A sob broke from Carin’s throat. “Rafe,” she whispered. “Oh, Rafe, my love…”
His arms closed around her; hers looped around his neck. Rafe kissed his wife again and again.
“Let’s get Amy,” he said softly.
“Amalia,” Carin said, and smiled.
Rafe kissed her again. “And then, querida, we will go home.”
Carin buried her face against her husband’s throat as he swung her into his arms.
“Sim, querido,” she whispered. “Let’s get our daughter, and then, please, take me home.”
EPILOGUE
IN MID-AUTUMN, on an unusually warm Sunday, another wedding took place at Espada.
Carin and Rafe were married again. It had been Rafe’s wish. He wanted, he said, to share his joy with family and friends.
She was radiant in white. She wore a gown with a low-cut bodice of French lace, held up by slender white silk straps; the skirt was a long, graceful sweep of white silk. Her dark hair was drawn back in a French twist, though soft tendrils curled at her ears and at the nape of her neck.
Rafe wore a black tux and a white pleated shirt, and all the guests sighed when they saw the way he smiled at his bride when she reached the altar bedecked with blue and white silk wisteria.
“Who gives this woman in matrimony?” the justice of the peace asked.
“I do,” Jonas Baron said, and kissed his stepdaughter’s cheek.
Marta, who was holding Amy in her arms and sitting in the first row of white chairs, clutched her husband’s hand as he sat down next to her.
“Isn’t she lovely?” she whispered.
“All my girls are lookers,” Jonas said gruffly, and kissed his wife’s cheek.
“Amanda,” Marta said softly, “and now Carin…” She looked at the altar, at the slender, auburn-haired bridesmaid who was her third daughter, and sighed. “Everything would be perfect if Samantha would meet someone and fall in love.”
“You women won’t be happy until you have every danged man on the planet hog-tied,” Jonas said.
Marta smiled. “Something like that,” she whispered, and then she rose to her feet along with everyone else, tears shining in her eyes, as Senhor Raphael Eduardo Alvares took the beautiful Senhora Carin Alvares into his arms, and kissed her with all the love that had, for so many years, been locked away in his heart.
* * * * *
Now, read on for a tantalizing excerpt of Michelle Smart’s next book,
THE SICILIAN’S BOUGHT CINDERELLA
Posing as Dante’s fiancée at a society wedding is a far cry from Aislin’s modest life, but she’ll do anything to secure money for her sick nephew. Yet soon their explosive passion rips through the terms of their arrangement, leaving them both hungry for more…
Read on for a glimpse of
THE SICILIAN’S BOUGHT CINDERELLA
CHAPTER ONE
DANTE MONCADA JUMPED INTO THE CAR BESIDE HIS DRIVER, TWO OF HIS MEN CLAMBERING IN BEHIND HIM. THIS WAS ALL HE NEEDED, SOMEONE BREAKING INTO THE OLD COTTAGE THAT HAD BEEN IN THE MONCADA FAMILY’S POSSESSION FOR GENERATIONS.
AS HIS DRIVER navigated Palermo’s narrow streets and headed into the rolling countryside, Dante thought back to his earlier conversation with Riccardo D’Amore. The head of the D’Amore family had put the brakes on a deal Dante had been negotiating for the past six months. Riccardo ran a clean, wholesome business and was concerned Dante’s reputation would tarnish it.
He muttered a curse under his breath and resisted the urge to punch the dashboard.
What reputation? So he liked the ladies. That was no crime. His business empire was built on legitimate money. He did not play the games many Sicilian men liked to play. He kept his nose clean literally and figuratively. He liked to drink and party, but so what? He didn’t touch drugs, never gambled and avoided the circles where arms, drug dealing and people trafficking were considered profitable business enterprises. He worked hard. Building a multi-billion-euro technology empire from a modest million-euro inheritance, and with an accountancy trail even the most hardened auditor would fail to find fault with, took dedication. For sure, he cut the odd corner here and there, and his Sicilian heritage meant he did not suffer fools, but every cent he’d earned he’d earned legitimately.
But the legitimacy of his business was not the factor behind Riccardo’s foot coming down on the deal that Dante and Alessio, Riccardo’s eldest son, had spent months working on. The D’Amores had developed the next-generation safety system for smart phones that had proven itself hack-proof, out-performing all rivals. Alessio and Dante were all set to sign an exclusivity agreement for Dante to install the system in the smart phones and tablets his company was Europe’s leader in. This system would give him the tools to penetrate America, the only continent Dante was still to get a decent foothold in.
