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Bought for the Marriage Bed

Page 8

by MELANIE MILBURNE


  ‘Don’t worry, Miss Selbourne,’ the childcare worker reassured her. ‘She’ll settle down once you leave. They all do.’

  Nina bit her lip in an agony of indecision. Georgia’s little face was bright red, her eyes spilling tears and her desperate wails increasing in volume.

  ‘Maybe I should call work and tell them I can’t make it.’

  ‘Of course you shouldn’t,’ the woman said. ‘She’ll be fine. I’ll take her to look at the toys while you leave. Feel free to phone as soon as you get to work but I am sure you’ve got nothing to worry about. Come on, Georgia,’ she told the child with a smile. ‘Let’s go and look at the nice teddy bears over here.’

  Nina could still hear Georgia’s cries as she made her way outside the building, her heart squeezing painfully at the thought of her niece being so upset at the prospect of being abandoned. It made her realise anew how important it was to protect her, for it was obvious the baby considered her to be her primary carer. If Marc were to find out who she really was now, Georgia would be the one to suffer, for Nina felt sure he would evict her from the child’s life as soon as he possibly could.

  The library was a few blocks away and she walked there with dragging steps, wondering how mothers across the globe dealt with leaving their children in someone else’s care.

  She loved her job but she loved her niece more. If push came to shove she would have to quit work, swallow her pride and accept the allowance from Marc that his lawyer had arranged in the pre-nuptial agreement.

  ‘Hi, Nina,’ Elizabeth Loughton, one of the other librarians, greeted her as soon as she arrived at work. ‘Hey, where have you been the last few days? Sheila said you called in sick. Are you OK now?’

  Nina placed her bag in the staffroom locker in order to avoid her friend’s probing look. ‘I’m fine, just a bit tired. It’s been one of those weeks.’

  ‘Don’t tell me your sister has been giving you trouble again,’ Elizabeth said. ‘I don’t know why you don’t tell her where to get off, really I don’t. She takes advantage of you so much, no wonder you’re not well.’ She pursed her lips for a moment, then, moving over to close the staffroom door, turned back and handed Nina a recent edition of a popular gossip magazine. ‘I suppose you’ve already seen this?’

  Nina disguised a gulp as she looked down at the magazine article Elizabeth had shown her. There was a photograph of her twin outside one of Sydney’s best known hotels, dressed in a revealing dress that left little to the imagination, her arms flung around the necks of two well known football personalities who both had dubious reputations with regard to their treatment of women. The caption hinted that, according to hotel staff sources, last Friday night Nadia and her male escorts had engaged in a drunken noisy threesome upstairs.

  ‘Oh, God.’ She shut the magazine and handed it back as they sat down together. ‘This is just what I don’t need right now.’

  ‘Are you all right?’ Elizabeth peered at her in concern.

  Nina met her friend’s hazel gaze. ‘I have to tell you something but you have to promise not to tell anyone else.’

  Elizabeth used a finger to zip her lips. ‘Mum’s the word.’

  Nina’s mouth twisted wryly. ‘That’s exactly right. Mum is the word you now have to use when referring to me.’

  Elizabeth’s eyes went out on stalks. ‘Oh, my God! You’re pregnant?’

  Nina rolled her eyes. ‘Of course not! No, but I am now acting as Georgia’s mother.’

  As Nina filled her in on previous events, Elizabeth’s face fell in horror.

  ‘Are you completely nuts?’ Elizabeth had got to her feet in agitation. ‘What the hell are you thinking? This Marc Marcello will eat you alive when he finds out! You could go to prison or something!’

  ‘What else can I do?’ Nina asked. ‘Georgia needs me. Nadia was going to give her up for adoption but this way I can keep her and give her the love she deserves. It’s a small price to pay.’

  ‘A small price?’ Elizabeth gaped at her. ‘What do you know about this guy?’

  Nina couldn’t help a tiny smile. ‘I know he adores Georgia and she adores him.’

  ‘And what about you?’ Elizabeth gave her another probing look. ‘What does he feel about you? Does he adore you too?’

  ‘No.’ Nina lowered her gaze.

