Mistress of La Rioja. Sharon KendrickЧитать онлайн книгу.
I’m happy, all right!’ Miranda had said. ‘Who wouldn’t be in my situation, with a man like Luis? And it’s so wonderful having servants, Sophie, I can’t tell you!’
Sophie hadn’t approved of Miranda’s attitude and approved of her own fleeting pang of jealousy even less. But she had said nothing. And even if she had, it wouldn’t have made any difference. Miranda had always been determined to fight tooth and nail for what she wanted, and she had wanted Luis.
And who in their right mind could blame her for that?
His deep voice broke into her thoughts.
‘Salvadora will show you to your room now, Sophie,’ said Luis, who was watching her very closely and wondering what had caused her to frown like that, caused the tiny goosebumps that made her slender arms look so cold and so vulnerable.
That piercing black look distracted her, but she forced herself to remember the main reason why she was here. ‘Can I…can I see Teodoro first? Please?’
He thought how pale she looked, and how tense— the faint shadows beneath her eyes making her lovely face look almost haunted. He shook his head decisively. ‘First you should eat something.’
‘But—’
‘No buts, Sophie. You may shower and change first, should you wish, and then we will eat dinner.’
She wasn’t used to such dominance, or to letting a man call the shots like that, and she was just about to protest when some warning light which glittered so imperiously from the jet-dark eyes told her that her protests would land on deaf ears. She would see her nephew when he chose to let her!
And a whole meal to get through first. ‘You don’t have to bother with dinner,’ she said, unwilling to sit down alone with him. Suspecting that she would find it impossible to keep up pleasantries for an entire meal. Or to keep forbidden thoughts at bay. ‘I could always have a sandwich in my room.’
Luis’s eyes narrowed with irritation at her clumsy refusal of his hospitality. ‘It is inconceivable that a guest should travel all this way and not be offered sustenance. And besides, you have a long and difficult day ahead of you tomorrow. You will join me in the dining room.’
There he went again—commanding her instead of asking her! What would he do if she insisted on staying in her room? Though wouldn’t that be stupid? She could hardly hide away the whole time she was here. Better get used to eating with him, no matter how much the idea managed to appall and yet excite her at the same time. And surely it was inappropriate to even be thinking such thoughts at a time like this?
She nodded. ‘Very well. I’ll get changed and come down again.’
‘I will be waiting.’
Sophie felt very slightly out of control as she followed the old woman upstairs, wondering how on earth you could get used to having your every wish catered for.
Although she earned a more than comfortable salary, she had always prided herself on her independence. Unlike most of her friends, she did not have anyone to clean her apartment for her, and she did not send her shirts out to be laundered. Her mother had always drummed into her that delegating life’s unpleasant tasks made you remote from life itself.
How different life appeared to be here, with gardeners and cooks and women who cared for your children.
Her shuttered room was cool and dominated by a large, plain bed, covered with snowy white linen. A vase of white flowers which she didn’t recognise had been placed on the dresser and a huge fan spun around from the ceiling to shift the warm and heavy air. She would have liked to just lie down and close her eyes, but she knew that her implacable host would be waiting.
‘The bathroom is through there,’ pointed Salvadora. ‘Is there anything you need, señorita?’
Peace would be close to the top of her list. But there would be no peace for Sophie, not in the foreseeable future—not with Luis present, looking like some dark and alluring angel. But she put him out of her mind because there was something far more important she needed to know.
‘How is Teodoro?’ she questioned falteringly, and just the mention of his name brought a little warmth creeping back into her heart. ‘Is he missing his mother very much?’
Salvadora did not answer for a moment, as if she did not understand, yet it was a simple enough question.
‘Of course,’ said Salvadora carefully. ‘He knows that something is wrong. He cries. But soon we will make him laugh again.’
Sophie felt sick. He knows something is wrong. Something wrong? The child had lost his mother, for heaven’s sake, and here was Salvadora making it sound as though he had thrown his rattle out of his pram! But Salvadora had power, too. Power over Teodoro, which came from being close to him. She needed to make the older woman realise that she cared about her nephew, and that was why she was here.
‘I hope to help make him laugh, too,’ she said softly. ‘Thank you, Salvadora. Please tell Luis that I shall be down shortly.’
‘Sì, señorita.’
Sophie carefully hung up her clothes, and it was a relief to strip off her travel-crushed things and to stand beneath the invigorating jets of the shower and wash away the grit of the journey.
She plaited her still damp hair and put on a fresh cotton dress. Drawstring trousers would have made her feel more relaxed, but she suspected that an evening meal in the de la Camara house would have a certain formality to it.
She was right.
When she entered the dining room it was to see Luis already seated at a long, polished dining table laid for two and that he, too, had changed—and there was absolutely nothing she could do about the sudden rapid beating of her heart.
Gone were the short-sleeved shirt and the lightweight trousers. In their place he had donned a snowy-white shirt, a filmy garment which tantalisingly hinted at the hard, muscular torso beneath. He had left the top two buttons of the shirt unbuttoned and on view was the soft, silken gleam of olive skin, and the sprinkling of dark hair. As he rose to his feet she could see stark black trousers which hugged the narrow jut of his hips and moulded themselves to the powerful shaft of his thighs. The overall effect was to make him look like someone who had just stepped out of one of the portraits of his ancestors which lined the walls, and Sophie’s mouth dried into dust.
‘Good evening,’ he said formally as he stood up. ‘I trust that you found everything to your satisfaction?’
For a moment the power to walk properly left her and she stood unsteadily in the doorway, her trembling fingers gripping the door handle for support as she realised that she was alone with this magnificent man she both desired and feared, and in such a magnificent setting.
He knitted his dark brows together, seeing the way that her face had paled to the colour of the whitest lily, making her skin look almost translucent in comparison. Afraid that she might suddenly faint, he swiftly moved towards her.
‘Something is wrong?’
Something was wrong! Everything was wrong! She was feeling everything she wasn’t supposed to feel, didn’t want to feel. Dark, illicit thoughts which enveloped her with tantalising fingers, locking her into forbidden fantasies. She found herself praying for some kind of merciful release. She should be concentrating on Teodoro, and on Miranda’s memory—not on the bone-melting effect of her host.
She shook her head. ‘No, I’m fine.’
‘Then please sit down.’ He pulled out a chair for her and then returned to his own seat. ‘For you do not look fine to me.’
Sophie sank down gratefully and, in an effort to distract herself, looked not into the inky glitter of his eyes but at the formality of the setting instead.
The table was set with the finest silver and fresh with flowers and gently glowing with candlelight. It was the kind of table that you would probably need a pool cue to propel the pepper