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Authors: Jianne Carlo

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BOOK: Manacled in Monaco
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He hadn’t been able to really assess her this morning, sleep fuddled mind reeling from the shock of seeing her again. Those honey eyes still had that oriental slant and were fringed by inky lashes, which cast shadows on her high cheekbones. Sarita’s delicate features were belied by an arrogant, almost aristocratic nose, and a lower lip so plump, so red, it begged to be nibbled on. And she’d loved it when he did, breaking into soft startled moans.

For years he’d wondered if it had all been a fantasy, that night on the centerline under the stars, and time and time again he’d pulled out the stark memento, the captured prize, one pink thong, to force reality home. Now he had another shock to absorb, a definite outcome of the first and only time he’d not used a condom.

“He’s mine,” Rolan gritted, and suddenly yearned for a long pour of brandy.

“I suppose there’s no sense in denying it,” she said, her tone firm, quiet, spoken with a queenly dignity he wanted to shatter.

“He’s ten,” he said, doing a quick mental calculation. “You didn’t figure on telling me about his existence?”

“Please don’t shout,” she replied, and her calm demeanor spiked his rising temper. “I wrote you twice.”

“Blasted hell, you did. The last time I saw you was that night on the football field. I tried to see you the next day, but your mother wouldn’t let me in the house.”

“You,” she said, and both eyebrows lifted. “You tried to see me after we, um, you know…”

Cheeks coloring a dark pink, her voice trailed off, she ducked her head and studied the tiled floor with an intensity most people reserved for lottery tickets while the winning numbers were called.

His stomach listed. Surely, she hadn’t thought…no, she
had
thought it was a one-night stand. He could tell from the slumping of her shoulders, the way air seemed to deflate that defiant body posture.

Jesus.

“Of course I tried to see you, Sarita. I’d received my draft notice that morning. I knew you’d be excited for me and I wanted to share the news with you. I went to your house even before I told my parents.”

“You did?” Pupils dilated, eyes rimmed with amber, she stared at him.

“I wanted to let you know that I had to leave the next day, but that I’d call and I would be back in six weeks.”

“Why?”

Rolan itched to smooth the lines between her auburn eyebrows, stop the slight quivering of her lower lip with his. She hadn’t believed him that night when he’d kissed and told her, “I’m falling for you, honey.”

It didn’t matter now.

Tony mattered.

“Jesus H. Christ,” he said, and slumped back onto the barstool. “I have a son.”

“He’s mine. I raised him. He’s mine. You were only there for the conception. He’s not your son.”

“He’s mine,” he roared and shot to his feet. “And if I have to blast it on the cover of every newspaper, every gossip rag, I will. You hid him from me for ten years, and get this straight Sarita, it stops right now. I’m his goddamned father and that’s it. You owe me. Big time.”

With that pronouncement, too perplexed, too overflowing with emotion, he stalked out of the tiny room, only managing to resist shaking her by plunging his hands into his pants pockets. He caught up with his son seconds later. Apparently, the boy didn’t take orders to heart.

“My dad’s dead.” The flat statement didn’t go with the boy’s wavering voice. “You leave my mom alone. If you hurt her, I’ll hurt you.”

His fury trickled away, replaced by a peculiar pride at his son’s protective words. “Go above deck, son. Your mom will come and get you when we’ve finished our discussion. She’ll be okay, I promise. Tell the captain we’ll be staying a few days here in Monte Carlo. Ask him to have my Lamborghini brought around.”

Those emerald eyes sparked and eyebrows the color of wheat almost met the boy’s hairline, yet he didn’t move, just chewed his lower lip.

“I look like you,” Tony said and he crossed his arms. “Why do I look like you? And why is your name the opposite of mine?”

Damn. Rolan tunneled both hands through his hair.

“I don’t want you to be my dad. I don’t like you. You yell at Mom and she looks like she wants to cry.” Tony jammed two clean hands into his jeans’ back pockets, lips sneering down. “And I’m not doing anything you say. You can’t make me. I’m going to get Captain Terry to make you go away. You don’t own this boat, Geoff and Captain Terry do. And Geoff wants to marry Mom. So does Harry, and he’s from Texas. He’s a cowboy.”

With that pronouncement, the boy glared at Rolan, spun around, and raced down the hallway.

His Sarita?

Geoff and Harry?

He saw red.

