Read A Bride for Kolovsky Online
Authors: Carol Marinelli
H
E WOKE
to the absence of regret.
Zakahr noticed because it was usually a familiar bedmateâuneasy with intimacy, he saw it as weakness and always awoke wishing she were gone. Not this morning. Faced away from her, his back exposed, he would normally roll on to his back or climb out of bed. But he had left it too late, because she had already stirred beside him. In silence he lay there, felt her cool hands on his back, felt her fingers tenderly probe his scars, and he braced himself for the inevitableâthe demand for information on the strength of one night, as if he were just going to roll over and share the darkest part of his life.
He waited for her questions, but they never came.
Still her hand softly roamed him, and as her fingers explored he relived the hell of each scar, reminded himself why he was right to be here, that the plan in action was deserved. It did not have to affect Lavinia, but that meant he had to trust her, and he tensed at the very thought of itâtrust was an enigma to Zakahr.
She felt him tense, but kissed his back, his shoulder, his neck. Lavinia willed him with her mouth to turn to
her. Bold, she unfurled beside him, stretching into the new skin of a body that felt different this morningâaware and tender. His skin was warm next to hers, and her hands explored him, past the jut of his hips to the flat of his stomach, inching downwards till she held his morning erection in her hand and adored it. She had been scaredânot just last night, maybe all her lifeâbut with him she wasn't any longer. All was beautiful.
Here, now, was where he would turnâhere, where he would normally end the intimacy. Yet he lay there and let her explore him, closed his mind to everything but her and then turned to face her. He never wanted to get out of the bed. He felt her mouth kiss his chest and then work down, felt her lips soft, warm and tentative, and then the cool of her tongue. He wanted to give in to her, but he would not. He wanted her, and it had to be now. He slid her up the bed, hooked her leg around his and drove into her.
Last night had been slow and tender, but now there was an urgencyâone Lavinia wasn't sure she could matchâbut there was also an intensity there that excited her, a loss of control in this guarded man as he bucked inside her, an instant need that from nowhere somehow her body easily met in a storm not building but hitting, spreading from her centre and outwards, and she clung onto his shoulders and gripped with her legs, bit on her lip to stay quiet.
He could feel her dense orgasm capture his, felt the shatter of release as he entered a place he had never sought, as he drove hard within her. He could hear her calling his name, and he was saying hers too.
They coupled.
It was a word he had never considered, never used, but in the midst of orgasm its meaning was crystal-clearâso clear he could actually
see
its meaning, feel her vibrations match his as she pulled him deep into her centre. He felt her fading twitches massage the last throes from him and he did not want it to be over, still lingering even after his body was spent. He lay on top of her for a moment, and her hands were still on his back. Zakahr wanted to recoil, to climb off, to get outâbecause the intimacy was killing him, because somehow he had to detach. And yet
still
he lingered, still his body refused to obey his demand, still he kissed, still he was inside herâstill she was in his head. And somehow, if he was to keep her for a little while longer, he had to trust her.
âWe should get up for breakfastâ¦' She lay in his arms, unfazed by his silence. âWhen do we leave?'
âIn a couple of hours.'
She picked up his wrist and glanced at his watch. âThis time tomorrow I'll be back at my desk,' Lavinia grumbled.
Maybe this wouldn't be so hard after all, he decided. Maybe this was what she'd intended.
âWhy not take some time off?' Zakahr said. âConcentrate on getting Rachael.' He saw just a smudge of a frown. âYou could stay with meâ¦'
âSorry?'
âMove in with me.'
Lavinia laughedâshe just laughed.
âI'm serious. You just said you don'tâ'
âIt was a comment, Zakahr. I was grumbling about
workânot fishing. Why would you ask me to move in? Any day now I could be guardian toâ'
âJust for a while.' He saw the smile wobble, made himself say it. âTill I return to the UK.'
And she'd known she could never keep him, had accepted as best she could that it could never last, but did he have to remind her so soon? She tried to sound casual, tried not to reveal that her heart was breaking. âAnd who's going to do my job if I suddenly leave?'
âYou don't have to worry about that,' he said evenly. âI called Abigail, my PA, on Friday. She should be there by tomorrow.'
âOh, but I do worry.' She sat up, pulling up her knees and whipping the sheet tightly around her, hating how easily she was being replaced. âI like my jobâ¦' She shook her head. âI
need
my jobâI'm not leaving.'
