Baby for the Billionaire(6)



Sasha hated the way he talked to her mother in private. In company, butter wouldn’t melt in his mouth.

“Dad, don’t speak to Mum that way.”

Porter made a dismissive gesture. “This isn’t about your mother and me. This is about you and Nick. Dammit, girl. It’s not like Nick isn’t a good-looking young man.”

Sasha could only stare at him in dismay. “I don’t understand why you want me to marry at all.”

Her father’s eyes darted away, then back again. “The Valentes are our closest friends. It would be nice to join the two families.”

That was a crazy reason to get married. Nobody did that sort of thing anymore, or if they did she wasn’t about to do it.

“Dad, I’m not going to marry a man I don’t love just to bring two families together.”

The wind seemed to leave Porter and he sat down heavily on a chair, looking defeated. “If you don’t, then say goodbye to this house and everything we have.”

“What are you talking about?”

“If I don’t close a deal with the Valentes soon, I’ll lose my shipping business. If that happens we lose everything.”

Sasha ignored her mother’s gasp. “But Cesare’s your friend. He’ll give you the deal.”

“He’s a businessman first. If anyone undercuts my offer he’ll go with them.” He paused. “Unless you’re his daughter-in-law and then he’ll want to keep it in the family.”

“You don’t know what you’re asking,” she whispered.

Her father sighed heavily. “You’re right, but it’s the only chance we’ve got.”

Sasha shook her head. No, she couldn’t do it. It was too much to ask of her.

Then she caught her mother’s pleading eyes. “Sasha, darling,” Sally began. “Do you think it would be so terrible to marry Nick?”

She drew a painful breath. “Oh, Mum, no. Don’t ask this of me.”

“Darling, I have to. If not for your father’s sake, then mine.”

Sasha hated seeing how her mother always put her husband first, and no amount of talking on her part could change her mind. It was part of the reason she’d gone to London. She’d had to get away from her parents.

And from the memory of Nick Valente.

She sighed with defeat. “Do you have Nick’s address?”

Her father’s face lit up and so did her mother’s. “No, but I can get it right now.” He jumped to his feet, then hesitated. “Thank you, Sasha,” he muttered, then strode out of the kitchen.

Sasha looked at her mother, who was blinking back tears of happiness. “Darling, I’m sorry. I know—”

“Mum, please don’t say anything right now.”

Her mother flushed. “Okay. If that’s what you want.”

“It is.”

Sasha went to get her purse when her father came back with Nick’s address. It was small comfort to know she could help her parents.

At what cost to herself she wasn’t sure.

An hour later she stood in front of Nick’s apartment and rang the doorbell. Right now the cost seemed much too high a price to pay.

Oh God, if only this had been seven years ago. She’d have given anything for him to ask her to marry him back then.

She remembered that kiss in the gazebo in the summer rain. It had just happened and she’d almost melted in a puddle at his feet. He’d surely felt everything she’d felt, she’d told herself as it ended and she’d moved in closer for another one. He’d realize he loved her and couldn’t live without her and any moment he’d tell her so.

Instead he’d held her back from him, obviously appalled he’d kissed her. She’d seen it in his blue eyes that had turned from light blue to dark in a matter of seconds.

And then he’d left her there, gone back up to the main house to the party and casually taken another woman home, just like he’d been exchanging his Ferrari for another model. It had devastated her, but she’d never let him know it.

Right at that moment the door opened and Nick stood there, devastatingly handsome and undeniably male, and nothing on his handsome face giving away any of his thoughts.

He moved back to let her enter the apartment. “My father said you’d be stopping by.”

“Word gets around fast.”

She stepped through the doorway, trying to shake her feelings of the past. It was the present … now … that should concern her.

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