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Italian Romance Boxed Set: Books 1-3




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Contents

  Perfect

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Epilogue

  Her Retreat

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Epilogue

  Trusting Him

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Epilogue

  Diana’s Books

  ITALIAN ROMANCE

  The Complete Boxed Set

  Books 1—3

  by:

  DIANA FRASER

  Escape to Italy—the land of romance—with this boxed set of three contemporary romances.

  From the Italian lakes in the north, through Tuscany, and down to Naples, one thing remains constant—the beauty of the land and the passion of its people.

  So pour yourself a glass of chilled Prosecco, and sit back and enjoy the sexy men, strong women, and mystery and intrigue which await you in these three Italian Romances.

  Kindle Edition

  Contents

  Perfect

  Alessandro is a commitment-shy Italian count who lives for the pleasures of the present. Emily is an archaeologist who’s obsessed with the past. Will they manage to forge their ‘perfect’ future amidst the ancient ruins of an Italian estate?

  Her Retreat

  Interior designer Isabella, Contessa di Sorano, is skilled at creating beautiful facades that cover a multitude of sins, especially when it comes to herself.

  But when she's forced to sell her home and accept a lucrative contract from the lover she rejected seven years earlier, she can no longer avoid facing up to her painful past.

  Trusting Him

  After a year with Giovanni Visconti, Rose had disappeared, seemingly unable to deal with her husband's jealous and controlling nature.

  Two years later Giovanni tracks Rose down, determined to prove he can be trusted. But Rose is keeping secrets from him—secrets that could destroy more than just their relationship...

  Perfect

  Chapter One

  Alessandro Cavour, Conte di Montecorvio Rovella, watched as the voluptuous blonde, who had just gate-crashed his party, popped a third piece of bruschetta into her mouth.

  If she was trying to fit in she was going the wrong way about it. Women in his world barely ate; they wore only black—not a blood-red sheath—and curves were not an option.

  “Shall I have her removed, sir?”

  Alessandro shook his head and drank the last of his whisky, relishing its fire. He needed fire. He needed a diversion. And he’d just found one.

  “No. Leave her to me.”

  Where was he?

  Emily Carlyle brushed the crumbs from her dress and anxiously scanned the room for the elderly count upon whom all her hopes were pinned.

  She needed to mingle. God, how did she do that?

  She needed to fit in. And she certainly didn’t do that.

  Her hand rose to push her glasses more firmly on her nose before she remembered she’d left them off tonight. Not, she thought, peering around the room, that there had been any point.

  She was surrounded by the cream of Neopolitan society: moneyed, elegant, perfect. And she was none of these things. And never would be.

  She tugged the wrap more securely around her shoulders. She might not be ashamed of her imperfections but there was no reason to display them—not tonight—not when so much was riding on it.

  Where the hell was he?

  Suddenly she felt a chill of awareness slither down her spine: someone was watching her. She turned slowly to see a man—blurred a little at first—moving through the crowded room towards her, staring directly at her. When he came into focus she could see his coal-black eyes held both heat and cool control: predator’s eyes.

  Her heart pounded once, fiercely, before settling into a fast tattoo that sent adrenalin racing through her veins, stimulating her body into a state of readiness. Fight or flight? At that instant, she could do neither.

  Then the crowd parted and the man emerged and stood before her. There was nothing about his appearance that contradicted her first instinct. A predator took whatever he wanted and she knew this man could do just that. It wasn’t just that he was the most striking man she’d ever seen; it wasn’t simply that he was the most charismatic—although conversations had stalled in his wake and all eyes were on him; it was his difference to the others that signaled his power.

  In a room of immaculately dressed people, this man stood before her disheveled and arrogant. His black tie hung loosely either side of his open shirt and his hair—raked back as if by careless fingers—hung in tactile curls on his collar. He either didn’t notice he was flouting convention or he didn’t care. She’d bet her life it was the latter.

  This was a man who was used to getting his own way; this was a man who didn’t want to be here.

  There, they had something in common.

  She stepped back to move out of his way. Because she hadn’t lived twenty-six years without knowing that men, that gorgeous, didn’t make a bee-line for her.

  But he also side-stepped so he stood squarely in front of her.

  He looked even better close up. She was preternaturally aware of the textures on his face: a day’s worth of stubble, the lines that bracketed his mouth and of an errant curl that fell like a question mark on his forehead.

  She swallowed hard.

  That men like this existed, she’d never imagined. That one could be touching her arm, with an intimacy that sent shivers down her spine, was impossible.

  “Scusi.”

  “Sure, sorry,” she mumbled, stepping aside so he could pass.

  He smiled. “No, signorina. It is you I’ve come to speak with.”