âLavinia, I tell youâyou won't have to worryâ¦' He reached out to caress her back, his fingers reaching for her shoulders, running the length of her prominent spine, glad now he hadn't signed that contractârighteous, even, in his decision. She
was
far better out of it. âI like spending time with youâI want to spend time with you.' It was an extremely unusual admission from Zakahr. âI'm trying to helpâ¦' He forced the words out. âSoon there will be no jobâ¦'
She went to turn her head, but froze. Katina's bitter words, which he had dismissed so readily with his assurances, now repeating.
âYou're going to destroyâ'
âI'm closing it,' Zakahr interrupted.
âDestroying it.' Her lips were white. Hugging her
knees tighter, she curled up at the wretchedness of it, her mind full of Rachael, how her employment status might change things. If she did get custody, how was she supposed to support her? âI can't believe you'd do this.' The implications were trickling in nowâher colleagues, Nina. The ramifications grew bigger with each cascading thought.
âWhat about Jasmineâ¦?' Lavinia was appalled. They were here as their guests, and Zakahr was planning on closing Kolovsky! âShe's getting married in a few weeksâ¦'
âLaviniaâI've been doing this for a long time. People will be looked afterâthere will be redundancy packages, agreements reached. You cannot make this personalâ¦'
âIt
is
personal, though!' And she said the words she had the first day they had met.
âIt's her weddingâ¦'
âHer father will be able to sort it⦠It's a dressâ¦' This wasn't going as well as he had hoped, and he moved to calm her. âYou are going to be fine. You will be away from all the fall-out. You can stay with me, and I will make sure you don't have to look for another job. When I'm gone, you will be able to concentrate on just yourself and Rachaelâyou can do your studiesâ¦'
Her spine straightened beneath his touch, ramrod straight, and the muscles over her shoulders tensed rigid as he named a priceâa price, Zakahr surmised, that was beyond her wildest dreams, that would secure her future, so of course she was silentâof course it was a shock. And then her head turned in fury, till the blue eyes that had always smiled darkened in fury.
âYou'll
pay
me to be your mistress?'
âI want to look after you.'
âWhile you're here,' Lavinia snarled, âyou'll pay me to sleep with you.'
âYou're twisting things.'
âI don't have to twist anything. It's pretty blatant.'
âThis wayâ' Zakahr started. But Lavinia would not let him continue.
âThis way I'll be your prostitute.'
âYou're being ridiculous.'
âActually, no. I'm an expert on the subjectâmy mother was a prostitute, Zakahr. I've done everything I can to claw my way out of that pit, and you'd hurl me straight back inâ¦'
âI am offering you a chance to change your life.'
âFor the greater good?' Lavinia scoffed. âWhat happens in ten years, when the gas bill's late or Rachael needs schoolbooks? Will I justify it then? You're offering me money, and at the same time you've taken away everything special about last night.'
She wanted to spit at him, but she wouldn't lower herself. Zakahr had done that enough already. She was out of bed in a trice, jumping out as if it were on fire, and wrapped in a sheet she turned to him. âI don't need your charity, Zakahr. In fact, you're the one I feel sorry forâthe only way you can get affection is to pay for it!'
She would have loved to dress and leave, but there really was no easy escape given they were on a yachtâso Lavinia locked herself in the bathroom, showering away every trace of his scent, repulsed at what he had
said and trying hard not to cry, trying to wash away all evidence of what had taken place. He could not possibly have shamed her more, and all Lavinia wanted was
out
.
Stepping out of the shower, she wrapped herself in a towel and wondered how she could go out there and face himâwondered how on earth she was supposed to face not just him, but Jasmine, the King. How she could ever go back to work knowing what was to come? She realised she would have to deal with this the only way she knew how.
He heard the shower turned off, waited for her to come outâexcept she was taking ages, and for once Zakahr did not know how he should react. Cursing his choice of words, but not the sentiment behind them, because he
did
want to take care of her, he was bristling, tooâhe did
not
have to pay for affection. Women threw themselves at him. And yetâ¦
Zakahr closed his eyes. He neither wanted nor needed affectionâdid not want the questions that came with companionship. Rather, he preferred the detachment that money allowed. He lay, wondering how best to deal with Lavinia, which words might soothe, for already she knew far too much. He would comfort her, Zakahr decided, dry her tearsâeven apologise if he had toâ¦
Except as the bathroom door opened and Lavinia came out he was stunned at what he saw.