Damn, damn and blast it. He stalked back to the kitchen to stake his claim. Sarita was his, and if either Geoff or Harry had so much as touched her, they’d pay. He knuckled his throbbing temple and took deep breaths determined to regain his famous control. He never lost his cool, not once in ten years on the football field, but he’d never had to fight so hard to regain his composure. His feet plodded forward as if mired in a bog.

Leaning one shoulder into the kitchen’s doorframe, he studied Sarita once more. Perched on a bar stool, slender back facing him, she slashed a wicked carving knife through a bunch of parsley, mincing the verdant leaves while muttering under her breath. All at once, she stabbed the axelike tool into the wooden cutting board letting the handle vibrate, and bounded to her feet.

“I hate you, hate you, Rolan Anthony Paxton. You are not taking my son away from me.”

“Isn’t this just dandy? We’re already dysfunctional and the family nucleus is in its infancy,” he drawled, pleased when she turned to him, bronze skin paling, features caught in a grimace, one lone tear slipping to hover at a stubborn jaw line.

He snapped a paper towel off the under the counter dispenser and edged forward. “Here. Crying isn’t going to solve anything. We need to talk.”

She stumbled backward, the bar stool wobbled, and Rolan had to grab it with both hands to prevent a nasty spill. Wide almond eyes with spiky lashes blinked up at him, and he caught a flash of vulnerability before that Zen-like mask descended again.

It irked him.

She irked him.

She looked so fragile, so vulnerable.

Red hot fury faded.

Strands of sunset hair escaped her high ponytail, slipping forward onto her shoulders as she straightened and dashed away the moisture on her cheeks with the back of her hand. The childlike gesture melted the rest of his anger and banded his chest.

“What do you want?”

His senses remembered that low throaty purr and his cock came to life in an involuntary reaction. And it was like they’d never been apart, all the old protectiveness, possessiveness, and lightening lust flaring through his soul.

Sarita.

His.

Rolan rescued the vibrating knife and set it on the cutting board. He slid onto the other barstool.

“You said you wrote?” Praying for calm, he decided to start at the beginning.

“Twice, one to your home and another to the college.” One forefinger flicked the minced parsley, shuffling the leaves into a rough circle. “I never heard from you, so I figured I was on my own.”

“Obviously I never received either letter. You didn’t think about picking up the telephone?”

Their gazes locked and he read the fury in hers as those pupils dilated and darkened, making the honey tint into a mere halo.

“You went out of your way to avoid me, Rolan Paxton, and you can’t deny that. I was the mistake you wished you’d never made.”

“Jesus Christ, Sarita, I was embarrassed. I took your virginity with all the finesse of a stampeding bull. You cried, damn it, and my raging hormones didn’t give a crap.”

For a second, naked pain lanced those amazing eyes, but she dropped her lids and concentrated on the minced parsley, one pearl eyetooth gnawing on her lower lip.

“And before I could say anything, you ran away. Look at me, damn it.”

“I wasn’t crying because you hurt me, Rolan.”

She said the words so softly he had to strain to hear them.

“Why then?”

She shook her head and he thought blood would spurt she bit down so hard.

A stream of anger returned heating his skin, and frustrated by her unwillingness to communicate, he snapped, “Burying your head in the sand isn’t going to help resolve this situation. I want joint custody of our son.”

“What?” Her head whipped up then, one hand fluttering to her throat. “No. You don’t have the right to ask that.”

“You want to take this to court?” Ah, rage again, good healthy anger. “One paternity test is all it takes. I’m his biological father. The courts will grant me joint custody. What have you got to offer the boy? I can afford full-time help, put him in the best private schools. I guarantee you -- you don’t want to take me on in a public battle for custody.”

“You always were a bully, especially on the football field.”

“And you’re hired help, plain and simple. One word to the captain and you’re out of a job. I bet your savings amounts to nil. I can ruin you, Sarita, and I will if that’s what it takes.”

Pounding footsteps preceded Tony’s skidding entrance, and he braked a tad short of them. Wary emerald eyes darted back and forth between the two adults.

“I asked you to stay above deck.”

“My son doesn’t take orders from you,” she spat out the words.

“Captain Terry says you’re to head to the deck. Your guests are here.”

Crap, he’d forgotten the primary purpose of this trip. “Ask Captain Terry to hang for a bit. I’ll be up in a second.”

