The Blackmailed Bride Read online




  Kim Lawrence

  The Blackmailed Bride

  The scandal...

  Kate was determined to protect her sister from an impending scandal, and Javier Montero was the only man who could help them avoid public exposure! But Javier wanted something in return. As head of his family's business empire, he needed a wife. Kate would be perfect!

  The marriage ultimatum!

  Negotiating with sexy, commanding Javier wasn't easy--and when he insisted on marriage, Kate knew she was about to become a blackmailed bride!

  CHAPTER ONE

  JAVIER drove through the large ornate gates and up the long winding driveway lined with olive trees towards the dis­tinctive Moorish tower that stood against the backdrop of the mountains. He pulled the Mercedes he was driving in a space besides a battered Beetle which stood out like a sore thumb amongst the other expensive models.

  So, Serge still hadn't persuaded Sarah to part with her old car. An easy-going young woman who would, as a rule, do anything for her husband, Sarah did have a few blind spots.

  Javier himself was unmarried, but did not lack female companionship. It had never required much, if any, effort on his part to have attractive women hanging on his every word, but no special woman had ever materialized from these adoring masses. The possibility that if and when he discovered her she wouldn't be interested had simply not crossed his mind!

  Then he'd met Sarah.

  Now he was thirty-two, didn't take anything for granted, and was, he liked to think, more discerning about women ­too damned discerning, according to his grandfather, who wanted his chosen heir safely married.

  Javier could have taken the easy option and chosen a suitable consort, a woman from a background similar to his own that would enable her to cope with the pressures of being a member of one of the wealthiest families in Europe just as his father before him had. That was the problem, every time he was tempted to take the easy way out Javier was confronted by the spectre of his parents' disastrous union.

  Before he'd left the family estate in Andalucia to make the journey to Majorca the old man had finally issued an ultimatum.

  `Marry before I die or I'll leave everything to Raul or one of the others!' Felipe Montero had warned his favourite grandson dramatically.

  Javier's immediate reaction to this not very subtle black­mail had been anger; did his grandfather know him so little that he imagined he could be bought...?

  He turned to Felipe with much of the pride and hauteur his grandfather was famed for etched on his own chiselled features. What he saw in the old man's lined face made him bite back the caustic response hovering on his tongue.

  Javier had no illusions about what his grandfather was capable of. Felipe Montero was devious, he frequently bul­lied and connived, he routinely plotted and schemed-in short, when it came to getting his own way he was capable of acts of great ruthlessness. However he was never crude in his manipulations and, even more significantly, Javier had never seen his grandfather look frightened before!

  `You'll live a long time yet...?'

  Felipe smiled; Javier had never needed things spelled out. He was a sharp judge of character who read people almost as well as he read the financial markets.

  `No, as a matter of fact I won't. The doctors give me six months at the outside.'

  Javier didn't tell Felipe that this wasn't possible, he didn't scream, as people often did when they were con­fronted with the mortality of someone they couldn't imag­ine life without, that the doctors must be able to do some­thing.

  He wanted to, but he didn't.

  Instead after a short pause he nodded, not insulting his grandfather by questioning the grim prognosis.

  `What is it?

  'Cancer. The damned thing's spread from my lungs. So there's not much point packing these things in,' Felipe ob­served with a deep throaty chuckle as he inhaled deeply on his cheroot. `And don't tell anyone else yet-nobody. If the news gets out millions will be wiped off the value of the company...' A flicker of revulsion appeared in the older man's eyes. `And I don't doubt they'll all start treating me as if I'm in my dotage,' he added, a tremor in his deep voice. It wasn't dying but the manner of it that scared Felipe Montero.

  `No one will do that.'

  A silent promise was exchanged in the look that passed between the two men.

  Felipe sighed, satisfied. `Unfortunately this couldn't come at a worst time, of course, with the Brussels deal...'An extremely disciplined man, it wasn't often that Javier's emotions got the better of him, but as he listened to his grandfather fret about the fate of the financial empire he'd expanded up over his lifetime something snapped.

