Название: Modern Romance October 2019 Books 1-4
Автор: Кейт Хьюит
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Короткие любовные романы
Серия: Mills & Boon Series Collections
isbn: 9781474097628
isbn:
The first two weeks passed by in a blur and she lived on Gabe’s schedule.
He was such a sweet, quiet baby, and even when the husband came home Aurora did not notice as she was holed up in the summerhouse, getting to know her tiny baby.
When snow filled the garden and painted everything white, he went to South Africa for a couple of months.
Louanna was happy.
Aurora could not believe her luck to have found this gorgeous family that was allowing her to provide a home for her baby.
When Gabe—as he had become known—was eight weeks old, she walked little Nadia to school in the slushy snow, pushing the pram as Antonio skipped by its side, and then waving off the little girl.
‘Today,’ she said to Antonio as they walked home, ‘we will make lasagne.’
‘Can I roll the pasta?’
‘You can,’ Aurora said. ‘But you have to roll it thin and not get bored like last time.’
Cooking always helped Aurora to think. And soon Gabe was asleep in his little bassinette and Antonio was helping to mix the dough.
She felt as if a fog was lifting. Not that she had returned to her old self, because along with Gabe a new Aurora had been born.
And on her next day off she would call Nico!
It came to her like a flash, and was followed by another rapid thought.
No, she would call Nico tomorrow. And if he wanted to meet her she would be free the next day to meet him—with Gabe.
She would not be asking Louanna to watch her son. Nico could get used to the idea, just as she had had to.
‘You look happy,’ Louanna commented.
‘I am,’ Aurora said, and then looked up to see her employer’s pinched face. ‘Are you okay?’
‘Of course I am.’ Louanna smiled. ‘My husband just called—he’s coming home a few days early.’
‘Oh, when?’ Aurora’s voice was as strained as Louanna’s smile.
‘Tonight.’
‘Then it’s just as well I’ve made plenty to eat,’ Aurora said.
He came through the door all smiles, and Aurora decided she must have imagined his dark moods, for he was pleasant to everyone.
Perhaps pregnancy had made her tired and more sensitive, Aurora thought as she put little Nadia and Antonio to bed and then came downstairs, to where Louanna was serving up the lasagne that Aurora had prepared.
‘Eat with us,’ he insisted.
‘No, really.’ Aurora smiled. ‘I’m going to take my supper down to the summerhouse and settle Gabe. Have a nice evening.’
She wasn’t avoiding him. The truth was that Aurora wanted to work out what she would say when she spoke to Nico.
‘Nico,’ she practised aloud, ‘there’s something I have not told you…’ Or, ‘Nico, this will come as a surprise…’
She fell asleep, still undecided how to break it to him, and woke to Gabe’s cries at two a.m.
‘Hey…’ she said as she gave him his bottle.
Aurora loved these middle-of-the-night feeds—the contented noises her baby made; the way his fat little hands held hers as she fed him. There was no time more precious to be holding her son as when the world was so peaceful and quiet.
Except tonight the world was not so peaceful and quiet—there was a light on in the main house. Louanna and her husband must be up.
Aurora’s heartburn returned as she lowered little Gabe into his bassinette and he slipped back to sleep.
She should just go to bed, Aurora told herself. It was no business of hers.
But as she listened Aurora changed her mind, and wondered if she should call the police.
Which would have been the sensible choice.
Except Aurora was bolshie and passionate, and she did not know how to look away…
Rome
THE GLORIOUS SIGHT of the city at night, from the vantage point of his helicopter, did not lift Nico’s spirits and there was no sense of relief to be home.
With wealth, Nico decided, came too much cream.
Here in Rome the chefs had been drilled as to his preference for plain food, but it hadn’t translated so well at the Silibri site. There the chefs had seemed determined to impress, but they had failed. Oh, the food had been spectacular, but for the first time Nico had heartburn.
Or was it more a sense of unease as he disembarked from his helicopter and saw his regular driver waiting for him?
‘I thought you were on leave?’ Nico said.
His driver and his housekeeper were married, and Nico had expected a stand-in driver to greet him.
‘My leave starts tomorrow,’
Nico glanced at the time. ‘It already is tomorrow.’
‘Perhaps, but better a familiar face to greet you than a stranger. How was the trip?’ his driver asked.
‘Fine,’ Nico responded. ‘It went well.’
By all accounts it had been amazing. The new hotel was sumptuous, and naturally he had his choice of suite there, so when he visited Silibri there would be no awkward stays with neighbours. He had visited the cemetery and knew his father was finally at peace. The hotel was thriving, with the rich and famous and even royalty reserving their spaces. It was wonderful to see the village come alive again.
Yet there was no Aurora.
And without her, without even the slightest chance of bumping into her, Silibri had felt more than ever like a ghost town.
He wished his driver all the best for his vacation and then let himself into his immaculate house. He left his case in the hall and went straight upstairs.
He stripped and showered. Got into bed. Though tired, he was restless. It was months since he and Aurora had last spoken, yet their last meeting still replayed in his head as if it were yesterday.
Why the hell couldn’t he move on?
Aurora had. As he had wanted her to do for so long.
He needed distraction, СКАЧАТЬ