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The Cinderella Valentine للكاتبة ليز فليدنغ

The Cinderella Valentine رواية انجليزية من روايات هارلوكين الشهيره التابعه لها روايات احلام ارجو ان تنال اعجابكم الملخص: Polly Bright has just landed a

 
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قديم 07-09-06, 02:10 PM   المشاركة رقم: 1
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Talking The Cinderella Valentine للكاتبة ليز فليدنغ

 

The Cinderella Valentine


رواية انجليزية من روايات هارلوكين الشهيره التابعه لها روايات احلام ارجو ان تنال اعجابكم


الملخص:


Polly Bright has just landed a much-needed job as a waitress at the Chelsea Bella Lucia. But on her way to report for duty, a series of mishaps leave her unfit to be seen by the guests of the posh eatery! Will the surly, but sexy, manager, Luc Bellasario, send her packing—or has
this Cinderella met her very own Prince Charming



الرواية:


chapter 1


Polly had allowed herself plenty of time. She was leaving nothing to chance. She'd even used two alarm clocks, set at five-minute intervals, both of which had performed on cue. Emma Valentine had come through for her with a life and a sanity-saving job at Bella Lucia, her famous family's chic, elegant, A-list group of restaurants. Hard work, but big tips. This was not the day to turn over and go back sleep.
The bus—incredibly—arrived on time and dropped her off at a spot a mere two-minutes walk away from the classic, ornate Georgian building in the heart of Chelsea, where the first of the fabulous Bella Lucia restaurants had opened fifty years earlier.
For once in her life, Polly hadn't messed up.
Even the sun was shining.
"Excuse me?" Polly turned to see a harassed mother encumbered by a three-year-old, a baby and a buggy struggling to get off the bus. "Would you mind…?"
In an all's-right-with-my-world glow, Polly took the buggy and did what she'd done a hundred times when babysitting her nieces and nephews—flicked it open.
The buggy didn't open. It sprang wide like a hungry tiger, taking a chunk out of her tights. As she bent to check the damage, the three-year-old generously thrust the rusk he'd been chewing into her. A thick beige smear appeared on the front of her waistcoat. She was already off balance when a speeding motorbike, skimming the curb to dodge the traffic, finished the job and dumped her in the road.
It could have been worse.
She could have fallen under a bus.
All was not lost, Polly thought, as she picked herself up. She was early. With luck she'd be able to slip into the staff washroom, clean up and change into the spare pair of tights that she'd fortuitously slipped into her bag before Mr. Valentine saw her. She scooped up a strand of hair that had sprung loose, tucked it behind her ear, rang the bell on the wrought-iron gate that guarded the rear entrance and was buzzed through.
It was only then that she discovered what she should have known the minute the buggy attacked her: she had carelessly left her luck, like a forgotten umbrella, on the bus. Not missed until the heavens opened up and she actually needed it.
Right now the sun was shining, but, as the man blocking her dash to the staff washroom slowly turned, she could have sworn she heard a clap of thunder.
Maybe that was because he bore more than a passing resemblance to the devil himself.
His hair, a pelt of thick, crisp curls, was a glossy black. His nose proclaimed that his ancestors had once ruled the known world. His brows were bold, straight, dark and not even the sensual curve of his lower lip could override the impression that he was more used to giving than taking orders.
All he lacked was a pair of little horns, although curls that thick could hide a lot.
His eyes, the colour of warm treacle, might have softened the image, but they were regarding her with a long, critical look that took in her hair—she could feel her own curls springing free of pins loosened by her fall—the sticky smear of rusk decorating her left breast, her torn tights.
"Polly Bright," she said quickly, getting that in before he could voice what he was so plainly thinking. She met his eyes head on, and offered her hand in the manner of a woman whom, despite appearances to the contrary, knew what she was doing.
He did not take it.
Wise move, she decided, realizing too late that, in her attempt to save herself, she'd placed her hand in a patch of oil.
"It's my first day," she added, but with rather less conviction.
"No, Miss Bright," he replied as, with the slightest movement of one hand, he addressed her appearance, "it is not."
Polly, entranced by the soft, seductive, fall-into-bed accent that matched the Roman nose and Mediterranean colouring, was, for a moment, oblivious.
Then what he'd actually said sank in.
Not?
Not! Oh, no, she wasn't going to take that, allow this long-legged demon to dismiss her without even giving her a chance to explain. This job was too important. It was an opportunity to get back on her feet, to prove to her family that she wasn't a complete screw-up. It was a chance to start again…
The familiar sounds of a kitchen gearing up to serve a hundred plus diners reached her and, name-dropping like mad, she said, "Emma Valentine will vouch for me."
Polly had met Emma Valentine, the Chelsea BL's chef, when she'd been booked to give a cookery master-class at Polly's catering college. Not that Polly was taking part; her exclusion was punishment for a piece of nonsense involving an ice sculpture. Polly had found Emma in the student washroom, throwing up from nerves; she'd fetched her some ginger ale, distracted her with the woeful tale of "Little Willy," made Emma laugh so much that she'd taken Polly into the class as her assistant leaving the principal with no option but to accept this fait accompli.
"Or Mr. Robert Valentine," Polly continued. Emma would be up to her eyes at this time of day. "He interviewed me."
"Mr. Valentine is at the Mayfair office this morning and his daughter is in Meridia organizing the coronation banquet."
In other words, what kind of nerve did she have thinking either of them would have spare time to pull her irons out of the fire?
"Max Valentine is in the office," he offered, with a touch of amusement. "Maybe you'd prefer to have this conversation with him?"
"No!" She'd met Max when she'd come for her interview. He was scary, unlike his father who was a sucker for a smile. "No," she repeated, "I'm sure he's busy."
"Then I'm sorry, Miss Bright, but all you have is me."

