Single Girl Abroad (Mills & Boon M&B) (Mills & Boon Special Releases) (26 page)

BOOK: Single Girl Abroad (Mills & Boon M&B) (Mills & Boon Special Releases)
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EPILOGUE

Singapore, two years later …

M
ORNING
came softly to some. It crept up on them one slow and languid stretch at a time. Jianne’s mornings often started that way, much to Jacob’s amusement and lazy satisfaction. He loved the smile that stole over Jianne’s lips when she sensed that he was awake and watching her. He loved the way her eyes would open and fix on him, and there’d be a smile in them too, along with a promise.

Two years married—remarried—and it only got better. Zhi Fu had stopped his pursuit of Jianne and returned to Shangahi. According to Jianne’s mother, Zhi Fu had recently taken a wife. Jake and Jianne hadn’t been invited to the wedding.

Po had disappeared in the days following the burning of the dojo. Disappeared and then reappeared at a Singapore police station three days later, bruised and beaten, with a three-year-old girl and a six-year-old boy in tow.
His half-brother and sister—with their mother dead, as Po’s mother was dead, and a vengeful arsonist for a father. The justice system had taken care of Po’s father. Po’s half-siblings had been taken in by their maternal grandmother. Po’s father had been the boy’s only living relative, so Jake and Jianne—with the aid of the best lawyers money could buy—had won the right to care for Po until the boy reached his majority. Beyond then, too, for Po was theirs now—now and for ever—a Bennett of the heart and to hell with blood.

Out of the ashes of misfortune more than one phoenix had risen.

A boy so wise and gifted and hungry to make a difference that Jake could barely wait to see what Po would become.

A dojo had been rebuilt in the exact place where only ashes had remained. A dojo and a home—complete with underground parking, rooftop garden, a children’s wing, office space for Jianne, and ample guest accommodation for both family and students.

And a marriage had flourished.

Jianne Xang-Bennett loved her husband, loved him well and often, and Jake revelled in it, fed on it, and counted himself the most fortunate man in the world because of it. Whether fortune favoured the brave or whether every man was the architect of his own fortune—he didn’t care. Jake had his family, he had everything he’d ever wanted and he was never letting go.

Jacob slid from his bed without waking Jianne, and padded silently into the adjoining room and over to where someone
was
awake. A tiny baby girl with rosebud lips,
silky black hair, and eyes so dark and beautiful that he melted every time she looked his way. She didn’t have a name—not yet. He and Jianne were running a little late in that regard.

From the moment she’d slid out of her mother, red-faced and roaring with fury, she’d captured his heart. A midwife had handed the screaming bundle to him, and she’d stopped on a hiccup, and stared at him with dark, slightly unfocused eyes. Her tiny fern-like fist had unfurled and he’d touched it in wonder, marvelling at her perfection. And she’d closed her impossibly tiny hand around his finger, and gripped hard, and with that one gesture she had captured his soul for ever.

‘Like her father,’ Jianne had said with a smile. ‘What she has, she holds.’

‘Like her mother,’ he’d responded. ‘Impossibly beautiful.’

His brother Luke had taken one look at Jake holding his baby daughter and said, ‘Man, she is so cute.’ And then the baby had grabbed Luke’s hair in an imperious grip, and he’d muttered, ‘And we are so screwed.’

‘Trouble,’ said Po, when he first held Jake’s daughter, but that didn’t stop the boy from wanting to carry trouble with him wherever he went. Trouble had a willing slave and his name was Po.

Jake simply thought of her as
beloved
.

‘You’re going to meet your aunts and uncles today,’ Jake told the tiny girl as he lifted her from her crib and settled her against his chest. ‘And your cousins. They’re here for your christening.’ Hence the slight urgency surrounding the baby’s name. ‘Your aunt Hallie will probably
try and scare you with talk of wide brimmed hats and pinafore dresses that end at your ankles but don’t you take any notice of her. The Bennett brothers have moved on. I’m sure if you carry a parasol and keep your knees covered, everything will be just fine.’

The poppet nuzzled his chest and thumped him with a tiny fist. Jake’s besotted smile turned wry. ‘I’m taking that as a
“yes, Daddy”.’

Jake offered up a finger and his daughter grasped it with tiny fingers. ‘And don’t you give your cousins any grief, either. They may be wild, but they’ll be there for you when you need them, until the end of time. It’s how Bennetts are made. Never forget that.’

The tiny baby brought her fist to her mouth, with Jake’s finger still locked firmly in her grasp.

‘She’s hungry,’ said a voice from behind him, and then Jianne was sliding her arm around his waist and setting gentle fingers to her daughter’s head.

‘I know.’ Jake tried to extricate his finger but his baby held firm. ‘She won’t let go.’

‘Smart girl,’ said Jianne. ‘I wouldn’t either.’

‘She’s so fragile,’ murmured Jake. Such a delicate little thing to hold him in such thrall.

‘She’s stronger than she looks.’ Jianne rested her cheek against his shoulder. ‘She has her father’s heart. A heart from which others take strength. A tiger’s heart.’

‘Is that a warning?’ asked Jake.

