Imogen nodded sadly. ‘We might be sisters, but we were complete strangers at the start.’
‘And we didn’t have enough time to get to know each other when I was heading for that new job in Melbourne.’
A brief visit to the stud before she’d left was all they’d managed to fit in. That was why she’d had such high hopes when Ciara had come to the wedding. Perhaps now they could build real bridges and finally erase the separation of the past.
‘Then you were so ill…’
This time Imogen had to bite down hard on her lower lip to hold back the pain that almost escaped her.
‘I don’t think I’d have got through losing my baby without you.’
Ciara had held her tight when Imogen had endured the agony of an ectopic pregnancy, losing the baby she had conceived during those magical two weeks on the island of Corsica. It had meant so much to have another female to hold her and murmur soothing words. She had endured so many long years without a mother’s comfort, so a sister’s love had been a wonderful solace when she most needed it. She had never been able to share anything of her sadness with her father. He had been busy driving himself down the path to destruction, turning to the bottle for solace, and had never even picked up on her unhappiness.
She only wished she could have brought her sister home to see the stud as it had been, if not in its glory days, at least in some degree of stability and success. But Ciara had only been in London temporarily. She’d been looking forward to creating a new life in Australia.
Ciara had never shared just what was troubling her when she had returned home. Did that mean Imogen hadn’t really been there when her sister had needed her? Had her own misery blinded her to the way Ciara was feeling when she had lost her job—and the circumstances in which she’d lost it?
Imogen had never suspected that Raoul Cardini was the brother-in-law of Pierre Moreau, the man who had caused her sister so many problems, dragged her name through the mud and ultimately sacked her in disgrace. Now that she did know, it seemed obvious that Raoul would delight in making Ciara pay for what he saw as the insult to his family, his sister and her children. The tension that had been dragging at her insides just knowing Raoul was here, bringing with him those dark shadows of the past they had once shared, twisted into tight, painful knots. What did Raoul plan to tell Adnan? Because he did mean to expose someone and something, that much was certain.
Imogen was determined to make sure Raoul did nothing to hurt Ciara. It was the way she could make up for not realising just how low her sister had been at that first meeting.
She’d been trying to find Raoul ever since she’d made her way back to the stud but there hadn’t been a trace of the damn man. In the end, she’d had to take the chance that he still had the same number as the one she’d been weak enough to keep on her own phone in a last attempt to reach him.
What would Adnan do if Raoul revealed all he knew about her own past, and her sister’s? Would he go through with the wedding? Or would he decide that even their friendship, and the prospect of keeping his promise to his grandfather to provide him with an heir, cost too much at the price of tying himself to her scandalous family? He was a friend, but was he that much of a friend?
* * *
Raoul’s phone beeped again, for perhaps the tenth time that afternoon, and a twitch of a smile curled the corners of his mouth as he saw Imogen’s name as the sender of the incoming text.
We need to talk.
‘Answer it,’ the man with him said easily.
Raoul shook his head, his shoulders lifting in a shrug of indifference.
‘It’s not important—it can wait.’
‘No, answer it. I’ll make us another drink.’
As his companion got out of his seat and strolled out of the room, Raoul reached lazily for the phone that was still buzzing annoyingly.
We have things we need to talk about.
His thumb flew over the keyboard, casually creating his reply.
I’m busy.
He waited a nicely calculated moment, then added:
I’m talking to Al Makthabi right now.
After that he deliberately switched off the phone and dropped it into his jacket pocket.
* * *
Just how long could Raoul be talking to Adnan—and about what? Imogen stared out of her bedroom window and down onto the winding drive that led to the main house, her fingers drumming against the window pane.