Читать книгу Wed on His Terms: Million-Dollar Marriage Merger - Charlene Sands - Страница 9
Three
ОглавлениеTony debated whether to bring Rena flowers, remembering that sheâd always loved the tulips that grew in the Carlino garden. âI like the purple ones best,â sheâd said when they were teens. âTheyâre bright and happy, just waiting to put a smile on someoneâs face.â
But he knew giving Rena her favorite flowers wouldnât put a smile on her face now. Nothing he could doâaside from vanishing off the face of the earthâwould do that. Heâd opted to knock on her door empty-handed, hoping that she hadnât changed her mind about tonight.
Heâd sort of bulldozed her into this dinner date. What other choice did he have? Heâd waited a respectable amount of time to approach her, allowing her time to heal from the shock of losing her husband. Yet, with a baby on the way and a failing business, Rena was in trouble. Tony didnât think he could wait much longer.
Heâd promised David.
He drove his Porsche through the Purple Fields gates for the second time today and parked in front of the gifts shop-wine-tasting room adjacent to the main house. The quaint shop attracted tourists during the late spring and summer months when the weather was mild and the scent of grapes flavored the air. Rena had worked there during high school, serving sandwiches and cheese and crackers to their customers.
Tony ran a hand down his face, bracing himself for Renaâs wrath. She wouldnât agree to his terms lightly, if at all. He got out of the car and walked the distance to the house. Using the metal knocker on the door, he gave three firm raps and waited. When she didnât come, he knocked again, louder.
âRena,â he called out.
He gazed over the grounds as the last remnants of evening light faded. Focusing intently, he glanced around at the other buildings and through the vineyards. There was no sign of her. Tony tried the doorknob, and to his surprise it opened.
Sheâd left the door unlocked.
He felt a surging sense of alarm. Rena lived alone now. It wasnât like her not to be cautious. Without hesitation, he walked inside the house. The entry that led to the living room was dark. As he took a few steps inside, it seemed the entire house was dark. âRena?â
He made his way down the long hall and opened one door, peering inside to an empty room. He checked another room without success. When he got to the end of the hallway, he found the last door open. A small amount of moonlight illuminated the middle of the room where Rena slept on her bed.
Tony winced, seeing her sleeping soundly, her chest lifting and falling peacefully, her raven hair spread across the pillow. A few strands curled around her face and contrasted against her creamy complexion. She wore the same austere dress heâd seen her in earlier today, but it couldnât conceal the feminine slope of her breasts or the luscious curve of her hips.
Tony had loved her once. Heâd taken her virginity when she was eighteen. When sheâd cried, overwhelmed by emotion, heâd clung to her and assured her of his love. Rena had given herself to him one hundred percent and though heâd tried to give her everything she needed from him, he couldnât. He had another great passionâracing. It was in his blood. From the time he was a small boy, Tony needed to feel the wind at his back. He loved speed and thrilled at the danger of being wild and free. Later, heâd learned to harness his passion. Heâd learned that precision and accuracy as well as spirit made you a winner.
Heâd achieved his goals without much struggle. Heâd been born to race. But heâd also disappointed his father by not working alongside him as was expected by the eldest son, and heâd hurt the girl heâd admired and loved most in the world.
Memories flashed again, of making love to Rena and how incredibly poignant and pure itâd been. But Tonyâs mission here wasnât to rehash the past but to move on to the future. Rena was Davidâs widow now, and the strain of his death was evident on her beautiful face, even in sleep.
His first inclination was to quietly leave, locking the door behind him, but he found he couldnât move, couldnât lift his eyes away from her sad desolate face. So he stood at the threshold of her bedroom, watching her.
It wasnât long before she stirred, her movements lazy as she stretched out on the bed. Tonyâs gaze moved to the point where her dress hiked up, exposing long beautiful legs and the hint of exquisite thighs.
His body quickened, and he ground his teeth fighting off lusty sexual thoughts. Yet, quick snippets of memory emerged of hot delicious nights making love to her all those years ago.
Rena opened her eyes and gasped when she spotted his figure in the doorway. Immediate fear and vulnerability entered her eyes. She sat straight up, and when she recognized him, anger replaced her fear. âWhat are you doing here?â
âWe had a date.â
âA date?â To her credit, she did appear hazily confused. Then the anger resurfaced. âHowâd you get in?â
âThe door was unlocked. Not a good habit, Rena. Anyone could have gotten into your house.â
âAnyone did.â
Tony chose to ignore the swipe.