“No, you tell him yourself. I’m staying with Mom.” Tony marched into the room.

“Anthony, it’s okay. Please go above deck and relay Mr. Paxton’s message.”

He waited until the boy’s long limbs vanished around a corner. “Joint custody, Sarita; I’ll settle for nothing else.”

Chapter Two

 

For what seemed like an eternity, Sarita traced Rolan’s retreating broad back. Her knees buckled when his pronouncement penetrated her stunned brain.

Joint custody.

Over her dead body.

Every instinct told her to take Tony and disappear, run to the farthest corner of the world.

She heard the familiar sound of her son skidding to a stop, his sneakers squeaking on the uncarpeted floor.

“Mom?”

A miniature of his father, Tony braced the doorframe. Each day he grew more and more like Rolan, in looks and in personality. She raked his features, taking in the wobbling lower lip, reading the unvoiced question in his dilated pupils. He knew. He’d overheard.

“He’s my dad, isn’t he?”

“Yes.”

“I have a dad,” he said and clenched fingers into tight fists. He gave her the exact same lip-curled-at-one-corner cutting glance Rolan shot her not moments ago.

“You lied to me.”

The words sliced her heart apart and she dug fingers under her rib cage, the pain a physical one, stabbing at her diaphragm. Sarita didn’t even know when her son slipped out of the room, too caught up in misery to do anything but wallow in self-pity.

For years it had been just the two of them united against the cruel small-town mindset that favored the country club members, those tennis playing blondes with their perfect Kellogg’s families and husbands who tried to cop a feel at each high-falutin’ shindig she waitressed.

She’d had to drop out of high school a scant month before the year ended and long after the NFL drafted Rolan. No one knew about her pregnancy; not even her more drunk than sober mother suspected until the now-famous DUI pileup on the town’s main drag.

Scandalized by her mother’s affair with the bank’s president, the town ostracized Sarita. And the grieving widow vented her rage on Sarita with a vengeance. In less than a month, the bank repossessed the ramshackle cottage by the train station, her mother’s 99 Chevy, all the appliances, and the furniture. She didn’t have enough money to pay for her mother’s funeral.

“Sarita, get a move on, Rolan’s chafing at the bit. There are twelve high flyers on deck.” Austen, the bosun and chief steward, dwarfed the doorway. A veteran Navy SEAL, the man’s Popeye biceps rippled as he reached the top cabinet. “I’m tending bar, so you’ll have to do the serving. Any more of this brandy? They’re guzzling it like agua. Captain said to assume formal attire. Hey lovey, you going to wear that little black number?”

“It’s all I have,” she muttered, wincing, and wished the black cocktail sheath weren’t so revealing. “I’ll be right behind you. There’re a couple more bottles of brandy in the main dining room, cabinet under the TV.”

Scattering the minced parsley around the salmon rosettes, she washed her hands and rushed to her cabin, donning the spandex sheath. On impulse, she added a slash of scarlet lipstick and yearned for the requisite high heels to go with it. Back in the kitchen, she sliced black olives, garnished the antique pewter tray with them, nabbed a handful of decorative paper napkins, and stalked out of the confining room, shoulders squared.

Fortifying her courage, she flashed through the changes ten years had wrought. She knew she could survive almost any setback, and had almost saved enough for her own small bistro. Rolan Paxton wasn’t dealing with the naïve adoring teenager who had hung on his every word.

“I am a fool, a complete fool,” she said, hitting the doorframe so hard her palm stung. “Down girl, back to reality. What were the chances of me ever seeing Rolan again? Far less than him finding out about Tony. What did I do to call down this type of punishment?”

Those four Saturdays in detention with him had been the highlight of her life.

Since grade school, she’d been in love with him. Not that he ever noticed her existence. That first detention proved pure torture, and she had been sure he had clumped her into the nerd circle. Then that next Saturday, he’d thrown paper missiles at her and they’d spent six hours playing word games together.

Five weeks later, she’d waitressed on prom night, the event held at the town’s only country club. He’d arrived in the kitchen at midnight and insisted on driving her home. Flustered, flattered, in the throes of the worst adolescent crush, she accepted his offer of a ride. Then he’d kissed her in the car in the parking lot. She’d never been kissed before. The feel of his tongue sliding into her mouth, the way he’d growled and hauled her into his lap… Sarita shook her head and compressed her lips. Not going there, not making the same mistake twice.