***






chapter 2

Well, if life gave you lemons, you made lemonade. She tried the "sucker" smile. "And you are?"
"Luc Bellisario. I may not be a Valentine, but Bella Lucia was my great-aunt, if that makes me an acceptable alternative?"
Seductive sarcasm, she noted, but then he was not just some uppity Italian waiter with a power complex. Not even an Italian restaurant manager with a power complex. He was family…
"This lunchtime I am acting manager of this restaurant," he continued, without waiting for her to confirm that he was. "And you, Miss Bright, are not in any state to polish its floor, let alone serve food to the people who dine here."
"Mr. Bellisario…" She pulled out all the stops, reprising the smile that had worked so well on Robert Valentine. "Luc." Then, with a sweeping gesture that took in her bedraggled appearance, she appealed to his sense of fair play. "You don't imagine that I set out from home looking like this, do you?"
"That," he replied, unmoved, "is beside the point."
"No!" Then, because actually he was right, "Well, yes, obviously it is, but I had an accident."
As he frowned, his brows drew down at the centre, emphasizing the devilish look, drawing attention to his eyes. They were, she realized, threaded with streaks of gold lightning.
"What kind of accident? Are you hurt?"
"Hurt? Oh, er, no." Surprised into a genuine smile by this evidence that he was, after all, human, she said, "I had an argument with a buggy." She raised her leg, apparently to display the damage, but well aware that they were one of her better features. The buggy, she realised belatedly, had taken more than nylon.
"You are bleeding." His expression softened a little and the devil took on a different role. Pure temptation.
"Oh, no," she said, not entirely in response to this statement. Men, even sexy Italians, had been banished from her life. Then, using his concern to her advantage, she said, "Well, not much." She rubbed at her elbow. "A bit of a bump when I fell off the pavement, that's all. The motorcycle barely touched me…" She ground to a halt as she realized she was coating her shirtsleeve with oil.
About to assure him that all she needed to do was clean up and she'd be ready to go, she decided to save her breath. Luc Bellisario, rot-his-socks, was right. Who, in his right mind, would let a disaster like her practice the dangerous art of silver service in a restaurant full of the rich and famous?
"Okay," she said.
"Okay?" he repeated, totally Italian. Totally gorgeous.
"I give up. There's always an opening at Burgers-R-Us."
Luc watched the woman rescue a pale blonde corkscrew curl that had escaped its pin, smearing more oil on her cheek as she tucked it behind her ear. She was a disaster, no question, and after learning that Robert Valentine had employed her, his first response had been nothing short of astonishment.
His second had been to send her home. Losing a day's pay—more importantly, a day's tips—would give her time to dwell on the standards required from staff working in a restaurant like Bella Lucia.
His third… His third had been purely physical as she'd smiled—the real smile, not the one calculated to turn him into her slave—eclipsing the late September sun, heating him down to the bone. It was a raw, totally male reaction that went a long way to explaining why Robert Valentine—Luc's cousin had made meeting beautiful women his life's work—had employed her.
