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A Virgin for His Prize(9)

By:Lucy Monroe


He set out to entertain and charm, succeeding to the point that she let him drive her home instead of calling for her father’s car and driver.

He pulled the Maserati, a different one than he’d been driving the year before, to a purring halt in front of her dad’s mansion. This one had a backseat.

“Still living with your father?” he asked, though he had to know, or why else would they be here?

“Yes.”

Max nodded. “No desire to live on your own?”

“He needs me.” It was an admission, but not one that would surprise an American tycoon with surprisingly deep Russian roots.

Romi didn’t even share with Maddie how bad things had gotten for her dad, but a year ago? She’d told Maxwell Black.

On their second date. Maybe that was why he’d put the sell-by date on their relationship after their third one.

But no, that was just the way Max ran his love life, or sex life really. The man didn’t believe in love. Well, that wasn’t quite accurate.

He believed the emotion was real enough, just refused to ever let himself feel it.

Romi wished she had the ability to turn her heart off.

But it was never going to happen.

“You are a good daughter.” His pewter eyes warmed with sincerity.

It was almost surreal. “What, no admonishment to leave him to work it out on his own?”

“What have I ever said that implied I did not take the obligations of family seriously?” Max actually sounded a little offended.

Feeling convicted for letting her own insecurities spill over onto him, Romi said, “Nothing.”

She knew he cared deeply for his mother.

Max had never been hesitant to admit he supported Natalya Black financially. They might live separately, but Romi had no doubt that if his mother needed to live with him, they would be sharing a residence right now. No questions, no lesser options.

“We share a dedication to family.”

“What we have of them,” she agreed.

Romi didn’t know why, but Max and his mother had no connection to their family back in Russia. He’d never mentioned his father, much less the man’s family, so Romi had always assumed they were either all gone or like her father’s family.

Estranged.

“I still see my mom’s family yearly.” Unlike the Graysons, who had turned their back on Harry when he’d married a woman from a decidedly middle-class background instead of old money, the Lawtons had remained in their daughter’s life and that of her husband and child.

Albeit on a more limited basis than Romi had always wanted.

“Why only once a year?” Max asked, like he was reading her mind.

She shrugged, looking away from him. “They only came to visit when my mom was alive. Since then, I’ve gone to stay with my grandparents for a couple of weeks every summer.”

But she and her father had never been invited to share the major holidays with them. Romi didn’t know if that was because he’d made it clear in some way he wasn’t interested, or if they weren’t, and she’d never really tried to find out.

It was enough she got a taste of the family that had made her mom the person she’d been. Even if that person was someone Romi would never know.

She’d enjoyed the different kind of living, sharing a room with the sewing machine and her grandmother’s craft projects, sleeping on the floor in the family room with her cousins when they stayed over. No servants, no cars and drivers, no shopping in exclusive boutiques.

Lots of summer barbecues, playing in a yard maintained better by her grandfather than any gardener her dad had ever employed.

“Why don’t any of them come to visit you?” Max asked.

She didn’t really know, but had made her own internal excuses. “It’s a long trip.”

“A few hours by plane.”

“Still.”

“It’s a different world for them, isn’t it?”

She nodded. She’d finally come to realize as an adult that her mom’s family found her life as an heiress—her bedroom that was a three-room suite in a multimillion-dollar mansion, all of the trappings of wealth—too foreign for comfort.

She thought maybe they hadn’t been any happier that Jenna had married Harry than the Graysons. The Lawtons just hadn’t turned their backs on their daughter.

Her grandparents were political activists like Romi, but unlike her, they had little affection or respect for the people that had populated Romi’s life since birth.

Old money wealth, big business, they were dirty words to her grandparents.

Romi had always wanted to make a difference, but she’d never felt the need to destroy the system to rebuild it.

Her grandparents had spent a month living in a tent during Occupy Wall Street. Her aunts and uncles weren’t as antiwealth and antiestablishment, but made no bones about the fact they preferred their suburban lives over Romi’s in San Francisco.