Rena swung her legs around and set her bare feet on the floor. She rubbed her forehead with both hands and shook her head. âI guess I fell asleep. What time is it?â
âEight-fifteen.â
She looked up at him. âWere you standing there all that time?â
âNo,â he lied. âI just got here. I was fashionably late.â
She closed her eyes briefly. âI donât know what happened. I felt exhausted and fell into a deep sleep.â
The baby, Tony thought. Heâd had many a racing buddy speak about their wifeâs exhaustion during their early pregnancy. âMaybe itâs all catching up with you. Youâve been through a lot this past month.â
âYou donât know what Iâve been through.â She was being deliberately argumentative, and Tony didnât take the bait.
âHow long before you can be ready?â
Her brows furrowed. âReady?â
âFor dinner.â
âOh, I donât think so. Not tonight. Iâm notââ she began to put her hand to her flat stomach, then caught herself ââfeeling well.â
âYouâll feel better once you eat. How long since youâve eaten?â
âI donât knowâ¦. I had a salad for lunch around noon.â
âYou need to keep up your strength, Rena.â
She opened her mouth to respond, then clamped it shut.
âIâll wait for you in the living room.â
Tony turned and walked away, not really giving her a choice in the matter. There were many more things heâd have to force upon her before the evening was through.
Rena got up from her bed, moving slowly as she replayed the events of the day in her mind. First, Tony had visited her this afternoon, a fact that still irked her. Yet he had something to say and he wouldnât leave until he got it off his chest. Thatâs how Carlinos operated; they did what they darn well wanted, no matter how it affected other people. Bitter memories surfaced of her father standing up to Santo Carlino, but Rena shoved them out of her mind for the moment. She couldnât go there now.
Next came thoughts of her conversation with Mr. Zelinski at the bank. Heâd been kind to her, confessing his hands were tied. She wouldnât be getting the loan she desperately needed. She wouldnât be able to pay her employees. Purple Fields was doomed.
Her head began to pound. She felt faint. Though her appetite had been destroyed today, she admitted that she really should eat something. For the babyâs sake, if nothing else. She couldnât afford to sink into depression. It wouldnât be good for the unborn child she carried.
As quick as her body allowed, she got ready, cringing at her reflection in the mirror. Her face was drawn, her hair wild, her clothes rumpled. She washed her face, applied a light tint of blush to her cheeks, some lipstick to her lips and brushed her hair back into a clip at the base of her neckâjust to appear human again. She changed her clothes, throwing on a black pair of pants and a soft knit beige sweater that ruffled into a vee and looked stylish though comfortable. She slipped her feet into dark shoes and walked out of the room. Whatever Tony had in mind, she certainly wasnât going to dress up for him.
Tony closed the magazine he was reading and rose from the sofa when she strode in. She squirmed under his direct scrutiny. âYou look better.â
She didnât comment yet noted genuine concern in his eyes. Why?
He strode to the door and opened it. âShall we go?â
âWhere are you taking me?â
Tonyâs expression flattened. Heâd caught her meaning. âIâve made arrangements, Rena. No one will see you with me.â
If she werenât so upset about everything, her face might have flamed from his acknowledgment. She lifted her chin. âHowâs that possible?â
âWe own half of Albertoâs. Itâs closed to the public tonight.â
âYou mean you had it closed for my benefit?â
âYou havenât had any use for me since I returned. I didnât think youâd like answering questions about being out with me tonight if anyone saw us.â
Rena had almost forgotten that the Carlinos had their hands in other enterprises. They owned a few restaurants as well as the winery. They also owned stores in outlying areas that sold a line of products related to wine.
âThis isnât a date, Tony. Just so weâre clear.â
Tony nodded. âVery clear.â
Rena strode past him and waited for him to exit her house before she locked the front door. She moved quickly, and once he beeped his car alarm, she didnât wait for him to open the car door. She climbed into his Porsche and adjusted the seat belt.
âReady?â he asked unnecessarily. Once they made eye contact, he roared the engine to life. âItâs a nice night. Mind if I put the top down?â
âNo, I could use a good dose of fresh air.â
Itâs how Tony liked to drive, with the top down, the air hitting his face, mastering the car and the road beneath.
He hit a button, and mechanically the car transformed. He drove the road to Napa surprisingly slowly, as if they were out for a Sunday drive. Every so often, he glanced her way. She couldnât deny his courtesy.
