Harlequin Romance March 2021 Box Set Cara Colter (the mitten read aloud TXT) đ
- Author: Cara Colter
Book online «Harlequin Romance March 2021 Box Set Cara Colter (the mitten read aloud TXT) đ». Author Cara Colter
Amalfi. Italy. Home. For all he had been born and brought up in London, sent to school in the home counties, for part of him, Italy would always be home. Matteo half closed his eyes. He could feel the warmth of the sun, smell the all-pervasive scent of lemons mixed with the salt of the sea, see the vibrant blues and greens of that God-blessed coastline. âWe honeymooned there too.â He smiled at Charlie. He might not remember the honeymoon but he remembered the planning. âParis, then the Orient Express to Venice because the book is one of your favouritesâŠâ But at the shuttered look on Charlieâs face he paused, uncertain, hating the holes in his memory. âHave I got it wrong?â
âNo, that was the plan, but we didnât get any further than Paris.â She looked away, her cheeks pink. âA business deal gone wrong. We postponed the rest.â
âIâm sorry,â he said futilely. What had he been thinking? They had planned the honeymoon together and she had been so excited.
Charlie waved a dismissive hand. âI understood. Itâs ancient history. I meanâŠâ She stopped, a stricken look on her face. âI am so sorry. Ancient history to me, but the future to you.â
âNo, donât apologise.â This was ridiculous. They were married, in love, and yet they were dancing around each other like guarded strangers. âI should apologise, for not having taken you to Amalfi yet. It shouldnât take an accident and memory loss to prompt me. But let me make it up to you. This can be a second honeymoon.â
He smiled but, to his surprise, Charlie avoided his gaze. Dread curled around his gut. Something was wrong. Very wrong.
âYes,â she said. âLovely.â
CHAPTER TWO
âYOUâRE DOING WHAT?â Phoebe froze in her chair, her wine glass held up to her half-open mouth. âAre you insane?â
Charlie plonked her bag onto the kitchen table and sank wearily into the opposite seat, pulling the wine bottle and spare glass waiting next to it to her. She had no idea how to truthfully answer that question. âIt would look weird if I didnât go with him, and the doctor said very clearly that Matteo wasnât to get any shocks. He knows weâre married; thereâs no good reason why I wouldnât go.â Besides, she couldnât help replaying the moment sheâd first seen him, lying so still, hooked up to all those machines, the doctorâs words echoing in her head. He is very lucky. She had to make sure he was on the road to recovery before walking away. Again.
Phoebe looked over at their grandmother for backup. âCan you hear this, Gran? No good reason? Thereâs plenty of good reasons, Charlie. Number one, youâre getting divorced. Number two, youâre supposed to be flying out to Vietnam on Friday. What is Lexi going to say?â
Charlie poured a generous glug of the wine into her glass and gratefully accepted the bowl of soup her grandmother held out to her, helping herself to bread from the plate in the middle of the table. âThis smells incredible, Gran, thank you. I donât think Iâve had a chance to eat since breakfast; thereâs something about hospitals that makes you lose all sense of time and appetite.â She took a bite of her granâs home-made bread, still warm from the oven, and immediately felt a little better.
âPheebs, you know that Lexi has fallen in loveâor lustâwith some rugby-playing New Zealand backpacker. From what I can tell, sheâs at the smitten, canât-spend-a-second-away-from-him phase. Honestly? I think sheâll be relieved if I donât turn up to be an awkward spare wheel on her holiday romance. And as for your number one, thatâs kind of the problem. Matteo doesnât know about the divorce, Phoebe. He doesnât even remember getting married. As far as Matteo is concerned itâs last year. The day before our wedding.â
âBut itâs not. A lot has happened since then and you have wasted enough of your life on him. You donât owe him anything, Charlie.â
âNo, but we are still married and I am still his next of kin, for the next six weeks anyway. Itâs my responsibility to get him safely to the villa and keep an eye on him until his concussion heals. Then, I just need to think of a good excuse to come home and by the time my absence looks suspicious hopefully heâll have remembered.â It wasnât much of a plan, but it was all she had. âI did promise âin sickness and in healthâ after all.â
âOh, Charlie. You promised for ever and ever, through good times and bad. And they are lovely sentiments, but thatâs all they are.â
âPhoebe!â her grandmother scolded, and her cousin looked shamefaced.
âIâm sorry, Charlie, but you have to admit, even by your standards this is a terrible idea.â
Charlie rubbed her eyes. All the adrenaline that had fuelled her through the long afternoon of tests and doctors had faded away, leaving her as worn-out as her grandmotherâs ancient tea towels. âPhoebe, I know youâre just trying to help, that youâre looking out for me and I appreciate it, I really do. But I have to do this.â She hesitated, trying to find the right words. âThis isnât me doing something crazy because someone told me not to or because it looks like fun. This is me trying to do the right thing. I hate that we failed, Matteo and I. I hate what happened to us. That in the end I couldnât make it work.â She took a large gulp of her wine, looking for the courage to say
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