Rebecca Winters

One Summer at The Villa


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she’d failed miserably. If any man should have been tempted by a royal title, it should have been Raúl Vega.

      If she failed, it would be yet another humiliation to add to her long list. Her first fiancé had driven a car off a cliff and her second had married another woman before the handshake had grown cold on the deal her father had made to wed her to him.

      She was doomed in love, it would seem. Not that she’d ever been in love, but she’d like a chance to experience it. Like Lily, the woman her second almost-fiancé had married instead of her. What was it like to have a man look at you the way Nico Cavelli looked at Lily? To have a man sacrifice everything to be with you?

      She would never know. It wasn’t her lot in life to find love. Dante had told her she didn’t need to marry for Monteverde now that their father was no longer King, but she’d insisted it was her duty. If it benefited her country, she would do it. No matter how desperate and sad it made her. No matter how much the idea of tying herself to a man terrified her.

       Not all men were like her father. Not all men would grow violent when they were angry.

      Antonella shook her head to clear it. She didn’t know for certain that she had failed this time. There was still a chance she’d won, that her royal title and her ore would be more enticing than anything Cristiano di Savaré had to offer.

      She threw the tail of her shawl over her shoulder and continued her pacing on deck. Most of Raúl’s guests had returned to shore or to their own yachts, with the exception of those who had cabins aboard. In the harbor, yachts, a cruise ship, and fishing boats lay at anchor for the night, though the sounds of laughter and music drifted across the bay.

      She chewed on the edge of a fingernail, then jerked her hand away with a curse when she realized what she was doing. She hadn’t chewed her nails since she was twelve and her father made her drink half a bottle of hot sauce to end the habit. It had certainly worked—she’d spent two days so sick she’d thought she would die; afterwards, she could hardly look at her fingernails without retching.

      But Cristiano unsettled her in ways she couldn’t quite fathom. He was Monterossan, which was a big strike against him. He was the future King of that nation, an even bigger strike. He was tall, incredibly magnetic, and arrogant beyond all imagination.

      And yet, a little thrill of excitement insisted on rearing its ugly head whenever she thought about him. Stop. She didn’t like him, and she damn sure didn’t trust him.

      A shiver slid over her. What if she’d failed?

      “Perhaps you should drink fewer espressos so late at night, cara.

      Antonella whirled to find Cristiano emerging onto the deck. Her heart thumped, though not from fright. Why did he disconcert her so? “What are you talking about?”

      He tipped his chin to her. “Pacing. Less caffeine would help.”

      Antonella closed her eyes and counted to five. He knew he irritated her. Worse, he seemed to take great pleasure in it. She must not allow him to do so any longer. She could control her reactions. Would control them.

      “I had one espresso, grazie. Your concern is touching.”

      He came over and leaned against the rail, watching her. His eyes dipped to her chest, back up. Typical. Half the time, men talked exclusively to her breasts. She’d grown quite accustomed to it.

      “You are dying to know what we talked about, aren’t you?”

      Antonella shrugged. “You are mistaken if you think I care. I’m not here for business.”

      He laughed. “So you have said. But what do they call it now, if not the oldest business in the world?”

      She would not react. Would not. Had Raúl told him what they’d discussed, that she’d offered herself in exchange for the mills? Or was he simply baiting her?

      “Is that what it’s called when you sleep around, Cristiano?” she said very coolly, her heart throbbing with hurt and anger and the urge to deny she’d ever slept with any man. He’d never believe her, of course. Nor did he deserve an explanation.

      Why did men have a double standard when it came to sex? He could bed countless women and it only added to his allure.

      “Sensitive, cara?

      “Not at all. I simply don’t like you. Or your hypocrisy.”

      “I’m hurt.” His teeth flashed in a grin.

      She wished he’d jump off the side of the yacht and leave her alone. “Where is Raúl?” she demanded.

      “I’m not your social secretary, Principessa. If you want him, go find him.” The words were said mildly, almost mockingly. And with a hint of steel beneath the velvet. “And what makes you think I’m a hypocrite? I quite like that you’ve had lovers. It means you know your way around a man’s body. It means we will not need to waste time once we are naked.”

      Perhaps she’d had too much caffeine after all. Her pulse raced like a bullet fired from a gun. “I’m not sleeping with you, Cristiano.”

      “Don’t be too sure,” he said, his voice a sensual growl that scraped over her nerve endings and left her shivering.

      “I know my own mind, and I know what I don’t want. I don’t want you.”

      Cristiano reached for her hand, slipped his fingers between hers and brought them to his mouth. She tried to pull away, but he held her firm. “And do you know your body, Antonella? Often, our mind and our body are at war. Did you not know that?”

      Before she could formulate an answer from her scattered thoughts, he touched the tip of his tongue to the center of her palm.

      Antonella sucked in a breath as rivers of sensation spilled down her spine, through her limbs, into her feminine core. Why? Why? Men had been trying to get her into bed for as long as she could remember and she’d yet to feel anything remotely as exciting as what she felt when Cristiano touched her.

      Too bad he was the wrong man. She needed to pull her hand away forcefully, needed to put distance between them and never allow herself to be alone with him again.

      But she couldn’t. She was trapped, as trapped as if he’d bound her to him with iron shackles.

      “Stop,” she forced out, her voice little more than a tortured whisper.

      “Are you quite certain?” he murmured. “Your body says otherwise.”

      “You don’t know that.”

      “Si, I do. You are flushed…”

      “It’s hot.”

      Cristiano laughed low in his throat, kissed her fingers and settled her hand on his shoulder before he tugged her closer. His broad fingers splayed over her hip. “And it’s about to get hotter. Why deny this attraction, hmm? We will be good together.”

      “I—”

      A shadow passed over them and then a voice said, “I beg your pardon.”

      Antonella jerked out of Cristiano’s grip just in time to see Raúl turn around and slip back inside. Oh, God! Furious tears pressed against the back of her eyes but she refused to let them fall. She would have to go after him, would have to try and repair the damage. She’d just offered to marry him, for God’s sake. What would he think of her now?

      She could repair the damage. Surely she could. She had to. For Monteverde’s future.

      But not before she turned and gave the arrogant man who’d caused her so much trouble in such a short time a piece of her mind.

      “You did that on purpose!” She should have listened to the voice telling her to get away from him. Because she hadn’t, because she’d been riveted by his handsome face and sizzling touch, she’d risked