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Marrying Cade(7)

By:Sally Clements


"One of the drivers … Benito." The driver walked closer, raising his hands in apology. "He's drunk."

Melo bit back the curse that automatically threatened to escape. There  was no point in berating the driver about it. She hated people who shot  the messenger. She rubbed her eyes wearily. Eighty guests to ferry back  to the Fiori Hotel. And only three drivers. It meant they would all have  to do double shifts. No, dammit, it meant she would have to do three.

Cade stepped out of the shadows. "I can do it."

She felt her jaw gape open. "You? But you're a guest … " Her family was  very strong on protocol, everyone was supposed to be enjoying the party,  not worrying about how to get the party guests home.

"And you, Melo? Aren't you supposed to be enjoying the party too?" He  traced warm fingers down her arm, sending a flurry of goose bumps over  her entire body. "Give me the keys." It wasn't a request; it was a  command. "I told you I'd be keeping you company, I haven't drunk a thing  all night." Warm lips trailed over her cheek. "I want to help. Let me."





Chapter Four



"Melo? Where's my bikini?"

Melo forced her eyelids open as her whirlwind of a sister rushed in and  pulled open the curtains. She glanced at the alarm clock. Seven thirty.  Four whole hours since she crawled into bed. She groaned. "Rosa, we  don't need to get ready for a couple of hours … "

"Come on, Melo!" Rosa tugged at her arm. "I want to find my bikini and  get my bag ready for the boat." She planted her hands on her hips, a  mutinous expression darkening her expression.

Melo sighed, and sat up in bed. There was no talking to her sister in  this mood. She climbed out, and shoved her feet into her slippers.  "Where did you leave it?"

When Rosa had returned from the shopping trip in Florence, she'd dumped  her purchases in a mound in the corner of Melo's room. Now she fell on  them like a starving lioness bringing down a gazelle.

"There it is!" Rosa raised a bag high. She rushed to the bed, and  uploaded its contents on the warm gold cover, hands scrabbling. A hot  pink, barely-there bikini dangled from her fingertips. "Isn't it  gorgeous?"

Only Rosa would have the confidence to bare her curves in such an incendiary garment. "Yeah, gorgeous."

Melo's throat was parched. She stripped and quickly pulled on her jeans  and T-shirt. There was no way she was sitting here admiring Rosa's  purchases a moment longer. Not without coffee.

"I got a great kaftan, too." Rosa waved a pink and gold fragment in the air. "Thanks, Melo."

Like a demanding toddler, Rosa was all sunny smiles now she got what she  wanted. She snatched up an armful and headed for the door.

"Hey, you forgot something." A couple of scraps of something white lay  on Melo's bed. She picked them up, fingers sliding over the smooth  fabric.

"That's for you." Rosa grinned. "And before you ask, no, I haven't seen  your black Speedo anywhere. You'll have to wear it." She trounced out of  the door in a flurry of bouncing blonde curls.                       
       
           



       

"Rosa?" Melo raced across the room to her chest of drawers. Tugging the  top one open, she groaned in frustration as her fingers searched  frantically for her all-encompassing black one-piece. It was true.  Rosa'd nicked it. She ran shaking fingers through her hair. The plan was  to get Cade's attention, and in the miniscule scraps of white that was a  given. The question was, did she have the nerve?

****

"The coach is picking us up from the hotel." Rosa smothered her  croissant with raspberry jam. "Then we're off to the boat for the sail  around the island. I'm so excited; everything is going to be perfect."

"And you've organized lunch on board, Melo?" Mary questioned.

"Yes, Mum. Everything is ready." Melo gulped a mouthful of coffee and  dragged in an uneven breath. Crunch time. There was no way she could  make the trip. She'd promised her father to sit and work through the  figures as soon as she could. "I've decided to stay here."

Rosa's cup clattered into her saucer. "What?" She pinned Melo with a  glare. "But you're the bridesmaid. You're supposed to do everything with  me. What will everyone think?"

Melo glanced at her mother, praying she'd take the bait. "They'll  understand. If I stay to keep an eye on Papa, Mum can go. You'd like to  go wouldn't you, Mum?"

