Free Read Novels Online Home

Forbidden Duke by Pinder, Victoria (11)

11

Blackwell could breathe after having Donna again. He thought nothing could alleviate how empty he felt when she’d turned him down. However she hadn’t run away after their romantic interlude and a nap, which gave him hope.

Now he thought of this as a challenge. He needed to show her that being his duchess would be the best thing she’d ever do in her life. He had to marry someone, and unlike the nothingness he normally felt, Donna lit something inside his heart.

They left the hotel and he put her single bag in the trunk of his Ferrari. “Donna, I don’t want to pressure you. I know you can marry or not marry anyone you choose, anytime you choose. I don’t have that option.”

“You could walk away from your family money and choose your own life,” she said.

Not really, but how could she, as an American, understand? “You’ll meet my mother when we go home. I had to give up my life when my father died and all his responsibilities as the Duke of Oakley are now mine.”

“So you’re stuck.”

“I need to ensure the people under my care are provided for and if that means I marry a stranger, I will do whatever I can to keep them safe. But I’d rather marry you.”

“Thanks for letting me think about this and explaining.” She stayed beside him and he closed the trunk and went to open the passenger door. She squeezed his upper arm and then slid into the black leather seat of his car. “Even if there is only a possibility, I’m okay. I want to see where you live and what your life is like at home.”

Blackwell got into the driver’s seat, started the car and heard the powerful vhrrm of the engine. He clutched the wheel, but turned toward her. “I don’t feel like Woodbridge Hall is my real home—I’ve spent more time in my apartment in Paris.”

He pressed a button and the top came down. Donna smiled when they left the parking lot and headed toward the highway. She stared out the window, tendrils of chestnut hair flying over her cheeks. Once they were on the road and she grew comfortable with the Italian countryside, she turned and stared at his profile. He kept quiet, letting her look her fill. “I’m curious about you.”

He winked at her. “I’m an open book.”

She held the handle on the passenger side door as they went past a curve. “Do you often drive this fast?”

His brow lowered and he checked the odometer. He was driving the American speed limit, though Italians and Avceans often drove this road even faster. He reached over and patted her leg. “I’m going slow to impress you.”

She gave an audible sigh as she let her hair flap in the wind, but released her hold on the handle. “Ohh. Well I’m not used to riding in a convertible.”

He took his hand back to keep both hands on the wheel so he didn’t scare her. Blackwell turned on American rock music. “Tie your hair up.”

She laughed but put her hair in a ponytail. “You learned this trick from what woman?”

His mind went blank at the question and he shrugged. “I don’t remember. No one was as memorable as you.”

He handed her an extra pair of sunglasses from his console and adjusted his favorite Ray-Bans. Her excited laughter was all he needed to speed up so she could feel the wind hit her face.

They drove, singing and laughing, toward Woodbridge Hall and his skin grew more electric. He didn’t have a lot of time left to convince Donna to marry him, so he needed to formulate an action-packed, no-fail plan. He considered what he knew Donna liked and how he could play up his strengths.

She stared ahead of them and raised her eyebrow quizzically. “The royal palace is all lit up and it’s almost midday.”

Thankfully he wasn’t that royal. He could have a simple backyard wedding with no fuss, which was what he’d prefer. “For the week after a royal wedding, there are activities to celebrate. If you wish to go there is probably a ball tonight.”

She shook her head fast. “No thanks. Tomorrow maybe. Tonight, I want to see what your life is like.”

He drove toward his house and in the far distance knew some servant watched for his car and opened the black gate for them without being asked. She went quiet so he said, “If you marry me, we can keep the ceremony simple and invite no one, a few people or as many as you want.”

She took off his too big sunglasses, looked at him and he swore he saw a hunger in the reflection of his glasses, but he couldn’t be sure. She shrugged. “Good to know.”

A few minutes later, he drove through those black gates without seeing one person to thank. He pointed with his nose ahead of them. “Here we are.”