Or the fact that she thought him the most devastatingly handsome man sheâd ever met. Sheâd thought so since theyâd first met the day he entered public school at the age of sixteen. Up until that point, the Carlinos had gone to an elite private school. But Tony hated the regimented lifestyle, the solitude and discipline of being in an academy. Finally, his father had relented, granting his sons the right to go through the public school system.
Tony had made a lasting impression on her, and theyâd started out as friends. But the friendship had grown as theyâd gotten closer, and Rena had become Tonyâs steady girlfriend two years later.
Despite his obvious wealth and place in Napa society.
Despite the fact that Santo Carlino and her father had become bitter enemies.
Despite the fact that Rena never truly believed she could have a lasting relationship with Tony.
âCare for some music?â he asked, reaching for the CD player button.
âIf you donât mind, Iâd like to be quiet.â
She didnât want to rekindle memories of driving in Tonyâs car with the top down and the music blasting. Of laughing and telling silly jokes, enjoying each otherâs company.
âOkay,â he said amiably.
They drove in silence, Tony respecting her wishes. Shortly, he pulled into Albertoâs back parking lot. âI usually donât resort to back alley entrance ways,â he said, with no hint of irritation. âAre you hungry?â
âYes, actually quite hungry.â
âGood, the food is waiting for us.â
Before she managed to undo her seat belt, Tony was there, opening the car door for her. He reached his hand inside, and rather than appearing incredibly stubborn in his eyes, she slid her hand in his while he helped her out. The Porsche sat so low to the ground she would have fumbled like an idiot anyway, trying to come up smoothly to a standing position.
Sensations ripped through her instantly. The contact, the intimate way his large hand enveloped her smaller one, trampled any false feeling of ease sheâd imagined. She fought the urge to whip her hand away. Instead, she came out of the car and stood fully erect before slipping her hand out of his. Composing herself, she thanked him quietly and followed him inside the restaurant.
âThis way,â he said and gestured to a corner booth lit by candlelight. True to his word, the entire restaurant was empty but for them. She sat down at one end of the circular booth, while he sat at the other.
The few times Rena had come here, sheâd always felt as though sheâd wandered in from the streets in Tuscany with its old world furnishings and stone fountains. Albertoâs was one of finest restaurants in the county, serving gourmet fare and the best wines from Napa.
âI had the chef prepare a variety of food. I wasnât sure what you liked.â
âYou forgot that I loved pepperoni pizza?â
Tonyâs mouth twisted. âNo one could inhale pizza like you, Rena. But I doubt itâs on the menu tonight. Letâs go into the kitchen and see what the chef conjured up for us.â
Tony bounded up from the booth and waited. She rose and walked beside him until they reached the state-of-the-art kitchen. They found covered dishes on the immaculate steel counter along with fresh breads, salads and a variety of desserts sitting in the glass refrigerator.
Tony lifted one cover and announced. âVeal scaloppine, still hot.â
Rena looked on with interest.
Tony lifted another cover. âLinguine arrabiatta, black tiger shrimps with bacon and garlic.â
Steam rose up, and she leaned in closer. âHmm, smells good.â
He lifted two more covers displaying filetto di bue, an oven roasted filet mignon, which smelled heavenly but was too heavy for Renaâs tastes, and ravioli di zucca, which Tony explained was spinach ravioli with butternut and Amaretto filling. Since entering the aromatic kitchen, Renaâs appetite had returned wholeheartedly.
âThe ravioli looks good,â she said. âAnd that salad.â She pointed to a salad with baby greens, avocado, tangerines and candied walnuts.
âGreat,â Tony said lifting the covered dish of her choice. And one for him. âIf you could grab that salad, weâll eat. Soon as I find us a bottle of wine.â
âOh, no wine for me,â she announced. Tony glanced at her with a raised brow but didnât question her. âIâll have water.â
âYour poison,â he said with a smile. He set the dishes down on the table and took off again, bringing back a bottle of Carlino Cabernet and a pitcher of water.
They settled in for the meal in silence, Rena polishing off the delicious salad within minutes and Tony sipping his wine, eyeing her every move. âQuit looking at me.â
âYouâre the best looking thing in this place.â
She squeezed her eyes shut. âDonât, Tony.â
He shrugged it off. âJust stating the obvious.â
When he turned on the charm, he had enough for the entire Napa Valley and then some. âDo you mind telling me whatâs so important that you couldnât tell me earlier this afternoon?â
âAfter dinner, Rena.â
With her water glass to her lips, she asked, âWhy?â
âI want you to eat your meal.â
She gathered her brows and shook her head. âBecause ⦠what you have to say might destroy my appetite?â
Tony inhaled sharply then blew out the breath. âBecause youâre hungry and exhausted, thatâs why.â
âWhy the sudden concern about my well-being?â
Tony softened his tone. âIâve always cared about you, Rena.â
âNo, Tony. Weâre not going there. Ever,â she emphasized. She wouldnât go down that mental path. She and Tony had way too much history, and she thought sheâd never heal from the wounds heâd inflicted.