"Wait," he said.
She stopped, looked back over her shoulder, blew another escaping curl from her face. Had she any idea how sexy that was?
Well, obviously. Like her first smile, it was a move calculated to snag his attention, keep him hooked. It was working.
"What?" she demanded. Then, when he didn't answer, "Don't tell me, you want me to leave the uniform?"
He swallowed, fighting the image of her peeling it off, piece by piece and dropping it at his feet.
"Would there be any point?" he asked, striving manfully for cutting sarcasm. "It's only fit for the dustbin."
She was trouble.
He should do everyone a favour and let her go, but in a month he'd be back in Italy, stepping into his father's shoes. Assuming the role to which he'd been born. Trapped…
The word dropped into his mind like a stone weight.
He blocked it out. Concentrated on the problem facing him.
Miss Polly Bright.
Luc saw, behind her sparky, couldn't-care-less in-your-face attitude, a loss of hope that tugged at something deep inside him. Something that he couldn't bring himself to crush.
"Come," he said, turning abruptly, and walking towards the housekeeper's room, resisted the urge to look back, check that she had obeyed him.
She'd followed.
"Housekeeping will find a dressing for your leg and a clean uniform. When you're fit to be seen, come to the restaurant and report to Michael, the head waiter." He came close to smiling. "I warn you, he won't be impressed by a smile and unlike me, he won't give you a second chance."
"You won't regret it, Luc," she said, earnestly. Then, "Mr. Bellisario."
"Be sure," he warned her. "You"ll be sorry if I do."
* * *

 
 

 

عرض البوم صور emma  

قديم 07-09-06, 02:14 PM   المشاركة رقم: 2
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chapter 3


All through the busy lunchtime, the rush of media stars, artists, the unexpected arrival of a minor royal whose party had to be found room in an already packed restaurant, Luc kept an eye on her.

Polly wasn't slick. He didn't know what she'd told Robert about her previous experience, but it certainly hadn't been as a waitress at the luxury end of the business, he decided, after witnessing a couple of close calls with the silver service. Far from irritating high profile diners who were used to the best, however, they responded to her startled "oops" with good humour, encouraging her efforts, tipping her extravagantly.

Watching her might be wrecking his nerves, but she had a way about her, a warmth that people responded to. A smile that could melt permafrost.

Max Valentine joined him, followed his gaze. "Isn't that Emma's friend? How's she doing?"

"Living dangerously. If she gets through lunch without tipping a bowl of soup into someone's lap, it'll be a miracle."

"Oh, great, that's all we need. A lawsuit." Then, "Look, Dad wants me at head office and he warned me it's likely to be a long one. I realise it's your evening off, but I wondered if you could stand in for me?"

"No problem."

"Thanks, Luc." Then, "Keep an eye on that girl."

That wasn't a problem, either. It was looking away he was finding difficult.



* * *

Polly made it through her first day on pure adrenaline. It would have been easier if Luc Bellisario hadn't been watching every move, making it plain that he thought she was a disaster waiting to happen. It hadn't and by the end of the week, even the perfectionist head waiter had given her a nod of approval.

