Her Forgotten Lover's Heir. Annie WestЧитать онлайн книгу.
her safe.
And ensure the success of his own plans.
‘Thanks, Pietro.’ She hesitated over his name as if shy, and instantly he was hurtled back to the day they’d met. She’d been self-conscious yet charming. He’d been intrigued as he’d watched her stiffness disappear as soon as she’d interacted with her young charges and forgotten him.
Now she stopped by the table, her head angled as if to scrutinise him better. Instantly he was alert, conscious of the need to be careful.
‘Is something amusing? You’re smiling.’
‘Am I?’ Pietro was surprised. He might have been amused at the memory, but he hadn’t actually smiled. He’d been told more than once that he kept his emotions well-hidden. It was a useful trait during business negotiations and over the years it had become instinctive, as he preferred to keep his feelings private.
She took the chair opposite and sank down. ‘Not exactly smiling, but one corner of your mouth twitched and your eyes looked different.’
Pietro stared, astounded that she’d sensed his mood from such slight evidence. No one else read him so easily.
He needed to be even more careful than he’d anticipated. Had Molly always been able to sense his thoughts and feelings? The idea disturbed him. Pietro was used to being the one in control, the one reading others, not being an open book himself.
Marta appeared with a tray.
‘Grazie.’ Molly smiled at the older woman and accepted a soft drink.
‘Prego, signora.’ Marta served Pietro’s glass of wine and a platter of antipasto misto.
Pietro nodded his thanks then turned back to Molly. ‘You haven’t forgotten your Italian, then?’
Just how much did she remember? He hadn’t probed earlier for she’d looked so fragile. Yet he had to know, for it would determine his next move. Was it possible she recalled more than she admitted?
She shrugged. ‘Much good it will do me. I can say “please” and “thank you”. I know some food and the days of the week, but I get the numbers confused.’ Her eyes fixed on him, grey now rather than blue. ‘Was I ever fluent in Italian? I don’t remember. Not a thing.’
The sunny smile she’d given the housekeeper faded and her eyes grew shadowed. She blinked, her mouth pursing, as if to stop it trembling. Molly wasn’t dissembling. She really knew nothing of her past. He was so caught up in his own deception he was too ready to expect it in others.
Molly’s distress tugged at something deep within. He reached for her hand resting on the table and covered it with his. He ignored the heat that flared when they touched.
‘Give it time.’ He made his tone upbeat. ‘But I’m afraid as far as Italian goes you weren’t ever proficient. You’d just started learning.’
‘There was I hoping that when my memory came back I’d find myself fluent.’ She smiled just a little too widely and he read the fear in her eyes despite her light tone. Something struck his chest and his hand tightened. He wanted to help but there nothing he could do. The experts had told him that. Yet such impotence made him uncomfortable. He was used to decisive action.
‘I can fill in some of the blanks for you.’ Even though he’d much rather not talk about the past he wasn’t accustomed to lying and, though he had no doubt he was pursuing the right course of action, he’d prefer to avoid more untruths.
Molly’s smile rewarded him. Gone were the clouds in her eyes, replaced with sunny pleasure.
‘Fantastic! I have so many questions. But first, what amused you when I came out? Was it to do with me?’ Her hand slid from his and began twisting a tiny pearl button on her pale blue top. Her other hand lifted to her hair then fell to her lap.
She was nervous. About how she looked?
Surely not? Molly was slim and sexy in a fresh, wholesome way, quite different from the sophisticates he usually met in Rome.
‘I was remembering the day we met.’
‘Really? Tell me!’
It was as if he’d ignited a spark inside her. She sat forward eagerly, her pink lips parting in a soft smile and her eyes turning a hazy blue. He could always tell when Molly was happy or excited because her eyes looked more blue than grey.
‘It was at my villa in Tuscany.’
‘You have a villa in Tuscany too?’ Then before he could answer she shook her head, making her hair swirl around her cheeks in a bright curtain. ‘No, of course you do. It makes sense when you have all this.’ Her gesture encompassed the penthouse apartment. ‘I suppose you have a luxury sports car as well as the limo.’
He shrugged. ‘I use the limo in the city as I’m usually busy with business calls. In the country, I prefer to drive myself.’
Which was better than saying he had several sports cars and, for that matter, a couple of other properties, including the whole of this building. For he remembered how Molly’s eyes had widened in shock, first at the limousine then at the sight of his city apartment. How tentative she’d been, walking through the expensively furnished rooms, as if scared to touch anything. He didn’t want her feeling even more uncomfortable. Time enough for her to learn the scale of his wealth later.
She sipped her drink then sat back, expression expectant. ‘So, you were at your villa in Tuscany. How long ago? When did we meet?’
‘The spring just gone.’
He watched her eyes become round. She sat forward. ‘Really? Such a short time ago?’ Colour highlighted her cheeks. ‘So, we’re newlyweds?’
Pietro nodded and spoke quickly, not wanting to get side tracked into detail. ‘We haven’t been together long.’
Molly’s brows knitted and she stared at her glass, her flush intensifying. ‘Yet we don’t share a room.’
Pietro’s heart gave a mighty thud. Why had he believed for a moment that Molly would simply accept things without question?
‘You need plenty of rest. The doctors were insistent.’
Plus, despite the rush of desire when he was near her, he had qualms about bedding her now. He was already taking advantage of her amnesia. If she knew all that he knew, she wouldn’t be sitting here, blushing and smiling at him.
‘So, I was at the Tuscan villa.’ Pietro paused to make sure his diversion worked. Sure enough, Molly nodded, eager for more. ‘I was working in my study.’ No surprise there. He spent a lot of time working, even when he was supposed to be relaxing, or in this case recuperating from a bad bout of flu—brought on, his doctor had said, from too many hours working and not enough enjoying life. ‘But this particular morning I had trouble concentrating.’
At her curious glance, he went on. ‘The villa isn’t alone on the property. Down the drive, on the other side of a small hill, is an old farmhouse. My cousin Chiara is a budding entrepreneur and persuaded me to let her do it up and rent it out as guest accommodation.’ The agreement was she’d keep any profits too and Pietro had been happy to support her small but growing enterprise.
‘I rented it?’
He shook his head. ‘Not quite. A family from Australia rented it. The husband’s ancestors were from Tuscany and they wanted to explore the area for several months. You came with them to look after their three young children. They just returned to Australia last week.’
Slowly she nodded, twisting her glass round and round on the table. ‘That’s right, you said I was an au pair.’
‘Temporarily. You’re a qualified teacher, specialising in early childhood. As one of the boys has learning difficulties, the parents were eager to get someone with your qualifications.’
Molly frowned.