Read Brazilian Revenge (The Brazilians) Online
Authors: Carmen Falcone
Tags: #mystery, #Carmen Falcone, #suspense, #Ignite, #Brazilian, #Brazil, #Entangled, #Revenge, #romance
Within minutes, they raided the place. There was not a single soul in the two-bedroom house. He checked the kitchen. Clean, with stainless-steel appliances.
“There’s hardly any food in here,” she said, studying the fridge.
“You think maybe she went out of town?”
She grabbed a rubber band from her pocket, and put her hair up in a ponytail. Several rebellious curls strayed. There was something sexy about her lack of makeup. Besides the freckles that scattered on her nose and cheeks, she was fresh faced. “Maybe she’s been working odd hours. She’s a nurse, right?”
He blinked.
Focus, man
. The previous night he’d used his attraction for her to channel his energy. What was his excuse now? “Just because that’s what she told her estranged mother doesn’t mean it’s the truth. If Clemonte paid for her silence, maybe she doesn’t need to work right away.”
…
Satyanna twisted her hands together, her fingers fidgety. Refusing to let the circumstances alter her resolve, she shook her head and walked to the bedroom.
The queen-size bed, adorned with a thick bedspread and golden pillows, didn’t hint at someone who experienced financial difficulty. She sat on the bed and heard footfalls her way. Leonardo strode into the room. His gorgeous, enigmatic eyes trailed over her.
“No one makes a bed like this if they don’t intend on coming back to sleep.”
She stared at the vanity chest in front of her, and something snapped inside her mind. Of course. Drawers. Standing up, she scanned the room and found two nightstands on each side of the bed. She yanked the drawers open, her hands faster than her brains. Bills. More home-decor magazines. And…a passport. She recognized the nurse from the hospital. Jacinta had been the one who greeted her and checked on her before they gave her medications. With kind eyes and curly, short brown hair, the nurse looked back at her in the picture with a half smile. Except…the name on the passport read Claudia Soares.
“It’s a fake,” he said.
“So she’s not leaving the country, but considering it?” she said, and flipped through the pages. A folded piece of paper fell, and she recognized the receipt of a furniture store. What, was the woman so gung-ho on decoration?
Leonardo went to search the other nightstand. She peered at him when he wasn’t paying attention. Ever since he’d told her he’d treat her as an equal that’s what he’d been doing. It was too soon to know for sure, but a warm sensation wrapped her heart. Different than the mad heart beating when he’d told her not to get a tattoo with his name on it.
She had pretended she was okay with that but truth was, it hurt. Was sex all she was good for? When he’d held her late into the night, this crazy thought hit her. What if he, too, needed some comfort, but just had a hard time admitting to it? He’d embraced her with so much determination. Was it really only an attraction between them? Because, deep down, even with all that baggage, she—
“I found it!” Leonardo shouted, and waved a piece of paper up in the air.
“What? What is it?” she asked, and dashed to his side.
“When she moved here, she needed an address to get her bills transferred to. I’m assuming she didn’t find this place right away. This is it. Her old address on a piece of paper from the carbon-copy protocol of the electricity company.”
“Let me see it.” She pulled it from him and narrowed her eyes. Speaking Portuguese was a challenge she’d faced and mostly overcome. Reading it was a different story. Yet, something got her attention at the bottom of the document. The extravagantly cursive handwriting of… “Harry,” she said, even though it read Carlton Stephen.
“She’s with him,” he said.
She pointed at the address. “If she used this address for the electric company to verify her address, then that’s where we should go.”
He nodded. “It’s only an hour away.”
A knot formed in her dry throat. She stayed pinned into place as Leonardo walked. When he reached the threshold, he turned around. “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing,” she said in a small voice and followed him to the car. Tightening the grip of the paper in her hands, she tried to keep it together during the car ride. And succeeded for the most part. Pulling her window down, she soaked in the smell of sugar cane and watched big trucks on the highway, contrasting against a few unfortunate people who rode on donkeys under the unforgiving hot sun.
Harry had betrayed her in the past. But this…her heart raced like she was running, even though she barely shifted in her seat. There was no running from the truth.
“What’s wrong? And don’t give me a bullshit answer. Not in the mood,” he said, slanting her a look as he continued driving. Even when he sat, his spine was perfectly locked into place.
“It’s really happening,” she said, rubbing her forehead. “I guess a silly part of me wished this wasn’t true. That Harry hadn’t stolen my baby and taken her from me. But now I recognize his handwriting and we’re about to drive to see him, or should I say them…”
“Do you think they’re having an affair? That they do this to other couples? Since she’s a nurse.”
