Brazilian Nights. Sandra Marton
Not just a man.
Him.
How could life change so fast? Ten days ago, ask him what made him happy and he’d have said, well, his work. His family. The call last night telling him there was a ‘58 Ferrari Berlinetta coming on the market in Palm Beach. And women, of course. An entire BlackBerry of them. Redheads, blondes, brunettes, all beautiful, all fun, all exciting.
For a little while, anyway.
The music went from fast to slow and easy. Not that it mattered. From the second they’d hit the dance floor, he’d held Gabriella close, his arms tightly around her, her arms around his neck, her face buried against his throat.
The truth was, nothing was as exciting as this. Gabriella, in his arms. In his life.
How could he ever have been foolish enough to have let her go?
She made him happy. And he made her happy. She’d gone from fragile and looking as if she were made of glass that might shatter, as she had in Brazil, to the woman she had been in the past. Smiling. Full of life. More beautiful than seemed possible.
She was her own woman.
And she was his.
He awoke to her softly whispered “Good morning,” fell asleep with her in his arms. He was never without her. They talked about everything under the sun, agreed on some things, agreed to disagree on others. They read the papers over breakfast, drove out to Long Island and walked the beach at Fire Island, empty and beautiful on a cool fall day.
At first Gabriella would remind him that they’d hired Stacia so she could get in touch with her agent, have him line up some interviews…
“Could that be better than this?” he’d ask her softly, and her answer was always in her kiss.
Sometimes they didn’t talk at all. They just were together. He’d never before been with a woman and found the silence between them comfortable and easy.
And then there was Daniel.
He still didn’t know much about kids, but even he could tell that the little guy was, well, one fine-looking baby. And, better still, brilliant. Those ba-ba-ba’s had grown to include ga-ga-ga’s. The kid would probably talk before he was a year old. Plus, the way he reached for that mobile above his crib, watched it with such obvious curiosity…Oh, yeah. Daniel was smart, and not only because he was his.
Which he was. Absolutely. How could he have ever doubted it?
“Dante?”
This had been the best week of his life. He was happy. Such a simple word, especially from a man who’d never thought much about his feelings, but—
“Dante!”
He blinked, looked down into Gabriella’s smiling face. “What?” he said, and she gave a soft little laugh.
“We’re still dancing.”
“And?”
“And,” she said, “the music stopped about five minutes ago.”
She was right. They were alone on the dance floor, locked in each other’s arms, people watching them and smiling.
“Amazing, because I could swear it’s still playing.”
Gabriella smiled. “Me, too.”
Dante grinned, spun her in a circle, then dipped her back over his arm.
“You are doido,” she said, laughing.
“Doido for you,” he told her, dancing her to their table, snatching up her pashmina shawl, then waltzing her out the door. His driver spotted them almost instantly, rolled out of the No Parking zone where he’d been waiting and pulled to the curb. Dante signaled him to stay put, opened the passenger door himself and handed Gabriella inside. “Let’s go home,” he said. The driver nodded, closed the privacy partition and headed uptown as Gabriella snuggled into the curve of Dante’s arm.
“Did you have a good time?” he said, pressing a kiss to her temple.
“Mmmm. A wonderful time.” She smiled. “We’ll try salsa next.”
Dante gave a mock groan. “You just want to see me make a jerk of myself on the dance floor.”
“Stop fishing for compliments, senhor. You’re a fine dancer.”
“Salsa means moving parts of the human body never meant to be moved.”
A playful glint came into her eyes. “Ah, but I have seen you move those parts exceedingly well.”
Dante drew her onto his lap. “But not on a dance floor,” he said, his voice suddenly husky.
Gabriella threaded her hands into his hair and drew his face to hers.
“Perhaps we should test those moves when we get home,” she whispered.
What a good thing a privacy petition was, Dante thought, and then he stopped thinking about anything but the woman in his arms.
Saturday morning, early, a courier delivered a package.
Dante insisted Gabriella watch as he opened it.
It was a long length of woven fabric with an adjustable closure. “It’s a baby sling,” he said, as he draped it over his shoulder and arm, then snugged Daniel securely within its soft folds. “I researched it online. Seems lots of tribal people have carried babies this way for centuries. It gives the babies a real sense of security. What do you think?”
“I think it’s a great idea,” she said, but what she really thought was that she was living a miracle.
The man who’d been one of New York’s wildest bachelors, who had not even suspected he had a son less than two weeks ago, had become the world’s most amazing father.
“You mean it?” He grinned as Daniel cooed. “Daniel, my man, what do you think?”
The baby laughed. So did Gabriella. Dante looked at her and smiled.
“I guess the vote’s unanimous.”
It was. She and her son both adored this man—but she couldn’t tell him that. Not until he said the words she longed to hear. Instead she kissed the baby, rose on her toes and kissed her lover, too.
“Unanimous,” she said brightly.
“Okay. Let’s take it for a trial run. How’s a trip to the Bronx Zoo sound?”
It sounded perfect, she told him. Dante smiled, handed Daniel to her and put aside the baby sling. “Let me just check my e-mail. I haven’t looked at it all week and Monday, much as I hate to do it, I’m going to have to go to work.”
Her face fell; he loved the fact that it did. She didn’t want him to leave. Hell, he didn’t want it, either, but life had to return to normal sometime.
“Five minutes,” he said softly, kissing her. “Not a second more, I promise.”
But he was in his study longer than that and when he came out, she knew something had happened.
“Dante? Is everything all right?”
He assured her that it was.
It was not. His expression was closed; he was unusually silent during the drive to the zoo. Preoccupied, but by what?
Dante carried the baby in the sling as they made their way from exhibit to exhibit. He spoke to him the way he always did, as if the little guy understood every word he said about the seals and the monkeys and the giraffes.
But his behavior was subdued.
It was unsettling.
Eventually they took a break. Daniel had fallen asleep; Dante stood staring off into the distance, one hand curved around the baby, the other tucked in the