  There was a short silence and Nina looked up to see her friend’s contemplative gaze trained on her.

  ‘I think I’m starting to get the picture,’ Elizabeth said. ‘You’re in love with him, aren’t you?’

  ‘How could I possibly be in love with him?’ Nina’s eyes darted away once more. ‘I hardly know him.’

  ‘You must feel something for him because, knowing you as I do, you would never agree to marry someone if you didn’t respect and admire them at the very least.’

  Nina thought about it for a moment. Yes, she did respect Marc. In fact, if circumstances were different, he was exactly the sort of man she could come to love. He had qualities she couldn’t help admiring. He was fiercely loyal and protective and his sense of family was strong.

  ‘Come on, Nina,’ Elizabeth continued. ‘I can see it in your eyes. You’re halfway there already.’

  ‘You’re imagining things.’

  ‘Maybe I am, but I’d watch it if I were you,’ Elizabeth cautioned. ‘You’re not the hard-nosed bitch your sister is. You are going to get yourself seriously hurt if you don’t take care.’

  ‘I know what I’m doing,’ Nina said. ‘Anyway, I don’t have a choice. I love Georgia and would do anything to protect her.’

  ‘Sounds like you and that future husband of yours have rather a lot in common, don’t you think?’ Elizabeth mused as she opened the staffroom door. ‘You both want the same thing and are prepared to go to extraordinary lengths to get it.’

  Nina didn’t answer. She was starting to think it might have been a mistake to tell Elizabeth the truth about her situation. Her friend was seeing things Nina herself had pointedly refused to examine too closely.

  She turned to the phone on the wall and quickly called the childcare centre to check on her niece, relieved to hear that Georgia had finally fallen asleep. She hung up the phone and made her way out to the front desk, glad she had something to do other than think about Marc Marcello and how she really felt about him.

  Nina had not long returned home with Georgia later that day when the phone rang.

  ‘Nina?’ Her sister’s voice sounded in her ear. ‘Is that you?’

  ‘Who else would it be?’ Nina said tersely.

  Nadia laughed. ‘Well, for a minute there I thought you sounded just like me.’

  Nina ground her teeth. ‘That is so not funny. You do realise that all because of your stupid actions I will be marrying Andre’s brother in a matter of days, don’t you?’

  ‘Lucky you,’ Nadia said. ‘I’m sure you’ll be more than adequately compensated. A billionaire to call your own.’

  ‘His money means nothing to me,’ she bit out.

  ‘Good,’ Nadia said. ‘Then you won’t mind sending it to me.’

  ‘What?’ Nina stiffened.

  ‘Come on, Nina. You’ll be loaded. We talked about this the other day, remember? I expect you to share your good fortune with me. Besides, we’re sisters, twin sisters.’

  Nina drew in a breath. ‘I am not taking his money.’

  ‘Don’t be stupid; he’s giving it to you in exchange for marriage. You have to take it.’

  ‘I have no intention of doing so.’

  ‘Listen.’ Nadia’s voice hardened. ‘If you don’t take it I’ll tell him who you really are.’

  Nina swallowed, her hand on the receiver growing white-knuckled. ‘You can’t do that. He’ll take Georgia off me.’

  ‘Do you think I care?’ Nadia said.

  ‘How can you be so callous?’ Nina cried. ‘You’re her mother, for God’s sake!’

  ‘If you don’t take the money and give it to me I will tell him how you’ve deceived him. Somehow
I don’t think he’ll take all that kindly to the news.’

  Nina could well believe it, but this wasn’t about her at all. It was about Georgia. She loved her niece and couldn’t bear the thought of never seeing her again.

  She considered going to Marc and telling him the truth before Nadia got the chance but knew in the end it would be pointless. He would simply remove Georgia from her custody, would no doubt be relieved that he didn’t have to bind himself to her after all. He would have no regard for her feelings as the child’s aunt even if she was to plead with him to allow her a place in Georgia’s life.

  ‘I haven’t got any money yet,’ Nina said. ‘The marriage doesn’t take place for another few days. Marc told me I won’t get the allowance until the ink dries on the marriage certificate.’

