"Wait a minute. Hold on." His mind was spinning. Her perfume was clouding his brain, and her words jammed into his consciousness.
"And look at this bougainvillea. It really should be cut back, but I love it wild. The terrace is perfect for entertaining, isn't it? And the location couldn't be better. Just up the coast from the shop and all but next door to Templeton House."
"I said, hold it." He turned her around, took a firm grip on her shoulders. "Are you thinking of buying this place?"
"It's a once-in-a-lifetime chance." Her only chance. "Kate says it's a fabulous deal, a solid investment, and you know how pessimistic she is. It isn't even going on the market until next week—there was some problem with clearing the deed—so it's ground floor."
"Jesus, duchess, you never change."
Her heart lightened a bit at the amused exasperation in his tone. "Should I?"
"Listen, this place has got to run at least three hundred K."
"Three hundred fifty, but Kate thinks three hundred will close it."
"Dream on," he muttered.
"I am."
"You've been in business less than a year, a month before that you were sniffing at bankruptcy. There isn't a bank on the planet that's going to approve a loan of this size. Margo, you just can't afford it."
"I know." She aimed her best smile, the one that had earned her fleeting fame and fortune. "But you can."
He did choke. "You want me to buy a damn house for you?"
"Sort of." She toyed with the button of his shirt, shot a look up from under her lashes. "I thought if you bought it, and married me, we could both live here."
He couldn't get a word out. When his vision hazed, he realized he wasn't breathing either. "I have to sit down."
"I know how you feel." She linked her hands together, found them damp, as he lowered himself to a bench.
"You want me to buy a house and marry you so you ca
n live in it?"
"So we can live in it," she corrected. "Together. When we're not traveling."
"You just got finished telling me you didn't want things back the way they were."
"I don't. It was too easy before. Too easy to dive in, too easy to walk. I want to make it hard. I want to make it very, very hard. I love you." Because her eyes were filling, she turned away. "I love you so much. I can live without you. You don't have to worry that I'll jump off a cliff like Seraphina if you walk. But I don't want to live without you. I want to be married to you, have a family with you, build something here with you. That's all I have to say."
"That's all you have to say," he repeated. His heart had settled back in place, but it seemed to be taking up too much room. So much that it hurt his chest. Just as the grin was so wide it hurt his face. "I guess it's my turn to say something."
"I'd never cheat on you."
"Shut up, Margo. You lost your chance to see me crawl over that one. I was wrong, I was stupid and I was careless with you, and it won't happen again. And I'm going to add that I always thought a hell of a lot more of you than you thought of yourself. That's all I have to say."
"All right, then." She struggled to find a dignified exit. But he laid a hand on her shoulder and put what he had in his hand under her nose.
The ring caught fire and light and promise. She covered her mouth with her hand as it shot out dreams that dazzled her eyes. "Oh, my God."
"Grandmother Templeton's engagement ring. You remember her."
"I—Yes. Yes."
"It came to me. I got it out of the safe deposit box, had it in my pocket the day I walked in on you and your Italian friend."
"Oh. Oh."