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Don Joaquin's Pride (Presents, 2127)

Page 17

by Lynne Graham


  Suddenly she was faced with the acknowledgement that she had carelessly glossed over something huge as if it was no more than a molehill. Behind her the molehill had mushroomed into a volcano. She, who prided herself on her soft heart and her sensitivity, had behaved in the cruellest way imaginable, and as she sat there numbly attempting to justify herself she found that she could not.

  There was no excuse for her having allowed Joaquin to spend two entire days believing that Roger was her lover, most particularly not when she was pregnant. Just because she had known it wasn’t true; just because she had been afraid to come clean and admit who she really was there and then. She had hidden behind the defence that she still had to put Cindy first, but that was no defence at all. Yet she had tried to make Joaquin listen and he had refused to listen. He had been in such a temper she had let herself be rebuffed.

  When she got back to the townhouse, she was too disturbed by the awareness of her own less than presentable behaviour to be embarrassed by the reality that she was alone. Joaquin was furious with her and she understood why. How could she have treated someone she loved as she had treated him? She knew how volatile he was. Suppose he had just decided right then on the spur of the moment that even for the sake of their child he could not stand to be married to such a selfish, insensitive woman? Recognising what a state she was working herself up into, Lucy stopped pacing the floor and decided that she would be better occupied doing something with herself.

  The twelve-foot tree which had been delivered the day before now stood in the hall waiting to be dressed. That evocative pine scent brought back hazy memories of Christmases when Lucy had been a young child. Before her parents had divorced they had always had a real tree, as opposed to an artificial one. Entering into the spirit of the occasion, Joaquin’s urbane manservant had produced boxes and boxes of vintage decorations from the attic where they had lain almost twenty years, since Joaquin’s mother’s death. Apparently Joaquin and his late parents had once spent every Christmas in England.

  Reluctant to remove her wedding dress, but determined to keep it clean, Lucy borrowed a large apron, donned it, and began to burrow into the boxes. Her enthusiasm increased with every box she opened, for she found beautiful handmade decorations which had more than stood the test of time. She was standing on a low set of steps fixing an exotic feathered bird to a branch of the tree when the front door opened two hours later and Joaquin reappeared, with a gaily wrapped parcel in his hand. She froze. Three feet into the hall, he froze too. He appeared transfixed by the sight of her.

  ‘Madre mia!’ Joaquin suddenly exclaimed, and setting aside the parcel in haste, he strode across the hall to close both arms round her. He lifted her down from the steps much as though he was reclaiming her from grievous danger on the edge of a cliff.

  ‘Are you crazy?’ he demanded tautly. ‘The staff should be doing this.’

  Lucy focused on his lean, dark devastatingly handsome face, a tide of sheer heady relief washing over her. ‘I love dressing the tree—’

  Joaquin elevated an ebony brow. ‘On your wedding day?’

  ‘I needed something to do.’ Lucy snatched in a steadying breath. ‘And before you say anything, I’ve got something to say. I wish I could give you some magical explanation of why I let you go that day Roger barged in without making you listen to me, but I can’t! I think I had just got so used to pretending to be Cindy, to being passive on my own account—’

  Joaquin reached out and linked his hands with hers in a feeling movement. His brilliant green eyes held hers. ‘I can’t stand passive.’

  ‘Well, I swear that if you hadn’t come to the church on Cindy’s wedding day I would have come to you to explain!’ Lucy broke in urgently. ‘I was really upset that you should think those things of me.’

  Joaquin was now gripping her trembling hands very tightly. Dulled colour marked his proud cheekbones. ‘I shouldn’t have abandoned you in the limo,’ he conceded in a driven undertone. ‘But I was afraid of what else I might say…the damage I would do.’

  ‘But you were right. I didn’t think of how you might have been feeling.’

  ‘Por Dios…I felt like I was being ripped apart that day at your sister’s apartment!’ Joaquin admitted grittily. ‘But the crowning nightmare was believing that you were marrying Roger. I came to the church intending to do whatever I had to do to prevent you marrying him but very much afraid that I would be too late.’

