was angry, and with every right to be so.

“No. I spoke to Ra’if. I am having him moved here and it has involved much of my time. And I thought of you. And I wondered what I could say that might fix this.”

“Nothing. Nothing can fix this.”

He braced himself but her words were cutting away at his confidence.

“Olivia, I have never known someone like you.”

“So?” She fired back. “I’ve never known anyone like you either. What’s your point?”

“Please, let me speak.”

“Why?” She fixed her eyes to his, and he saw the heartbreak in them.

“Because I can’t stand to let you go.” He closed his eyes. “I know, I know. I have heard the adage you are about to quote at me.”

She arched a brow. “I was going to do no such thing.”

“Perhaps it is my conscience I hear then. I know that loving you should mean I am prepared to set you free. But the risk that you might choose a life away from me rips me apart. A month ago, the night I told you of my father, you were prepared to come with me. You loved me then. I know you will love me again.”

“I don’t want to love you again,” she said angrily. “You walked away from me without a backwards glance. You treated me as though I’d been a convenient stopgap in your life, but that my usefulness was at an end. You left, and I was …” She swallowed. She didn’t want him to know how badly she had struggled. It was mortifying to realise the depth of her dependence.

But he understood.

“I know. I know. I felt it too. But my duties here …”

She made a noise of disapproval. “I don’t care about your duties here. Your father met your mother and he married her within a week. Because he loved her. You could have done what you wanted. If you truly loved me, you would not have left me in Vegas. You would have brought me here, to hell with the consequences.”

He moved to her, but he didn’t touch her. “Why do you speak of my father?”

“Because I was summoned to him just now,” she snapped. “He was positively thrilled to learn that I don’t love you. Or Ra’if, for that matter.”

“You told my father you do not love me?” He pushed quietly.

“Yes.” She lifted her chin. “And it’s true.” Her eyes were clouded with deep emotions.

“No, it’s not.” He ran a thumb over her lower lip. “Let me show you how I know this for a fact.”

She crossed her arms over her chest, determined not to be impressed. No matter what he did or said, she was determined to steel her heart against it.

He reached into his robes and pulled out a black bow with gold thread through it. It was only when he knelt down, and held the bow up to her hands that she saw it was tied around a circle of gold. And her heart began to pound; her mouth was dry. “Olivia Henderson, you can leave any time you want to. But before you do, I ask you only to listen to what I’m about to say. Would you give me the honour of the next five minutes of your time before you make your decision?”

Her eyes narrowed and her chest contracted painfully, but she nodded.

“I am aware … believe me, I realise that I erred in dragging you here. It is yet another crime against me. I was stupid and I was wrong. I found though, that when faced with the possibility of losing you for good, and I knew that I would do anything to avoid that.”

“You have already lost me for good,” she interrupted angrily.

“I thought that I could fix everything easily enough. That you would forgive my stupidity, and we would be as we once were. But your first night here, in my apartment, I saw how badly I had damaged you. My actions were those of a selfish man, entirely used to thinking only of his own interests.

“I choose not to apologise for how I behaved, because it would demean you to accept my apology. I don’t expect forgiveness for the way I treated you. I made you doubt everything you felt. You loved me, as I loved you, and yet I left you as though that love meant nothing to me. When really, your love is the greatest gift I have ever received.” Olivia pulled her hands away so that she could wipe the tears from her cheeks. “Your love is all that matters to me.”

“Instead of apologising, I want to pledge to you that I know how wrong I was. I want to promise you that if I could go back in time and change that night, I would have brought you – beautiful, sweet, generous Olivia Henderson – to Dashan and introduced you as my betrothed. My life. I will never, for the rest of our lives, leave you in any doubt of my feelings.”

She sobbed and pulled her hands away from him. Her voice was cracked with emotion when she spoke. “I still don’t understand why.”

“I had many reasons, and all of them stupid.”


Tags: Clare Connelly The Henderson Sisters Billionaire Romance