There was no trace of tears, her hair was glossy and tied back in a low ponytail, her make-up was on andâmost confusing of allâshe smiled over to him and,
without a trace of embarrassment or shame, dropped her towel and pulled on her underwear.
âYou'd better get ready.'
In purple panties and bra she hurried him, and Zakahr watched as she put on a simple white cami, then topped it with a smart lilac trouser suit. She looked fresh and poised and incredibly beautiful, andâworse for Zakahrâshe was still smiling.
Worse still, she was looking him straight in the eye.
He had expected tears, arguments, perhaps, even that she might have reconsideredâit was a life-changing sum, after all. But instead she was looking at him, smiling at him, talking to him as if none of it mattered, as if she was enjoying his company, evenâand it hit him then like a fist in the stomach. She was performingâjust as she had for those revolting men she had once danced for.
Laviniaâthe real Lavinia he had started to glimpseâwas closed.
âM
ORNING
.'
He walked in on Monday to the scent of freshly brewed coffee and pleasing perfume. The computers were on, as he sat at his desk his diary was open at today's page, his schedule updated, and of course there should be nothing but relief when he looked up and it wasn't Lavinia bringing him coffee but Abigail instead.
The journey back to Melbourne had been hellish. There had been no grand gestures, no flouncing off. Instead Lavinia had chatted away about nothing, thanked him when his car had dropped her off, and then walked up her garden path and closed her door.
She wouldn't be backâof that he was sure. And it was for the best, Zakahr told himself. For without Lavinia buzzing in his ear, messing with his head, finally he could execute his plans.
âI want this sorted by the end of the week,' Zakahr told Abigail.
âI thought we had longer.'
âI want it done,' Zakahr saidâbecause he just wanted to be on that plane and heading home. But even his head protested at that word. Home? To where? London?
Switzerland? Or would he stop over in Singapore? Home to what? His family was here.
He
had
no family, Zakahr reminded himself.
âAleksi Kolovsky called,' Abigail unwittingly taunted him. âHe says it's nothing urgent. He just called from his honeymoon to see how things were going.'
Zakahr shrugged and flicked his hand, which told Abigail to disregard itâthat it wasn't important. They had worked together for years. Abigail was marriedâvery happily marriedâwhich meant she would never jeopardise things with sudden demands. But they were still occasional lovers, and Zakahr could not fathom that now, even as Abigail flirted a little and offered him a cue.
âIt seems a little strangeâ¦' Abigail smiled ââ¦just us in Australia.'
âIt won't be for long.' Zakahr did not pursue it. âI'm making the announcement on Fridayâyou'll need to arrange the pressâbut till then try to keep it business as normal as far as you can. Though I
do
need the auditors in.' He recited his orders. âI want the team flown in by the weekend. I'm leaving straight after the press conference on Friday.'
He saw Abigail frown. Normally Zakahr stayed to wrap things up, was steadfast in his decisions. He stood by the burning building as it fell, answered questions, and fended off the reporters.
âWon't you be needed here?' Abigail checked. âAt least for a few days?'
âI've been away long enough. It will be pure admin.'
He turned to his computer, and because she wasn't
Lavinia, Abigail took her cue. Did not question a detail, nor argue a point. But there was one thing he needed to clear up, so he headed out of his office, to where Abigail was now working, and briefly brought Abigail up to speed.
âThere was an assistant,' Zakahr said. âLavinia. I doubt she will be back, but just in case, she is to know nothingâ¦' His voice trailed off, for there she was, walking in, just as she had on that first day, offering a quick apology for being late and carrying a large takeaway coffee. Only this morning her make-up was fully on. â
I'm
Lavinia.' She offered her hand to Abigail, who after a moment's hesitation shook it. âJust ask me anything you need to know, or need me to do.' And, swishing past Zakahr with a bright smile, she wished him a good morning, then headed for her old office.
With that she set the tone.
It was business, but it was so not as normalâLavinia was just caught up in the dance of pretence, while knowing it was all a charade. She loathed Abigail, with her pussy-cat smile and her long red nails that lingered too long on his armâloathed the scent of the woman who was so devoted to Zakahr that she would accept him without question. Not that she let Abigail see how she felt.
âRula's agent insists the new contract is signed before her client puts on weight.' Lavinia listened as Abigail passed on the message. âThey've drawn it up; I've got it here. I'll bring it through and let Katina know.'
