Love Unbreakable
The Unwanted Wife's Unexpected Comeback
Secrets Of The Neglected Wife: When Her True Colors Shine
Comeback Of The Adored Heiress
Moonlit Desires: The CEO's Daring Proposal
Bound By Love: Marrying My Disabled Husband
Who Dares Claim The Heart Of My Wonderful Queen?
Best Friend Divorced Me When I Carried His Baby
Return, My Love: Wooing the Neglected Ex-Wife
Married To An Exquisite Queen: My Ex-wife's Spectacular Comeback
‘Oh, yes, there are snakes—’ his grin widened as he glanced towards her thoroughly inadequate shoes ‘—and then there are the giant
anteaters, jaguars and the—’
‘OK, I think I’ve heard enough,’ she said breathlessly, interrupting him
with a shaky smile. Any moment now she’d be clinging to his arm and begging him to fly her home. ‘I’m sure Mr Cordeiro wouldn’t live here if it were that dangerous.’
The pilot threw back his head and laughed. ‘You obviously don’t know the first thing about him. He lives here because it’s that dangerous, baby doll. He has a low boredom threshold. Likes to live life on the edge, so to speak.’
Baby doll? The careless way he’d diminished her to nothing irritated
Grace sufficiently for her to forget her nerves. All her life she’d been
patronised and underestimated. All her life people had doubted and dismissed her. And she’d proved them wrong, over and over again. She’d fought against the odds and she’d succeeded. Until now.
Now she was in danger of losing everything she’d worked for.
And she wasn’t going to let that happen.
This was probably the most important fight of her life and she was going to win. She had to win. And to win she had to forget that she was probably the worst person in the world to be given the responsibility of talking numbers with the Brazilian billionaire with the computer brain.
She had to forget everything except the consequences of losing. And the
people depending on her. If she failed then they lost their jobs, it was as simple as that.
If Rafael Cordeiro called in his loan, then it was all over.
The humid, oppressive heat wrapped itself around her like a thick, suffocating cloak and she pushed a damp strand of hair away from her face, her eyes drawn upwards, following the straight lines of the trees that rose to such impressive heights. It was like being in a remote, exotic paradise and it was hard to remember that cities like London and Rio de
Janeiro even existed. ‘Isn’t he afraid, living out here?’
‘Cordeiro?’ The pilot chewed on a piece of gum and gave a grim smile.
‘He isn’t afraid of anything.’
Knowing that if she heard any more about the man she wouldn’t have
the courage to face him, let alone fight her corner, Grace stumbled out of
the helicopter and discovered that her legs were shaking. At that precise
moment she would have been hard pressed to say whether she was more afraid of the jungle or Rafael Cordeiro.
In a world obsessed with celebrity and image, he treated the notion of both with something approaching contempt, rejecting every invitation to talk about himself. And he didn’t need to, because everyone else did the
talking for him. The papers were full of curvaceous blondes who’d been
persuaded to ‘tell all’ for the right amount of money. And so the whole world knew about his relentless pursuit of his billions, his prowess as a lover and his determined refusal to indulge in ‘happy ever after'.
Once. Once he’d done that and the news of his glamorous wife’s
departure from his life after less than three months of wedded bliss had
filled the newspapers with stories that had lasted longer than the marriage.
He’d been impossible to live with.
He’d ended their relationship by email.
He was only interested in making money. And more money.
The speculation had been endless but if any of it was to be believed then Rafael Cordeiro was little more than a machine and she knew, she
just knew, even before she had to fight for her business, that he was
going to be just the sort of man that brought out the worst in her.
She wouldn’t look at him, she promised herself. If she didn’t look at him
she wouldn’t become tongue-tied or stammer. She’d just pretend that she was in her small sitting room at home, talking to the mirror as shealways did when she had an important presentation to memorise.
Grace felt her stomach lurch again and this time the feeling of sickness
that enveloped her had nothing to do with the helicopter and everything to do with her past. At times like this—times that really mattered—the
memories rolled up behind her like a giant wave, waiting to engulf her.
For her this was the ultimate test. And she wouldn’t fail. She just couldn’t.
Too much was at stake.
There was no reason to be afraid of Rafael Cordeiro, she assured