Renaldo had officially made her a partner at SDG. He held controlling interest, but the title and added responsibilities demonstrated his confidence in her abilities.
Leonardo and Alexa had welcomed their third child, another girl, into their family. They had already moved back to Atlanta, where Leonardo’s business was headquartered.
The relationship between Renaldo and his mother blossomed, and so did the relationships Sabrina had with his sisters and her mother-in-law. She put forth more of an effort to make friends and spend time with her in-laws.
Last Saturday, for instance, his mother, his sisters, and Beatrisa’s children had come to the house for dinner. Sabrina suffered through Beatrisa’s stifling meddling when Beatrisa was being…well, Beatrisa. Carolina surprised everyone by showing up with a male friend, which caused Renaldo to give the man a cold reception.
When they were alone later, Sabrina pointed out Carolina had sprung it on them in that manner because he’d probably want to have the man investigated. He didn’t deny the charge and vowed to get Paulo on it first thing Monday morning.
It seemed she’d exchanged one set of family problems for another, but she welcomed these kinds of problems. They made her smile instead of cry.
Today, she and Renaldo sat at a small table on the beach in front of their bungalow in Corumbau, the same one where they’d spent their honeymoon. They’d both gotten darker from being out in the sun the past few days, and Renaldo had barely managed to keep his hands off of her when he saw her in the gold bikini. He, as usual, looked devastatingly handsome in his dark blue trunks.
Under the table, her feet rested on his thighs. As she ate moqueca and sipped a blend of fruit juices, she watched the blue-green waves roll up and retreat back into the ocean. This was the life.
“You’re never allowed to sell this place,” she said before she put a spoonful of stew in her mouth.
“Never?”
“Never.”
Renaldo’s dark eyes smiled into hers. He caressed her calf under the table, sending darts of pleasure up her legs. “Then I will never sell it.”
Sabrina pointed at the bowl with her spoon. “I never thought I’d say this, but I think this is better than Vera’s.”
Renaldo shook his head. “Impossible.”
“You’re biased because you’ve known her so long.”
“Hmm…maybe I’ll tell her what you said and see what she thinks about it.”
“Don’t you dare.” Sabrina picked up a chunk of papaya and tossed it at his bare chest.
“Behave yourself. If you do that again, I’ll spank you.”
Sabrina lifted an eyebrow, but she didn’t throw another piece. “I’ve been thinking…I know we talked about waiting a few years to start a family, but what do you think about starting right away?”
He sat back. The smile on his face broadened. “I think it’s a wonderful idea.”
“So you’re ready?”
“I am if you are.”
“Well, we don’t have much choice but to be ready.” She watched him below a veil of lashes with a soft smile playing around her lips. “The doctor’s office called right before lunch and confirmed we’re pregnant.”
“Pregnant!” The spoon he held dropped to the bowl. “And you didn’t tell me?”
“I wanted to be sure.”
“Come here.”
Sabrina jumped up and went to sit on his lap. She wrapped her arms around his neck. “You’re excited.”
“Of course.” The smile on his face threatened to outshine the sun. “I can’t believe it. We’re going to be parents. How far along are you?”
“Six weeks.”
“So in a little over seven months we’re about to meet the first of our three children.” He spread his fingers over her flat belly and gave her a kiss.
“Hey, wait a minute, just because we’re starting earlier doesn’t mean we’re having more. We agreed to have two.”
“Two, three.” He shrugged.
“Um, I’m the numbers person, and I can tell you they’re not the same thing.”
“We’ll talk about it later.”
“You’re not getting your way in this, Renaldo da Silva.”
“We’ll see.”
Sabrina punched him in the chest.
“Now I have to spank you,” he said.
“No, you said if I threw another piece of papaya at you. Besides, you can’t spank me. I’m pregnant and fragile.”
“Nice try. Turn over and let me get that bottom.”
She hopped out of his lap and twisted away. “Stay away from me.”
“That’s not what you said last night, meu coração. Or this morning. Come here.”
Sabrina took off down the beach with Renaldo right behind her. The wind blew through her loose curls, and she laughed when he caught her and swung her up into his arms. She clasped her arms around his neck and welcomed his loving kiss.
He spun around with her in his arms and growled low in his throat, smiling at her with half-closed eyes. “A baby.”
“Our baby. We’re starting our own little family.”
“You’re going to be a wonderful mother. I love you,” he said.
She ran her fingers through the silky black strands of his hair. “I love you, too, honey.”
The End
Fight for Love
by Delaney Diamond
Science teacher Rebekah Jamison lives a quiet life in the suburbs of Atlanta. Devastated by a tabloid scandal nine years ago, she ended her marriage to the man her parents never approved of.
Rafael Lopez, former professional wrestler and “Sexiest Athlete Alive,” regrets the lapse in judgment that caused him to lose his wife. He shows up unannounced one day with some startling news, but he gets a surprise of his own. He finds out he’s a father. To get to know his son, he whisks him and Rebekah off to his home in the Hollywood Hills for the summer.
