to be devastated when this was over, but she was going to be devastated anyway so why not have some weeks of delicious mind-blowing sex with this gorgeous man to remember and some financial security for the twins?
‘All right, but no.’ She twisted away from the hand that reached for her, knowing that once he touched her she wouldn’t be able to think straight, let alone consider consequences. ‘There have to be some rules.’
Isandro stared at her, taken aback—he made the rules.
‘I don’t want this to affect the twins. I don’t want them to know about us. We have to be discreet. We know this is just sex but they are just…’ Whichever way she looked, there were aspects to this arrangement that didn’t feel right.
He tipped his head. ‘That seems fair.’ He tangled his fingers in her hair and kissed her mouth. ‘Do not look so worried. We have weeks of pleasure ahead of us. You are not some little girl seeking the attention of men and mistaking it for love. This is an equal relationship of two people who know what they want.’
‘What do you want?’
‘You, querida, you in so many ways.’
She shivered. ‘Many ways?’
His smile made her heart flip. ‘Come here and let me show you.’
Zoe and the twins had been established in the gatehouse for six weeks. Her passion with Isandro had not flagged, and six weeks was new ground for him. Abiding by rules set by someone else was also new and on occasion frustrating.
There came a tapping on the window of his study—which had recently been knocked through to make room for the extra office equipment he needed since he had made the decision to do more work from home.
Isandro looked up from the computer screen.
When the red-headed figure at the window saw him she began to gesticulate wildly. A second later she vanished, and there was a clattering sound.
With a sigh Isandro levered himself up from his chair, stretching the kinks from his spine as he walked towards the window. Pulling up the sash, he leaned out. Georgina was lying beside an overturned crate she had presumably dragged over to the window and fallen off. She was picking herself up.
‘What are you doing?’
‘Looking for you, obviously.’ Ever irrepressible, she dusted off the seat of her jeans.
‘Did you hurt yourself?’
The kid treated the question with the scorn she appeared to think it deserved, shaking her head and looking offended by the question.
Like aunt, like niece, he thought.
‘I would have gone to Chloe but they’re not back until tomorrow. I can’t wait to see Hannah again and she’s walking with crutches, and there isn’t really anyone else.’
So not first choice, or even second. ‘I feel honoured.’
‘If Zoe died, would we get put in a home?’
His half-sardonic smile snuffed like a candle caught in a chill draft and Isandro did suddenly feel as though a cold fist had plunged deep into his belly.
‘Zoe is not going to die.’
‘No…?’ Her niece sounded scarily uncertain.
‘What has happened to your aunt Zoe?’ he asked, ruthlessly reining in his imagination and struggling to keep his tone light.
‘She says she’s fine but she doesn’t look fine and she—’
He held up a hand. ‘Wait there. I will be with you momentarily.’
Snatching up his jacket on the way out, he paused only to close his laptop before leaving the house. Outside Georgie was trotting around the side of the house to meet him when he emerged.
‘Zoe sent you?’
She shook her head. ‘She’ll be mad with me,’ she predicted gloomily.
‘She doesn’t need to know that you came to get me.’
Her eyes flew wide with shock. ‘That would be lying!’ Children were a minefield.
‘Of course it would, and of course you should never lie…especially to your aunt.’
The child looked unconvinced as she climbed into the passenger seat of his car.
‘Now tell me what is wrong.’
When they arrived at the lodge they entered through her open back door where Harry, his face scrunched in concentration, was standing on a kitchen chair trying to open a tin with an opener that looked like an antique. His small fingers looked perilously near the razor-sharp edges.
Conscious it might not be a good idea to startle him, Isandro walked across and, after a friendly pat on the shoulder, extricated the tin from his grip.
‘Let me—there’s a knack to this. There you go.’ He glanced at the label. ‘Chicken soup.’
‘Mum always gave us chicken soup when we were sick. I thought I’d make Zoe some.’
‘Good idea, but let’s wait until we