‘It probably should be,’ murmured Jianne. ‘But I prefer to think of it as a blessing. It’s also all your fault, by the way. And I’ve thought of a name. Our daughter will need a strong name.’

‘You’re not calling her Tiger,’ said Jake.

Jianne smiled serenely. ‘I thought Willow. One who bends but never breaks, no matter how wild the storm. In Chinese it would be Lian. Lian-li if you like, although the second name is more traditionally a boy’s name or a surname. It means strength.’

‘Pretty,’ said Jake. And to the baby, ‘What do you think, Li-li? Are you strong enough for such a name?’

‘Of course she is,’ said Jianne with a swift kiss for his cheek and then a more lingering greeting for his mouth. ‘She’s a Bennett.’

MEET
KELLY
HUNTER

ON WRITING AND READING …

What do you love most about being a writer?

I’m never bored. There’s always something to think about and work on.

What do you like least about being a writer?

There’s always something to think about and work on.

Do you have a favourite locale or setting for your novels? What is it and why is it your favourite?

I don’t really have a favourite setting or locale, though I do like setting fish-out-of-water stories in South East Asia. I’ve lived and worked there many times before and feel comfortable writing about the locations and the customs. I like to take my readers on a journey. I love armchair travelling!

Is there an upcoming book that you’re looking forward to reading?

I can’t wait to get my hands on Carol Marinelli’s MIRA
®
release called
Putting Alice Back Together
. I love it when authors push boundaries.

What are your five all-time favourite books (with authors)?

Welcome To Temptation
by Jenny Crusie

No Place Like Home
by Barbara Samuel

The Chesapeake Bay Series
by Nora Roberts

To Kill a Mockingbird
by Harper Lee

The Paladin
by CJ Cherryh

What one specific piece of advice would you give a would-be writer trying to kick-start a career?

Learn—join a writing organisation, an online group, buy how-to books, attend workshops and conferences. Write. Don’t give up.

 

ON ROMANCE …

Describe the ultimate romantic meal.

You mean one I don’t have to cook or clean up the remains of afterwards? In that case, I’ll have a table set with matching silverware, stiff linen napkins and glassware that hums long after you ting it. I’ll have old-fashioned quantities of modern French food, served on fine white china and washed down with chilled white wine. As for music, Yo Yo Ma will be tucked in a corner, sawing away on his million-dollar cello and Nigel Kennedy will drop by for a quick stint on his violin. The room will be lit by candles, of course, and I’ll look years younger than I really am. My husband will be my dinner companion, (yes, I’ve decided to let him join me) and he’ll make fascinating conversation whilst looking impossibly sexy (he’s actually pretty reliable in this regard). We’ll slow dance between courses and at the end of the evening he’ll tell me he’s pregnant.

What is your all-time favourite romantic movie?

Mulan
(It’s a Disney animated film).

What is your all-time favourite romantic song or composition?

Jimi Hendrix’s ‘Little Wing’.

What is the most romantic gesture or gift you have received?

A pair of Belted Galloway calves turning up at the back door on Valentine’s Day with pink ribbons around their necks. Moo.

How do you keep the romance alive in your relationship?

We laugh a lot. Give a lot.

What tip would you give your readers to make their lives more romantic?

It’s all in your mind!

Where is the most romantic place you’ve ever travelled?

Istanbul was very romantic, but then, I was madly in love …

ALL ABOUT ME …

Besides writing, what other talent would you most like to have?

Er, concert pianist? Without the all-encompassing practice that goes with it.

Who is someone you admire and why?

My mother. She’s the most giving person I know.

Do you have a good luck charm or superstition?

Nope.

Share one of your favourite indulgences with us.

Steaming, bubbling spa baths.

What quality do you most admire in a man?

Oooh. Tough one. You mean I can only choose one? Loyalty.

What is the one thing you’ve always wanted to do, but never had the courage to try?

Skydive. I’m afraid of heights.

If you weren’t a writer, what would you be?

Richer.

All the characters in this book have no existence outside the imagination of the author, and have no relation whatsoever to anyone bearing the same name or names. They are not even distantly inspired by any individual known or unknown to the author, and all the incidents are pure invention.

All Rights Reserved including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. This edition is published by arrangement with Harlequin Enterprises II B.V./S.à.r.l. The text of this publication or any part thereof may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, storage in an information retrieval system, or otherwise, without the written permission of the publisher.

This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the prior consent of the publisher in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

® and ™ are trademarks owned and used by the trademark owner and/or its licensee. Trademarks marked with ® are registered with the United Kingdom Patent Office and/or the Office for Harmonisation in the Internal Market and in other countries.

Mills & Boon, an imprint of Harlequin (UK) Limited,
Eton House, 18-24 Paradise Road, Richmond, Surrey TW9 1SR

SINGLE GIRL ABROAD © Harlequin Enterprises II B.V./S.à.r.l. 2012

Originally published as
Untameable Rogue ©
Kelly Hunter 2010 and
Red-Hot
Renegade
© Kelly Hunter 2010

ISBN: 978-1-408-97900-6

009-0212

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