Читать книгу The Italian's Baby of Passion - Ким Лоренс, Susan Stephens - Страница 9
CHAPTER TWO
Оглавление‘BUT it must be hard for a woman alone?’
‘One-parent families are not exactly unusual.’
‘But you’ve never been married?’
Scarlet, who was beginning to feel puzzled with the older woman’s pursuit of the subject, shook her head. ‘Never.’ This might be a good time to change the subject and admit she had contacted the tyrannical son.
‘Listen, Mrs O’Hagan—’
‘Natalia, please, my dear.’
‘Natalia, I know you asked me not to.’ Scarlet took a deep breath and made a clean breast of it. ‘The thing is I called Mr O’Hagan…that is your son, the control freak one,’ she explained unhappily.
‘I don’t blame you being angry with me,’ she continued, ‘but I really did think that someone should know—’ Scarlet stopped in response to a cool hand laid on her arm.
‘I’m not angry with you, child.’
Scarlet gave a sigh of relief. ‘I’m glad about that.’
‘Did you speak to Roman yourself? I ask,’ she added, ‘because I have a problem doing so myself sometimes.’ She gave a light laugh. ‘He is guarded zealously.’
You can say that again!
‘I did manage to, eventually,’ Scarlet admitted with a guarded smile.
There was something in the other woman’s manner…she couldn’t quite put her finger on it, but Scarlet couldn’t shake the feeling that she was missing something.
‘My, you must be a determined girl, or have special access that I don’t?’ Her laughter had a forced sound to it.
‘I could have done with it, but I had to fall back on my natural talent—I’m stubborn.’
Natalia nodded; her expression suggested her thoughts had already moved on. ‘I sometimes think this security business has got out of hand, you know. Since the stalker affair Roman is not a very accessible person, but no doubt you know that.’
‘Stalker?’ Scarlet queried, pausing to briefly wonder why his mother would assume she knew anything at all about her son.
‘Oh, I’m sure you read about it. That woman who became obsessed with him? It was about four years ago.’
Scarlet shook her head. She was not about to explain that four years ago her world had narrowed to the bedside of her dying sister.
‘Perhaps you were out of the country?’
‘Not likely,’ Scarlet returned. ‘I get seasick and have a phobia of flying.’
‘How inconvenient. Actually it was covered quite widely in the papers—this woman developed a thing about Roman.’
‘An ex-girlfriend?’ That figured. Any woman who went out with him had to be slightly unbalanced to begin with.
‘Well, no, that’s the thing, they had never actually met, but she became convinced they had a relationship. She wrote to him, telephoned him, sent him gifts…initially Roman felt sorry for her and thought if he ignored her she’d go away. Things came to a head when he arrived at the office one morning to find her holding his PA at knifepoint.’
‘Gracious!’ Scarlet gasped, her eyes widening in horror. ‘Was anyone hurt?’
‘Roman managed to talk her into letting Alice go and apparently she was going to hand over the knife when the police arrived. The woman panicked and became quite frenzied. Roman and Alice both got injured, Alice badly. Fortunately they both recovered.’
‘That must have been very traumatic.’
‘It was, though Roman was more concerned that he had unwittingly put someone else’s life at risk. Oh, I know it wasn’t his fault.’ Scarlet, who hadn’t been going to suggest anything of the sort, remained, silent. ‘But Roman has a very overdeveloped sense of responsibility.’
Scarlet smiled politely and wondered privately how much a mother’s natural bias had coloured this version of events. Certainly this caring, sensitive paragon didn’t sound much like the man the newspapers were so fond of writing about or the one she had spoken to earlier!
‘Roman admires a woman with spirit.’
Roman manages to hide his admiration pretty well. ‘Really…?’ she responded, not sure what else she was supposed to say to this apparently irrelevant comment.
‘And what did my son have to say for himself?’
Beyond threaten to sue the socks off me? ‘Oh, we didn’t really chat,’ she responded lightly.
‘Well, you’ll be able to get reacquainted properly when he arrives. The years have changed him, you know, my dear.’
The turn of phrase struck Scarlet as distinctly odd, but she was so relieved that the older woman appeared resigned that her son was coming to collect her that she didn’t comment on it.
‘Scarlet.’ David appeared at the door. ‘Could I have a word for a moment? Mrs O’Hagan, it’s good to see you looking so much better.’
Now that he said so, Scarlet too saw that the older woman had perked up considerably. ‘I’ll be right back,’ she promised.
Actually she wasn’t right back because David had been informed that Roman O’Hagan was in the building and, as he put it, thought that, ‘a more senior member of staff should be here when he arrives. No reflection on your abilities, Scarlet, but as a sign of respect.’
Scarlet gave him no argument. ‘I think it’s the least he would expect,’ she agreed.
It suited her down to the ground not to be there when the bullying millionaire put in an appearance. If she had to be nice to him she’d choke.
‘I might take that time owing me and nip off now with Sam, unless you want me to hang around?’
Roman ran his long fingers through the gleaming strands of his dark hair in a gesture of impatience. The same impatience was etched in the strong, symmetrical lines of his darkly handsome face as he looked down at his mother.