  She could feel her eyes widen in shock and opened her mouth to reply only to find her voice had somehow diminished to a whisper.

  “I think you’ve got the wrong woman.”

  “Davvero?”

  Her eyes dropped to his lips: amusement flickered at their corners.

  She nodded. “Really.”

  “And who would be the right woman?”

  She shrugged. “Anyone else.”

  He frowned. “Your husband or boyfriend is here?”

  “No, I don’t have one.”

  “Ah, then you are free to talk.”

  Her irritation, at his presumption that a boyfriend would be the only reason why she wouldn’t want to talk with him, should have brought her back to her senses.

  “But I don’t know you—”

  “We can remedy that —”

  “And I can’t think why you would want to speak with me. Perhaps you’ve mistaken me for someone else?”

  “I always make it a point to speak to the most beautiful woman in the room. And if I’ve mistaken you for such, then perhaps it is because you are.”

&nbsp
; The instinctive laugh froze on her lips. There was something about his manner, about his tone, about the expression in his eyes, which stopped her reacting with her usual self-deprecating humor.

  She knew it to be a lie but how persuasive, how devastating, it was to hear such words addressed to her. She’d spent years avoiding her femininity, scared of being seen as an object. Bitter experience had taught her that objects could be owned and possessed and people did what they liked with their possessions, even tried to destroy them.

  Now, she’d just walked straight into what she’d been avoiding all these years. And it thrilled her like nothing before.

  He was like no-one before.

  She took a deep breath in order to ground herself. “Thank you for the compliment.”

  His lips curved briefly into a smile that lingered in the lines around his mouth and in the flicker of heat in his eyes.

  “You’re not used to this, are you?”

  His candor dispelled her nerves and, for the first time, she glanced away from him, trying to suppress a smile.

  “Is it so obvious?”

  “Obvious and refreshing.”

  “What gave me away? I guess it’s the dress,” she looked down frowning at the red dress. “Hardly the usual color, it would seem.”

  “You stand out. But it is not that alone.”

  “What then?” She grabbed the ends of the shawl to make sure they stayed in place and folded her arms across her breasts. “I guess I eat, which clearly sets me apart from the other women.”

  “It does.” He leaned forward and whispered conspiratorially in her ear. “And a very good thing, too. But it is not that either.”

  “What then?”

  “Your lack of awareness.”

  “Of?”

  “People. My guess is that you don’t attend many such parties.”

  “And you would know this because?”

  He hesitated for one long second, enough for her to note the shading under his eyes and the stark lines of his cheek and jaw. The predator was hungry.

  “Because you look and don’t see; you don’t notice the inquisitive stares, the jealous looks, the admiring glances. They don’t affect you. I think you must live away from society—some kind of recluse, maybe?”

  Emily could feel the blood drain out of her face. How could he tell? How could he know that her world, as an archaeologist, was the world of the past, where the only people who mattered had been dead for centuries?

  “I am correct?”

  She nodded, spellbound by this man who could see into her heart.

  Part of her knew it to be the result of clever, well-honed flirtation skills, pick-up lines well learned, but the greater part of her didn’t care. She felt a connection with him slide smoothly into place.

  “How did you know?” Her voice, normally so strong and so confident, sounded cracked, fractured.

  “By your lack of consciousness—in your body, but most of all in your eyes.” He cocked his head to one side. “Green eyes.”

  She gasped down a lungful of air like a dying woman desperate for life and shook her head.

  “Kind of more like blue-ish with yellow streaks—”

  “You,” he brushed her cheek with the back of his finger, “are too prosaic. Your eyes are green. Unusual. A dark green: the color of a pine forest in twilight, of wet, gold-streaked jade, the color of a secret. What, I wonder, is yours?”

  Somehow the stranger had brought himself so close to her that she could smell his intoxicating blend of aftershave—earthy, warm and very, very male—and whisky. Imperceptibly—surely he would hardly notice—she dipped her head towards his neck and inhaled his more personal scent. She swallowed and looked away as she felt the heat fire deep inside her, stirring something she’d thought long dead, never to be revived.

  His own face inclined to hers briefly in response. The feel of his hair grazing her cheek made her jump back in alarm.

  Suddenly music flooded the room. A small quartet, making a very large sound, made further conversation impossible.

  “Come.”

  She balked for an instant at his imperious command. But then he ran his fingers down her shawl-covered arm until he held her hand, and all resistance fled.

  “Let’s escape.” He nodded towards the open French windows.

  As he pulled her outside, the sultry stir of the evening breeze awakened Emily from the haze of lust this man stirred.

  She hesitated, and stopped abruptly. What was she doing?

  “I should go—go back inside. I need to, well, go.”

