Название: The Mediterranean Prince's Passion
Автор: Sharon Kendrick
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
isbn: 9781474063944
isbn:
She ate without speaking, unable to remember ever having enjoyed a meal as much. Eventually she put her fork down and sighed.
âItâs good?â
âItâs delicious.â
âHunger makes the best sauce,â he observed slowly.
There was red wine in front of her, and he gestured towards it, but she shook her head and drank some water instead, then sat back in her chair and fixed him with a steady look. His eyes were as black as a moonless night and they lanced through her with their ebony light.
âNow are you going to start explaining?â
Nico found that he was enjoying himself. He had played the rescuerâso let him have a little amusement in return. âTell me what you wish to know.â
âWell, for a startâwho are you? I donât even know your name, Mrâ¦?â
There was a pause while he considered the question. It seemed sincere enough, although the Mr tacked onto the end could have been disingenuous, of course. Was it?
âIt is Nico,â he said eventually. From behind the thick dark lashes that shielded his eyes he watched her reaction carefully, but there was no sign of recognition in her emerald eyes. âAnd you?â
âIâm Ella.â
Ella. Yes. âItâs a pretty name.â
âItâs short for Gabriella.â
âLike the angel,â he murmured, letting his eyes drift carelessly over the pale flames of her hair.
It was that thing in his voice againâthat murmured caress that made her conscious of herself as a woman. And him as a man. A man who had seen her sick and half-naked. But he was the angelâa guardian angel.
âWhere am I?â she asked slowly.
Now his expression became sceptical. âYou really donât know?â
She sighed. âHow long are we going to continue with these guessing games? Of course I donât know. One minute I was on a boatâand the next Iâm in some kind of beach hut, eatingâ¦â She stared down at her empty plate. Even the food had been unfamiliar, just as he was, with his strange accent and his exotic looks. Disorientated, she found herself asking, âWhat have I just eaten?â
âRabbit.â
âRabbit,â she repeated dully. She had never eaten rabbit in her life!
âThey run wild in the hillsides,â he elaborated, and then, still watching her very closely, he said, âOf Mardivino.â
âMardivino?â She stared at him as it began to sink in. âIs that where we are?â
âIndeed it is.â He sipped from a tumbler of dark wine and surveyed her from eyes equally dark. âYou have heard of it?â
It was one of the less-famous principalities. A sun-drenched Mediterranean islandâtax haven and home to many of the worldâs millionaires. Exclusive and remote and very, very beautiful.
âIâm not a complete slouch at geography,â she said. âOf course Iâve heard of it.â
Authority reasserted itself. âYou were in forbidden waters. You should never have ventured onto this side of the island!â
She remembered Mark and one of the others blustering about navigation, and then they had started hitting the bottle, big-time. She remembered how frightened she had been, how she had stood on deck for what seemed like hours and hours, the blistering sun beating down on her quite mercilessly. She shivered. âBut we were lost,â she protested. âGenuinely lost!â
âYes.â He didnât disbelieve her. Off Mardivinoâs rugged northern coast there were rocks and rip tides that would challenge all but the most experienced sailor. No one would have been foolish enough to deliberately put themselves in the danger in which he had found them. So why had they?
His eyes bored into her. âThose people with youâ¦â
âWhat about them?â
There was a long pause. âOne of them is a journalist, perhaps?â he questioned casually.
âA journalist?â She screwed up her nose. âWell, I donât know any of them that well, but none of them said they were journalists.â She met his eyes, which were hard and glittering with suspicion. âWhy would they be?â
âNo reason,â he said swiftly.
But Ella heard the evasion in his voice and stared at him. Nothing added up. She stared at him as if seeing him properly for the first time. His clothes were simple, but his bearing was aristocratic, and there was something about his appearance that she had never seen in a man before. Something in the way he carried himselfâan arrogant kind of self-assurance that seemed innate rather than learned. Yet he wore faded jeans and a worn T-shirtâ¦
He had brought her to this beach hut, where the shower dripped in a single trickle and yet the soap and shampoo were the finest French brands. She frowned. And he had called her cara, hadnât he?
âAre you Italian?â
He shook his head.
âSpanish?â
âNo.â
âFrench, then?â
He smiled. âStill no.â
Words he had spoken came back to her. âYet you speak all three languages?â
He shrugged. How much to tell her? How long to continue this delicious game of anonymity? How long could he? âIndeed I do.â
âAnd your English is perfect.â
âI know it is,â he agreed mockingly.
This time she would not be deterred by the soft, seductive voice. Ella leaned across the table, challenging him with her eyes. âJust who exactly are you, Nico?â
THE strangest thing was that Nico was really enjoying himself. It was like a game, or a storyâthe one where a prince disguised himself as a beggar and no one recognised him.
For a man whose life had been composed of both СКАЧАТЬ