Riccardo’s talk about reputations boiled down to one thing. Dante’s parentage. His recently deceased father Salvatore had been a heavy gambler and the ultimate playboy. His mother Immacolata was known unaffectionately as the Black Widow, a moniker Dante had always thought unfair, as she had never actually killed any of her husbands, merely leeched them for money when she divorced them. His father had been her first husband. She was currently on number five. His mother lived like a queen.
Riccardo, on the other hand, had had one wife, eleven children, thought gambling the work of the devil and sex outside the confines of marriage a sin. Riccardo was concerned Dante was the apple that hadn’t fallen far from the tree. Riccardo wanted proof that Dante was not the mere sum of his parents’ parts and would not bring Amore Systems and by extension Riccardo himself into disrepute. Riccardo was now in advanced talks with Dante’s biggest rival about contracting the system to them instead.
Damn him. The old fool was supposed to have retired.
He had one chance to prove his respectability before the deal was lost for good, Alessio’s forthcoming wedding.
Dante’s angry ruminations on his business problems were put to one side when his driver pulled the car to a stop in a small opening amidst the dense woodland that ran along the driveway to the cottage. A few metres away, also cunningly hidden in the woodland, was a much smaller city car…
Dante reached into the footwell for the baseball bat he hoped he wouldn’t have to use.
Flanked by his bodyguards, he neared the run-down farmer’s cottage through the thick trees that hid their approach from watching eyes and rubbed his arms against the bracing chill under the cloudless night sky. The remnants of what had been an unusually cold winter still lingered in the air.
The small cottage with its peeling whitewashed exterior walls came into view. All the shutters were closed but smoke curled out of the chimney that hadn’t been used in two decades, wisping upwards into the still darkness of this early spring Sicilian evening. Marcello, who managed the land, had been correct that someone was there.
Keeping to the shadows, Dante and his men approached it.
The door was locked.
Brow furrowing, he pulled his key out and unlocked it.
He winced as the sounds of the creaking hinges echoed through the walls, and stepped inside for the first time since his teenage years, when he would sneak girls there. It hadn’t been his father he’d worried about catching him, it had been the girls’ fathers. Sicilian men did not take kindly to their daughters having a sex life before marriage; at least, they hadn’t twenty years ago.
The open-plan interior was much smaller than he remembered. The lights already on, he scanned it quickly, looking for damage. The window above the sink had been boarded in cardboard. He guessed that was where the intruder had gained entry, but there was no other visible damage, nothing to suggest his unwelcome visitor had come here intent on vandalising or robbing them. Not that there was anything to take unless the intruder had a penchant for decades-old musty furniture. An air of neglect permeated the walls, mingling with the black smoke billowing from the log fire. A pile of what looked like ed
ucational books was stacked on the small table.
He stared at those books, brow furrowed again at their incongruity.
A floorboard creaked above his head.
Adrenaline surged through him.
Keeping a tight hold on the baseball bat, Dante nodded at his men to follow and treaded slowly up the narrow staircase, cursing that each step was received with yet another creak. He could have left his men to deal with the intruder but he wanted to see the face of the man who’d had the nerve to break into his property before deciding what to do with him.
Like all men with his wealth and power, Dante had enemies. The question he asked himself was if it was one of those enemies hiding behind this door plotting against him or just a cold vagrant chancing his luck.
He nodded at his men one more time and pushed the door open.
His first thought as he entered the empty bedroom was that he was too late and the intruder had escaped. There was no second thought, for a figure suddenly burst through from the en suite bathroom and charged at him, screaming, with what looked like a shower head in hand.
It took a long beat before his brain recognised the screeching figure for what it was—a woman.
Before the shower head in her hand could connect with Dante’s head, Lino, the quicker of his men, grabbed hold of the woman and engulfed her in his meaty arms.
Immediately she started kicking out, hurling a string of obscenities in what sounded like English, but with a strong accent he had trouble placing.
Dante stared with amazement at this struggling intruder dressed only in a thick maroon robe.
Her eyes fell on him. There was a wild terror in the returning stare.