  `There is such a thing as a good time to die?' he gritted. `To hell with the company!' His deep voice cracked. `You're going to die, Grandfather.'

  `We're all going to die,' came the careless response. `If you really care,' Felipe goaded slyly; `show it. Marry Aria... she loves you.'

  A wry laugh was wrenched from Javier. `You never give up, do you?'

  If and when he did marry, Javier knew it wouldn't be to someone who loved him, someone he might hurt as his father had his mother. A fragile creature, his mother had never grasped the fact she was meant to turn a blind eye to her husband's mistresses; she was meant to look attrac­tive, bring up their son and be the perfect hostess.

  `This is no laughing matter, Javier,' the old man re­proached sternly. `Continuity, blood lines are important; you need sons.'

  `I'm sorry, but I can't.'

  The idea of losing his inheritance didn't frighten Javier.

  He immediately recognized that there was part of him that might actually welcome the situation. A man who needed the constant buzz of physical and mental chal­lenges, he could think of few things more exciting than the challenge of starting from scratch, and few things more satisfying than knowing at the end of the day that every­thing you'd achieved was down to your own efforts, noth­ing to do with being born into a wealthy dynasty.

  Wealth brought its privileges, but Javier had been raised to believe it also carried responsibilities. His deeply in­grained sense of family duty would never allow him to do anything more than occasionally dream about the luxury of being a free agent.

  Deep down, however, he was pretty sure it wouldn't come to that, his grandfather would never disinherit him for standing his ground. Nothing in his manner even hinted at this belief. He couldn't do much for his grandfather but he could at least let Felipe play the heartless tyrant he liked the world to see him as.

  Felipe searched his grandson's unyielding face with growing frustration. `This is about that silly blonde you let Serge snatch right from under your nose, I suppose... Don't look so stunned, boy.' He laughed. `Do you think I'm blind? If you want my opinion, she'd have been a disastrous match for you...'

  Javier swallowed his anger with difficulty.

  `.Far too sweet and malleable. You need someone with a bit more fire...'

  `Like Aria,' Javier cut in drily.

  Felipe conceded this point with a grunt. `Well, it doesn't have to be her ...but if you want to be my heir you'll marry someone and soon...'

  `We shouldn't be arguing ... not now...'

  'Why change the habit of a lifetime? If you start agreeing with me the family will know something's wrong straight away, and I won't be able to move for everyone being nice to me,' he observed with a shudder.

  When two people who were congenitally incapable of compromise worked together there were bound to be some sparks. Javier's combustible relationship with his grandfa­ther was not without its moments of conflict, often vocal conflict, at least on Felipe's side-Javier was more inclined to smouldering silences. Javier knew his rivals within the family frequently crossed their fing
ers and hoped he'd over­step the mark one day and alienate the old man totally. What they failed to understand was the deep mutual respect the warring parties felt for each other.

  'I'm sorry.'

  `You're a stubborn idiot!' the old man railed at his tall grandson's retreating back.

  A man with extraordinary self-discipline, Javier pushed aside the personal issues that filled his mind as he stepped out of the air-conditioned luxury of his Mercedes. He barely registered the blast of baking heat which immedi­ately hit him; Majorca had been experiencing one of its hottest Julys on record.

  He consulted the discreet but expensive metallic banded watch on his wrist and nodded; he had a few minutes to spare. He couldn't abide poor time-keeping in others and always made a point of never abusing his position of power by keeping others waiting himself. To his mind punctuality was a matter of simple good manners.

  As he made his way towards the rear entrance of the large mellow stone building even his well-known critical eye for detail could find no fault in the delightful terraced gardens and wide, well-tended sweeps of green tree-dotted parkland. The pool area, when he reached it, was almost deserted but for a few stalwart-or was it foolish?-tourists sunning themselves in the fiery Majorcan midday sun.