Rosa tossed her hair back from her face, and stuck her bottom lip out in a pout.

"Mum's coming anyway. And Papa will be fine. He has the doctor and his  nurse looking after him, he won't even realize we've gone."

Mary cleared her throat. "I'd feel much happier if one of us stayed,  darling." Her fingers playing with the handle of her china cup and she  raised her bright blue gaze to her daughter. "I feel guilty going, I'll  stay."

"Oh, Mum! You can't!" Rosa wasn't above wailing when she didn't get what she wanted, and she was in full pampered-princess mode.

The pulse in Melo's jaw twitched. Give me strength. She patted her mother's hand.

"You go, Mum."

A silent burst of communication flashed between them.

"Well, if you're sure … "

"I am." Melo drained her coffee and stood up. "I'll see you later."

****

"Ciao, Cade. Thanks for coming."

Marco lounged on a worn wicker sun bed, propped up with cushions covered  in faded red brocade. A huge sun umbrella shaded him from the blazing  sunshine, and a woolen blanket swathed his legs. He gestured to an empty  wicker chair next to the small, mosaic-topped table. "Sit. Please."

The housekeeper bustled out of the open glass doors with a tray of  freshly squeezed lemonade with a small plate of biscotti. Marco thanked  her, and stayed silent until she disappeared from view. "I'm glad we  have this chance to talk in private."

Cade brought the frosted glass to his lips and drank deeply of the  frigid liquid. His tongue puckered at the sharp lemony taste, and he bit  into a biscotti to dilute the sensation. The flavor of almonds and  lemon was a great combination.

"I have been watching your progress, over the past decade. You've done  well." Marco crunched the crisp almond biscuit with his teeth, and  chewed noisily. "How many hotels do you have now?"

"Seven. The American and Canadian hotels, one in Wales, and in a couple  of months I'm opening my latest in Scotland." The West Hotel Group was a  force to be reckoned with, but Cade's ambitions were a long way from  being recognized.

"Nothing in Italy?"

Cade watched Marco carefully. What was the old guy getting at? "Not yet."

"As you know, Cade, Isola dei Fiori is a very simple place. But very  beautiful. I wanted to talk to you about the possibility of you siting a  hotel here."

Shock thundered through Cade like a freight train. Sure, he'd had his  suspicions, but he never thought he'd see the day Marco would suggest  development on the island. The entire family had always seemed so  determined to keep it just as it had always been-private and unspoiled.

Cade pushed his hair back from his face. Sipped his lemonade. Kept his  voice even, and his face impassive. "Whereabouts, exactly?" he asked.

Marco's alert eyes captured his.

Cade's mouth dried. It was like being interviewed for a job, something  he hadn't experienced for years. Not since the days when he'd  desperately needed one, after his father's death when they'd lost their  home and his family had to scrimp and save to get by.

The old man's voice was a strained whisper. "Do you remember Paradise Beach?"                       
       
           



       

How could he forget? He'd spent every day of his holiday on the deserted  white sands with Melo, Adam, and Rosa for company. Walking in the cool  water, as brightly colored tiny fish darted around his ankles, like  shimmering sunlight beneath the waves. The clear azure water flowed over  soft white sand, and they'd eaten picnics in the shelter of the dunes.  It was a private haven, a little piece of heaven. And even though the  site was perfect for a hotel, something clenched in Cade's chest at the  thought of exploiting it.

"I remember it, Marco," Cade said, wanting to hear more of the old man's plans.

"I have decided to sell it. For a hotel." Marco's mouth thinned. "I thought perhaps you … "

"It's very beautiful … "

"I have decided to sell immediately. If you're not interested, I will  have to sell to Felix Mezzuti. He's shown interest in building on the  island in the past."

Felix Mezzuti? Cade felt his eyes widen. He'd never met the infamous  developer, but the man's reputation as a ruthless businessman preceded  him. He'd been involved in a development in Rome where he'd callously  destroyed a lake in order to build a hotel that was much too big for the  small community surrounding it. When business hadn't been up to his  expectations he'd closed it, leaving a damaged ecosystem in his wake. He  couldn't possibly be allowed to develop on Isola dei Fiori.