. The flirtation was harmless.
“Anyway, now that I’ve done it once, I’m happy to help out if you’re in a bind again.”
“I’ll keep it in mind. What are you up to for the rest of the day?”
Her cheeks flushed as she thought of what she could have been doing, if she’d listened to her instincts and desires instead of her common sense.
“Home to rest, then I’ll try to get some painting done.”
“How’s it coming along?”
Ewan was the only person she’d confided in. Her dreams of being exhibited in an actual gallery were closer to coming true than ever before. “Good. I like it.”
“When do I get to see it?”
She reached out and playfully punched his arm. “Not until it’s finished. You know my rule. I can’t have someone see it and jinx it. Not before I’m ready.”
“How do you know I’m not your good luck charm?”
“Because.” She slid the last clutch of towels into a shelf and put her hands on her hips.
“Because?”
“Well, maybe you are,” she conceded with a laugh. “But I don’t need luck.”
He laughed, and put an arm around her shoulders. “I’m sure you don’t. Thanks for everything tonight, Emme.”
“You get some rest,” she called over her shoulder, as she slipped out of the storage room and back to the staff locker area. She collected her handbag, slung it over her shoulder then dipped her head low.
Sabato’s eyes haunted her as she stepped out of the staff entrance. His mouth, and memories of the way it had moved over hers, made her breath catch. She almost lost her footing, and might have fallen, had a strong arm not clamped under her elbow.
Emily looked up, preparing to mutter a word of thanks.
And then, the world began to quiver. Her eyes clashed with his. Sabato’s. The eyes that he been haunting her all night.
“It’s you,” she breathed slowly, her chest heaving.
His throat worked overtime as he swallowed down deep emotions. “Come with me.”
Despite the way her heart pulse was thrilling, Emily kept her wits about her. “Last time I ‘came with you’ everything got a bit out of hand.”
He nodded gravely. “Not out of hand enough, believe me.”
“Sir,” she said, stepping away from him and pulling on the cheap vinyl strap of her handbag as though it would tether her back to reality.
“Sab,” he corrected, matching her step, bringing his body back to hers.
“Sir,” she repeated, dropping her eyes to his chest. Misery seemed to float around her. She wanted to go with him. She wanted to put her hand in his and see what the future held. But it was a foolish, stupid, fake, childish dream. To hope or want anything with a man like Sabato Montepulciano was thoroughly absurd. “I’m very tired,” she said, only partially lying.
“Yes, I can imagine.” He pushed his hands deep in his pockets. “Come and watch the sunrise with me. Tell me more about your … toddler’s palette, I believe you called it. Come and tell me more about you.” He wasn’t touching her, but the intensity of his eyes made her body tingle as though his hands were gliding over her.
She stared at him silently, her eyes huge and her body at war with her mind.
“And let me tell you something about myself, cara,” he continued gently. “At your age, I had nothing. I worked very hard, for a very long time to get here. I walked away from a trust fund to make my own life.” Emily tasted her lip with the tip of her tongue. “Determination might as well be my middle name.”
“What are you saying?” She prompted huskily, though she knew.
“That I want you to come upstairs, and so you will.”
“You know, what you call determination is coming off a lot like arrogance.” The curtness was sucked out of her response by the way she was staring at him, as though he was her salvation.
His laugh was warm, melted chocolate. “Is that a yes?”
Emily bit down on her lip. “It’s … complicated. I work here. I don’t especially want any of my colleagues to see me strolling through the lobby with you.”
His smile was bemused. “I’m sorry. I don’t have a cloak of invisibility.” He reached into his pocket and pulled out a gold card. “How about you go ahead of me? If one of your colleagues sees you, they will simply presume you’re still working.”
Her chest was lifting and falling with the hurried breaths she was dragging in. Was she really going to do this?
“You are in charge,” Sabato conceded finally, a rare promise he’d never had to make before. “You stay as long as you are comfortable. Go when you please.”
She nodded finally, slowly. “Okay.”
As soon as she said it, she felt a river of warmth besiege her. It was the right decision. The only decision, she saw now, she could have made. Her acceptance was written in the stars; her destiny to go with him never in question.
Emily had been in the penthouse before, but never as a guest. She had to rail against the instinct to empty the bins and neaten the sofa cushions. She was not overawed by the grandness of the room. Not as she might have been if it was her first time in the luxurious apartment.
Four bedrooms, an enormous, rarely used kitchen, a plush, carpeted lounge area, and a dining space that overlooked Hyde Park all gave the suite a sense of homely comfort. Admittedly, the kind of home that would cost millions of pounds, she thought with a smile. She placed her handbag down on the carpet beside the door and slipped her shoes off. She lined then up neatly beside the bag, and then, she waited.
Not for long.
The door clicked only a moment or two later, and Sabato, enormous, larger than life, handsome, and sexy, strode inside. He walked purposefully towards her, his eyes glittering like dark diamonds in his face. His air of victory was unmistakable.
“I thought, until I walked in, that you might have changed your mind.”
Emily swallowed. “No.”
“You are nervous.”
Her soft smile was a mask of admission. “Of course. I think we’ve already established that this is hardly the kind of thing I do every day.”
Sabato’s eyes flared wide. “And I’m very glad to hear it.” He put an arm around her waist, smiling when she trembled in response. He propelled her to the balcony, and led her out into the cool morning air. He shrugged out of his jacket and wrapped it around her shoulders, surrounding her with his fragrance.
“You’re still in a tuxedo,” she observed belatedly.
“Indeed.”
‘’You haven’t been to bed.”
He pressed a finger beneath her chin, angling her face to his. “I’ve been waiting for you.”
“Oh.” She blinked, and then looked away. It was too much. She felt as though her heart was about to burst from her chest.
“You’re still nervous.”
Emily shook her head. “Yes.”
“Why?”
“Why do you think?” She stared out at the city beneath them, sprawling and twinkling, like a blanket at a fairy picnic.
Sabato linked his fingers with hers and lifted her hand to his lips. He kissed her gently. “Try not to be. I don’t bite. Often.”
Her blood rushed through her body. “I’m … out of my depth.”
Sabato felt a small prick of compunction but he ignored it. With any other woman, he’d already be undressing her. He was employing patience and self-control. He had nothing to feel guilty about.
He thought again of the boar he’d hunted, and released her hand. “Here is your other favourite time of the day.”
She nodded. “Yes.”
“Why?”
“Why?” She turned to face him, and then cursed inwardly. How had she let herself forget how beautiful he was? How handsome and overwhelmingly masculine? She pretended fascination with a building over his shoulder. “It’s magical.”
“Is it? Some would say, myself included, that it is merely a function of physics.”
“Oh, dear.” She shook her head with mock disapproval. “How can you speak so ludicrously?”
Seduced by the Italian Tycoon: From the first moment they met, she was powerless to resist him Page 3