âHere.' She made the other woman a drink, rolled
her eyes in sympathy as Abigail juggled with an angry Katina on the phone.
âHe'll sign it soon,' Abigail said crisply to the chief designer, âand we'll get it couriered. Go ahead with the alterations. One moment.' She handed a file to Lavinia. âCould you ask Zakahr to sign these? He knows what it's about.' She returned her attention to the phone call with Katina. âThat's your department. Zakahr does not need to be concerned with those details.'
Zakahr didn't look up when the door was knocked upon and opened. Abigail had said she was bringing the documents in, but whether it was her scent, or her walk, or just her presence, before the paperwork even reached his desk he knew that it was Lavinia.
âThese are for you to sign.'
He looked at her immaculate French polished nails, then dragged his eyes up past her immaculate clothes to her groomed face. There was no trace of tears, no malice in her eyesâthere was nothing.
A nothing he wanted to refuteâbecause he
knew
she was hurting.
She was unreadable, and that was what killed himâshe was closed off to him, and he did not like it a bit. But he consoled himself that it was for the bestâhis plans were coming into place. Soon it would be done withâsoon he could resume his life. If only Lavinia stopped challenging him. Zakahr had no conscience where his family were concerned, and he had considered it the same in businessâfigures, facts were what he dealt with. Numbers, the bottom line. It had to be that wayâand yet a lowly assistant was like a loose cannon
now, bursting into his office and asking for answers, her lips smiling but her blue eyes glinting with confrontation, forcing self-examination when Zakahr would rather not.
âJust one thing,' Lavinia said as he picked up his pen. âIf you do go ahead with your plans, just understand that with a stroke of your pen you're about to terminate her career.'
âRula will get other workâ¦'
âRula will be known as the Face Kolovsky didn't want.' Lavinia tossed her hair. âAnd thanks to this contract she'll be several kilos heavier!'
âShe'll be all the healthier for it.' Zakahr signed with a flourish, but his teeth seemed welded together as he passed her the forms.
âHas she rung yet?' Lavinia asked, and Zakahr shook his head in impatience.
âWhy would Rula ring
me
?'
âI meant Ms Hewitt,' Lavinia retortedâbecause even if it was hell right now, even if her heart was breaking, there were other more important things on her mind.
âNo.'
âShe did say that she would?' Lavinia checked, and for just a fraction the mask slipped. âThat wasn't another piece of your plan to get me away from this place?'
âNo.' Zakahr almost tasted blood. It felt as if he were swallowing shards of glass as he heard her take on things. He could see how it lookedâthe night away, Abigail flying in⦠âI will let you know when she calls.'
Â
He didn't.
She limped through to Thursday, but it took every ounce of strength she possessed to go to work. She should just leave, just walk away. Except she wouldn't give him the satisfactionâand there was, despite all evidence to the contrary, still a flare of hope in her heart that Zakahr would not go through with it, that he would be the wonderful, intuitive man she knew he could be, the caring man who had listened about Rachael.
And the devil himself she was sure
did
have a conscience. Because while she smiled and carried on as before, while she made extra effort with her appearance, Zakahr didn't seem to care less. He'd stopped shavingâsince Sydney his face had not met a razorâbut unfortunately it made him look sexier.
What wasn't so endearing was that for the first time since he'd taken over Zakahr had the same suit on for a second day in a rowâand, Lavinia was positive, the same shirt. And he wasn't wearing a tie.
She wondered whose bed he'd just rolled out of.
âI don't give “warm wishes”.' He placed two letters she'd actually been asked to draft on her desk beside her, and Lavinia should have jumpedâafter all, she was scrolling through Positions Vacantâbut she refused to jump to
him
.
âAnd I'm not a typist,' Lavinia said. âWhat do you preferâyours truly?'
The irony wasn't wasted on Zakahr, and he gave a thin smile. Even though they barely spoke, when they did, thanks to Laviniaâwho had always refused to bend to himâthey managed pretty much as before.
âYours sincerely,' Zakahr said. âIf you can manage it.' He glanced at her computer screen. âAnything good?'
âA few!' Lavinia said. âDon't worryâI shan't ask for a reference.'
It shouldn't concern him at all. But as he sat later, going over and over the events of tomorrow with Abigail, over and over his mind drifted to Lavinia.
What would she do?