She held her breath, leaned forward and didn’t say a word about the white house in the distance that shone as the centerpiece of some old world design. She turned toward her door and stared at the manicured garden of lawn, tulips, and rose bushes. “The gardens are gorgeous. Where does that path go?”

He glanced past her to see which path she pointed at then answered, “Toward the pond or the horse stables depending on your turn. Do you ride?”

She let out a small, nervous laugh. “I’ve never ridden a horse in my life.”

He knew many people from Florida who rode horses—Wellington had a large polo and equestrian community, but perhaps she never had the opportunity. Blackwell parked near the front door, knowing a servant would take his car to the temperature controlled garage. He left the key in the ignition. “I ride often. I will teach you, if you’d like.”

She opened her own door and hopped out of the Ferrari. She stretched her long, denim-clad legs and met him behind the car, expecting him to get her bag. Normally a servant would but he popped the trunk and took it himself. When he’d first moved here, he’d carried his own bag to spite his father’s insistence they were nobles again. Donna wouldn’t be so strict as his father and he wanted her to be comfortable.

Donna smiled at him with trust. “You have a small, gentle horse for me?”

Red Devil came to mind, a mare the opposite of her name, and Gaia, a retired show horse, fit the bill. “I’m sure I do.”

He carried the bag up the three steps and she stopped to put her sunglasses back in the car. Once she returned, she glanced higher and said, “This reminds me of the lawn at the White House.”

Blackwell waved her inside. “Let me show you the house. I’m sure my mother will be around to impress you with our wealth.”

The butler who opened the door immediately reached for her bag and Blackwell handed it to him.

Donna unfastened her ponytail and ran her hands through her silky chestnut hair. “Why?”

His mother cared about him, which was why he’d follow the rules. “She knows I need to marry but hopes I’ll find a woman to love too. She’s formal, but my parents were very much in love. I’m the only child because when she had me, she almost died and my father couldn’t handle it if she left him.” He guided Donna to the right and toward a living area. The couch was pretentious with the gold gilding but his mother said it was a family heirloom. The rest of the room was simpler. He opened the door and showed her the sitting area that he used as a living room, complete with a view of the gardens.

Her hands went to her heart and she smiled. “That’s sweet. What happened to your father?”

His father had been larger than life and smarter than anyone else he’d ever met. “He died ten months ago. My mother is technically still in mourning…” The footsteps outside the door perked his ears and he knew it was his mother, here to meet Donna. He spoke loud enough for her to hear. “Speak of the devil herself. Here she comes.”

Donna rubbed her arms. “My parents died when I was fifteen. My grandfather died when I was twenty-one and graduating college and my grandma died last year. Mourning is always hard.”

They took their seats in the sitting room, when the side doors flew opened and at first revealed a portrait of his grandfather. When they’d lived in Colorado that portrait had come with them and hung in their living room. It was comforting to see his image still with the family, in a place of honor.

His mother breezed through the door and had both her hands in the air, like she was joining a dance and not a conversation. She came over and kissed both his cheeks. “I was setting up to have a nice lunch on the patio in the dower house, when I heard your arrival. May I join my son and his bride for lunch?”

No. His heart stilled. He’d need to speak to his mother, alone, so she didn’t pressure Donna. He widened his stance and said, “Mother, Donna’s not my fiancée. She wants to get to know our lifestyle first, but please join us for lunch. The patio does sound nice. Would you like to dine al fresco, Donna?”

Donna nodded, stilled and lowered her head. “Sounds lovely, if you introduce us, Blackwell.”

Right. He straightened his shoulders and placed his hand on Donna’s lower back to keep her next to him. “Mother, this is Miss Donna Smith. Donna this is my mother. Martina Oberlin, the soon to be Dowager Duchess of Oakley.”

“Please call me Martina.” His mother came forward and hugged Donna. Then she kissed both of Donna’s cheeks, as this was customary. “I’ll happily be Dowager if I know my boy is happy.”