“He’s gay. They aren’t having an affair, but that’s beside the point. I feel…cheated. And I hate myself for letting him back into my life again.”
“Why are you telling me all this?”
“Because I have no one else. Forget it. You’ll probably think this is a big scheme to steal your money or something. Whatever. Just drive.”
He slowed the vehicle, and for a moment she thought he was going to pull it off the road and listen to her. Anticipation welled inside her, and it was like the raging pregnancy hormones returned with a vengeance. What the hell was she thinking? She dared to gaze at him, and found him watching her, too. A dark flicker touched his eyes, and the hazel shifted to a rich caramel. He opened his mouth slightly, then closed it, and shook his head as if to talk himself out of something. Then, he stepped on the accelerator and focused on the road ahead.
Chapter Eight
The sedan came to a stop across the street from the gated community. There was a visitor’s entrance where a uniformed doorman greeted the guests. And she also noticed the resident’s entrance where they had to punch a special code to gain access and enter.
“Any luck?” she said, pointing at the wrought-iron gates.
“As soon as a resident pulls up, we’re tailing them and going in,” he said, stretching his legs inside.
She did the same and kneaded the back of her neck to alleviate some kinks. “God, I feel like I need intravenous Tylenol. I’ve seen wood boards more flexible than my body.”
He stifled a laugh.
“What? It’s true.” She shrugged. “The last few nights I slept on the ground, then last night I was a train wreck. And now my heart is about to slip from my mouth.”
“I never knew you were so emotional.”
“I…have my moments.” She had worked on hiding her emotions to avoid disappointment. Somehow around him that was a challenge. He stirred an array of sentiments inside her, and stole from her any way of controlling them for a long period of time.
She clamped her lips shut to keep her thoughts to herself. The previous day she’d convinced him to hug her back, and later in the day to screw her.
Have you no pride, woman?
“Here.” Without taking his eyes off the community’s entrance, he stretched his hand and put it on the back of her neck. A wave of awareness surged through her, as if glacial water had just splashed her. As he started to knead the pulsating knot in her neck, the effect was the opposite of cold. Warm strands of recognition swept through her, and she closed her eyes.
“If you ever want to moonlight as a masseuse, you may have a shot at it,” she heard herself saying.
His hearty chuckle reverberated through her. “You never know.”
God. Was this real? His fingers pressed her flesh, making deep circles and easing her discomfort at the same time his touch provoked a much different type of ache. Her nipples strained against her bra and her blood thickened, pounding in her veins like it carried an urgent message.
She took a deep breath, hoping the meditation technique would bring her clarity. A low moan flew from her lips.
Shit
.
“There’s a car pulling in the resident line,” he said, and withdrew his hand.
She opened her eyes with a start and recomposed herself, pulling at the hem of her shirt. “Great,” she said, blinking herself out of that senseless haze.
He rotated the steering wheel, and within seconds they followed a Mercedes into the exclusive residential retreat. She chewed her lower lip. “What’s our plan?” she asked when the car came to a halt in front of the opulent, all-white house.
“We go in and get some answers.”
She sucked in a breath and wished she had some kind of weapon for their protection.
You’ve got your karate moves
.
Let’s put them to good use.
Fear tightened her midsection. She would find out what had happened to her daughter. The possibilities were endless, and none of them easy to swallow.
“This is it,” she said, her voice carried by emotion. She’d lost her daughter once…losing her again wasn’t part of the equation. Couldn’t be.
He gave her shoulder a light squeeze, and then cleared his throat. “It’ll be okay, Satyanna.”
She bit back a smile. “Thanks.”
He knocked on the door, and a woman with reddish shoulder-length hair and prescription glasses opened.
Jacinta.
A chilly wave flooded her veins, and Satyanna gasped. The woman must have recognized her, too, for she tried to slam the door on their faces. Thankfully, Leonardo shoved his foot at the door and opened it. She spun on her heels to run, but he gripped her elbow and pulled her against the wall, pinning her down. The gasp from the nurse’s mouth cut the air. Satyanna had never seen him like this. So…primeval.
“What do you want?” Jacinta asked. Her voice was steady, but fear flickered in her brown eyes.
“I want to know what happened to our daughter,” Satyanna asked.
Jacinta tried to move, but Leonardo kept her under his command. “No running. You’re going to tell us everything, and if you cooperate maybe I won’t ask for the maximum sentence when I throw you in jail.” He clenched his jaw.