  `Did you see who that was?' a female guest hissed ex­citedly as she clambered wetly out of the pool.

  Her sleepy husband opened his eyes reluctantly as wet hands urgently grabbed his shoulder. `Who... what...?

  'There, it's Javier Monte-ro!' she hissed as the tall man in the exquisitely cut suit shook hands in a friendly manner with the elderly gardener before moving away.

  `Sure, Javier Montero is on first name terms with all the casual labourers on the island...'

  `There's no need to be sarcastic. I tell you, it was him. I mean, there can't be two men who look like him.'

  `Don't drool, Jean. And think, woman, what would Ja­vier be doing here?

  'Why wouldn't he be here?' she responded, with a ges­ture that encompassed the extensive grounds of the thir­teenth-century Majorcan manor house with its distinctive Moorish tower. `He owns the place.'

  An army of local craftsmen had returned the once ne­glected building to its original splendour. Tucked away in the Sierra de Tramuntana the exclusive hotel now provided a hideaway for those people who liked their retreats to combine the most up to date modern conveniences with historic ambience, top-class Mediterranean cuisine and personal attention from helpful staff.

  Naturally this combination was very costly, but no more so than the other two hotels the Monteros owned on the island. Each establishment was aimed to appeal to specific clientele. People who wanted the cosmopolitan sophistica­tion of Palma would find everything they could want in the elegant surroundings of the hotel situated right in the mid­dle of the medieval old town; and those who liked a resort that offered them the choice of six top-class restaurants on site. a spa and every sporting facility known to man, with top-class tuition thrown in, would adore the resort hotel on the beautiful undeveloped northern coast of the island.

  `Sure, this hotel and God knows how many others around the world, and then there's the airline, the racehorses and the interests in property development. Is there any pie the Monteros don't have a finger in...?' he wondered enviously.’ I really doubt someone like Javier Montero involves himself in the day-to-day running of hotels,' he announced, settling himself back down to sleep.

  `It was him.'

  'If you say so,' her husband agreed, reapplying sunscreen to his peeling nose-it was too hot to fight.

  He had been right on one count; though Javier was known to occasionally subject individual hotels to grueling spot inspections, it wasn't part of his remit to involve him­self in the day-to-day running of individual establishments. Javier's talents lay elsewhere.

  Early on in his career he had displayed a remarkable ability for spotting untapped niches in the markets. This talent had been recognized and exploited, but he wasn't just an ideas man; when a project was beset by difficulties, be it labour disputes or legal wrangling, Javier was the person who could be relied upon to get things running.

  The information that had brought him hot-foot to the island hardened the naturally severe cast of Javier's stag­geringly handsome features as he knocked on the heavy oak-studded door of Serge's office.

  Though of average height, due to his massively broad shoulders and deep barrel chest, the swarthy-skinned man behind the desk gave the impression of being much taller.

  'Javier!' Serge rose to his feet with a welcoming smile and the two men clasped hands and hugged. `It's been too long.'

  `It has.' Javier responded with the sort of smile that would have shocked rigid those members of the press who had dubbed him Mr Deep Freeze. `How are little Raul and ...Sarah?' Nobody seeing him smile would have guessed that he experienced any difficulty saying this name. `Where is she? I saw the car...'

  `It broke down the last time she was here,' his friend admitted ruefully. `You can laugh, Javier, but it isn't you that ends up pushing the cursed thing. Other than a stub­born, irrational affection for that old tin can on wheels, Sarah is fine-though your godson is keeping us both up nights.'

  `Then I expect you could have done without me asking you to do some discreet digging for me...?'

  Serge shook his head. `Anything I can do, any time­ you know this, Javier. I know you don't like me saying this, but if we live to be a hundred there still won't be enough time to pay you back what we owe you.'

  `You owe me nothing, Serge.' Abruptly Javier changed the subject. `About the other thing...' His dark angled eye­brows lifted and his eyes, startling blue in a face that was an even, deep gold, narrowed. `You're sure about this, Serge?'

