lly rejected Lily’s claims. But now it seemed as if she was finally getting through to him.
What if he really was the father of the baby?
The look of fear on her face when she hadn’t understood what the doctor was saying about his rare blood-group haunted him. And the cold look of disgust on her face when she’d thrown him out of her hospital room stabbed into him like a jagged blade.
Suddenly the fax machine came to life. He was rooted to the spot, watching as the sheet of white paper curled out.
A copy of his fertility-test results.
All those years ago he’d never read them for himself. The disdainful look on Capricia’s face had seen to that. His pride hadn’t been able to stand it. Even providing the sample in the first place, letting his virility be put to the test, had been hard to bear. He’d never considered getting a physical examination or second opinion. The brutal assault on his masculine pride had been unendurable.
He reached for the fax and hesitated, blood pounding in his temples.
He was terrified at what he would read.
Would the results show that he had been right all along, make him relive his humiliation yet again? Or would he find out that Lily had been telling the truth—that he was guilty of treating her appallingly when she didn’t deserve it? And that her beautiful baby boy was his son?
He picked up the document and looked at it.
His heart thudded in his chest and his palms were suddenly damp with sweat.
Results: every likelihood of excellent fertility at this time.
Lily lay on her side in the hospital bed watching her newborn baby sleeping in his crib. The nurses had made her put him down, told her that if she didn’t sleep when he did she’d become exhausted and her milk wouldn’t flow. But, even though she’d been awake all night, sleep would not come.
Vito had left when she’d asked and he’d never returned.
She didn’t know what she had expected—she hadn’t exactly been thinking straight at the time. But despite the fact he had proven once again just how little faith he had in her, she wished he were there with her.
She couldn’t stop thinking about how wonderful he’d been during the birth. She couldn’t have asked for more. It must mean something. Maybe, although love was not part of the equation for him, he did care about her a little.
But now she had sent him away.
She squeezed her eyes shut, wishing sleep would come and ease her misery. But then she heard a quiet sound and, although it could have been a nurse returning to check up on her and the baby, she knew it was Vito.
She rolled over and tried to sit up, but after the rigours of the birth she was stiff and sore. Vito was by her side in a second, gently helping her into a comfortable position.
‘Thank you.’ She looked up at him standing beside the bed, and her eyes widened with surprise as she took in his appearance. He’d showered and shaved since last night, but his face was ashen and painfully troubled.
‘I’m sorry.’ His voice was deep and rough, as if it had been difficult for him to say that word. Or maybe it was because he was so tired. But, whatever the case, his expression was contrite as he gazed down at her on the bed.
‘What for?’ she asked simply.
‘For everything,’ he said. ‘For the way I’ve treated you. For not trusting you. For making you marry me even though I didn’t mean it to last.’
‘Do you believe me now?’ Lily asked, looking at the lines of stress etched around his eyes.
‘Yes,’ Vito said. ‘I got Capricia’s doctor out of bed at an ungodly hour this morning, and had him go straight to his office to fax me a copy of the results of my fertility test.’
‘I don’t understand,’ Lily said, ignoring the wave of sadness that washed over her as she realised it wasn’t anything she had said or done that had convinced Vito. It had taken Capricia’s doctor. ‘How did that make any difference? You saw those results years ago.’
‘I never read them myself,’ Vito admitted.
Lily stared at him in frank disbelief, too startled to mask her reaction. For a moment he actually appeared to wince with embarrassment.
‘You never read them?’ she gasped. ‘Surely you followed up the result—repeated the test or got a second opinion?’
‘No.’ Vito hung his head for a moment, then took a deep breath and looked her in the eye to continue. ‘I was devastated. All my dreams of becoming a father, of continuing the Salvatore line, were shattered. It seemed like an assault on my very existence.’