Chapter One
Rebekah Jamison wiped sweat from her cheeks with the back of her forearm so she wouldn’t scratch her face with the rough, dirty gloves she wore. The edges of her headscarf were damp. The cut-off denim shorts and loose-fitting tank top had seen better days, but they were comfortable, and she preferred to wear as little clothing as possible when she worked in the yard. The vegetable garden was a treat, but it could also be quite taxing in the Georgia heat.
“Mom, look!” her eight-year-old called from a few feet away. He was grinning broadly, holding a worm in his palm for her to see.
“Sweetie, put that down,” Rebekah scolded from her position on her knees.
She had encouraged him to help her plant the fall vegetables, but he was turning out to be a distraction she didn’t need. Every so often he would wander away from the task, digging in the dirt where she didn’t tell him to dig and chasing after wasps and butterflies that flitted around the small, privacy-fenced yard.
She probably would have been farther along if he weren’t “working” with her, but she enjoyed their moments together. Nine months out of the year she taught middle school kids about conservation, alternative energy, and green living as a science teacher in metro Atlanta. The biggest perk of working for the school system was that she could spend the summers with the favorite man in her life.
Rebekah rose to her feet and dusted off her knee pads. “Maybe it’s time for a break,” she announced. She removed the large straw hat providing protection from the scorching sun.
“Can I have some sweet tea?” His brown face looked up at her expectantly. He was overdue for a haircut. The loose, dark curls on his head were thick and unruly. With his cute, angelic face and big gray eyes staring up at her, she couldn’t refuse him the indulgence this time.
“Yes, but only if you drink a glass of water right after.”
“I will, I will,” Ricardo promised, racing past her toward the back door of the kitchen.
She would make sure he drank water the rest of the day. He had developed a sweet tooth of late, and she wanted to
break him from the habit of sugary drinks. Besides, he needed to stay hydrated since he spent so much time outdoors.
Rebekah removed her knee pads and gloves and circled the small area where this year’s crop of summer vegetables was planted. She smiled. Last year she’d had enough squash, tomatoes, cucumbers, and green peppers to share with her parents and a couple of neighbors. This year’s crop appeared just as healthy and bountiful.
The ringing of the doorbell brought her head up.
“I got it!”
“Ricky, don’t open the door unless you know who it is first.”
He knew better, but it didn’t hurt to remind him. She hoped it was the delivery she was expecting from her sister, Samirah. They were souvenirs for the family from her latest jaunt overseas. She often sent them nice gifts from her travels. Rebekah sometimes envied her younger sister’s carefree lifestyle. Samirah had a culinary degree from Le Cordon Bleu, and she traveled the world, earning her keep as a cook in restaurants or private residences.
“Mom, come quick!”
Rebekah dropped everything in her hands and raced into the kitchen, uncertain if Ricardo’s tone expressed excitement or anxiety.
He stood in front of the open front door, staring at someone outside. As she came closer, he caught sight of her and began to hop up and down excitedly, pointing with his hand to the still-invisible person on the other side of the threshold.
“Look! Look! It’s La Sombra, Mom! It’s La Sombra!” he screamed excitedly.
Rebekah skidded to a halt, her feet no longer sure what to do since her brain temporarily ceased to function. Heavy knots piled up in her stomach, and her broken breath shivered past her suddenly parched lips.
It couldn’t be him.
Ricardo’s face was alight with glee, and his uncontrolled excitement was a comical contrast to the heavy dread pressing down on her. She moved slowly toward the door, closing her hands into tight fists to calm their shaking.
When the person came into view, her stomach muscles clenched into even tighter, more painful knots.
There was no doubt who the man was at the door. It had been nine years since she’d last seen him in person, but his image appeared on the occasional magazine, and she’d read articles about him online. Even if he weren’t a public figure and she had wanted to forget him, it would have been impossible because of the pint-sized, darker version of him bouncing up and down like a rubber ball just a few feet away.
La Sombra had been the alias he used when he was a professional wrestler. The nickname, which meant “the Shadow” in Spanish, had stuck because of his dark complexion. His real name was Rafael Lopez, and he was her ex-husband.
His gaze lifted from the small boy before him and settled on her. From the firming of his sculpted mouth and the hard glint that came into his gray eyes, she knew he’d already deduced the obvious.
The young boy whose excited reception he had just received was the son he had never known existed.
Chapter Two
Rebekah placed her hand on Ricardo’s shoulder. “Ricky, go upstairs, sweetie,” she said. “I need to have a word with…” She didn’t even know what to call him “…with Mr. Sombra.”
“But Mom…”
She gave him her stern face that meant she wasn’t playing around. “Now.”
With a heavy pout, Ricardo stomped toward the staircase.
“Ricardo Lopez,” Rebekah said, “do you want me to follow you and give you something to stomp about?”
He froze with his hand on the wooden stair rail and peered over his shoulder at Rebekah with a hurt expression on his face. “Sorry, Mom,” he said quietly. Twisting his head further without turning completely around, he looked at Rafael, who hadn’t made a move during the short tantrum. “Please excuse my behavior, Mr. Sombra. My mother raised me better than that.”
