Vineyards Of Deception
erful release still violently racked her slender frame. Alessandro had disentangled, detached and distanced hims
ightly tanned skin but knowing from experience that her touch would be rebuffed. His words, the ones that were always wrenched from
a son, Is
g more than a biological imperative. After eighteen months of the same, Isabella had finally realized that it would never change.
She sat up, naked, her body still trembling and drew her knees to her chest. She wrapped her arms around her legs, pressed her cheek to her knees and watched as his breathing steadied, his own shaking was subsiding slightly. He lay spread-eagled, al
words and they spilled from her
divorce, A
coiled spring, before he turned his head to meet her watchful
a lowered her eyelids, trying to mask the shaft of pain at his words. When she was su
anaged, hoping the l
e the purr of a cat. "What happened
ange," she
ow, resting his head on his hand. He looked so much like a Roman gladiator
ky purr of agreement but Isabella wasn't fooled by his relaxed
he assessed, his voice st
o love me so much, she couldn't live without me. The one
, without moving, without s
only thing I've ever wanted from this pathetic excuse for
a divorce," she tried for
o easy way out of this marriage. Not until I got what I wanted from you and that day looks to be a long
she buried her face in her knees a
r and took a few seconds to compose herself, swiping the hot tears from her face with the backs of both hands before dragging on a gauzy peignoir and heading toward the kitchen
range juice. His short black hair was damp and standing up in tufts where he had carelessly towel-dried it after his shower and he wore not
Alessandro never touched her outside of the bedroom. In the eighteen months they had been married, this was the first time that she could recall him touching h
rce, Theresa... ever," he told he
divorcing you, Sandro,
u get that divorce, your cousin loses her business and she can't afford that now, not
t know what the specifics of that loan were but she had always assumed that it was something he had done out of generosity. Staring up at him now, she coul