But the devil just didn't quit. Every time she looked up, it seemed, his dark eyes were fixed on her. Every time he spoke to her, he had found something to criticize. Her hair, mostly.

Today, though, she really was in trouble. At one of her tables, a woman whose face was a permanent fixture on the front pages of the gossip magazines, had drunk her way steadily through a bottle of wine, waiting for a lunch date who never appeared, not touching the bread, the herb-flavoured olive oil, the tiny antipasto appetizers that Polly had brought, hoping to tempt the woman to eat something…


Luc, a sixth sense alerting him to trouble, looked for Polly. But for once she wasn't causing the drama—she had diffused it. She calmly, lent an arm to the infamous diner as if she was a dowager rather than just unsteady on her feet. Luc moved to help, but Polly stopped him with a keep-back I-can-handle-this look, and helped the woman move towards the rear exit to escape the paparazzi who were outside hoping for a gift like this.

It was nearly an hour before she returned.

"Where the devil have you been?" Luc demanded, when she finally appeared. By then he was almost out of his mind with worry.

"Sorry. I didn't have any money with me so I had to walk back."

"What!"

Misunderstanding him, she was instantly on the defensive, "I had to make sure that poor woman got home safely."

"It's a pity she didn't have the same thought for you."

"She was distraught." Then, "So? Am I in trouble, Mr. Bellisario? Do I get shot for desertion in the face of the dessert trolley?"

"Nothing that painless, Polly. Your punishment is to sit next to me at lunch."

For a moment she looked beaten, but she rallied. "Brave man."

He thought that foolhardy probably better described his action as she sat beside him at the staff lunch table. He was much too close to the fine spirals of hair that had worked free of the pins that never could quite restrain them. Much too close, altogether.

"Tell me," he said, in an effort to distract himself, "what were you doing before you worked here?"


So, that was what he was after. Digging into her background to find some reason to get rid of her.

"Not this," Polly said, and since there was no point in pretending, listed all the jobs she'd had in the last year—always two at a time—cooking fast food, slow food, pub food just to pay back the bank, keep a roof over her head.

This had the effect of rendering Luc momentarily speechless. A relief. She could resist his good looks—if she closed her eyes—but his voice never failed to reduce her bones to putty.

"You're a cook?" he asked, while she helped herself to a spoonful of risotto. She wasn't planning a long lunch.

"According to any number of gold-edged certificates with my name on them," she assured him. "In fact until a year ago I was a partner in a catering business I started straight from college."

"So?"

She looked at him. The lightning in his eyes had softened to flecks of gold and she discovered that it wasn't just his voice…

"What happened?"

She swallowed, concentrated very hard, remembered how to speak. "One of my partners had a baby."

"And the other?"

She swallowed, took a slow breath. "Was the father," she said. It had been a year. She was over it, she told herself. Looking into Luc Bellisario's eyes, she could even believe it. "They wanted their capital back. It was tied up in the equipment."

"You had to sell it?"

"Yes." At a thumping loss, which she'd carried. She'd have done anything to escape… "This is my way back. Emma told me about the tips your people earn. A year and I'll be able to start over." This time on her own. Then, "Is that it, Mr. Bellisario? Inquisition over? Because I'm done here."

"Luc," he said. Then stood as she pushed back her chair, "We got off to a bad start, Polly, but I want you know that I appreciate what you did today."

"Oh," she said, doing her best to ignore her stupid heart doing that stupid little fluttery thing.

"Just …"

Too soon… "What!" she demanded.

"Next time take a taxi," he said, with unexpected warmth. "We"ll pay."


He'd misjudged her, Luc realized, as she walked away. He now watched her, not for mistakes, but for the pleasure of it. Nearby, Robert Valentine, his attention caught by a burst of laughter, smiled. "Pretty little thing, isn't she?"

"More than that, sir. A lot more than that." She'd had a setback, but was determined to start again. That took courage. Heart.