Donna hugged her back, but didn’t kiss. “It’s nice to meet you.”

His mother took her hands. “You, too. I’m so glad I told my son to go after you and not settle.”

Donna’s gaze narrowed and she stared at him with a blank expression for a second. She then gazed at his mother and tilted her head, “You did? Why? We never met.”

His mother met his stare. He prayed she didn’t ruin his chances. She started but then bit her lip and finished, “I… I saw how happy my son was when he came home the day he met you and asked you to the wedding. I knew you must be special. I can see now I was right.”

Good. She hadn’t said anything that Donna didn’t already know.

Donna folded her hands in front of her. “Is being a duchess hard?”

His mother waved off the question in her usual fashion. “It’s a job, like most people have. I’d happily show you how to do it if that’s one of your worries.”

The answer seemed to calm Donna. “Actually, it was and if you’re here then it’s one less thing to worry about. After lunch, can we see this huge place? I’m afraid I’ll get lost without guidance.”

Blackwell reached down and took Donna’s hand in his. “Sure. Mother, I’m going to show Donna to our room. Please meet us on the patio in half an hour.”

His mother began to breeze out of the room, but she stopped and turned toward Donna. “I’ll order the meal on my way. That’s the first lesson of being a duchess. Always make sure my son is fed. He gets whiny without food.”

Donna laughed.

His jaw tightened. “Mother…”

She lifted her arms like she was in a ballroom dance as she floated out the door. “I’m going. Goodbye.”

“I like your mother,” Donna said as they followed a moment later. His mother wasn’t in the hallway so she must have gone to the kitchens.

Blackwell shook his head. His mother was unique and prone to getting her way. “Good, because she’s a handful.”

Donna didn’t say anything else and he brought her to the main stairs. Soon he’d show her the layout of Woodbridge Hall and perhaps together they’d make this museum into a place he might call home.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Lexy Timms, Alexa Riley, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Leslie North, Elizabeth Lennox, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, C.M. Steele, Bella Forrest, Madison Faye, Jenika Snow, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Dale Mayer, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Penny Wylder, Piper Davenport,

Random Novels

Dealing Double (A Heartbreaker Novel Book 2) by Tamra Baumann

Hard Rock Sin: A Rock Star Romance by Athena Wright

Happily Ever Alpha: Untitled Until Brandon (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Natasha Madison

Building Billions - Part 1 by Lexy Timms

Once Upon A Twist: An Anthology Of Unusual Fairy Tales by Laura Greenwood, Skye MacKinnon, Arizona Tape, K.C. Carter, D Kai Wilson-Viola, Gina Wynn, S.M. Henley, Alison Ingleby, Amara Kent

City of Fractured Souls: A Fantasy Romance (The Nighthelm Guardian Series Book 2) by Olivia Ash, Lila Jean

The Baby Arrangement (A Winston Brother's Novel #1) by J.L. Beck, Stacey Lewis

Wish You Were Mine by Tara Sivec

SEALs of Honor: Cooper by Dale Mayer

Twisted Locke (Locke Brothers, 3) by Victoria Ashley, Jenika Snow

Hard Pressed: A Billionaire in Disguise Romance by Vivien Vale

Gage (Contract Killers Book 1) by Jenika Snow

Scratch and Win Shifters: AMY Christmas Love (Lovebites Lottery Book 2) by Kate Kent

BOUND BY THE EARL (Lords of Discipline Book 2) by Alyson Chase

The Coyote's Cowboy by Holley Trent

Coming Off the Bench: A Sports Romance by Autumn Avery

The Witch's Heart (The Rise of Orion Book 2) by J. M. Davies

Callan by Bartel, Sybil

Fake True Love (The Billionaire Parker Brothers Book 1) by Kayla C. Oliver

Noble Prince (Twisted Royals, #4) by Sidney Bristol