  ‘And instead you found out that I wasn’t even who you thought I was,’ Lucy filled in, shamefaced. ‘Joaquin, I’m so sorry—’

  ‘No, your concern for your sister was understandable.’ Poised very straight and tall, Joaquin lifted one wide shoulder in an eloquent shrug that dismissed his own previous anger. ‘In the heat of the moment in Guatemala I did make a most dishonourable threat. How were you to know that I would never have carried it out? I am not the kind of man who would sink to the level of carrying disreputable stories about a woman to another man.’

  Recognising the distaste stamped in his lean strong face, Lucy sighed. ‘I should have known that too.’

  His beautiful mouth compressed. ‘How could you have? From the instant I laid eyes on you I was strongly attracted to you. That angered me, and in an effort to remind myself of who and what I believed you to be I made several offensive remarks. I cannot excuse myself for having said such things to a woman.’

  ‘I was shocked,’ Lucy recalled ruefully.

  ‘Sí…I saw that too, and marvelled at it. Then, when you condemned my lack of courtesy, I was outraged—but you were right to reproach me.’

  It was balm to Lucy’s ragged nerves to learn that Joaquin had been strongly drawn to her from the moment he met her, and she looked up at him and gave him a rather tremulous smile, for the extent of her relief had brought her emotions very close to the surface. ‘I’m just glad you’re home now. I was scared you were halfway back to Guatemala!’

  ‘I can be hot-headed, gatita mia,’ Joaquin conceded, his full attention pinned to her lovely smiling face with an intensity that made her incredibly aware of his powerful masculinity. ‘But I assure you that even in the grip of all my stubborn pride and fury, I could not be that big a fool!’

  ‘I was worried…’ Belatedly becoming aware of the ludicrous apron she was wearing, she tugged her hands from his, only to find herself looking in dismay at her grimy hands. ‘My goodness, I need to wash…I seem to have got more dust on me than the duster!’

  Turning away in some chagrin at how she must look clad in her silly apron and with her childishly grubby hands, Lucy started up the stairs.

  ‘For causing you concern—I apologise…’ Having tracked her up to the landing, Joaquin caught one of the hands she was keeping well away from her gown in his, to plant a kiss almost defiantly into the centre of her palm.

  Her knees went wobbly as she collided in shock with his shimmering crystalline gaze. ‘I love your eyes,’ she heard herself mumble.

  ‘So you told me many times when you were ill…’ His wolfish grin flashed out with charismatic brilliance.

  Dredging her attention from him again with the greatest of difficulty, Lucy sped down the bedroom corridor, only to find herself forestalled by Joaquin, saying very decisively when she headed for the guest room she had been using, ‘Wrong door.’

  Feeling ridiculously self-conscious over that reminder that they would now be sharing the same bedroom, Lucy hurried further down the passageway and across his bedroom, straight into the en suite bathroom to wash her hands.

  ‘You are still so shy, querida,’ Joaquin murmured with a rueful amusement that made her cheeks burn as he came to halt in the doorway. ‘Only now do I recognise what a lousy actress you were in Guatemala. I told myself that the innocence I kept on sensing was a good act. I could not bear to want you so much and believe that you were out of reach. For of course, had I known the truth, it would have been dishonourable for me to take advantage of you.’

  ‘You didn’t do that.�
� Grabbing up a towel, Lucy hastily dried her hands.

  ‘I did. Don’t you know it’s asking for trouble to go to bed with a man who tells you not to fantasise about a future? It was a line and you swallowed it,’ Joaquin imparted in a seriously pained tone. ‘You should have told me to get lost.’

  ‘But I didn’t want you to get lost,’ Lucy answered truthfully.

  ‘You were a virgin…’

  Looking anywhere but at him, Lucy nodded her head in embarrassed confirmation.

  Joaquin groaned out loud. ‘All that nonsense you spouted to conceal that reality! I would have waited for our wedding night—’

  ‘Joaquin…this is one of those subjects when cultivating a short memory would be the very nicest thing you could do for me.’ Now frantically engaged in a struggle to untie the knot of the apron strings, so that she could shed the wretched garment and once more look like a normal bride, Lucy found herself receiving help. Joaquin edged her backwards out of the bathroom, spun her gently around and had her out of the apron in two seconds flat.