* * *

 
 

 

عرض البوم صور emma  
قديم 07-09-06, 02:16 PM   المشاركة رقم: 3
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chapter 4


"Polly…"

"Luc, if it's about what happened with the princess…"

Three weeks and she hadn't dropped anything. Not that she still didn't get the wobbles when she caught Luc looking at her—not from nerves, but because now he looked away. But today, he hadn't been fast enough and she'd been surprised to see something in his expression, something almost tender and she'd come close to spilling some chocolate confection into the lap of a minor royal. Not that Her Highness had complained. On the contrary, she'd smiled away Polly's apology, and said, "My dear, if that man smiled at me like that, I wouldn't drop just my pudding…"

"No. That was not your fault."

He knew what he'd done, then…

"Are you going out? Lunch is about to be served."

"Thanks, but I could do with a break from food." And sitting next to him. Since that first occasion, the place had been left for her, as if everyone could see that she wanted to be there—even if she refused to admit it to herself. "You can enjoy your lunch for once without holding your breath, wondering if I'm going to tip something down myself."

"Instead I'll be worrying that you're being attacked by a buggy, or run down by a motorbike," he said, his voice grave, even while those little gold flecks were dancing in his eyes.

She caught her breath and stifled the laugh that responded to the way the corner of his mouth tilted up in an invitation to join him in a little self-mockery.

No. She really wasn't going to be that stupid. He would be leaving soon. Going back to Italy. She stuffed another brick in the wall guarding her heart and said, "I'm sorry, Luc, but right now all I want is some air."

"You've been working non-stop for three hours and you've got a tough evening ahead of you. You can't do that on fresh air."

"I'll pick up a sandwich."

"That's not enough. You need proper food."

Confronted with his Michelangelo good looks, liquid Italian accent and spare broad-shouldered, narrow-hipped figure, bricks were useless and a girl had to save herself any way she could. "You do realize," she said, "that you sound exactly like your mother?"

This affront to his masculinity was supposed to drive him away. Instead, with a wry lift of his left brow said, "You've met her." Then, before she could recover, he took her elbow, opened the door for her and said, "Very well, fresh air first, then we eat," and refusing to take no for an answer, he steered her out into the street. Smooth and silky as chef's ice cream, she thought. First the freeze, then the sweetness as it thawed on the tongue. "Besides, someone has to ride shotgun on your uniform."

It was the delicious combination of the American expression and Italian accent that got her.

"What?" he demanded. "What did I say?"

She shook her head as she pulled her lips hard back against her teeth in an attempt to smother the burst of nerve-fuelled laughter. Then, losing it, "You're a fan of spaghetti westerns?"

It took him a moment, but then she discovered that despite all evidence to the contrary, Luc Bellisario knew how to laugh. And when he laughed he looked younger, less threatening. But a whole lot more dangerous. Yet she still found herself walking along the King's Road with him.

While she'd planned to do nothing more than window shop, enjoying exotic and beautiful things she couldn't begin to afford, Luc apparently had other ideas, a destination in mind. But when he turned a corner into a narrow street, away from the shops, opened a gate that led down to a basement flat, produced a key and opened the door, she dug her heels in.

"You won't get much fresh air pounding the pavement, Polly. I have a small garden. You can sit in the sun and I will make you lunch." His smile was reassuring, his hand extended like a lifeline. And for the first time in a year, she was hungry.

"Small?" she exclaimed, a moment later when he'd ushered her through to a courtyard where a two-seater bench—there wasn't room for anything bigger—occupied the only space that wasn't filled with pots of sweet-scented culinary herbs standing, hanging everywhere. "This is pocket handkerchief-sized, but fabulous." And while Polly the woman suspected she was making a mistake, Polly the cook didn't care as she plucked a warm leaf of basil, and rubbed it between her fingers to release the scent. "A touch of home in London?" she said, taking the cold drink he passed to her.

"If you forget the sea, the boats, the long wide beach," he said, wryly.

"It sounds lovely."

