‘Nice to meet you.’
His hand squeezed hers. ‘You too.’
Serena pulled away, getting hot, sensing Luca’s intense focus on them and Max’s desire to needle his brother. When she looked at Luca, though, he gave nothing away and she cursed herself. Of course he wouldn’t be proprietorial or jealous.
Luca indicated for them to sit down and said heavily, ‘Max has some news for you...and me. I thought I owed it to you to let him tell you face to face.’
Now Serena was nervous, and she looked from him to Max and back. ‘What is it?’
Luca explained. ‘I asked Max to look into what happened at the club that night—to do some digging.’
Before she could properly assimilate that information, Max drawled in a deep voice, ‘My brother knows I have some...less than legitimate connections.’
Serena looked at him and her heart went out to both of them for what they’d been through as children. The way their parents had all but rolled the dice to decide their fate.
Huskily she admitted, ‘I... Luca told me what happened.’
Max’s eyes flared and he shot his brother a scowl.
Luca said warningly, ‘This isn’t about us.’
For a second Serena could have laughed. They might not be identical, but right then she could see how similar they were—and they probably didn’t even know it themselves.
Max looked back to her. ‘I did some digging and discovered who did plant the drugs on Luca that night. He was a small-time dealer and in the crush he spotted you together. He knew that if he could plant the drugs on you or Luca no one would ever dispute that you had been involved.’
Shame lanced Serena to be reminded that everyone knew of her exploits and how tarnished her reputation was, even as her heart beat fast and she wondered why Luca had asked his brother to do this.
Max continued. ‘He’s actually in jail at the moment on another charge, and he’s been bragging to anyone who will listen about how he set you and Luca up—it would appear that he couldn’t bear to keep such a coup to himself. He’s been charged with the offence and hasn’t a leg to stand on because he’s confessed to so many witnesses.’
For a moment the relief was so enormous that Serena felt dizzy, even though she was sitting down. She looked at Luca, whose face was stern. ‘You can clear your name.’
He nodded, but he didn’t look happy about it. He looked grim.
Max stood up, rising with athletic grace. ‘My flight leaves in a couple of hours. I have to go.’
Serena stood up too. ‘Thank you so much. This means...a lot.’
Max inclined his head before sending an enigmatic look to his brother. ‘I’ll be in touch.’
Luca nodded. They didn’t embrace or shake hands before Max left, striding out with that same confident grace as his brother.
When he was gone, Serena sank down onto the chair, her head in a spin. She looked at Luca, barely taking in that he looked a little pale, his face all lean lines. ‘How...? Why did you ask him to do this?’
He sighed heavily. ‘Because I owed it to you to find out the truth. After all, you’ve been nothing but honest with me. The fact is that I think I suspected you were innocent in the jungle. This just proves that you were as much a victim as I was. You deserve to have your life back, Serena. And you deserve to have the slate cleared too. My lawyers and my PR team will make sure this is in all the papers.’
Serena felt an almost overwhelming surge of emotion to think that Luca was going out of his way to clear her name too. Perhaps now people wouldn’t always associate her with feckless debauchery.
Treacherously, this made her hope for too much, even when The End was written into every tense line of Luca’s body. Clearly he just wanted to move on now.
It made her want to push him away again, for making her feel too much. For making her fall in love. Damn him.
‘And if Max hadn’t found the culprit so easily? Would you have believed me anyway?’
Luca stood up and paced behind his desk, his white shirt pulled across his chest, trousers hugging slim hips. Just like that, heat flared in Serena’s solar plexus.
He stopped and looked at her. ‘Yes.’
Serena cursed herself for pushing him. She hated herself for the doubt, for thinking that he was lying. And then she had to concede that Luca didn’t lie. He was too moral. Too damn good.
She stood up again, her legs wobbly. ‘Well, thank you for finding out.’
Luca looked at her for a long moment, and then he said, ‘Serena—’
She put up her hand, because she couldn’t bear for him to say it. ‘Wait. I have something I need to tell you first.’