Michelle Smart

The Sicilian's Bought Cinderella


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were the bane of the honest businessman’s life. ‘Done.’

      He held the phone for her to see. ‘The money will credit your sister’s account by the end of the working day.’

      She peered at it with a furrowed brow. ‘You transferred two hundred thousand?’

      He nodded tersely. ‘I’ve upheld my end of the deal. Now we can go.’

       CHAPTER FOUR

      AISLIN GAZED OUT of the car window. The drive from the cottage to Palermo had taken her from farmed fields and intense greenery to the bright lights of Sicily’s capital in only twenty minutes.

      Thankfully Dante had sat in the front next to his driver, enabling her to relax into the journey and not spend the trip fighting her growing awareness of him.

      The gleam she’d seen in his eyes a few times had made her think he might be aware of her in the same way, but his declaration that this was purely a business agreement had put paid to that notion.

      Her limited experience with men meant her instincts could not be relied on. Growing up in a small village in Kerry, there had been a shortage of boys to play with. Secondary school had not been much better on the boy front. By the time she’d started university she’d been desperate for a boyfriend but on her first day had overheard a group of boys ranking the girls on the size of their breasts, their ‘spreadability’ and their looks. It had been enough to make her vomit and, from that point on, she’d kept males at a distance, willing to be friends but not anything more. Some girls might have been happy to be marked out of ten on their prowess but she was not one of them.

      It was in the summer term of her second year that Patrick had taken an interest her. Far from immediately trying to dive into her knickers, he’d made an effort to woo her. He’d brought her flowers. He’d asked for her help with an assignment—without a boyfriend to distract her, Aislin had soon distinguished herself as a swot—and it had filled her silly little head with pride that the most popular lad in her year was interested in her.

      Weeks later, they’d started dating. Words of love and respect were exchanged, words she’d believed. Six months on, Orla had been driving in a heavy storm when an approaching car had lost control and smashed head-on into hers. Patrick, resenting Aislin’s devotion to her comatose sister and prematurely born nephew, had wasted no time in hooking up with Aislin’s housemate, a girl she had considered a good friend.

      She hadn’t dated anyone since. In all honesty, even if she’d wanted to, which she didn’t, there hadn’t been the space in her life to date.

      Dante was the first man to occupy her thoughts in three years and, compared to his playboy antics, Patrick was a rank amateur.

      She didn’t know if it made it better or worse that Dante didn’t fancy her. It shouldn’t matter at all.

      This deal was strictly business.

      She couldn’t work him out. One minute he was haggling over the upfront payment, driving down her demands, the next transferring four times the amount they had settled on.

      So far, she hadn’t dared tell Orla about the deal, fearful of building her hopes up. She didn’t think Dante would be able to stop the payment but he was a powerful man. Beneath the affable exterior lay a darkness. She had no idea what he was capable of.

      It had been dark when she’d landed four days ago, too dark for her to appreciate Palermo’s astounding beauty, especially as she’d been trying to navigate unfamiliar streets in a rental car and driving on a different side of the road than she was used to.

      She’d almost forgotten about that rental car. Thankfully, Dante had given the keys to one of his goons with instructions to take it back to the airport.

      Driving in daylight through Palermo was like stepping into the medieval past. Were it not for the busy narrow streets filled with people in modern dress, she could believe she’d slipped into a time vortex.

      Expecting to be taken to a secluded palatial home guarded with Rottweilers and more goons of the armed variety, she was momentarily taken aback when Dante’s driver pulled up in a street that was only a little wider than the luxurious vehicle they were in, stopping beside a long terrace of five-storey apartments. The street was clean and pretty, the exterior walls painted cream, iron balconies beneath all the upper windows with hanging baskets of flowers creating colour, a few scooters parked close to the walls.

      Dante craned his neck to talk to her. ‘We are here.’

      ‘This is your home?’

      She pressed her face against the window for a better look, certain he was having a laugh at her expense. This was an ordinary residential street. Dante was a billionaire. Shouldn’t his main home—during the course of her research she’d discovered he owned a heap of opulent city apartments across Europe—be flashier?

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