Reading Online Novel

New Year at the Boss's Bidding(27)



'I'm sorry if it's been miserable, stuck here with me.' There was a  hint of hurt in his voice as he spoke firmly, bringing her rapidly from  her thoughts.

'No, it's not that.' She struggled to find the right way to explain.  'Neither of us planned this to happen and if we are totally honest, we  know what did happen wouldn't have if it hadn't been for the snow.'

'You are right. It wouldn't have.' The hard words fired back at her and  her heart squeezed with pain. What they'd shared had been nothing more  than a passing moment. Two vulnerable people stranded together, sharing  secrets. But even so she'd harboured a little bit of hope.

'And once we are back in London?' She almost didn't dare ask, but she needed to know, needed to hear it from him.

For a moment she dared to allow herself to imagine him saying he wanted  to see her again, that he wanted much more than just the three nights  they'd spent here together. She looked at his hard expression, realising  such hope was futile. What they'd shared was over. The mutually  beneficial fling had come to an end, expired, just as her contract had  done.

'I will have your van returned to you as soon as possible.' His voice  shattered the fragile image of things she shouldn't want. The fact that  it would be returned and not that he would return it didn't go  unnoticed. All connections would be severed and his life would go on as  before. Whereas hers... How could she go back to her life when he'd  woken the spontaneous, happy and passionate woman she'd always wished  she could be?

'I don't want anyone to know about us.' She looked down at the  breakfast, which suddenly looked very unappetising. She was acting from  self-preservation. There was no way she could admit what she really  wanted. This was worse than her wedding morning when Jason had told her  it was over. 'From a professional point of view, I don't want to risk  future clients finding out.'

'Sì, that is best. What happened here will stay here, within these walls, probably adding to secrets from generations ago.'

She looked up at him, pain crushing her. How had she got so close so  quickly? Was it simply because of the intimate moments they'd shared,  the secrets they'd spoken of?

It was much more than that-for her at least. It was love. She hadn't  ever allowed herself to fall in love, not even with Jason, and without  realising it she'd fallen in love with Xavier Moretti as quickly as the  snow had fallen from the grey sky. The worst man possible to love.

He wasn't like the boy she'd grown up with who had suddenly wanted more  from life than she could give. This was a man who thrived on his  playboy reputation, who was probably even now planning his next  meaningless affair.

He didn't love her. She had to remember that as they left this place.  For him it had been nothing more than an opportune affair, just as it  should have been for her.

No matter how her heart broke at the prospect, she was determined to  say goodbye in a cool and dignified way. She couldn't risk him knowing  how she felt, not when he would merely dismiss that love as nothing. She  would walk away from this with her head held high.

* * *

Xavier put their cases into the back of the four-wheel drive his friend  had organised, thankful that they would at least be heading back to  London before the end of the day. He didn't think he could spend another  night here and not go to Tilly.

He glanced at her as she got into the back and wondered how she really  felt. The driver sat solemnly waiting as he climbed up into the back  beside her. There wouldn't be any chance of talk now. Not real talk.  He'd never know if it had been simply lust-filled passion or something  more that had filled their nights.

Her cold acceptance and obvious relief at being rescued proved what  she'd said as they'd walked in the snow yesterday morning. Their first  night together had been wrong, a mistake. So what did that make last  night? Another item ticked off her list, one to prove her new-found  spontaneity?

He tried to ignore the sizzle from being close to her. Tilly pulled out  her phone and sent a text. She looked up at him, as if sensing his  scrutiny.

'Just letting Vanessa know I'm heading back to London. We'll catch up  at her party.' Her face looked a little pale but she smiled brightly at  him, her excitement for her friend showing clearly. Or was it that they  were on their way home and she would be free of him?                       
       
           



       

He looked out at the passing countryside, white and unrecognisable,  admitting that whatever strange emotion she'd evoked in him, he wasn't  looking for any kind of commitment. How could he when most nights the  accident filled his dreams and the pain remained in his legs as a  constant reminder. The last two nights had been dream-free. He stifled a  growl of anger. He didn't deserve the love of a woman when he'd  deprived another of the man she loved because of the need to win a race.

Finally the snowy countryside gave way to suburban scenes and he knew  there wouldn't be much longer to endure this feeling of being tortured.  He'd say goodbye, make it clear it was exactly that and walk away.  Whatever he was beginning to feel for her, she deserved better.

'Not long now,' she said, her soft words dragging him from his  thoughts. He didn't recognise the streets they were in and tried not to  notice where they were going. He didn't want to know where she lived.

'It's good to be back,' he lied, hoping the harshness of his words  would leave her in no doubt it was over between them. This was his way  of protecting them both from the hot passion and tender love they'd  shared that could never be repeated.

'Yes. It is.' Her soft voice held a hint of regret.

The driver pulled over and before he'd had a chance to stop himself he  looked out at the street they were in. Damn. He didn't want to see its  name, didn't want it imprinted on his mind so he could imagine her here.  He wanted it to remain just an anonymous London street. He needed to  keep her for ever in the snowy manor, in his memory at least.

'I'll walk you to your door.' He was out of the vehicle before she could argue and as he pulled her case out she joined him.

'There's no need Xavier, please.' The defiant lift of her chin reminded him of the first time he'd wanted to kiss her.

The firmness of her words also held a warning. She didn't want to  prolong them being together at all, or for him to know exactly where she  lived.

'Va bene. Then I say goodbye and thank you.'

'Thank you?' Her soft lips parted, unwittingly inviting his kiss, and  he clenched his hands tightly against the need to take that kiss.

'It was a very memorable New Year's Eve, despite the circumstances that  forced us together.' He knew he sounded brisk and indifferent, he could  see the shock in her eyes, but he was reminding himself he couldn't  have more.

'We're back in London now and our time at the manor stays there.  Remember?' There was a slight wobble to her voice and a question in her  eyes. He fought hard against the urge to tell her that he wanted more,  if only guilt would set him free, but he couldn't tell her. She'd calmly  told him he was nothing more than a tick on her list. A fling to get  over the man who'd broken her heart.

'Sì, cara. I remember. Arrivederci, Natalie.' Pride kept him from saying anything-and fear of rejection.

* * *

'Goodbye, Signor Moretti.' Tilly's legs were weak as she stood there,  looking into the handsome face of the man she loved. She wanted to tell  him not to go, tell him something special had started, something they  shouldn't let go of, but the fierce glitter in his eyes kept her words  from forming.

He hadn't hidden the fact that all he'd expected had been a brief  affair, company during the hours of darkness. She'd used the same excuse  herself, but it had been a way of justifying how he'd swept her away  that first moment their eyes had met. She'd labelled it a bucket list  fling in her mind, one Jason had pushed her into. But if she was honest  she knew it was more.

She picked up her small overnight bag and clutched the dress she'd  draped over her arm as if it were a lifeline. Never again could she wear  it, or even look at it.

She turned and walked towards the main door of her flat. The building  was familiar and should have steadied her nerves, but it didn't. Nothing  in London seemed to have changed-but she had.

'Tilly?'

Hope flared to life inside her at the tentative tone of his voice as  she turned back to look at him. Tell me, she thought as she watched  various emotions cross his face. Tell me you want me-that you've fallen  in love with me.

'Yes?' Her voice sounded amazingly firm considering all that was rushing around in her head.

'Email me with the bill-and make sure the cost reflects all the time you were at the manor.'

She swallowed down the bad taste that had sprung to her lips. He didn't  want her-all he was worried about was settling his bill. And she  thought she'd used him.