"There's an ancient square where people gather in the evening. Mountains." He made broad, encompassing gesture. "Everything."

"You must miss it," she said, settling herself on the bench. "But you're going back soon."

He joined her, leaning back into the seat, not quite touching her. "Next month. The Bellisario family is in the restaurant business, although not on the grand scale of the Valentines. Not yet. I came here to learn from them so that when I go home and step into my father's shoes…"

He didn't look that excited at the prospect. And in a heartbeat, she found herself wanting to reach out, touch his hand. Invite his confidence.

"And you, Polly?" he asked, before she did anything so reckless. Turning the attention from himself to her. "What are your plans?"

"Not to step into my father's shoes, that's for sure. I'm the family failure."

"Your catering business? That is not failure, that's experience."

"You could say that." Then, because she wanted him to understand, wanted him to know everything… "One of my partners was my fiancé, Luc. The baby…" He was the one who took her hand. Stopped her. "I was so busy building an empire that I didn't notice what was going on under my nose. I'm too stupid to live, let alone be entrusted with a business."

"No…" Then, softly, "He was the stupid one, Polly."


And he should know. He could teach her a thing or two about stupid, Luc thought, as Polly closed her eyes, effectively closing the subject as she lifted her face to a sun that continued to shine on into October, suspending autumn in a perfect Indian summer. At least she'd had the courage to follow her dream, while he would be living the one his father had invented for him: to emulate his famous cousins, the Valentines, taking their own restaurants into a new level of luxury, elegance.

When Max had asked him to delay his departure to give them all a little breathing room, he'd grabbed at it. Anything to delay the inevitable.

His father had understood. The Valentine family was in turmoil with skeletons falling out of every closet. Grey faces, long meetings, Stephanie with a face like thunder after a confrontation with her stepfather, Robert Valentine.

Debts had to be paid. Honor demanded it…

And how much honor was there in living a lie when with Polly's example—with the hope of Polly at his side—his own dream beckoned so much more brightly.

Reluctantly, he let go of her hand and, leaving her to drink in the sun, went into the kitchen and began to assemble a simple lunch. The sooner it was done, the sooner they could return to the restaurant. To sanity.

"What are you doing?"

He glanced round. She was flushed from the sun, her mouth sweet as the fat cherries that grew in his grandmother's orchard. "Making lunch. Nothing as exciting as a sandwich," he said, unable to resist teasing her a little. "Just pasta, wild mushrooms, a little cream."

"Ambrosia," she said, laughing. "Food from the gods."

"I … No…" Flustered, quite possibly blushing—the devil had lost his cool—he said, "My grandmother taught me to cook." Then, "I need parsley…"

"I'll get it." And when she returned, she took a teacloth, tucked it around her waist. He moved over. There was just enough room for the two of them at the stove.

"Polly…"

As she glanced up from chopping the herbs, as he'd known she would, a stray curl bobbing over one eye. She blew it away. No, he realized, she had no idea just how sexy that was or she wouldn't risk it here, alone with him…

"Yes?" she prompted, when he didn't say any more.

"Nothing," he said. "Just Polly." Then, "What kind of name is that?"

"It's short for Mary."

"How can it be short for Mary? It's longer."

"I guess it's one of those things you have to be British to understand."

"Mary." This time she just carried on chopping, using the razor sharp knife like the professional she undoubtedly was and without warning the dream in his head, the one he'd buried so deep that he'd almost forgotten it, dissolved into the one that had been haunting him ever since Polly Bright had stuck out an oily hand and introduced herself, smiling at him.

"Maria…" She scooped up the herbs, dropped them into the pan of mushrooms. "Bella Maria."

And this time when she looked up, he bent to kiss that smile.

He just might have retained his hold on sanity if she had not kissed him back. If her kiss had not been the one his soul had been waiting for, if she had not been the woman who would complete his dreams making anything seem possible.


