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Because he will force you to abort your child, just as

he forced me to abort mine."

Jodie could feel the blood leaving her face. She

looked wildly towards Lorenzo, expecting to hear him

deny Caterina’s horrific accusations, but instead he

simply turned on his heel and left.

"that’s not true," Jodie whispered. "It can’t possibly

be. Lorenzo would never—"

"What? Have you fallen in love with him already?"

Caterina mocked her. "You little fool. You mean

nothing to him, and you never will. And it is true.

Lorenzo forced me to abort my child. If you Don’t

believe me, go and ask him. He will not spare you

by lying to you about it. Not Lorenzo. His pride

wouldn’t let him." She started to laugh, stepping past

Jodie as a car swept into the courtyard.

Jodie had no idea how long she had been out here,

sitting alone in the Castillo garden, trying to cope

with the violence of her turbulent emotions.

It wasn’t true what Caterina had said to her, she

told herself stubbornly. She had not fallen in love

with Lorenzo. But she wanted him. Physical desire

was not love. But it was a manifestation of it. She

could not love a man who not only did not love her,

but who did not even recognise what love was. But

what if she did?

"It’s getting dark, and if you stay out here much

longer You’ll risk ending up with your leg aching."

She hadn’t heard Lorenzo come into the garden,

and automatically she moved deeper into the shadows,

because she was afraid of what he might read in

her expression. She tensed as he sat down beside her.

"You’re right. I’d better go in," she told him in a

thin, emotionless voice.

"Why Don’t you want to go back to England?"

"What?" Jodie looked at him blankly. She had almost

forgotten their earlier conversation, thanks to the

i

"There must be some reason," Lorenzo persisted.

"I’m not sure that It’s something that I want to do

any more," she admitted reluctantly. "It seemed a

good idea at the time, and…and it even gave me a

sense of purpose — something to focus on. But now…"

Now her old life seemed a million years away, and

she didn’t care what John and Louise did or thought,

because now… Because now what? A fear that she

didn’t want to give any room to was uncurling inside

her with all the clinging tenacity of a killer vine. Was

this seismic shift in her emotional focus because she

was falling in love with Lorenzo?

Falling in love? That implied that she was in the

middle of an act she could halt, she decided with relief,

clinging to that thought in desperation. And she

would halt it, she decided fiercely.

"I think we should go."

"Do you?" If she argued with him now, would he

start thinking that it was because she might be falling

in love with him? No way did she want that.

"Yes. It will help you to find closure and be a way

to draw a line under your relationship with both of

them. Then you will be able to move on."

"Mmm. I suppose You’re right."

"I know that I’m right," Lorenzo said. "I just

wish…"

"What? That you had married Caterina?"

"No," he denied sharply.

"Did you…? Was it…? Was it true what she said

about — about the baby?" Jodie whispered, unable to

stop herself from asking the question that had been

splintering and festering inside her since Caterina had

made her accusation.

"Yes," Lorenzo admitted heavily.

Jodie shuddered. "Your own child!" she protested

with revulsion. "How—?"

"No! Caterina was not… It was not my child. But

that does not diminish my guilt. I hadn’t thought…

That was the trouble. I didn’t think. I just assumed,

with the arrogance and stupidity of youth, that—" He

broke off and Jodie could see the tension in his jaw.

"Caterina and Gino had been engaged for about six

months when she boasted to me that she had a new

lover. She had never forgiven me for ending our brief

relationship, and I think she thought she could make

me jealous. She told me that she was to have his

child, but she had told Gino the child was his. I was

angry on behalf of my cousin, whom I knew loved

her deeply, with all the self-righteous anger of the

very young. I tried to force her hand. I told her she

must tell Gino the truth or I would do so myself. I

wanted Gino to know what she was — and, yes, it is

true I hoped he would end the engagement. For his

own sake. But instead of telling Gino the truth she

had her pregnancy terminated — and told Gino she had

lost the child. He was devastated, and immediately

insisted on marrying her. So, through my interference,

one life was lost and another destroyed."

Jodie had to swallow as she heard the raw emotion

in his voice. "You weren’t responsible."

"Yes, I was. If I had not interfered she would have

had the child."

"And she would have gone on lying to your

cousin."

"I tried to play at being God, and no man should

do that. I tried to control her behaviour because I had

not been able to control my mother"s. She left my

father and she left me, too, to be with her lover.

Caterina stayed with Gino, but, like my mother, she

sacrificed her child for her own ends. It felt like I had

murdered my own brother."

As she heard the pain in his voice it occurred to

Jodie that Caterina must have known how he would

react, and that her decision would have been motivated

by her desire to inflict that pain and guilt on

him.

"I can never forgive myself for it — never!"

"It was Caterina who made the decision — not you,"

Jodie pointed out quietly. "It was her child, and her

body. You weren’t even the father."

"If I had been there is no way she would have been

allowed to do what she did," Lorenzo told Jodie passionately.

"Not even if I had to lock her up for nine

months to make sure of it." He fell silent for a moment,

then spoke more quietly. "My mother once told

me that she hadn’t wanted me. She hadn’t even really

wanted to marry my father. There had been family

pressure, and she had decided that marriage to him

was at least a form of escape from the strict control

of her parents." Lorenzo’s voice was bleak.

"I was so lucky to have two parents who loved one

another, and me," Jodie commented softly. She

couldn’t begin to image what it must have been like

for a young child to be told by his mother that he

wasn’t wanted.

"She was little more than a child when she got married.

Seventeen, and my father was twenty-four. He

loved her intensely. Too much. Her lover was a racing

driver she met through a friend. So much more exciting

than my father. She used to take me with her

when she went to meet him. I had no idea then of the

truth. I thought… He showed me his car and…"

And you liked him, Jodie recognised compassionately.

You liked him, and then you felt you had betrayed

your father — just as your mother had done.

"They ran away together in the end, and my mother

died of blood poisoning in South America, where he

was racing. My father never got over losing her, and

I swore then that I would never…"

"Trust another woman?" Jodie finished for him.

"Let my emotions control me," Lorenzo corrected

her.

"Do we really have to stay married for a year?" she

asked him. "After all, you’ve got the Castillo now,

and Caterina has left…"