The Playboy's Unexpected Bride
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About this ebook
When billionaire Lincoln Aldridge learns he's been left custody of a tiny baby, he needs ananny—fast! Luckily, fiery Brazilian beauty Ana Maria Marques soon loves baby Jenny like amother. So when Linc has to prove that his playboy days are over, he makes her his wife!
Originally published in 2008 as Hot Summer Bride.
Sandra Marton
Sandra Marton is a USA Todday Bestselling Author. A four-time finalist for the RITA, the coveted award given by Romance Writers of America, she's also won eight Romantic Times Reviewers’ Choice Awards, the Holt Medallion, and Romantic Times’ Career Achievement Award. Sandra's heroes are powerful, sexy, take-charge men who think they have it all--until that one special woman comes along. Stand back, because together they're bound to set the world on fire.
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The Playboy's Unexpected Bride - Sandra Marton
CHAPTER ONE
Rio de Janeiro, April
CARNAVAL had ended almost two months ago, but Rio didn’t seem to know it.
Lincoln Aldridge wasn’t surprised. He’d been to Rio before. The city could be an endless party, especially for a man with money, rugged good looks and connections.
Linc had all three but he wasn’t in a partying mood. He’d been on the go for almost two weeks, first flying to Argentina, then Colombia, then Brazil. His business meetings had gone well but he had a more important matter on his mind.
Too much time had gone by since he’d heard from his sister. Kathryn and her husband, married five months, were on what she’d called a belated honeymoon, seeing the world.
New York City was part of the world, Linc had said wryly, and he damned well expected that Kath and the husband he’d never met intended to make it part of their trip.
Absolutely,
she’d answered, sounding almost like the kid he still thought of her as being. We’re going to stop there last so we can spend some time with you. And, Linc? Get ready for a wonderful surprise!
The best surprise would be seeing her again. Kath was twenty-two and he’d all but raised her. Now she lived in L.A., where she’d met Mark and eloped to Vegas. Linc, ten years her senior, would have felt better if he’d laid eyes on the guy before the wedding but at least he would meet him soon.
It was why he was eager to get home.
First, though, he had to finalize the deal he’d made with entrepreneur Hernando Marques. They’d shaken hands on it but Marques wanted to sign the contract at his home. An odd request, maybe, but when a man was about to spend twenty-five million bucks a year giving Aldridge Inc. full responsibility for the security of all his residential and commercial properties, an odd request was okay.
This is my poker night, Lincoln,
Marques had said. I spend it with a few old friends whose company I am sure you would enjoy. Please. Join us.
So Linc had smiled and said he looked forward to it.
A little before eight, his taxi glided through the massive iron gates that guarded the Marques estate.
Force of habit made Linc check the perimeter. One of his teams had installed the latest security systems a couple of weeks ago. Electric eyes. Hidden cameras. Sensors. He couldn’t spot them all, which was as it should be, but what he saw looked perfect.
The taxi stopped at the foot of wide stone steps. His host flung the door open before Linc could ring the bell.
Lincoln!
Marques grinned and extended his hand. "I was afraid you might have forgotten my invitation, meo amigo."
Traffic,
Linc said with a quick smile, even as he wondered at his host’s reaction. Brazilians were a friendly people but Marques seemed to be taking things to a new level.
Marques led him to a leather-walled game room where a dozen or so men stood chatting in small groups near an expansive buffet laid out on a mile-long table.
Come and meet my friends, Lincoln.
Linc shook hands, smiled, said hello and how are you to men he’d met before and others he knew by reputation. This was a gathering of some of the wealthiest men in South America. Eight years ago, when he’d started Aldridge Inc. with nothing but guts and his Special Forces experience, he’d have given anything to have been invited to an evening like this.
Now, it was Marques’s guests who expressed pleasure at meeting him.
He moved from group to group, eating a little, drinking hardly at all, wondering when he could get away. No one seemed in a hurry to play cards.
At last, Marques sought him out again. He was smiling but tiny drops of sweat stood out on his forehead. Something was wrong. Had the man decided against the deal despite the binding handshake?
Hernando,
he said pleasantly. I was just going to look for you. This is great but—
But you have had a long day and you wish for an early night.
I’m glad you understand.
I do. So perhaps—perhaps, now, we might adjourn to the library to—to—
To sign the contract,
Linc said, his eyes on the other man’s.
Certainly. To sign the contract.
Marques hesitated. And to talk.