  Serge sighed and looked grim. `I'm afraid so. The reports you heard were right.'

  `And you know who it is?

  'A waiter working at the resort, a Luis Gonzalez, young­ish ... about twenty five. He came to work there at the start of the season...'

  Javier didn't make a note of the name but Serge knew that he would not forget the name or forgive the guilty party for the crime he had foolishly committed. Javier made a friend in a million but he was an implacable enemy.

  `References?' Javier enquired, controlling his impa­tience: control was one of the things Javier prided himself on.

  Impeccable forgeries.'

  'Nobody else is involved, nobody higher...?'

  Serge Simeone shook his head.

  Javier shrugged and squinted against the midday sun through the window, his expression inscrutable. `Well, that' something.'

  When it had come to his attention that a member of staff in the large resort hotel they owned down on the coast was using his position to deal drugs to guests, Javier, unsure as to how deep the rot was, had not risked involving any of the staff there: instead, he had gone to someone whose integrity he trusted totally.

  'You haven't contacted the police yet?'

  'You asked me to wait. What are you going to do, Ja­vier?' His friend turned and for a moment Serge experi­enced a spasm of pity for the culprit. Javier's long, angular, aristocratic face had the texture of cold marble; his deep set eyes were equally chilling. Serge knew that Javier had precious little sympathy with recreational drug use and even less with those who peddled the stuff, after his younger sister had nearly lost her life to addiction.

  `We're going to pay Luis a visit.'

  Kate Anderson tried not to show her shock as she flicked through the pile of grainy, slightly out-of-focus photos her younger sister had silently handed her after she'd asked, `Surely they can't be that bad... ?' Now she knew they weren't talking a couple of topless shots on the beach which even their conservative parents could have laughed off.

  `It could be anyone...?' she croaked, trying desperately to put a positive slant on a very negative situation as she handed them back to her sister, who tore the incriminating images into-shreds and let them drop to the floor.

  While the negatives we
re not in their possession, both sisters knew this defiance was just an empty gesture.

  `It's not anyone, it's me! You've got to help me, Kate! You have to do something,' Susie added, her expression an accurate reflection of her total faith in her sister's ability to extract her from this present dilemma. After all, she'd been doing it successfully for the past twenty years. `You can't let mum and dad find out ...I'd die...'

  Kate thought it was much more likely she'd have her generous allowance cut off, but then as far as Susie was concerned that probably amounted to much the same thing!

  `That would be ... awkward,' Kate admitted thinking of her parents' faces if confronted by semi-nude photos of their younger daughter. She didn't want to think about the consequences if they actually got into the hands of the press. She could think of several tabloids that would love to print compromising shots of a high court judge's daugh­ter.

  `What if he sends those photos to Chris...? He'll never believe I wasn't sleeping with Luis.'

  `You weren't?'

  Susie's wails got louder. `See? Even you thought I was. Luis was someone to hang around with and go clubbing, he was fun... You don't believe me,' she accused. `I can tell...'

  `I believe you. Now hush, Susie, I'm thinking...' Kate pleaded as she concentrated on the problem facing them.

  The frown line between her feathery brows, which like her lashes were, dark in dramatic contrast to the silver blonde hair colour both sisters had inherited from their mother, deepened as she caught her lower lip between her even white teeth.

  Unlike her sister, Kate's features weren't strictly sym­metrical: her mouth was too wide and full and her aquiline nose had never inspired men to poetry. Her almond-shaped brown eyes, without a doubt her best feature, were unfor­tunately more often than not concealed behind the round lenses of her wire-framed spectacles.

  With or without specs, the first impression people re­ceived of Kate Anderson was that she was a young woman with keen intelligence, sharp wit, and boundless reserves

  'Susie got my looks; Kate's the sensible one.' Kate had lost count of the number of times she'd heard her mother explain away her supposed deficiencies to people.