Reading Online Novel

The Bride Fonseca Needs(12)



Darcy felt hotter. 'But we didn't.' Thank God. 'We came to our senses.'  She waved a hand. 'What I'm trying to say is that even now we are  embarking on this ridiculous charade-'

'That I'll be paying you handsomely for...' Max pointed out, immediately making Darcy's irritation levels rise.

'And for which you'll be earning your place among the financial giants of the world,' she lashed back.

Max's jaw clenched. 'Touché.'

Darcy had leaned forward in her agitation but she pulled back now,  forcing herself to stay calm. 'What I'm saying is that this marriage is  going to be fake in every sense of the word. If you want anything  physical then I'm sure you can get it from the legion of women in your  little black book.'

Max folded his arms and regarded her. 'There's something incredibly  ironic about the fact that I always swore I'd never enter into the state  of matrimony and yet now I find myself on the brink of such a  situation-'

'Caused by you,' Darcy flung at him.

That made him dip his head in acknowledgement before he continued, 'I  find myself with a wife who won't sleep with me. I would never have  anticipated that as a problem to be surmounted.'

'No,' Darcy said waspishly. 'I don't imagine you would have. Like I  said-call someone else to provide you with any extra-curricular services  you might require. I'm sure you can be discreet.' She looked at him,  wondering just why this conversation was making her so angry. 'I would  just avoid a three-in-a-bed romp-that won't endear you to Montgomery if  it gets out like the last one did.'

Max made an irritated sound. 'For what it's worth that was a PR stunt  for charity that ended up being leaked before we could explain it, so it  never got used. You can't seriously think I'd be so crass?'

Darcy looked at him and cursed him. He looked positively angelic.  Wrapped up in a demon. And of course he wouldn't be so crass. Max oozed  sophistication. She should have known better. And now she'd revealed  that she'd been keeping an eye on his exploits. Damn him.

She looked away. 'Whatever, Max-just don't make me look like a fool.'

'The same goes for you, you know,' came the softly delivered response.

Darcy looked at him and for a moment all she could see was the way Max  had looked at her the other night, when she'd pulled back from his  embrace, cheeks flushed, eyes glittering dangerously. 'Don't worry,' she  said, as frigidly as she could, 'I won't have a problem curbing my  urges.'

Max had muttered something she couldn't catch-something like We'll see  about that-just as the car had pulled up outside the small plane.

Darcy's attention came back to the plane. Max was staring out of his  window. Not goading her or looking at her with those mesmerising eyes.  She remembered what he'd told her last night and how she'd wanted to  leave his apartment-get away before he might see something on her face  or in her expression. Empathy. A treacherous desire to help him achieve  what he wanted.

'I didn't know your brother was a twin.'

Max turned his head slowly and looked at her. 'It's not really common knowledge.'

'I saw pictures of him...the wedding. You're not identical?'

Max shook his head and smiled, but it was hard. 'I'm prettier than my  brother.' His self-mocking expression was anything but pretty. It was  utterly masculine, making a mockery of 'pretty'. Especially with that  scar running from his temple to his jaw.

Darcy felt breathless. 'You said you're closer now?'

Max raised a brow. 'Did I?'

'Last night...you said you were working with him.'

Max's mouth tightened. 'For a cause-not because we sit up at night  drinking cocoa and reminiscing about our childhood experiences.'

Darcy rolled her eyes at his sarcastic response just as the plane  banked. She took the opportunity to escape Max's gaze and looked out to  see Paris laid out in all its glory, the distinctive Eiffel Tower  glinting in the distance. Fine. Obviously Max wasn't about to launch  into any more confessionals. He'd probably already told her far more  than he wanted to.                       
       
           



       

And she wasn't curious. Not at all.

* * *

Max watched as Darcy inspected the trays of rings laid out for their  perusal. He almost smiled at her overwhelmed expression. She had been  pretty slack-jawed since they'd walked into the opulent Rococo interior  of one of the oldest jewellery establishments in the world. A byword in  luxury, wealth and romance. These jewellers had supplied jewels for all  the major royal houses, iconic movie stars and heads of state.

