Jennifer Hayward

His Million-Dollar Marriage Proposal


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no answer was better than attempting one to that statement. Micaela took the hint and reached for her coffee cup to get started. Her eyes nearly popped out of her head when she saw the giant diamond sparkling on Chiara’s hand.

      “You and Lazzero are engaged?”

      “It’s brand-new,” Chiara murmured, as every assistant in the shop turned to stare. “We haven’t made a formal announcement yet.”

      “You won’t have to now,” Micaela said drily, inclining her head toward the shop girls. “Half the city will know by noon.”

      Oh, God. Chiara bit her lip. Why had she agreed to do this again?

      Micaela led her into the dressing area and started throwing clothes at her with military-like precision. Telling herself it was the armor she needed to face a world in which she’d been declared not good enough, Chiara tried on everything the stylist presented her with and discovered Micaela had impeccable taste that worked well with her own personal style.

      It was when they came to the search for the perfect evening dresses that Micaela got intensely critical. Chiara would be in the limelight on these occasions, photographed by paparazzi from around the world. They needed to be flawless. Irreproachable. Eye-catching, but not ostentatious.

      Just the thought of walking down a red carpet made her stomach churn.

      By the time they’d chosen purses and jewelry to go with her new wardrobe, she was ready to drop. Looking forward to collapsing at the spa appointment Micaela had booked for her, she protested when the stylist dragged her next door to the lingerie boutique.

      “I don’t need any of that,” she said definitively. “I’m good.”

      “Are you sure what you have isn’t going to leave lines?” Micaela asked.

      No dammit, she wasn’t. And she wasn’t about to end up on a red carpet with them. Marching into the fitting room, she tried on the beautiful lingerie Micaela handed over. Felt her throat grow tighter as she stood in front of the mirror in peach silk, the lace on the delicate bra the lingerie’s only nod to fuss.

      Antonio had loved to buy her lingerie. Had always said it was because he loved having her all to himself—that he didn’t want to share her with anyone else. He’d used that excuse when it came to social engagements too—taking her to low-key restaurants rather than his high-profile events because, she’d assumed, he was deciding whether he should make her a Fabrizio or not, and fool that she’d been, she hadn’t wanted to mess it up.

      Heat lashed her cheeks. Never again would she give a man that power over her. Never again would she be so deluded about the truth.

      Sinking her fingers into the clasp of the delicate bra, she stripped it off. She hadn’t quite shed the sting of the memory when Micaela whisked her off to the salon for lunch, hair and treatments.

      Dimitri, whom Micaela proclaimed the best hair guy in Manhattan, promptly suggested she cut her hair to shoulder length and add bangs for a more sophisticated look. A rejection rose in her throat, an automatic response, because her hair had always been her thing. Her kryptonite. Antonio had loved it.

      That lifted her chin. She wasn’t that Chiara anymore. She wanted all signs of her gone. And if there was a chance she was going to run into Antonio in Milan, she would need all her armor in place.

      “Cut it off,” she said to Dimitri. “And yes to the bangs.”

      * * *

      Lazzero was on the phone tying up a loose end before he left for Europe on Tuesday evening when Chiara walked into the tiny lounge at Teterboro Airport. Gareth, who’d dropped her off with Lazzero’s afternoon meetings on the other side of town, deposited Chiara’s suitcase beside her, gave him a wave and melted back outside. But Lazzero was too busy looking at Chiara to notice.

      Dressed in black cigarette pants, another pair of those sexy boots she seemed to favor and a silk shirt that skimmed the curve of her amazing backside, she looked cool and sophisticated. It was her hair that had him aghast. Gone were the thick, silky waves that fell down her back, in their place a blunt bob that just skimmed her shoulders. He couldn’t deny the sophisticated style and wispy bangs accentuated her lush features and incredible eyes. It just wasn’t her.

      Wrapping up the call, he strode across the lounge toward her. “What the hell did you do to your hair?”

      Her eyes widened, a flash of defiance firing their green depths. “It was time for a change. Dimitri, Micaela’s hair guy, thinks it looks sophisticated. Wasn’t that what you were going for?”

      Yes. No. Not if it meant cutting her hair. She had gorgeous hair. Had gorgeous hair. He wanted to inform Dimitri he was an idiot. Except Chiara looked exactly like the type of woman he’d have on his arm. Micaela had done her job well. So why the hell was he so angry? Because he’d liked her better the way she’d been before?

      “I’m sorry,” he said gruffly. “It’s been a long day. You look beautiful. And yes, it’s chic...very sophisticated.”

      Her chin lowered a fraction. “Micaela was amazing. She gave me some excellent advice.”

      “Good.” Catching a signal from a waiting official, he inclined his head. “We’re good to go. You ready?”

      She nodded and went to pick up her bag. He bent to take it from her, his fingers brushing against hers as he did. She flinched and took a step back. He grimaced and hoisted the bag. He was going to have to deal with that reaction before they landed in Italy or this relationship between them wasn’t going to be remotely believable.

      He carried it and his own bag onto the tarmac, where the sleek corporate jet was waiting. After a quick check of their passports, they were airborne, winging their way across the Atlantic.

      He pulled out his laptop as soon as they’d leveled out. Chiara, an herbal tea in hand, fished out a magazine and started reading.

      Together they silently coexisted, seated across from each other in the lounge area. Appreciating the time to catch up and finding it heartily refreshing to be with a woman who didn’t want to chatter all the way across the ocean about inane things he wasn’t the slightest bit interested in, it wasn’t until a couple of hours later that he noticed Chiara wasn’t really focusing on anything. Staring out the window in between flipping pages, applying multiple coats of lip balm and fidgeting to the point where he finally sighed and set his laptop aside.

      “Okay,” he murmured. “What’s wrong?”

      She dug into her bag, pulled out a newspaper and dropped it on the table in front of him. Too busy to have touched the inch-thick pile of press clippings that had been left on his desk that morning, he picked it up and scanned the tabloid page, finding the story Chiara was referring to near the bottom. It was Samara Jones’s weekly column, featuring a shot of Chiara leaving a store, shopping bags in hand.

      One Down—One to Go!

      Sorry, ladies, but this Di Fiore is now taken. According to my sources, Lazzero Di Fiore’s new fiancée was seen shopping in fashion hot spot Zazabara on Monday with celebrity stylist Micaela Parker, a four-carat asscher-cut diamond dazzling on her finger. My source wouldn’t name names, but revealed an appearance at La Coppa Estiva was the impetus for the shopping excursion.

      Lazzero threw the tabloid down. For once he didn’t feel like strangling the woman. It was perfect, actually. Word would get around, Carolina would realize the reality of the situation and his problem would be solved.

      The pinched expression on Chiara’s face, however, made it clear she didn’t feel the same way. “It was the point of this, after all,” he reasoned. “Don’t sweat it. It will be over in a few days.”

      She shot him a deadly look. “Don’t sweat it? Playing your girlfriend is one thing, Lazzero. Having my face plastered across one of New York’s dailies as your fiancée is another matter entirely. What if my father sees it? Not to mention the fact that it’s