The library was big and leather-paneled like the game room. A pair of French doors graced the far end; a fire blazed on the hearth of a stone fireplace to ward off the faint chill of the night.
Marques offered brandy. A cigar. Coffee. Linc said no to all three.
Something’s on your mind, Hernando.
Linc’s tone was polite but cool. I’d appreciate it if you’d just get to it.
His host nodded. Licked his lips. Fussed at the logs on the hearth with a poker before finally looking at Linc.
This is difficult for me, Lincoln.
But?
But there is something I must ask.
A quick laugh. I am not good at asking for favors. Not that this is a favor, exactly. I mean, it is something that will surely benefit you, as well as me.
Here it comes, Linc thought, folding his arms over his chest. A request to change the terms of their agreement? To renegotiate the price? What else could it be?
And what is it you must ask?
Marques cleared his throat. You are unmarried Lincoln. That is correct, yes?
Excuse me?
I said, you are single. Am I right?
Linc frowned. What did his marital status have to do with anything? Uh, yes. Yes, I’m single.
No children, then?
Marques. What is this about?
Because, you see, it is possible only a man with a child—with a daughter—would understand my feelings on this matter.
What matter?
Marques looked at him, then away. I have a daughter. She is young—but,
he added quickly, mature for her age.
I’m afraid I don’t see what—
She is also bright and well-educated. Obedient and well-mannered. And—
And, Linc thought in horror, as the truth began to sink in, Marques wanted to marry her off. To him?
I am a modern man, Lincoln. Still, when it comes to my daughter, I have some old-fashioned ways.
Hell. Absolutely to him. He’d heard about this kind of thing, of course, arranged marriages, especially in wealthy families in Europe and South America…
…would never hand her off to a man I didn’t trust and respect…
They did this back home, too. Not quite this openly but he’d been the target of a couple of attempts at marriage-brokering. He was in his thirties, he was single, he was well-off…
Why think in polite euphemisms? He was rich and that was fine because he’d gotten that way strictly on his own. Nobody had given him anything in this life, which made what he’d acquired, the homes, the cars, the private plane, all the more enjoyable.
And his looks were acceptable.
Okay. Most women made it clear his looks were more than acceptable. He’d always had his pick of women, even back in the days he’d never had more than ten bucks in his pocket. So, yeah, he’d been here before. Approached, you could call it, by some of New York’s best-known grands dames. They had daughters and he was, by their reckoning, eligible, and so what if his blood wasn’t as blue as theirs?
You’d love my Emma, they said. Or, Why don’t you come out to our place in Easthampton this weekend? Glenna will be there. You do remember Glenna, don’t you?
Yes, but nobody had ever come straight out and said, Here’s my daughter. I’d like you to marry her.
…a charming young woman, Lincoln, polite and very willing to accommodate. If you’d simply agree to meet her—
Hernando.
Linc took a deep breath. I—I want you to know I appreciate how—how direct you’re being. This can’t be easy for you.
Marques gave a little laugh. It’s one of the most difficult things I’ve ever done.
I’m sure it is but the thing is—the thing is—
A polite knock sounded at the door. A servant popped his head in, smiled apologetically and said something in rapid Portuguese.
Marques sighed. My wife is on the phone, Lincoln. I’ll take the call in my office. She is visiting her sister but you know how it is with women.
Linc didn’t. Not with wives, at any rate, and he had every intention of keeping it that way.
I’ll only be a minute. Help yourself to some brandy while you consider my proposition.
Linc waited until the door closed. Then he muttered an oath and decided brandy was a fine idea.
How did a man turn down what Marques called a proposition? Grimly, he poured an inch of amber liquid into a snifter. He didn’t want to insult him. He didn’t want to lose this account, either, but if that was what it took to get out of here…
What was that?
Had something stirred outside the French doors? Clouds had moved in to obscure the moon; the light was poor but… Yes. There it was again. He had a better look now, enough to be sure what was out in the darkness wasn’t a something.
It was a someone.
Linc put down the brandy glass. He moved slowly, instinctively falling back into survival tactics honed to a fine edge years ago. Adrenaline pulsing through him, breathing steady, he felt himself come alive as he always had in moments like this.
The handles to the French doors were almost within reach. One more step…
He exploded into action, yanked the doors open, threw himself into the night and wrapped his arms around the intruder.
Wrapped his arms around a woman.
Definitely a woman. Her long hair swept across his face. Her breasts