Rebekah almost smiled as he repeated almost verbatim words she’d said to him on other occasions. His pitiful expression almost undid her, but she kept her face in an unhappy scowl.
“Will I be able to get his autograph?” her son asked.
“Yes,” Rafael interjected. He stepped into the house, and the expansive width of his broad frame blocked most of the outdoor light. “Just as soon as your mother and I have a little chat.”
Ricardo’s face broke out into a happy grin, and he scampered up the stairs.
Rebekah’s heart kick-started with a thump, the matter-of-fact tone doing nothing to allay the frisson of fear that trickled down her spine. Even more disconcerting was her reaction to the deep, seductive sound of his accented voice. It scrambled her brain and sent unwelcome vibrations running through her.
She didn’t dare look at him, worried he’d see every emotion she felt. Shame. Excitement. Anxiety. She needed time to gather her thoughts so she could have a coherent conversation. The shock of his unannounced arrival sharply tipped the balance of her normally ordered day toward disorder.
Deafening silence descended between them, and Rafael was the first to break it. “We need to talk.”
As he shut the door on the outside world, Rebekah finally ventured a look at him. His thick black hair was closely shorn to his head. At five-feet-seven, she wasn’t a small woman, but Rafael dwarfed her at six-foot-three. He had an incredible physique, with muscles so densely packed the linen button-down shirt couldn’t conceal them. His muscles were tightly honed from years of weight lifting and hours of exercise, creating a fighting machine of flesh-covered steel. Each meaty bicep was the size of one of her thighs, and his lean fingers looked long enough to span the width of a basketball.
“Sexiest Athlete Alive,” headlines had proclaimed two years in a row. More recently, his rugged good looks could be seen smiling into the camera endorsing agave nectar, an all-natural sweetener exported from Mexico.
When his dark gaze rested on her, the last remnants of rational thought disappeared like a puff of smoke in a blast of wind. For a few seconds, her breath caught in her chest, and she was once again the seventeen-year-old girl who had anxiously awaited her eighteenth birthday so she could run away and marry the man of her dreams. He became the twenty-year-old rough neck from south of the border who had captured her heart and convinced her not to judge a book by its cover. His coarse exterior had disguised a tender heart and loving disposition—or so she’d thought. Her disapproving parents had been correct in their initial assessment of him. Rafael had changed once they were married, and not for the better.
“What are you doing here?” Rebekah asked.
The cold stare of his eyes lanced through her. “Is that any way to greet a man you haven’t seen in almost ten years?”
Of course not. If her beating heart had anything to say about it, he would have received a much warmer greeting. “You came here unannounced, uninvited to my house. Something tells me this isn’t a social call.”
“I came because I had something I needed to tell you—in person,” he said. “I didn’t want to tell you over the phone. I’m on my way to New York and decided to stop over in Atlanta to see you.”
“You could’ve called first, instead of popping up unannounced. As you pointed out, it has been almost ten years.”
His lips thinned in irritation. “For the record, once I tracked you down, I did call, but you don’t have voicemail, so I couldn’t leave a message. Since I couldn’t get in touch with you, I figured it was easier to show up.”
Rebekah could have kicked herself. She had ordered the VOIP phone service over a week ago, but since she was a technophobe, she had delayed setting up the voicemail.
“I have caller I.D. I never saw—”
“My number is private. You wouldn’t see anything.”
Rebekah swallowed. Since he’d seen Ricardo, she could understand his antagonism, but she had reasons of her own to feel antagonistic toward him. “What’s so important you had to tell me in person?”
“Are we going to have this conversation in the middle of your foyer? Is your southern hospitality only reserve
d for people you’re expecting?”
Without waiting for a response, he brushed past her toward the kitchen, and she caught a whiff of an unfamiliar cologne. She followed him on unsteady legs, conscious of the fact she looked as bad as he did good. While he was dressed comfortably in a fine linen shirt and crisply pressed dark slacks, she was self-conscious about her unattractive gardening attire and pink cotton headscarf. She wasn’t wearing a stitch of makeup, and she was certain she must smell sweaty after working in the yard.
In the kitchen, Rafael leaned against the counter, staring at her as she leaned against the counter across the room. His arms hung loosely at his sides, but she could sense the leashed tension in him.
“Well?” she said to break the uneasy silence.
She was never good at remaining quiet, and he was the complete opposite. He was the quintessential strong, silent type.
“Is he mine?”
She hadn’t expected him to ask that question first, but it was inevitable. “Yes.”
Rafael’s hands clenched into fists, and he pushed away from the counter and took two long strides toward her. Rebekah brought her hands up in a defensive motion, drawing in a sharp breath. His steps came to an abrupt halt.
“I wasn’t going to hit you,” he rasped.
“You’re not exactly known for your long fuse.” Her rapid heartbeat began to slow down.
“I would never hit a woman, no matter how much she infuriates me.” His cold, angry eyes stared into hers. “How could you do that?” he demanded in a rough voice. “How could you keep him a secret from me?”
Now came the hard part—the inadequate explanation she couldn’t even justify to herself. “I did try to contact you, but you were always traveling. It was impossible to get in touch with you.”
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