But he was still curbing the irritation he'd felt ever since Darcy's  very stark insistence that they observe professional boundaries-marriage  or no. Was the woman completely blind? All he had to do was come within  two inches of her and the electricity was practically visible.

Even now he couldn't take his gaze off the way her breasts pressed  lushly against the edge of the glass case they were sitting in front of.  He'd noticed the sales assistant's eyes drop too, and had glared at the  man so fiercely he'd almost dropped a tray of priceless rings.

Darcy's reminder that she would have been long gone if not for this  wedding arrangement caused another ripple of irritation. Max wasn't used  to things morphing out of his control. It was a sense of control hard  won and fought for-literally.

But when Darcy looked at him with those huge blue eyes all he wanted to  do was throw control out of the window and give in to pure basic  instinct. And yet she had the wherewithal to sit there and draw a little  prim circle around herself saying, Not over the line.

She looked at him now, and Max couldn't imagine a woman looking less enthusiastic to be here.

He frowned. 'What is it?'

She glanced at the assistant, who moved away for a moment, discreetly polishing a ring.

'I don't know what to choose-they're all so ridiculously expensive... I  mean, you're going to insure the ring, right? I'd hate for anything to  happen to it-especially when this isn't even for real.'

Max saw the clear turmoil on Darcy's face and it was like a punch to  his gut to realise just how different she was from any other woman he  might have brought to a place like this. They would have had absolutely  no qualms about choosing the biggest and most sparkly bauble in the  shop. And he would have indulged them without even thinking. It gave him  a sense of distaste now.

He took her hand in his. It felt unbearably small and soft. 'Darcy,  you're overthinking this. Just choose a ring. We'll get it insured.  Okay?'

After a moment she nodded, and then said, 'Sorry, I'm probably making this boring for you.'

She looked back at the rings and some hair slipped over her shoulder,  obscuring her face. Without thinking Max reached for it and tucked it  behind her ear again. She looked at him and he couldn't resist. He  leaned forward and pressed a kiss next to the corner of that  surprisingly lush mouth.

Immediately her eyes went darker, but then they flashed. 'I told you-'

His hand gripped hers and he smiled as he said, 'We're buying a ring  for our whirlwind engagement, cara mia, people are watching.'

She looked around quickly and then ducked her head, whispering fiercely, 'Fine...just in public.'

Max said nothing, but vowed right then to make sure they were in public as much as possible.

* * *

Darcy looked at the ring on her finger from different angles as Max  discreetly paid the bill. Someone had delivered her a glass of champagne  and she sipped it now. Grateful for the slightly numbing sensation.  Numbing her from thinking about how choosing the ring had impacted on  her so much.

It had brought up all sorts of unwelcome and tangled emotions. As a  small girl she'd used to love going into her mother's jewellery box and  looking at the glittering earrings and bracelets. But the engagement  ring had been her favourite, made of nine baguette diamonds surrounded  by sapphires and set in white gold.

Darcy had used to put it on, holding it in place and imagining herself in it, marrying a handsome prince.

And then one day it had disappeared. Darcy had asked her mother where  it was, only to be told curtly that she'd sold it. That had been the  beginning of the end of the fairytales in Darcy's imagination, as her  parents' marriage had fractured and split apart over an agonising year  of arguments and bitter recrimination.

Today the ring Darcy had chosen in the end had been far too close to  something she might choose for real, but she hadn't been able to  resist-some rogue devil had urged her on. A rectangular-shaped diamond,  surrounded by smaller baguette diamonds, set in platinum. It was  positively discreet when compared with some of the other choices, but  right now it felt like an unbearably heavy weight on her hand.                       
       
           



       

'Ready?'

Darcy looked up to see Max waiting. She grew warm, thinking of him  watching her as she'd been inspecting the ring, and almost sprang out of  the chair.