‘Yes, it was necessary for me to bring Philip; he is your doctor.’
‘And as I have told him, I fainted, nothing more. You are fussing like an old woman, Roman,’ she told her son scornfully. Graciously she extended her arm for the suited figure to apply a blood-pressure cuff. ‘Normal?’ she asked as the medic removed the stethoscope from his ears.
The doctor nodded. ‘If all my patients were this healthy I’d be out of business,’ he told her cheerfully.
Natalia shot her son a triumphant look. ‘I told you so,’ she murmured complacently.
‘But you will carry out further tests?’ Roman addressed his query to his friend.
‘I could, but—’
‘Do them.’
Natalia gave a sigh of exasperation. ‘This is exactly why I didn’t want them to ring you. You come rushing here when I’m sure you have a million more important things to do.’
‘Several million things, actually,’ Roman corrected, the corners of his wide, sensual mouth lifting in a sarcastic smile. ‘Naturally all much more important than my mother’s health.’
‘Well, I’m glad to see that family is still important to you, Roman.’
One dark brow quirked as, with slightly narrowed eyes, he scanned his mother’s face. Never slow when it came to reading between the lines, he asked, ‘Am I missing something here?’
‘You spoke to Scarlet on the phone, I believe.’
‘Scarlet—the blonde?’
‘She is not blonde. Though I suppose she might have been blonde when you knew her, though women usually go from brunette to blonde, not the other way.’
‘I don’t and didn’t know her.’
‘Well, why did you say she was blonde?’
‘She sounded blonde.’
His mother looked at him blankly. ‘Sounded blonde? Really, Roman, do not insult my intelligence,’ she rebuked coldly.
‘Did she say I knew her?’ He was accustomed to women trying to get to him, but if this one thought she could use his mother to do so she could think again!
‘Relax, Roman. She hardly mentioned you at all, which,’ Natalia added heavily, ‘is hardly surprising,’ his mother reproached. ‘This must have been a very painful experience for her.’
‘Told you I threatened her, did she? Well, she deserved it. How could anyone not have the wit to get medical help?’
Natalia stared at her son for a moment, then appeared to come to a decision. She turned to the doctor. ‘Philip, dear, do you mind? I’ve got something I need to say to Roman.’
The doctor clicked closed his case. ‘Of course, no problem.’
Roman flashed his friend a brief nod. ‘We’ll see you back at the clinic in fifteen minutes.’
Other than give an exasperated click of her tongue, Natalia did not respond to his comments.
‘Is this going to take long, Mother?’ Roman asked as the door closed.
‘Should I have made an appointment?’ Natalia enquired spikily. ‘You may be a very important man, but you might want to remember that you’re running the company because I persuaded your father to retire.’
It had actually been his father’s heart attack that had persuaded him and his equally reluctant brother to put their careers on hold and divide their father’s responsibilities. The injection of fresh blood and new ideas had produced results that had seen the O’Hagan family’s fortunes grow rapidly.
Unfortunately the success had increased, not lessened, the tension between father and sons.
‘I’ll pass on the fact that two minutes ago you were telling me my time was too important to spend it doing anything as frivolous as rushing to my mother’s side.’
‘Don’t change the subject, Roman.’
‘I wouldn’t dare if I knew what it was. Are you going to tell me any time soon what exactly I’ve done?’ Roman drawled. ‘I know all the signs,’ he added grimly. ‘I’ve searched my conscience and nothing immediately springs to mind. I must admit I’m curious.’
Natalia’s eyes flashed as her son gave a smile that was both cynical and charming in equal measure. She didn’t smile back, but instead snatched from his fingers the pen he was idly doodling with and banged it down on the blotter.
‘Don’t do that.’ Her sons had inherited their father’s Irish charm, her own dark Italian looks and, sadly, neither had very many scruples when it came to using either to get what they wanted. Roman had been getting pretty much what he wanted all his life, with one notable exception.
A frown formed between his dark, strongly delineated brows as Roman studied his mother’s face. ‘Has something happened? Dad…?’
Natalia heard the anxiety enter his deep voice, roughening the velvet-smooth tone, and immediately shook her head reassuringly. Eyes trained on his face, she took a deep, shuddering sigh. ‘Scarlet Smith.’ She flung the name like an accusation.
‘The woman with the smart tongue and the bad attitude who is not a blonde. If you want to know anything else you’re going to have to go elsewhere because that about exhausts my knowledge of the woman.’
Natalia searched her son’s face for a moment before her body sagged in relief. ‘You didn’t know, then.’ She sighed. ‘I didn’t think you could have,’ she revealed.
‘Didn’t know and still don’t,’ he inserted drily.
‘She must have changed her name, or maybe she gave you a false name?’
‘Are we back on the not-blonde?’
‘I don’t approve of everything you do, Roman.’
Roman’s expression became stoical as he prepared to endure one of his mother’s lectures on his lifestyle with a modicum of patience—patience he would not have extended to anyone else who chose to criticise him.
‘But I simply couldn’t imagine you abandoning your responsibilities and letting your own son grow up not even knowing who you are.’