Julia James – Heiress's Pregnancy Scandal (страница 2)
But the determination that had lifted Nic from the backstreets had kicked in again, and in the months since losing his grip on the Viscari portfolio he had reacted by lining up a string of potential new Falcone properties, including this, the newly opened Falcone Nevada, with its oh-so-lucrative on-site casino.
His keen eyes swept the crowded gaming floor as he strolled forward, noting that a good few of the gamblers had likely come over from the conference wing of the hotel, where a gathering of astrophysics academics were holding their annual shindig. Including the cluster of young hopefuls now quitting the bar area to head to the gaming floor. Leaving behind a woman who was now raising a hand to them in a casual goodnight.
A woman who halted him in his tracks. Tall, graceful and dazzlingly blonde.
Every sense went on high alert. In his time he’d seen—and sampled—many, many beautiful women. But none like this. He felt his stomach muscles clench, held his breath. His eyes fastened on her. And desire—hot, intense and instant—quickened...
* * *
Fran watched the post-grad students go off to buy their chips and hoped they wouldn’t lose their shirts at the tables. They were clearly in demob happy mood and making the most of this, the final night of the conference. As for herself, she should head off, for she still had a poster session to give the following morning, before the plenary session, and it wouldn’t hurt to run through her presentation again.
But as she turned back towards the barman to call for her bill a voice behind her spoke.
‘No temptation to try your luck at the tables?’
It was a deep voice, with an American accent that did not sound western, and it held a gravelled timbre that made her turn.
And as she did so her eyes widened.
The silent exclamation, as instinctive as it was unstoppable, resonated in her consciousness.
The man who stood there, his pose deceptively relaxed, was tall—easily topping her own willowy figure—with broad shoulders, lean hips and a muscled chest that looked as if it could take a punch without even noticing.
In fact, she registered, in her subliminal sweep of his features, it looked as if his nose, set in a face that was hard-planed and strong-jawed, had been on the receiving end of a slug at some stage.
The slight bump was a flaw that only added to his powerful appeal. The man might be in a tux, but everything about him said
For a second—a sub-second—she was frozen, taking him in, reacting to him on a level at which she never, just
With the exception of Cesare, with his hawkish, aristocratic demeanour, she’d always only gone for men with studious looks—not the muscled type that she’d always regarded as...well,
But there was nothing brutish about this man. Not with eyes like that. Glinting with sharp intelligence.
Yet even as she made that reasonable assumption she realised she needed to do something other than just gaze dumbstruck at him. Should she acknowledge his remark? Without vanity, she knew from experience that her blonde looks drew male eyes—and more—and if she was chatted up she normally kept her reaction vague to the point of evasive until she could get away or the man gave up. If absolutely necessary she froze them out.
For the moment, though, she went for option one, and gave a brief, impersonal flicker of a smile and a demurring shake of her head.
‘Not my thing...gambling,’ she replied, glad to accept the leather-bound drinks bill, and jot her room number on it.
‘You’re part of the conference?’
Again, the deep, slightly gravelled voice made her glance up as she pushed the folder back to the barman.
‘Yes,’ she acknowledged.
She moved to slip off the high stool, and immediately the man’s hand was there, guiding her. She glanced at him, murmuring her thanks, but wished that she could retain the air of impersonal indifference that she knew she should be displaying at this time.
Only it was impossible to do so. Impossible to do anything but feel the extraordinary visceral impact on her that he was having.
An impact that suddenly increased exponentially.
He was smiling—and the smile was like the smile of a desert wolf.
Fran felt her lungs squeeze, her breath catch. The smile was swift—a sudden indentation of the firm mouth, a brief flash of teeth, a lightening of his tough features as if the sun had just come out and then disappeared again.
‘Forgive me for sounding clichéd, but you don’t look the least like an astrophysicist!’
Amusement played around his firm mouth, as if he knew perfectly well that it was, indeed, a clichéd observation, but didn’t give a damn. Because the light in those blue, blue eyes of his was telling her just why he’d said what he had.
He wanted to do anything to keep the conversation going.
Fran lifted an eyebrow. Whatever was going on here, it was unlikely to be anything to do with the man’s role as a member of the hotel’s security team, if that was who he was, given the air of toughness radiating from him. And if he wasn’t—if he was just another guest—then that made it no better. He was still chatting her up. So maybe she should just call time and walk.
Except that she didn’t want to. The sudden fizzing in her veins, the catch in her heart rate, was telling her that she was reacting to this man as she had never reacted to any man before—that something was happening to her that had never happened to her before.
So, instead of whatever she might have been planning to reply to him with, she could hear her own voice, with a clear hint of answering amusement in it, saying, ‘And you’ve encountered many astrophysicists in your time, have you?’
She was conscious that her eyebrow had lifted, just as her mouth had twitched in amusement, conscious too of how that flashing smile had come again. Her sense was that here was a man totally at ease with himself. Even if he was a security guy, chatting up one of the guests in the hotel he worked in, he didn’t care—and he was inviting her not to care either. He was a man who knew he was blatantly accosting a woman who had caught his eye...
She was conscious that long, dark lashes had swept down over those brilliant blue eyes as he answered her in turn.
‘Enough,’ he said laconically.
Fran’s eyes narrowed deliberately. ‘Name three,’ she challenged.
He laughed—a low, attractive sound that went with the flashing smile, and the brilliant blue eyes and the tough face and the tougher body. All of which were doing incredible things to her.
She felt herself reel inwardly.
Hard-working research academics didn’t go doolally because some muscled hunk smiled at them. And nor, came the even more sobering thought, did the woman who was her identity as well as Dr Fran Ristori.
Donna Francesca di Ristori.
Not that anyone here in the USA knew that—or cared.
It had caused, Fran knew, something of a rift between them, and it was only because Fran had agreed to marry into the Italian aristocracy that her mother had been reconciled to her research career.
But last year Fran had broken up with Cesare, Il Conte di Mantegna
‘But he was
‘I got a better offer,’ was all Fran had been able to say.
It had been an offer her mother could never have appreciated—the exciting invitation to join the research team of a Nobel Laureate out in California.