REGENCY: Loved by the Duke (Historical Billionaire Military Romance) (19th Century Victorian Short Stories) (10 page)

BOOK: REGENCY: Loved by the Duke (Historical Billionaire Military Romance) (19th Century Victorian Short Stories)
8.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Epilogue

Spring came like every year. The throbbing of life conquered whatever ground the stagnant frost had stolen from her throughout that last, long winter. Bliss was back to the hospital.

“Well, everything is just fine,” the doctor said. “If you plan to leave the country, well I would not recommend it in general, but it is still safe to fly up until the next couple of months.”

“Thank you,” Bliss told him while getting ready to leave.

“You know,” the doctor said, “I wonder if you want to know whether it is a boy or a girl?”

Bliss shook her head.

“No,” she said, “let it be a surprise.”

She left consulting room hastily.

On her way out, she placed her hand onto her belly. She grew into the habit of talking to the baby as if he or she could hear her.

“You are a very good little kid,” she said, “growing just fine, being healthy. You make your father very proud already.”

Ricardo was waiting for her in front of the hospital. He came with the Porsche. Bliss was disappointed.

“Where is the limo?” she asked.

“Oh,” Ricardo said, “Jake wanted a little holiday. Visiting his family in Jersey.”

Bliss took a seat next to him. But Ricardo did not start the car. Rather just stared at Bliss in demanding silence.

“What?” Bliss asked.

“So?” Ricardo asked.

“So, what?”

“What did they say?”

“What did they say about what?”

“For God’s sake, Bliss, is it going to be a boy or a girl?”

“I told them not to tell me,” Bliss said patiently. It was not the first time they had this conversation.

“You are crazy,” Ricardo scolded. But then decided to kiss his wife on the mouth. “Can you travel with me to Italy?”

“I asked that,” Bliss replied, “and they said, yes.”

“Good, the family really missed you this Christmas. They absolutely insisted on us visiting them at Easter.”

Ricardo started the car. The motor woke up with a terrible roar.

“Just if I knew why you do not want to know if it is going to be a boy or a girl. It would be easier to find an appropriate name.”

Bliss just smiled.

She never asked the doctors because she already knew.

She felt that it was going to be a boy.

And she was going to name him Giacomo.

THE END

Becoming The Mobster’s Bride

Prologue

Luca Santiago Accorsi slammed the phone down angrily, pacing his penthouse apartment over-looking the most spectacular city in the world, Rome. The history, the amazing architecture, and fine art. But he didn’t see any of it. The only thing he could see was the end of his life, probably at the hands of one of Vincenzo’s hired thugs.

He shook off the morose thought. It wasn’t in his nature to be so depressed, he was a born optimist, always looking for the best in life, and in people. Which was part of what had gotten him into such trouble with the Italian Mafia. He had tried to stay out of it, tried to stay clean, but as one of the leading real estate moguls in all of Italy, it was only a matter of time before they had gotten some ties on him.

And they certainly had. He had been tricked, duped, by the oldest trick in the book. A woman. Vincenzo had hired her to meet him, charm him, and let him take her home. It hadn’t been hard for her, Maria was a magnificent beauty with long, dark black hair that fell in waves around her voluptuous body. Curvy, just how he like it. None of that model skinny stuff for him. You should never be able to count the number of ribs on a woman.

Stop it, Luca! He yelled at himself. Keep your mind off the women! He shook his head again, remembering it so clearly. He should have seen it for what it was, but he had been blinded by her beauty and his own instinct to trust people.

She had stolen everything. All his secrets, all his banking records, al his future plans. He could kick himself! He had been so stupid! He looked at the phone in disgust as he recalled the conversation he had just had with Vincenzo’s right hand thug. They wanted him to launder money for him through the new development he was working on. Hah!

He had spent almost thirty years steering clear of the mafia, even though they tried again and again. But now, the only difference was, they had leverage. Things hadn’t always gone smoothly for him, especially in the beginning, and he had done some things he wasn’t proud of. And now, they were trying to use it against him!

“Ahh, merda!” He shouted in frustration at the empty penthouse. He looked around, taking in the one of a kind artwork, priceless paintings and lavish décor. He had built all of this himself, from the ground up. He wasn’t about to let them take it all away from him. He knew what happened to people that got tangled up with Vincenzo and his kind. They never got free again.

Luca took a deep breath, and then another, as a plan began to form in his head. With a small, secret smile he picked up the phone again.

“Hello, Tony. I need you to open up the Villa de Rosa for me. Get everything ready, stock it with the usual.” Luca paused, listening for a moment.

“Si, Tony, si, that’s the one. When will I be there?” He knew he had a private jet waiting on standby for him, so it wouldn’t take long at all to get the ancient villa in northern Italy. He grinned again, like a Cheshire cat. “I’ll be there tonight.”

He also knew that the property was nowhere on his records, it was his own private hideaway, but he almost never used it. Vincenzo couldn’t use him if Vincenzo couldn’t find him. And with that last thought, he walked into the bedroom to pack. He had a feeling it would be a long time before he came back to Rome.

Chapter 1

 
 
 
Alisa stared out the ancient taxi’s window with wide, bright amber eyes, the glass itself yellowed with age as they bounced over so many potholes and boulders she wasn’t even sure if it still qualified as a road. It felt more like they were just driving up the side of a mountain. Her teeth clicked together painfully as the vehicle jolted over yet another large bump, causing her to slide around on the worn brown leather of the back bench seat.

