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Second Chance with the Millionaire(27)


       
           



       

Sophy's advice was sound and practical, and it warmed Lucy's heart that Saul's mother should be concerned for her well-being.

'Saul's told us about the problem with your pregnancy,' she commented as  she turned away from the window and walked over to another door. 'This  is the bedroom,' she said as she opened it and waited for Lucy to walk  through.

Like the sitting-room, the bedroom was decorated in soft yellows and  blues, the floral fabric very English country-house in style, and the  walls washed in a soft golden yellow and rag-rolled.

'Anything British is very "in" over here at the moment,' Sophy  commented. 'But I must admit it was more nostalgia than fashion that  made me have this suite decorated like this.'

'It's lovely,' Lucy told her, looking hurriedly away from the huge  double bed. Seeing it had given her a shock. She knew that Saul's family  were not aware of the reality of their marriage, but somehow she had  expected that they would be given a room with two single beds.

'The bathroom's through here,' Sophy told her, indicating a door in the  far wall of the bedroom, 'and the closet's there. Since you're only  staying the one night, I'll tell Elena not to unpack your things. Saul  says you'll be living in his apartment until you can find somewhere more  congenial. The girls will be coming round for lunch tomorrow, so you'll  get a chance to meet them then. I'll leave you to get changed now.'

Before she left, Sophy turned to kiss her cheek.

She squeezed her arm lightly as she released her. 'I'm very glad that  Saul married you, Lucy,' she told her, frowning slightly as she saw the  sparkle of tears in the brown eyes. 'My dear, is something wrong? Don't  you feel well?'

'I'm fine …  Just overwhelmed by your kindness,' Lucy told her shakily. 'I  thought you'd probably loathe me, especially when I think of the way my  father behaved towards Saul.'

'George was my brother, don't forget,' Sophy reminded her drily. 'I know  exactly what he was like; we never saw eye to eye as children. I liked  your mother very much though. She was a sweet girl.' She frowned and  then said honestly, 'I must say I was angry when I heard what George had  done with the estate-but I suppose I should have expected it. He always  was almost obsessive about it. He must have been bitterly disappointed  when his second marriage produced another daughter.'

Lucy was beginning to feel the effects of the long flight; exhaustion  creeping over her and Saul's mother's warm reception of her relaxing her  normal guard, she replied without thinking, 'Oh yes, especially with  Oliver being born before he and Fanny … ' As she realised what she was  saying she went silent, a dark tide of guilty colour stealing up under  her skin.

Sophy frowned again, and then said slowly, 'Are you saying that Oliver is George's child?'

She had said too much to retract now and, biting her lip, Lucy nodded  her head. 'That was why he sold off so much of the estate. He wanted to  provide for Oliver. He wanted to have him made legitimate so that he  could inherit but Fanny wouldn't hear of it. She went frantic at the  very suggestion because she said she couldn't endure the gossip it would  lead to. I don't think she ever really understood my father's obsession  for the Manor. She could see no real advantage in Oliver inheriting it,  especially when my father had provided so well for him financially.'

'If Oliver had been legitimate, would he have been able to keep the Manor going-financially I mean?'

'No,' Lucy told her honestly. 'And I think in his heart my father knew  that. If he himself had lived much longer he would have had to  sell-either that or let the house deteriorate around him. The estimate  for the roof repairs alone was nearly £250,000, more than my father  realised from everything he sold.'

'Saul intends to keep it-and to have it fully restored. He can afford to  of course. Thanks to my husband Saul's a very, very wealthy man. Harry  gave both girls a million dollars when they married but Saul is his  partner in the business. Those two are much on the same wavelength when  it comes to the construction industry, and they're very close-much  closer in many ways than if they were actually father and son.                       
       
           



       

'I'm glad Saul found you, Lucy. We've been worried about him; wanting to  see him settling down with a wife and family and yet worried that he  might marry the wrong girl. He's had lots of girlfriends-even several  serious relationships-but I think this is the first time I've ever seen  him genuinely in love. I could tell when he came home when Harry was ill  that he wasn't really with us, but of course we already knew about you  from his letters and phone calls.

'I'll leave you now,' Sophy said with a smile. 'If I stay here much  longer it will be dinner time and neither of us will be ready.'

Alone in the suite, Lucy went to stare out of the window, turning only  when Tomás came in with their cases, which he put in the bedroom. It had  surprised her to hear that Saul had talked about her to his family. If  all he had intended all along was simply to pay her back for her  childish cruelty all those years ago, surely he would have kept quiet  about her. But perhaps because of their blood relationship his mother  had been curious about her? Telling herself that such speculation would  do nothing but re-activate hopes she already knew were pointless, Lucy  searched through her case for the silk dress she intended to wear for  dinner, noting with relief that it was not creased, and taking it and  fresh underwear with her into the bathroom.

She was dressed and putting on her make-up when Saul came into the suite.

'I didn't unpack your case because I wasn't sure what you'd want,' she  told him, watching him unfasten and then flick back its lid.

When he selected a white tuxedo and dark trousers, she knew she had been  right in thinking his parents would dine in some formality.

Physically they made a well-matched couple, she thought miserably half  an hour later as she caught a glimpse of their double reflection in the  bedroom mirror, but they weren't a couple at all-at least not in the  true sense of the word. Just two people held together by the demands and  responsibility of the new life they had so thoughtlessly conceived.

The conversation over dinner was light and entertaining, her  mother-in-law an experienced and skilled hostess. Never for one moment  did Lucy feel out of place or unwanted. Her pregnancy was mentioned a  couple of times in the context of the general conversation, Sophy so  patently relaxed about it that Lucy felt some of her own apprehensions  ease.

She was grateful when Sophy suggested an early night, knowing that it  was only will-power that had kept her from yawning openly over the last  stages of the meal.

Suspecting that Saul would probably remain with his parents, she excused  herself, returning Sophy's almost motherly kiss as she and Harry said  their 'good nights'.

As she walked past Saul's chair, she smiled at him, too, trying not to show how tense she was.

'I won't be long,' he told her. 'I'm rather tired myself.'

While Harry laughed and teased him for being very unromantic for a newly married man, Lucy made her escape.

Already she was beginning to take the air-conditioning for granted,  showering quickly, and then cleansing her face and brushing her hair  before slipping between deliciously cool and soft percale sheets. The  quality of the bedding was something she had already noted and decided  to ask her mother-in-law about. There were a lot of adjustments she was  going to have to make in her new life and she was glad that Sophy was  there to help and advise her. At home they used linen sheets, originally  bought by her great-grandmother, and still going strong, but they were  nothing like as soft and comfortable as these.

The sound of a door opening and then closing brought her up through  several layers of sleep but not fully awake. The alarm the sounds had  triggered off faded as her subconscious recognised the sounds of the  decisive masculine movements about the room. The shower ran, a distantly  heard and faintly comforting sound. There were movements and then the  sensation of the bed depressing, accompanied by the silken rustle of  sheets and an elusively familiar, tangy male scent. Instinctively, Lucy  turned towards the source of it, her sleep deepening into complete  relaxation as she snuggled up against the warm male body so close to her  own. A smile curved her mouth as she nuzzled, contentedly, deeper into  the secure warmth.                       
       
           



       

Lying on his side looking down at her, Saul tensed and swore silently,  reaching out to push her away, and then changing his mind and instead  settling her more comfortably against his body, his arm curling around  her.