Stiffening her spine, she took a deep breath, strode onto the deck, and spotted him speaking to one of those thin long-legged supermodels. Fool, fool to fall back into the fantasies of a sixteen-year-old doting girl.

She stepped onto the deck and into an episode of the rich and famous. Cringing inside, Sarita pasted a wide smile on her face. She served appetizers to Jessica Alba lookalikes, polished versions of Lindsay Lohan and Scarlett Johansson. By the time the tray held two lonely salmon rosettes, her self-confidence had flushed down the toilet. Rolan’s jade gaze stalked her every move and the flat line of his mouth intimidated her as much as his guests did. She made it back to the kitchen in record time and began preparing the six-course luncheon.

“Where the hell did you get those?”

She whirled around to face Rolan.

“Huh?” Apparently, intelligence vanished in his company.

“Jesus, you had little cupcakes. Where the hell did those come from?” He stared at her breasts.

She crossed her arms over them. “Go away. Why the hell would you follow me down here to ask that?”

“Because you flaunt those titties.”

“Oh,” she gasped, and her eyes narrowed. “How can you even say that? This happened after Tony was born. They…they just grew. I really hate you, Rolan Paxton.”

“Who told you to wear that number?” He was roaring by now, discombobulating her with every shout. “Cover up, for Christ’s sake. I won’t have the mother of my son dressing like some dime street whore. Don’t come back above deck until you’ve changed into something respectable.”

And he flounced, actually
flounced
out of the tiny kitchen.

Somewhere in her Salma Hayek imagination, she’d bought this little red number, little being the causative verb. Scarlet, just a tad below the ass, almost nipple baring, it was a dress that screamed the wearer’s intention. Temper fired, she marched to her cabin, shed the black sheath, and pulled the red spaghetti-strapped silk over her body. For a second she wavered, but wearing the dress at this point symbolized thumbing her nose at him. Besides, wouldn’t it be wonderful if he drooled. Sarita’s lips curved into a sneer-smile. She smoothed the skirt down, plumped up her breasts, and applied mascara.

Running late, she assembled the first course, foie gras burnished by an apple-brandy cream sauce. No one would complain about the food, especially him. She plated twelve Limoges dishes with red pepper garnishes and a few perfect basil leaves.

Austen bulldozed into the room.

“Whoa! Where’d you get that number? Hello lovey! I’m up for it, and most times I feel like your dad, but this ain’t one of ’em!”

“You’re exaggerating, Austen. It’s just me.”

“Lovey, in that dress, there isn’t anything that’s just you. Sarita, what the hell are you proving and to whom?”

“Just help me serve the first course.”

“Can I place odds on who’s serving the boss?”

She scowled at him, mouth tightening.

Rolan didn’t take his eyes off her, not for a second. And his lips compressed into a fierce thin line. She bent low to serve him and felt the spandex creep up her ass, which was on show to all and sundry, and she didn’t give a damn. Satisfaction warmed her soul.

Sarita did a little stripper’s sway when she left the dining room, all aglow and thrilled to have thrown him a curveball. She didn’t even make through the kitchen doorway before he railroaded her into a corner, snatched the pewter tray from her hands, and tossed it onto the counter.

It clanged and thwanged, the noise matching the explosive tension sizzling in the compact kitchen.

“Rolan,” she said, the murmured protest bedeviled by the fear in her voice. “Stop, you’re scaring me.”

“Good. If you ever display those tits and that ass again, I will flay your backside until it’s raw.”

“Mom?”

They both turned to that whispered voice. Tony’s green gaze, wide and troubled, met theirs. “I don’t care if you are my dad, you can’t hurt my mom.”

Firm, growled, and oh so like Rolan.

Something in the back of her throat collapsed.

“We can’t do this,” she mumbled. “It’s not fair to Tony.”

“You’re right,” he said and slicked two hands through his unruly wheat hair. “We have a son. He has to come first.”

“Yes. He comes first.”

He drew a forefinger around her neckline. “Please change.”

A question, loaded, but not a command.

“Yes.” Deflated, the wind sucked out of her sails, she stared at the floor and wondered how she could face everyone again.

“Where’s your cabin?”

“Next to the kitchen.”

“Terry’s famous organization. That man is all about efficiency.”

They didn’t speak another word.