 
 
 
“Ah, Signorina, stai bene?”

 
 
 
Alisa just nodded, smiling through a gritted jaw as they continued their four hour drive from Florence. The airplane had landed and she had exited the terminal to find her driver not only was planning to take her to the Villa Della Rosa in a taxi from the mid nineteen seventies, but that he also spoke no English. Alisa had brushed up on a few of the more common phrases: she could say things like, ‘hi, nice to meet you’ and ‘where is the bathroom’ but as they made it farther and farther away from the populated city,
 
his rambling and rustic Italian became impossible for her to translate.

 
 
 
She pulled out her Italian to English dictionary, flipping through the pages until she found what she thought he had asked her.

 
 
 
“No, non ho fame.”
No, I’m not hungry.
She replied in a terrible accent that made him once again look over his shoulder at her. Out of the front window of the car she just make out the large boulder directly in front of them, slightly obscured by the flurries of snow that the sky had been spitting out more and more the farther north they drove.

 
 
 
“Look! Watch out!” She pointed wildly at the rock in the road, and he turned around, jerking the wheel to the left and swerving the car out of its path just in time to avoid a head on collision. The movement sent her sliding again on the slippery material and it took a moment to right herself.

 
 
 
As she scooted back to her seat on the passenger’s side she resolutely looked out the window at the ever darkening sky. She knew winter in Italy, especially northern Italy, would come with unpredictable weather but she had her finger’s crossed that they would make it to the rental home in one piece with the way Matteo was driving.

 
 
 
Well, this was definitely not how she expected her vacation to start, Alisa thought to herself. But, to tell the truth, none of this had happened the way it was supposed to.
 
She cast her thoughts back to the funeral that she had come from no more than a few days before and a wave of sadness threatened to overwhelm her. Her grandmother was the only family Alisa had, and now she was gone.

 
 
 
It seemed like just yesterday that Grands was yelling at her about something. How she spent too much time at work, didn't get out enough, didn't enjoy life enough. It was her grandmother that had finally pushed her into taking the trip she had always wanted to, although she hadn’t planned on taking it until the following summer. Alisa just couldn’t stand the thought of spending Christmas alone in that big house, all by herself.

 
 
 
Her father had been out of the picture long before she was born, and her mother had soon followed, swallowed up by a life of drugs and bad decisions. Her grandmother had taken her in, had raised her as her own. She had been there for every scraped knee and broken heart. And now she was gone.

 
 
 
Alisa blinked back the threat of tears, looking out onto the mountainous, exotic scenery. It had been a stroke of pure luck that the travel agency had been able to switch her rental dates on such short notice, and now she was just a few miles away from the authentic Italian villa that she would call home for the next two weeks.

 
 
 
Excitement bubbled through her, despite the answering pulse of sadness that she knew only time would be able to heal, as she looked around. Another feeling emerged at the sight of the roiling black clouds that seemed to be moving ever closer.

 
 
 
Hastily, she flipped through her translation dictionary. “Um, è vero… uh, dovrebbe farlo?” She pointed out at the sky, the dark skin of her fingers almost disappearing against the darkness swallowing up the afternoon sun outside. She had been prepared for the cold, but this storm looked like something else. It looked bad.
Is it supposed to look like this?

 
 
 
Matteo the taxi driver ducked forward, examining the sky above them for a brief moment before stepping on the gas, the engine choking loudly but speeding up a little on the incline while making the catholic symbol to ward off evil. Well, that can’t be good, Alisa thought uneasily as she turned back to her window.

 
 
 
She released a massive sigh of relief as, after a few more tension fraught moments, they pulled up a gravel drive in front a very old looking authentic rose colored stone building. The Villa Della Rosa. It meant the house of the rose, because of the massive rose quartz stones they had incorporated into the main building some hundreds of years ago when it was first built. And it was all hers for the next two weeks. She could have squealed in excitement as she got out, grabbing her suitcase, and sending a quick wave to the taxi driver as she pulled the gold key out of the envelope from the travel agent and walked up the small stone path to the front entrance.

 
 
 
Alisa paused for a moment, remembering how ecstatic grands had been when she had found out about this trip. It had weighed on her, whether she should take this trip or not, but for the first time since her grandmother’s death, she felt like she was exactly where she was supposed to be.

 
 
 
With a small smile curving the corners of her full lips, Alisa reached out to unlock the door to find it...open. She paused, her smile fading as she slowly, cautiously, pushed it open. It was already unlocked! A wave of trepidation fluttered in her stomach, and for a moment she turned around, about to hail Matteo only to find the taxi and its driver long gone, its red tail lights barely visible through the snow that was now coming down in a steady stream. It was becoming almost impossible to see anything and resolutely, she turned back towards the door. If she couldn’t go back that meant that the only option left was to go forward.

Other books

My Forbidden Desire by Carolyn Jewel
Death of a Hot Chick by Norma Huss
Lost Girls by Caitlin Rother
Chosen by Sin by Virna Depaul
Jewish Life in Nazi Germany: Dilemmas and Responses by Francis R. Nicosia, David Scrase
The Labyrinth of Destiny by Callie Kanno
Too Close to Home by Linwood Barclay
Nothin But Net by Matt Christopher