* * *

 
 

 

عرض البوم صور emma  
قديم 07-09-06, 02:35 PM   المشاركة رقم: 4
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chapter 5

A kiss, one kiss, was all it had taken to break down the wall she had spent the past year building around her heart.

No. Three weeks of looks that had moved from cold to a sizzling heat. From tight smiles to tender ones. Three weeks of looks and one kiss.

And a little pasta with mushrooms and cream served by a man who looked not like the devil, but Adonis.

After he'd kissed her, he hadn't said a word. He had simply served her lunch and then walked her back to the restaurant. And that evening, all through the long hours while they cleared and laid the tables for the next day, he didn't look at her once. She understood that. If he had, if their gazes had met, she'd have crumpled up into a little pile of mush right there on the floor.

But then, at the end of the evening, she waited for him.

Michael said, "If you're looking for Luc, he's holed up with Max. It looked as if it was going to be a long one. Can it keep until tomorrow?"

"Yes. Yes, of course."

Except that tomorrow, Luc Bellisario was not there.

It was Robert Valentine who broke the news that he'd returned to Italy. "Luc put his plans on hold to help us out over a difficult few weeks. He'll be a tough act to follow, but…"

She stopped listening.

He'd left without a word. Gone home to his small Italian town by the sea where his father's shoes were waiting for him. She would have walked out then, but she owed Emma for the chance she'd been given. It wasn't as if she had to see him. But she kept on looking up, expecting to see him…

Polly gave a week's notice and for six days she performed like a well-oiled automaton, on the outside at least. She was the perfect waitress. Efficient, calm, invisible. Not an "oops" or a dropped pea. Not much laughter, either. All emotional responses had been shut down. What was there to get emotional about? One kiss. What was that?

Nothing, she told herself and was congratulating herself over how well she was holding everything to together—just this last day to get through—when the restaurant door opened bringing in a rumble of the thunder that had been threatening to bring the Indian summer to an end, a draft of cool air. And something else…

Luc.

When she looked up he was standing there, watching her and six days of perfection came to an end as the tray she was carrying slid from her hands.

Luc was beside her even as Michael moved in smoothly to restore order. Beside her, murmuring softly, reassuringly. "Cara …forgive me… I could not speak…" With his arm about her, he swept her into the office, closing the door, held her as she cried out, tried to escape… "Before I could speak to you I had to talk to my father. Say what I should have told him long ago. That his dreams are not my dreams. That I cannot walk in his shoes. Only then could I come back for you, my Bella Maria."

"You're giving it all up?"

"I'm surrendering my father's dream for one of my own, Polly. A small restaurant overlooking a sheltered bay." He was so close that she could hardly breathe.

"How did he take it?"

"Philosophically. And my sister is very, very happy."

"Oh. So, this restaurant…"

"Somewhere full of warmth, life, where the food touches the soul. Is that a dream you could share?"

"What you're saying," she said, carefully, "is that you're looking for a cook?"

"What I'm saying is that I would like you to be my partner." He took an envelope from his pocket, took out a document. "Here are the deeds."

She glanced at them, saw the name—Bella Maria.

She was shaking, close to tears. "And if I say no?" she whispered.

"Then I will keep asking you," he said, "Like this…" He brushed his mouth against hers, melting the bones in her legs so that she was forced to lean into him for support.

"I'm not sure…" she said. Then, he'd kissed her again. "This may take some time."

"Come to Italy, my Bella Maria," Luc said, taking her hand, leading her into a new life, a shared dream, "and I'll take as long as you need."

The End

 
 

 

عرض البوم صور emma  
قديم 07-09-06, 02:38 PM   المشاركة رقم: 5
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اتمنى ان تعجبكم الروايه
واعتقد ان لهذه الرواية 8 اجزاء وهاذي جزء منها وكل جزء يتكلم عن قصة افراد عائلة فالنتاين ومطاعهم
وان شاءالله الاقي الاجزاء كلها واعرضها لكم في المنتدى

تقبلوا تحياتي
:)

 
 

 

عرض البوم صور emma  
 

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