She made her way to the cabin with Rolan in tow, shut the door on him, and changed into a somber black dress.

When she came out, he raked her from head to toe and said, “Doesn’t make one iota of difference, I’m as hard as a rock. That little red number will star in my fantasies for a very long time.”

“Rolan?” She had no idea what question she asked, but something thundered in the air between them.

“Sarita,” he said, took her hand in the gentlest of movements, and kissed the center of her palm, his tongue leaving a wet heated circle.

The caress curled her toes, fluttered her belly, did strange things to her center, making her moist and heated, hot, really, really hot. She squeezed her thighs together. “I don’t want this.”

“Neither do I.”

One arm snagged her waist and he pulled her against his overheated body, his erection rigid against her stomach. A finger tipped her chin and she couldn’t avoid his gaze.

“Something’s happening Sarita, and I’m not sure we have much control over it. But we have a son, a responsibility, and he has to come first.”

“I’m scared,” she said.

“Hell, I am too, but Tony has to be our main focus.”

She stared at the mosaic wall. “I know. Go back to your guests. I have to finish the salad course and the rest of the meal.”

With a sidelong trace of her cheek, he murmured his agreement and left. She didn’t have to leave the kitchen to finish the luncheon, so she had Austen serve the meal and kept out of sight, retiring to her cabin as soon as the last guest departed. Bankrupt, emotionally and physically, she swallowed a couple of Tylenol PMs and fell into a deep slumber as soon as her head hit the pillow.

When she lifted heavy-as-cast-iron lids, Rolan came into focus. At first, she figured her fantasies had run riot, but he became more real as the drugged sleep left her eyes.

“Rolan?” Sarita knuckled her lids. “Why are you here?”

Puzzled, wondering if she’d tumbled into another cabin by mistake, she surveyed the small space. Her savored possessions, the pink ribbon from prom night, Tony’s first blue medal for football, and the statues of Lord Krishna and the goddess Lakshmi, came into view. Her space.

“Marry me,” he said, the words firm and ringing.

“I’m dreaming.” She rubbed the corners of her eyes harder as if the pressure would evaporate little girl wishes and hopes.

“It makes sense,” he said, and his harsh tone hit her like a knockout punch. “We can be real parents for Tony.”

And she wanted to weep. Weep and rail at the unfairness of life. Not a word about them making love ten years ago, not a word about how he felt about her. Instead bland, logical words, which erased that little hint of hope left in her soul, that little bit of her that still believed in happy ever afters. So much for adolescent fantasies. Tony needed a male role model, Roland wanted the responsibility. Sarita surrendered to the inevitable.

“Fine,” she blurted. “Tell me where and when, and I’ll show up.”

She hopped out of the bed and disappeared into the head. “I’m having a shower and then we can discuss the details.”

After slamming the door shut, she stared at it for long moments, before twisting the shower knob to the right. Warm water solved a million problems. She ducked into the stall.

He was gone when she came out.

Numbed, despairing, she shrugged on a chintz-patterned cotton sundress, forced her legs into motion, and made her way to the deck.

Rolan stood there, hips braced against the deck rail, ankles crossed.

Although it seemed impossible, he’d become more handsome over the years. Six feet one of honed muscle, long legs, lean hips clad in black jeans. He wore a sable T-shirt, which amplified his broad shoulders and contrasted sharply against the platinum streaks in his chin length hair. The color of his eyes had always caused her lungs to stammer, and even though Anthony’s were the exact same emerald shade, it didn’t matter. His intent gaze caught and held hers, and her heart did a wild staccato beat hammering and thudding in her chest. She could eat him up; he looked like a marauding predator.

Delicious.

Enticing.

Tony’s father.

Captain Terry O’Connor had taken the yacht out for its daily spin and they faced the calm surface of the aquamarine Mediterranean. A brisk sea breeze whipped Rolan’s lion’s mane away from his chiseled jaw. On the short walk from her cabin to the deck, she’d changed her mind about marriage ten times, vacillating between him, Tony, and hard-won independence.

“I had Austen get me a special license. We can get hitched today.”

His words tilted the decision.

“No.” And sadness sank into her very depths. It meant nothing to him, nothing at all. And it had been all she had dreamed about these last ten years, the country club life with Rolan, being the blonde tennis-playing wife, the two-car family, having a husband who adored her.

BOOK: Manacled in Monaco
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