  ‘The fault was mine. I was too proud to accept that I could be so much in love with a woman who seemed to be the total opposite of my every ideal,’ Joaquin breathed ruefully.

  ‘So much in love…?’ That was all Lucy heard, and that confession just pinned her to the spot with a dry mouth and a madly racing heartbeat.

  ‘Which is why I came to the church on your sister’s wedding day. The minute I realised I might have lost you to another man, nothing else mattered!’ Joaquin shared in a raw-edged admission. ‘Not that you might have slept with him, not that the child might even be his…I still wanted you to be mine.’

  ‘Oh, Joaquin,’ Lucy muttered, her eyes glistening with helpless tears. ‘I can’t believe you loved me that much—’

  ‘Didn’t I rush to the church to tell you so?’ A forgivably grim smile of recollection momentarily curved his firm mouth. ‘Only to discover that you were not Cindy Paez and not the bride either. Never have I been made to feel like such a fool! In anger with you, I almost let my pride destroy us then.’

  Lucy touched his hand with uncertain fingers. ‘You were allowed to be angry—’

  ‘But I might have driven you away. I wanted to punish you for having deceived me. Yet, when I thought about it, I had always known the real you,’ Joaquin stressed, spreading both hands in speaking emphasis on that point. ‘The whole time you were just yourself in Guatemala. Honest in every way you could be. Very shocked to hear of Fidelio’s situation, always attempting to show me that there were two sides to every argument—’

  ‘You know…’ Lucy broke in, so eager was she to share her own feelings at that moment. ‘I love you very much too!’

  Joaquin surveyed her with shimmering eyes full of appreciation, and his smile became one of unalloyed satisfaction, his brilliant gaze softening to tenderness. Nothing was said. In that instant nothing more needed to be said. He pulled her into his arms with unconcealed impatience and kissed her with the most explosive hunger he had ever shown her.

  There was nothing remotely cool about the way in which he got her out of her wedding gown, nothing measured or smooth about the manner in which he stripped off his beautiful suit. They were both on an emotional high of sheer relief and happiness that all the misunderstandings were now behind them. From that first drugging kiss she was on fire, aching for the glorious fulfilment that only he could give.

  In the aftermath of that wild passion, which swept them both to the heights and then dropped them down gently to share a wonderful sensation of togetherness, Lucy recognised that she had never felt so happy in her life. And that sensation was made all the more intoxicating by the quiet awareness that Joaquin felt exactly the same way.

  His bright gaze, semi-screened by his lush black lashes, smouldered over her with possessive intensity and then his mouth quirked. ‘There’s something I should tell you… I will personally replace the remainder of Fidelio’s savings. He will never know that the money did not come from your sister.’

  Lucy could not conceal her total disconcertion at that announcement.

  Joaquin smiled ruefully and skated his fingertip over her full lower lip. ‘Roger argued with me, but I insisted that clearing the debt would be my wedding present to them both.’

  ‘But why…why did you change your mind and decide to do that?’ Suddenly registering that this must be what her twin had referred to but refused to discuss before she’d set off on her honeymoon, Lucy was genuinely amazed that Joaquin had decided to make so generous a gesture towards her sister and her husband.

  ‘I now believe that Fidelio and Cindy were both victims, in their own way. If Mario hadn’t died, it would never have happened.’ Joaquin sighed. ‘But Mario was using my hotel suite when he met your sister. He was a very nice guy, but it is possible that in a desire to impress Cindy he somewhat exaggerated his circumstances and misled her entirely.’

  Lucy nodded very slowly at this re-rendering of possible events. She had the tact not to comment. She saw that Joaquin had been realistically reappraising what he recalled of his former friend’s character. A nice guy, but possibly not above the kind of boastfulness which might have come close to actual lying, she translated for herself.

  ‘It is not a good idea for Roger and your sister to start their life as a couple with a substantial debt still hanging over them. They had already lost the value of that flat which was sold. Your sister is going to have a hard enough time living within their income,’ Joaquin pointed out wryly. ‘It occurred to me that to saddle them with so great a burden might put considerable strain on their relationship in the future.’