  ‘Well, when it does I want you to send me it. All of it. I’ll give you my bank details.’

  Nina put the phone down a few minutes later, the numbers on the piece of paper in her hand making her feel sick to her stomach.

  Her sister had just sold her child.

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  NINA had not long settled Georgia for the night when the doorbell rang. She didn’t have to check through the peephole; she knew it was Marc by the way her skin had started to tingle all over.

  She opened the door and stepped aside to allow him to come in, her tone reproving as she said, ‘You should have called to say you were going to visit. Georgia’s just gone down. I don’t want to unsettle her.’

  ‘I am not here to see Georgia right now,’ Marc said, closing the door behind him.

  Nina tucked a strand of wayward hair behind one ear and did her best to hold his unwavering gaze. ‘W-what did you want to see me about?’

  ‘Where were you today?’ he asked.

  ‘Um…why do you ask?’

  ‘I called you for hours but you didn’t answer.’

  ‘I am allowed to go out, aren’t I?’ She gave him a hardened look. ‘Or is my being a prisoner part of your stipulations?’

  ‘No, but I would prefer it if you would keep me informed of where you and Georgia will be in case I need to contact you. Do you have a mobile phone?’

  ‘Yes, but I don’t have it on a lot as it wakes Georgia,’ she said half truthfully.

  ‘I have something else I would like to discuss with you,’ he added and, reaching into his coat pocket, took out the magazine Elizabeth had shown her that morning.

  She took it from him with unsteady fingers and placed it on the coffee table without opening it to the damning page.

  ‘I take it you have already seen it?’ he said.

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘And?’

  She met his diamond-hard gaze. ‘That was more than a week ago. Besides, you know how these magazines like to blow things out of proportion.’

  ‘Did you sleep with those men?’

  Nina’s stomach quivered at the steely edge to his tone but she forced herself to respond with a steadiness she was nowhere near feeling. ‘No.’

  ‘You lying little—’ His mouth snapped shut as if he felt tainted by even uttering the rest of the vilifying sentence.

  ‘I am not lying,’ she stated quietly.

  His jaw tightened and his hands went to fists at his sides. ‘I am going to ask you again where you were today and I expect you to tell me the truth.’

  ‘I went to the library.’

  ‘The library?’

  She lifted her chin and folded her arms across her chest. ‘Yes, it’s this really boring place full of books where you have to be quiet all the time. I thought I’d check it out, you know, to improve my mind a bit.’

  ‘You went there all day?’ He looked sceptical.

  ‘For a big part of it,’ she answered. ‘That’s why my phone was switched off. What did you do all day?’

  ‘I was working.’

  ‘Oh, really?’ She gave him an equally sceptical look. ‘Can you prove it?’

  He frowned at her. ‘I do not have to prove anything to you.’

  She tilted her head at him. ‘Nor do I to you.’

  ‘If I find out you are lying to me, Nina, you will be very sorry.’

  ‘I don’t have to answer to you until we are married,’ she said. ‘And even then I will not tolerate you bossing me around as if I don’t have a mind of my own. Now, if you have finished discussing what you came here to discuss, I think you should leave.’

  ‘I will leave when I am good and ready.’ He closed the small distance between them, one of his hands going to the wall at the side of her head, his eyes holding hers as his body pressed close.

  Too close.

  Nina felt the sharp nudge of desire his sudden closeness evoked, her legs weakening beneath her and her heart thumping erratically behind the wall of her chest. Her breasts seemed to swell as she pressed her back against the wall, the spicy fragrance of his aftershave teasing her nostrils as he leaned even closer.

  ‘P-please go away.’ Her voice came out choked.

  She felt herself drowning in the fathomless depth of his dark eyes. The silence stretched and stretched until she could hear a faint ringing in her ears. She wondered if he was going to kiss her and her gaze instinctively flicked to his mouth, her heart doing another funny kick-start at the thought of those sensual lips pressed to hers.

  Her eyes returned to his and instantly widened as she began to feel the metal of his belt buckle against her stomach and the potent strength of what she could feel was stirring just below. She could feel the energy of his body sending a charge of crackling electricity to hers, making her flesh prickle all over with sensory alertness.