The nurse’s eyes widened, and Satyanna noticed the pulse throbbing in her neck. “O-okay.”
Hell, Satyanna’s own breathing was labored. Anticipation iced her bloodstream. This was it, the first step to finding Lyanna. Would she like what she’d hear?
Be strong.
Leonardo loosened his grip on her and drew back just enough so the woman had room to lift her hand to her heart, maybe to make sure it was still beating. “Talk. Now.”
“I-I…” She fiddled with her pendant necklace. “I’m sorry for the pain I have caused you,” she said, looking straight into Satyanna’s eyes.
Satyanna took a long deep breath, and sized her up. “Harry put you up to this?”
She nodded. “Mr. Stephen offered me some money. I’ve always wanted to have my own place, and he gave me enough money to pay for a down payment.”
That explained the posh furniture inside that modest house. Jacinta had plans. She wanted to build or buy a better house, maybe somewhere else. Why on Earth had she relocated? “Why did you move all the way here?”
Jacinta adjusted her glasses. “He asked me to.”
Leonardo shook his head, impatient. “What did he do with my daughter?” Leonardo asked, towering over her so she had no escape.
Jacinta glanced at Satyanna, then at Leonardo. A shade of red covered her cheeks and neck. A sheen of sweat slicked her forehead. That woman knew she was in trouble, and Satyanna doubted she was dumb enough to lie. “He kept her…as his own.”
As his own?
Satyanna chewed her inner cheek so hard she could taste blood. She blinked a few times until she was able to speak again. “What? Where is she?” Her voice rose.
“Valentina’s taking a nap, in the first room to the left,” Jacinta said, pointing it out.
Valentina?
Satyanna dashed to the room, her heart throbbing in her ears. She blocked out Leonardo’s voice shouting something. She barely paid attention to the expensive surroundings. It was like she was waiting to be spiritually reborn, clinging to that one moment that would change her life forever.
When she got to the room she held the door handle, her cold palm wrapped around the heavy metal. Her fingers trembled as she turned it. A dusty pink baby girl’s bedroom welcomed her, filled with teddy bears and shelves neatly stacked with diapers, wipes, and cream.
She walked to the white, vintage-looking crib, covered by a soft veil. A sound machine attached to it played a soothing lullaby. Before she even got to Lyanna she felt her presence—and knew it. Knew she was no longer alone, and that the little baby she talked to when she had been in her belly was within a few inches from her.
Inhaling deeply, she carefully pulled down the veil. A bear-patterned blanket swaddled the baby, whose eyes were closed. A wave of happiness swept over her, and she sighed. Common sense said she shouldn’t wake up a sleeping baby, but damn it, she had waited too long to hold Lyanna in her arms.
A generous amount of reddish brown hair covered her head, and the chubby baby seemed healthy. She felt a huge smile spreading across her face and had to lift her hand to her mouth to suppress a squeal. As if on cue, Lyanna opened her eyes and glanced around with gorgeous hazel eyes, much like her father’s.
“Finally we meet, little one,” she said, her voice a sweet hum.
…
“Where is he?” Leonardo demanded. Frustration washed over him. Satyanna had dashed out of sight two minutes ago, despite him telling her not to. What if the woman was lying? What if she sent her straight into Clemonte’s bedroom? Who knew what that man was capable of?
“He’s away on a business trip. He’s even gotten me a passport to go along in the future. Supposed to come back tomorrow. I tag team with another nanny, a local, to take care of the baby when he’s away.”
Bastard. “We will wait here until he’s back. All of us,” he said, enunciating the last words so she would know there was no escape.
She blinked, as if reality dawned on her. “What?
Senhor
, I told you all I knew.”
Was she serious? He scowled at her. “Yes, but you helped him kidnap a baby. What did you think, you could just walk into the sunset and we’d forget all you’ve done?”
“But I…” Tears bordered her eyes. Her lips trembled, and for the first time since he’d met her, her nervousness was palpable. “I never meant to hurt anyone. He told me the mother was unstable, that he would be a better fit as a parent.”
“Yes, I’m sure your altruism is the only reason why you accepted to change your life around. Even career,” he added, sarcasm dripping from his voice.
“He pays me way more than what I did as a nurse.”
He snorted. “I bet. Satyanna?” he called, turning his head in the direction of the hallway. If she didn’t answer, he’d have to drag Jacinta with him, but he’d go personally to make sure she was okay. Why didn’t she check with him before bolting?
