Ким Лоренс – The Italian's Baby of Passion: The Italian's Secret Baby / One-Night Baby / The Italian's Secret Child (страница 2)
Alice still had the scar. Unconsciously his hand went to his face. Fortunately you couldn’t see hers, but his own reminded him of his poor judgement every time he looked in the mirror.
‘
‘I’m not a crank!’ The disembodied voice filled the room with husky outrage.
‘Fair enough,’ he drawled. ‘However, you are on a private line so hang up! If you have a message there are channels you can go through.’
‘Haven’t you been listening to
‘This has been said, but rarely to my face.’
‘I am Roman O’Hagan. If you’re not going to hang up, do you think you might get round some time in the next hour to telling me who the hell you are? If only so that I can make sure you never have an opportunity to harangue me in the future.’
This threat produced an audible sigh at the other end. ‘Well, I do think you might have said so straight away instead of wasting my time.’
‘Wasting
‘My name is Scarlet Smith.’
‘I manage the crèche at the university.’
So he’d been halfway right with schoolteacher.
‘Your mother is officially opening it today.’
‘My mother is in Rome.’ Roman stopped, having a vague recollection, now that he thought about it, of his mother having mentioned she was interrupting her holiday with her family to fly back and fulfil some commitment…it could well have been this one.
‘No, she’s in my office, and I’m afraid she isn’t very well.’
Roman levered his long-limbed frame into an upright position, his languid air vanishing. ‘What’s happened?’
‘I don’t mean to alarm you—’
‘Well, you are, so get to the point,’ he advised tersely.
‘Your mother fainted a little while ago. She seems better now.’
His mother didn’t faint. ‘What does the doctor say?’ Roman asked, settling his loose Italian-designed jacket smoothly across his broad shoulders.
‘She hasn’t seen a doctor.’
Roman picked up on the defensive note that had entered the attractive voice and his brows drew together in a disapproving straight line.
‘Why the hell not?’ he demanded. ‘I need the car,’ he added seamlessly as he turned to his attentively hovering PA, who, like all good assistants, knew when to say nothing. ‘And cancel all my appointments for the rest of the morning, then tell Phil to meet me at the university.’
‘Our flight…?’
‘Cancel.’
‘What if Dr O’Connor is busy—?’
Roman turned his head and looked at her; Alice took the hint.
‘Right, I’ll tell him to drop everything, though that might be hard if he’s in the middle of heart surgery.’
‘He’s a medical man; he doesn’t operate,’ Roman retorted. ‘Just explain to him what’s happened, Alice, and tell him to bring his bag.’
‘Your mother wouldn’t let me call a doctor or an ambulance.’
Roman turned around as if to face the bleating voice. ‘
‘For less than a minute.’
Roman knew when he heard someone covering their back; there was nothing he despised more. He came down hard on people who preferred to shift the blame because they lacked the guts to carry the can for their own mistakes.
‘Let me tell you,
His PA was unable to remain silent. ‘Really, you can be so mean!’
‘What is this? Sisterly solidarity?’
‘I don’t think you realise how much you terrify people,’ she reproved, shaking her head.
‘No, Alice, I know
‘Nonsense,’ returned Alice. ‘The secret of your success is you live for your work and don’t have a life,’ she observed disapprovingly. ‘You lack balance.’
‘A little more terror, Alice, and a little less lip would be appreciated,’ Roman drawled.
‘That poor girl is probably crying her eyes out.’
‘Pardon me but I don’t empathise with incompetence, especially when that incompetence puts my family in danger,’ he explained grimly.
Contrary to Alice’s prediction, the ‘poor girl’ in question was neither terrified nor crying. She was walking down a university corridor where people who would normally have called out a cheery greeting took one look at her usually sunny face and changed their minds.
Others stared curiously when she walked past practising out loud—the acoustics were excellent—one of the cutting home truths she would like to deliver personally to Mr Roman O’Hagan.
‘Get to the point,’ he’d said. What did he think she’d been trying to do while he’d been cracking jokes at her expense?
Of course she should have called for an ambulance, she knew that—did he think she didn’t know that?
David Anderson, the university’s vice-chancellor, looked incredibly relieved as she walked through the door.
‘I thought you were only going to be a second, Scarlet?’ he said, drawing her a little to one side and out of earshot of the pale-faced woman sitting in the chair.
‘How is she?’ Scarlet asked, responding to his hand signals to keep her voice low.
‘Better than she was, I think. She wants me to ask her driver to bring her car around.’
‘I wouldn’t bother, David; her son is on his way over,’ she revealed casually.
On the whole, and considering how stressed David was already, Scarlet didn’t see much point explaining that the millionaire property developer in question was in a very vengeful and litigious mood.
Obviously threats were part and parcel of Roman O’Hagan’s
It hadn’t been bravery in her last year at school that had made her turn around and tell her gang of tormentors exactly what she thought of them, it had been simply a matter of reaching the end of her tether.
The experience had left Scarlet with a loathing of bullies and a determination to never again put herself in the role of victim. Every time she replayed the phone conversation in her head she felt her anger rising. How dared he threaten her? It wasn’t just
And that
He had the sort of voice that could make an eviction notice sound sexy.
The vice-chancellor shot her a look of annoyed disbelief, which she pretended not to notice.
‘You called Roman O’Hagan after she
‘Did she?’
‘I know she did, Scarlet, because I was there at the time and I heard what she said, not once, but twice.’
‘So maybe she did,’ Scarlet conceded. ‘But she also