  She drew in a shaky breath, her breasts rising and falling against his chest as her heart began to race. His eyes dipped to her mouth, lingering there for endless pulsing seconds before he lifted his hand and traced the contour of her bottom lip with the blunt pad of his thumb, back and forth, slowly, tantalizingly.

  Just when she thought she could stand it no longer, he dropped his hand from her mouth and stepped back from her, his expression closing over.

  ‘I will see you tomorrow. What time would be convenient for me to call around?’

  It took her several seconds to get her brain back into gear. ‘Um…about this time is good. I’ll be out all day.’

  He gave her a wry look as he reached for the door. ‘The library again?’

  ‘Yes…I thought I might read some books to Georgia. It’s supposed to be good for language development.’

  He looked as if he was going to say something but apparently changed his mind at the last minute. Nina watched as he opened the door and stepped through, casting her one last inscrutable look as he shut it behind him.

  She stared at the door while she waited for her heart rate to return to normal.

  Elizabeth was right, she thought as she let out a little uneven breath. As far as falling for Marc Marcello went, she was more than halfway there already.

  Georgia was even worse the next morning when Nina tried to leave the childcare centre. The pitiful cries shredded her nerves and, even though the assistant was just as reassuring and confident as the day before, Nina felt the full weight of her guilt drag her down as she made her way to the front door, her eyes stinging with the threat of tears.

  She didn’t see the tall figure leaning against his car near the front entrance until it was too late. She came to a stumbling halt as Marc’s shadow blocked out the watery sunlight, her heart leaping towards her throat.

  ‘M-Marc…what are you doing here?’

  ‘I could ask you the very same thing but I already know the answer.’ His dark gaze flicked to the childcare signage behind her. ‘So this is where you relieve yourself of your responsibilities towards Georgia, no doubt so you can cavort all day with your lovers.’

  ‘No…no! It’s not like that at all.’

  One dark brow rose in cynicism. ‘Perhaps you would like to explain to me why you have placed my niece in the care of complete strangers.’

&n
bsp; ‘They’re not exactly strangers,’ Nina said. ‘They’re highly competent childcare workers.’

  His mouth tightened as he took her by the arm. ‘Then we will go and see just how competent they are, shall we?’

  Nina had no choice but to follow him for his hold, though loose, was under-wired with steely determination. She could feel the latent strength in his long fingers as they circled her wrist.

  It wasn’t hard for him to find where Georgia was being looked after. Her cries were echoing throughout the building. As they approached the babies’ room Nina felt the tightening of Marc’s hold as if his anger was travelling through his body to where it was joined to hers.

  ‘There, there, Georgia,’ the childcare assistant was cooing as she cuddled her. ‘Mummy will be back later…now, now, don’t cry…Oh, hello again, Miss Selbourne,’ she said as she turned around. ‘I’m afraid your little girl is not settling all that well this morning.’

  Nina took Georgia from the woman’s arms and the howling stopped immediately, to be replaced by tiny hiccups and sniffles as the baby clung to her.

  ‘That’s all right,’ Nina said. ‘I don’t think I will leave her today, after all.’

  ‘We can try again tomorrow, if you like,’ the woman suggested. ‘As I said the other day, lots of babies find separation from mum hard at first but they soon get used to it.’

  ‘Miss Selbourne will not need your services any more,’ Marc announced in clipped tones. ‘We have made other arrangements.’

  The woman’s eyebrows rose slightly and Nina hastily inserted, ‘This is my…fiancé, Marc Marcello.’

  ‘Oh…well, then…’ The woman gave a slightly flustered smile.

  ‘Come on, cara.’ Marc took Nina’s arm and escorted her to the door.

  Nina waited until they were outside before she turned on him crossly. ‘You had no right to cancel my arrangements like that!’

  He gave her a glowering look as he unlocked his car. ‘Your arrangements were putting my niece at risk. Look at her. She has obviously been crying hysterically; she is feverish and over-tired.’ He took the baby from her arms and cuddled her close, glaring over the top of her head at Nina. ‘I cannot believe you would be so insensitive to leave a clearly distraught baby with total strangers.’

 

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