“I’m here.”
He turned his head to follow Satyanna’s voice and found her standing a couple feet from him, holding a baby. A shiver zapped down his spine, and he stretched to his full height. A baby, maybe his if the paternity test confirmed it.
A huge lump clogged his throat. He gestured for Jacinta to stay put, then slowly closed the gap between him and Satyanna. Each step he took brought a happy childhood memory to his mind. His father pushing him on a swing when he’d been five. His fishing trips with all his siblings. The way his mother kissed his forehead every night before he fell asleep. Even with all the money and success he had conquered, would he be able to provide the same security and love to his heiress?
The second he laid his eyes on her his heart stopped. A beat later it thrummed frenetically. The baby yawned and he bit back a smile. Something softened inside him, as if a part of him dissolved into warm goo. She had chubby cheeks, a cute little nose, and the jaw…the jaw. He recognized the cleft on her chin, the same one he had, even though her face was delicate and feminine. When she opened her eyes and scrutinized everything around her, her eyes were big and hazel.
Like mine.
He often relied on his intuition for work—it was a valuable asset to the amount of resources his team brought to him on every single case. In his personal life, he was usually right. His throat thickened, and pushing words out became a task. Yes. The sweet baby bundled in sheets in her arms was his, and there was no denying it. “Is she okay?”
“Of course she is. Mr. Stephen always makes sure—”
He lifted a finger and gestured for the nurse to be quiet. If she were a man, he would have punched her senseless already for helping Clemonte steal his baby. “I wasn’t talking to you.”
Satyanna smiled. “She seems healthy and good.”
The baby cooed and moved her hands. He remembered taking care of his younger siblings, especially after his older brother had fled to the United States—when Leonardo had been only sixteen.
“What’s happening?”
“Clemonte will come back tomorrow. We’ll stay here and wait until he’s back,” he said. What else could they do? Let Jacinta go and never hear from her again? No. He had lost the first few months of his baby’s life, and he refused to let go of more things. To let her free.
Satyanna rocked the baby from side to side naturally as if she’d been doing that her entire life. “Is that a good idea?”
He swallowed hard.
Merda
. He refused to lose Lyanna again, and what guarantee did he have that wouldn’t happen once Satyanna and the baby got out of his sight? None. Satyanna had run on him once, and could do it again. Their night together didn’t come into play—as far as he was concerned, it had no practical meaning. “I can’t send you back with the baby.”
She drew her eyebrows together. “Because you don’t trust me?”
“I’m not going to lose her again.”
“Because you don’t trust me,” she repeated, annoyance dangling from her voice.
Why should he pretend everything was okay? Giving her the benefit of the doubt to treat her courteously was one thing. Jeopardizing his daughter’s future wasn’t a part of the bargain. “Until Clemonte is in jail where he belongs, I don’t want you traveling with Lyanna without me. I’m not taking any risks this time.”
“Okay.”
“I’ll find a room so the nurse can stay overnight. We’ll have to lock her from the outside to make sure she doesn’t just take off. She’s an accomplice and needs to pay for what she’s done.”
“Of course.”
He turned around and told the nurse, “Come with me.”
She followed him, and he went inside a couple rooms until he picked the third one. It was a media room, therefore the only room without a window so she couldn’t jump outside. Beside several oversize chairs positioned as stadium seating was a huge screen and a console table with alcohol. He checked for sharp objects. Nope. Nothing. “You will sleep here. If you need to go to the bathroom or anything to eat or drink, call us.”
“What? You can’t keep me here. Like some kind of…”
“Criminal?” He shook his head. “You can stay here and watch a movie, or I can take you to the station right now,” he said, even though he would rather not do that. If he took her to a precinct the media could find out. After all, what was a big-time lawyer doing in a small town miles away from his turf? He’d attract unwanted attention, and worst of all, he could give Clemonte an advantage by steering him away. Unless Clemonte wished to get caught, there was no way he’d come to light after hearing that Leonardo had found, and
claimed,
the baby.
“This is not right,” Jacinta said, but he pushed her inside the media room, locked the door, and sat the key on a console table across the hallway.
“What’s next?” Satyanna asked.
“I’m going to scavenger hunt this place and search for some clues on his whereabouts.” Maybe even on his stolen sculpture. A seasoned son-of-a-bitch like Clemonte had to have an extra USB drive or list of connections. His detective had ensured him in the past that recovering stolen art was hard because highly skillful individuals organized that type of crime.