  He turned to face her. “So soon?”

  “It should have been sooner. I’m not in the habit of wandering around in the dark with strangers. I don’t even know your name.”

  He smiled. “My name is Alex.”

  “And mine, Em.”

  “M? That is an unusual name.” He raised an eyebrow. “Not the ‘M’ from James Bond, not the secret head of MI5?”

  She grinned, relaxing, the tension falling away. “No, not.”

  “Perhaps short for Miranda, or Miriam?”

  “Perhaps.”

  “So cagey. That is fine. I will call you M. So, M, why are you here?”

  She suddenly realized why this beautiful man was talking to her, why he’d taken her away from the party she’d gate-crashed. He was very smoothly ejecting her. She’d thought he was flirting with her. She’d thought wrong.

  Disappointment bit deep. She’d tried hard to fit in, had made a massive leap outside her comfort zone, borrowing a dress and too-tight shoes, but had still failed. But there was too much riding on it. She needed to see the count, even if it meant bluffing her way back inside.

  “What makes you think I haven’t been invited?”

  He dipped his head, uncomfortably close to hers.

  “Cara,” his breath tickled her skin, halting her own breathing. “I know you haven’t. It’s my party and I know everyone here, except you.”

  His words cut like ice, severing her last remaining thread of hope.

  He had no interest in her. And he’d effectively killed her work stone dead because if she couldn’t see the count, she had nothing. Without the count’s financial support her work would have to end.

  “I’m sorry. I’ll go. I was just—looking for someone. I’d been told he was here. But he’s not. So—”

  “You misunderstand me. I do not wish you to go.”

  “I shouldn’t be here.”

  She looked up at him, at this knowing man who’d broken through her defenses after all these years, willing him to contradict her.

  He smiled, as if recognizing the token comment for what it was.

  “And neither should I, believe me. I should be at the party, but I have never been interested in duty. It is pleasure that interests me.”

  “I can see that.”

  “Come,” he offered his arm, “let’s leave the party before someone either turns you away, or worse still, forces me to do my duty and make small talk.”

  She laughed. “Somehow, I can’t imagine anyone forcing you to do anything.” And then she hesitated.

  Thoughts of caution flashed through her mind, fighting the instincts and needs of her body.

  But her body won and she inhaled the fragrant night air and took his arm.

  Spring flowers tumbled around the stone-flagged pathway along which they walked, but Emily was only aware of the silk of his jacket and the heat of his arm under her fingertips.

  Within moments, she found herself seated in a secluded courtyard, enclosed by a high yew hedge, in the centre of which a small fountain played. Moon-white flowers clustered at its base.

  “So, M, relax and tell me about yourself.”

  “Nothing much to tell.” She could barely breathe, let alone think, with his body in such close proximity.

  He turned towards her, his arm resting along the back of the seat, close to her shoulders. Her skin prickled, as if her body responded to his magnetism by the forc
e of physics alone. And she knew all about the inevitability of the laws of science. But how they applied here was beyond her education.

  “So, where have you been hiding, M, that you are so unused to people? So unaware of your effect on my guests?”

  “What effect could I possibly have?”

  He searched her eyes before shaking his head. “You have no idea, do you? No idea how very different you are.”

  Different? Another thing they had in common.

  Heat swept through her body, following the path of his eyes. “English, I look English.” She said hopefully.

  “It is not that. You look,” his hand brushed down her arm lightly before resting once more on the seat, “sensual, very sensual.”

  She tensed then. She wasn’t used to being touched. But his eyes held only interest—a wonderful, inexplicable interest that her body exulted in—and gentleness. This wasn’t a man like her last—her only—boyfriend. There was no rage there, no insecurity, no jealousy, no violence. She exhaled jaggedly.

  History could repeat itself—as an archaeologist she knew that—but it didn’t have to, not if she learned from the lessons of the past. She’d never trusted her intuition before—not even when it screamed at her to run from her ex-boyfriend—but now she did.

  “Sensual?” No-one had ever said such a thing before. But she felt sensual. The skimming fit of the borrowed dress against her body, rubbing her skin, tantalized her arousal even further, the warmth of the night breeze on her skin. And this man.

  “Of the senses.”

  “Such as sight?” Hesitantly at first, she allowed her gaze to travel from his hair, curling where he’d pushed it roughly back, to the pulse that thudded in his neck and then down to his chest and legs before resting once more on his face.

  “Sight is indeed a sense.” His voice was roughened, deeper somehow.

  Her effect on him gave her a sense of power. She closed her eyes.

  “And sound.” The soft exhalation of his breath was louder to her than the rustle of the leaves high above them and the distant music and laughter. She opened her eyes again. “What else? Touch?”