February
Louise has just been offered a job.
Max wants to use her brilliant PR skills to help save the family business, but she is filled with mixed emotions. Since discovering she was adopted, that everyone she trusted has been lying to her all her life, she’s feeling less than charitable towards the Valentines. And working with Max is never going to be easy. There’s always been something between them – something they’ve tried to ignore – but things are very different now.
Family loyalty wins, but she extorts a high price from Max for her co-operation and sparks fly from the start. Will the past stand in the way of this special Valentine wedding?
FROM ROMANTIC TIMES... Liz Fielding brings the Brides of Bella Lucia to an extremely satisfying close with The Valentine Bride (4.5). Strong-minded Louise and attractively arrogant Max are well matched, and their sparring is especially memorable.
FROM LIZ...
My commission, to write a book that brought such a wonderful series not to an end, but to a new beginning, an exciting future for this family, was an awesome responsibility.
Max and Louise are such complex and wonderful characters, the love/hate relationship such a buzz, such fun to write!
Family is at the heart of this book – how it shapes us, makes us what we are. It requires Max and Louise to confront that, to accept that while the past is immutable, with courage, with each other, they can seize the future, shape it into something new.
EXCERPT...
‘Aren’t you missing something, Max?’
‘A PR consultant?’ he offered.
She shook her head. ‘I was referring to your usual accessory blonde. I imagine they have names, but it’s so hard to keep up.’
She gained a certain amount of pleasure in seeing him clamp down hard, forced for once to hold his tongue, keep his temper in check. Taking unfair advantage of his predicament, she looked up and down the nearly empty street as if his latest airhead might have wandered off to do some window shopping.
‘Maybe it’s a little cold for such delicate creatures to be out,’ she added, even as she mentally slapped her wrist for goading him when he couldn’t retaliate. But she owed him for that toy boy/sugar daddy remark. ‘No, I’ve just remembered. At the Christmas party you were flirting with Maddy, but she left with Jack, didn’t she? The brother who inherited your father’s good manners.’
‘According to Jack,’ he said, ‘the only blonde I need at the moment is you.’
‘Really?’ She tutted. ‘Then you’re really going to have to try harder, aren’t you?’
And, having done with Max, she raised her hand to summon a cruising taxi. He beat her to the door, opened it, climbed in after her.
‘Excuse me but this is my taxi. You have a car,’ she reminded him.
‘We have to talk.’
‘You have to talk. I don’t have to listen.’
He didn’t wait for an answer but gave the driver her address.
‘Hijacking my taxi isn’t going to get you what you want,’ she said.
‘What will?’ he asked, sitting back in the far corner of the cab, as far from her as he could get.
That didn’t please her either.
‘Nothing. I have a thriving business, more clients than I can handle. Why would I be interested in leaving that to work for Bella Lucia? More to the point, why would I spare one minute of my time to listen to you?’
‘You’re family, Lou. That should be enough.’
‘Family? Haven’t you been paying attention, Max? That was all just a pretty fiction invented by the Valentines. Your parents, the people who pretended to my parents. If you’re looking for a family connection you’ve come to the wrong person.’
‘Don’t be ridiculous. Of course you’re family --’
She arched a brow. ‘If you’ve come to demand my loyalty, you’re going to have to try a little harder.’
‘Not demand --’
She cut him off before he could perjure himself.
‘As I recall, being “family”…’ – she made those irritating little quote marks with her fingers; irritating Max when she had the upper hand was so satisfying – ‘… wasn’t enough the last time I was on the payroll. It certainly didn’t save me from the humiliation of being sacked in front of an entire restaurant full of diners. I’m sorry, Max, but I don’t see the attraction of working for you. I may be blonde, but I’m not dumb.’
‘That was a long time ago, Lou.’
‘Yes, it was, but what’s changed, hmm? You’re still treating me like some stupid girl who doesn’t know her left from her right. Insulting me in front of an important client. Ignoring my wishes. Well, I’ve got news for you, I’m not a girl, I’m a fully grown woman and I’ve built up a successful business from nothing, just the way William Valentine did. You should try it sometime, then you might have a little more respect.’
She swallowed. Wished she hadn’t said that. Bella Lucia was Max’s life. He worked harder than anyone to make it a success. If it had gone down in the recent financial crisis, no one would have been hit harder, or deserved it less.
It was always the same. The minute she was with him, she lost her head, stopped behaving like a rational woman.
She leaned forward, rapped sharply on the drivers window. ‘Pull over, please.’
The cabbie pulled into the kerb, but Max didn’t move. ‘This won’t go away, Lou.’
Probably not, but she was tired, she had another long day ahead of her tomorrow and while a row with Max was always exhilarating, she discovered that she wasn’t enjoying this one.
‘You want me to get down on my knees and beg, is that it?’ he pressed.
That was almost too tempting, but Max, on his knees, would not be a supplicant. He would simply be demonstrating – at least in his own eyes -- that he was bigger than she was. That he could forgive and forget. That in clinging to her grudge, she hadn’t been able to move on. Kneeling at her feet, his eyes would still be telling her that he was the winner.
‘All I want,’ she said, carefully, slowly, ‘is for you to listen to what I’m saying. I’m saying goodnight, Max.’
For a moment she thought he was going to protest, force the issue, but then, without another word he opened the door and stepped out of the cab, handing the driver a note to cover her fare home – still trying to keep control -- and shrugging his collar up against the rain, he began to walk back to his car.

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