âCanât you just forget for a few minutes who I am and who you are? Canât we break bread together quietly and enjoy a good meal?â
Rena relented but still questioned Tonyâs mysterious behavior. âFine. Iâll eat before the ravioli gets cold.â
âThatâs a girl.â
She shot him a look.
He raised his hands up in surrender. âSorry.â Then he dug into his filet mignon with gusto and sipped wine until heâd drained two goblets.
After finishing their entrées, Tony cleared the dishes himself, refusing Renaâs help. He needed time to collect his thoughts and figure out how he was going to propose marriage to his best friendâs new widow and not come off sounding callous and cruel. There was only one route to take and that was to tell her the truth.
Hell, he hadnât ever really thought about marriage to anyone but Rena Fairfield. As teenagers, theyâd spent many a night daydreaming of the time when theyâd marry. But then Renaâs mother became ill, and Tony had been given a real opportunity to pursue his dream of racing stock cars. Leaving Rena behind to care for her ailing mother and help her father run Purple Fields had been the only black spot in an otherwise shining accomplishment. Begging her to join him served no purpose. She couldnât leave. She had family obligations. She loved making wine. She loved Purple Fields. She was born to live in Napa, where Tony had been born to race.
Heâd hurt her. No, heâd nearly destroyed her.
Each time heâd called her from the racing circuit, sheâd become more and more distant. Until one day, she asked him not to call anymore. Two years later, sheâd married David. He hadnât been invited to the wedding.
Tony covered a tray with tiramisu, spumoni ice cream and chocolate-coated cannolis. He returned to Rena and answered her skepticism as she watched him place the food on the table. âWhat? Regardless of what you think, I wasnât born with a silver spoon. We had to do chores at the house. My father was a stickler for pulling your own weight.â
âI would think youâre one who is used to being served.â
âI am. I wonât deny it. Life is good now. Iâm wealthy and can affordââ
âShutting down a restaurant for the night to have a private dinner?â
âYeah, among other things.â
âI guess I should feel honored that you served me dinner. You must have a good reason.â
âI do.â He glanced at the desserts on the table and moved a dish of spumoni her way. âYou love ice cream. Dig in.â
Rena didnât hesitate. She picked up a spoon and dove into the creamy Italian fare.
Tony dipped into it as well, butting spoons with her. They made eye contact, and Rena turned away quickly. How often had they shared ice cream in the past?
After three spoonfuls of spumoni, Rena pushed the dish away. âOkay, Tony. Iâve had dinner with you. No one is around. So are you going to tell me why you needed to speak to me?â
âI know you hate me, Rena.â
She steered her gaze toward the fountain in the middle of the dining area. âHate is a strong word.â
âSo, you donât hate me?â he asked, with a measure of hope.
She looked into his eyes again. âI didnât say that.â
Tony didnât flinch. Heâd prepared himself for this. âWhat did David say to you before he died?â
She straightened in her seat, her agitated body language not to be missed. âThatâs none of your business.â
âFair enough. But I need to tell you what he asked of me, Rena. I need you to hear his last words to me as I rode beside him in the ambulance.â
Tears welled in her eyes. Tony was a sucker for Renaâs tears. He never could stand to see her cry.
For a moment, fear entered her eyes as if hearing Davidâs words would cause her too much pain. But then, courageously, she nodded, opening her eyes wide. âOkay. Yes, I do want to hear what he said.â
Tony spoke quietly, keeping his voice from cracking. âHe told me he loved you.â Rena inhaled a quick breath, and those tears threatened again. âAnd that you deserved a good life.â
âHe was the kindest man,â she whispered.
âHis last thoughts were only of you.â
A single tear fell from her eyes. âThank you, Tony. I needed to hear that.â
âIâm not through, Rena. Thereâs more.â
She sat back in her seat and leaned heavily against the back of the booth, bracing herself. âOkay.â
âHe asked me to to watch out for you. Protect you. And I intend to do just that. Rena, I intend to marry you.â