  ‘Yes.’ Lucy had been trying not to worry about that angle herself, but there was no denying that Roger would have had good reason for resentment when he found himself under such financial constraint. After all, he had not even known Cindy when the debt was incurred. Suddenly she was just filled to the brim with gratitude that Joaquin had had that much foresight and generosity.

  ‘It means so little to me, but so much to them.’

  ‘I just love you ten times more than I did a minute ago!” Lucy told him exuberantly, for he was every bit as clever as she had ever thought he was.

  Joaquin lay back against the pillows and let her cover him with kisses. He gave her a wry smile. ‘Fidelio will also profit more from this less punitive way of resolving the situation. We will invite Roger and Cindy to Guatemala to meet the old man and that will make him very happy.’

  ‘You’re brilliant,’ Lucy assured him, even more impressed and quite unable to hide the fact.

  ‘I told you that you were made for me.’ Joaquin studied her rapt face with tenderly amused eyes. ‘The Latin male ego thrives on appreciation.’

  Much later they ate by romantic candlelight in the dining room and Lucy unwrapped the gift which Joaquin had set aside and forgotten about when he returned earlier that afternoon. It was the most exquisite crystal angel.

  ‘I saw it in a store. It made me think of you,’ Joaquin confessed silkily.

  ‘An angel?’ Lucy queried a little tautly.

  ‘Not quite,’ Joaquin countered teasingly. ‘But I can see through you the same way I could see through crystal.’

  After their meal they finished decorating the Christmas tree, which had to be just about the very last thing Lucy had expected to share with a male of Joaquin’s sophistication. But Joaquin, it turned out, was no more proof against the lure of happy childhood memories than she was, and he was drawn into the task the instant he recognised some of the vintage decorations which Lucy had already hung.

  His mother, who had died when he was ten, had adored London. Christmas had never been the same after that for him. And Lucy had had much the same experience with her mother, after her parents had parted.

  ‘It made me sort of crave all the festive trappings while I was growing up,’ she confided ruefully. ‘Mum just had no interest after my father walked out.’

  ‘If you want to put a giant
Santa Claus on the roof and cover the whole house in naff lights, you can, gatita mia,’ Joaquin promised, appreciatively hugging her to him with all the affection and warmth she revelled in. ‘Yolanda will come in the door and groan about how sentimental you are, but secretly love it all.’

  Actually, he got that wrong. His sister came through the door on Christmas Eve, took one look at the gorgeous tree and gushed with unhidden excitement, ‘Oh, wow, Lucy…you’re going to do the whole family Christmas bit! Are we having a turkey for dinner, like British people do? Crackers to pull? Silly games? Do I get to hang a stocking? Open my pressies at midnight?’

  ‘No, you’ll have to be seriously cool and control yourself until dawn breaks on Christmas morning,’ Joaquin delivered with gentle irony.

  Yolanda gave him an amused look. ‘Joaquin…I’m adult enough now to be in touch with my inner child.’

  On Christmas Day Yolanda left a happy trail of wrapping paper right round the drawing-room, glorying in every gift right down to the cute and cuddly teddy bear in her stocking, and then went into seclusion with her phone to amuse herself talking to her friends.

  ‘Next year will be our child’s first Christmas,’ Joaquin whispered huskily, banding his arms round Lucy, who was still dazedly studying the huge mound of gifts which had more than made up for all the disappointing Christmases in her past.

  ‘Yes…’ She sighed dreamily, thinking that the little inflatable Santa Claus which Yolanda had included as one of her jokey presents would no doubt be exactly what their child would like to poke and pummel.

  ‘Not many women would appreciate a teenager around within a few days of their wedding.’ Joaquin studied her contented face with deeply appreciative eyes. ‘But you don’t mind, do you?’

  Lucy smiled. ‘I like the feeling that I’m part of a family just as much as she does.’

  He kissed her breathless, and her heart sang and her pulses raced. Sensible talk receded for some time, until Lucy recalled that they were supposed to be attending a church service before lunch. Aghast at how late it was, she leapt off the sofa with pink cheeks, shocked at herself. ‘Joaquin…we nearly forgot about the service!’

 

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