He'd seen the jobs she was looking atâand he knew the types of qualifications they required. She'd need a pretty good job to match her wage. She was, he admitted, one of the sharpest people he knewâbut by her own admission on paper she was qualified for little.
It wasn't his problem.
He'd never have got where he was if he'd worried about individual staffâZakahr had to be ruthless. He'd come from nothing. She could do it, too.
âYour mail.' Lavinia knocked and went in, handed him his personal mailâwhich was one of the few jobs still left to her.
âThanks.' He didn't even look up at her, and Abigail sat in silence, clearly waiting for Lavinia to be gone.
âOh, Abigail.' Lavinia smiled sweetly. âThe beauticians rangâthey can squeeze you in for your Brazilian after all. Just so long as you don't need your bottom done! I said I wasn't sure, and that you'd call them back.'
âThat was cruel.' Zakahr couldn't help but grin as a purple-faced Abigail excused herself for a moment.
âNo,' Lavinia corrected, âthat was bliss!' She turned to go, but then, blonde, dizzy, still absolutely stunning,
she turned back. âI've just had Alannah on the phone. She's a bit upset there are internal auditors going into the boutique.'
âExternal,' Zakahr corrected. âThey're an international firm I regularly use. Just tell her somethingâI don't know.' He shrugged. âTell her I don't trust anyone else's figuresâeven Nina and Aleksi could not agree on Kolovsky's worth. Tell her there's nothing to worry about.'
âLie to her?'
âIt's your job to keep things normal,' Zakahr said. âIf you can't handle itâ¦'
âFineâI'll tell her. I'm going to the boutique anyway. Abigail's given me quite a shopping list!'
As Zakahr took a phone call, Lavinia flounced out. A boot-faced Abigail scowled at her from her desk.
âIf you ever do that againâ¦'
âYou'll what?' Lavinia challenged. âFire me?'
âI'll speak to Zakahr!'
âAnd tell him what? That I'm a bitch?' Lavinia just laughed. âOh, I can beâ¦'
Unfortunately Zakahr chose that moment to put in an appearance. âCome,' he said. âI'll speak to Alannah myself. You can have a lift.'
It was their first real time alone since the weekend, and for Zakahr, even if it was awkward, it was actually a relief to get out of the office. As they moved out of the city Zakahr watched as Lavinia looked out of the window. Perhaps feeling his eyes, Lavinia turned and gave him a smile. It didn't look false, and that was the part that gutted himâhe knew it had to be.
âHow are you doing?' he askedâbecause despite everything he did want to know.
âGood!' she said.
âLaviniaâ¦' Zakahr could not stand the bright smile. âCan you drop the actâ¦?'
Never. She would smile, she would carry on, she would laugh and she would talk. But she would never let him in again.
âMs Hewitt just called.' There was a slight inclination of her head. It was the only indication of how much this mattered to her. âThat is why I wanted you away from the office. I confirmed that you have worked for Kolovsky for more than two yearsâ¦'
âDid you tell her that after tomorrow I wouldn't have a job?'
âOf course not.'
âShe'll find out anyway.' Lavinia shrugged. âI've got an appointment with her at lunchtime.'
âI told her that you are responsibleâthat you haveâ¦'
Except Lavinia shook her headâdidn't need to hear it. Instead she opened the partition and chatted with Eddie about his tiny granddaughter.
When they got to the boutique she didn't wait for Eddie to come round and open the doorâjust shot out of the car and walked ahead of him. And it was Lavinia who held the heavy door open as Zakahr refused to hesitate. He had seen many House of Kolovsky boutiques on his travels, but he had never been able to bring himself to go in, loathing them from the outside.
âAge before beauty!' Lavinia said brightlyâonly today she didn't make him smile.
He was very good with Alannah and her team. Lavinia had to give credit where it was due. In fifteen minutes he had the worried staff convinced this audit was nothing out of the ordinary, that it would all take place after hours, and that none of the clients would know, nothing would be compromised.
Lavinia picked up Abigail's order, which was actually two dresses, a jacket and a sheer silk shirt, a thick coat, and a gorgeous heavy silk scarf that Lavinia could quite happily have throttled her withâbecause if it was worth a fortune today, as Abigail knew only too well, tomorrow it would be priceless.
As they went to walk out of the boutique, as always Lavinia's eyes lingered a moment on her favourite signature piece. He must have followed her gaze as Zakahr's hand moved to the garment and there was a flare of recognition in his eyes.