Italian Tycoon, Secret Son. Lucy Gordon

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Название Italian Tycoon, Secret Son
Автор произведения Lucy Gordon
Жанр Современные любовные романы
Серия
Издательство Современные любовные романы
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781408911648



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her inside and closing the window firmly.

      ‘What the—’

      ‘Hush,’he said urgently. ‘Don’t make a sound.’

      ‘Who are you giving orders to?’ she demanded, drawing the edges of her robe together. ‘Just who are you?’

      ‘A man who’s throwing himself on your mercy,’ he said quickly. ‘Don’t be alarmed; I’m not going to hurt you. I just need a place to hide until he gives up the hunt.’

      ‘He? Who’s he?’

      ‘The husband, of course,’ he said, in a tone that implied inevitable consequences. ‘I didn’t know there was one. She swore she was divorced, and how’s a man to know?’

      ‘She being the woman you had dinner with downstairs, I suppose?’

      ‘Oh, you saw her? Can you blame me for losing my head?’

      ‘You didn’t lose your head,’ she said, standing back and regarding him cynically. ‘You knew exactly what you were doing at every moment. All that passionate gazing—’ She made a gormless face to indicate what she was saying and he flinched.

      ‘That’s a wicked slander! I never look like that.’

      ‘Look? Present tense? Meaning not with her or any of the others?’

      ‘How do you know there are others?’

      ‘Guess! You looked like a lovesick duck!’

      ‘A duck? May you be forgiven!’

      ‘But there was nothing lovesick about you. You were in control all the time.’

      ‘It seems like it, doesn’t it? A man who was in control would hardly be on the run. She just made my head spin.’

      ‘And that’s your excuse for acting like the hero of a bad Hollywood movie? Who do you think you are? Douglas Fairbanks?’

      ‘Who?’

      ‘He was always doing that athletic stuff in his films and— Why am I telling you this? How dare you just barge in here like some second-rate Lothario?’

      ‘I thought I was Douglas Fairbanks,’ he said with an expression of innocence that didn’t fool her for a minute.

      ‘Get out! Get—’

      The last word was silenced by his hand over her mouth.

      ‘Hush, for pity’s sake,’ he begged. ‘Ow!

      ‘Now will you let go of me?’

      ‘You bit my hand.’

      ‘I’ll bite you somewhere a lot more painful if you don’t leave my room. Go back to your lady friend.’

      ‘I can’t, her husband will kill me.’

      ‘Good for him! I’ll help him dispose of the body.’

      ‘You’re not very kind,’ he protested plaintively.

      She stared at him, bereft of speech long enough to hear a knock at her door.

      ‘Mademoiselle, I am police. Please to open at once. This is for your own protection.’

      She darted to the door, but at first she didn’t open it. Afterwards she could never quite understand what had stopped her, but she merely called back, ‘What is the matter?’

      ‘A criminal, mademoiselle. He has been detected in a room along here but managed to escape. Please to open.’

      ‘Open it,’ her companion murmured in her ear.

      ‘What?’

      ‘If you don’t, they’ll just get more suspicious. Your best bet is an air of calm and lofty innocence.’

      ‘How dare you? I am innocent!’

      ‘Then you can open it.’

      ‘And let them see you, so that the husband can identify you?’

      ‘He can’t. He never saw me. I got away while he was still in the outer room.’

      ‘And how do I explain your presence?’

      ‘This is a liberated age. You’re entitled to have a man in your room.’

      ‘Are you daring to suggest that I pretend that you and I—’

      ‘Unless you can think of something more convincing. I suppose I could be trying to sell you insurance—’

      ‘Shut up!

      ‘Whatever you say. I’m at your mercy.’

      ‘Mademoiselle!’That was the policeman again.

      Then another man’s voice said, ‘He’s obviously in there. Beat the door down.’

      There was a thump on the door. Furious with all of them, Mandy wrenched it open so fast that the attacker was caught in mid-blow, lunging forwards against her and landing hard enough to knock her back. Only the swift movement of her mysterious companion prevented her hitting the wall.

      ‘Murderer!’ he cried. ‘My darling, has he hurt you?’

      ‘I’m not sure,’ she said faintly. ‘Help me up.’

      He did so, lifting her in his arms and carrying her towards the bed, laying her down, then sitting beside her, still holding her.

      ‘Get out, the pair of you,’ he said to the two other men who were just behind him. ‘Look what you’ve done.’

      Through half closed eyes Mandy surveyed the two men, one of whom was in a police uniform. Madness seized her and she pointed to the other intruder, a squashy-looking individual with a mean face.

      ‘Why did he attack me?’ she asked in a quavering voice.

      ‘I didn’t, I didn’t,’ he squeaked. ‘I was seeking the man who was with my wife. I thought he was here—’

      ‘Ooh!’ she moaned, covering her face and turning so that the stranger’s arms enfolded her.

      ‘Get out before I have the law on you,’ he threatened.

      The policeman began a stumbling apology but fell silent when he saw a look in the stranger’s eyes. A jerk of the head sent him retreating through the door, half dragging the outraged husband with him.

      ‘It’s all right, they’ve gone.’

      Lifting her head, she saw him regarding her with a mischievous devil in his eyes. Then her appalled glance fell on herself, and the towel robe which had drifted open, revealing her nakedness. Sanity descended on her like a cold shower and she snatched the edges together.

      ‘Thank you for everything you did,’ he said in a placating voice. ‘You were wonderful.’

      But he backed away as he spoke, reading murder in her eyes.

      ‘If,’ she said, breathing hard, ‘you don’t get out of this room this instant, I shall scream the place down, call back the policeman and tell everyone the truth about you.’

      ‘Not that,’ he begged. ‘Anything but the truth.’

      ‘Oh, but this truth is very interesting. You are an unspeakable scoundrel—’

      ‘No doubt about it.’

      ‘A crook—’

      ‘Guilty.’

      ‘A ham actor—’

      ‘That’s going too far.’

      ‘A fraud, a man without scruple—’

      He’d reached the door now, opened it, paused in the gap.

      ‘I just