reaction and looked up at him. 'Do you have to do that?' she asked in an undertone.
'We are supposed to be reconciled, cara,' he said, taking the opportunity to brush his lips against her forehead. 'People will expect us to touch each other in public. They will imagine we will be doing much more when we are finally at home alone.'
'Where is home supposed to be now?' she asked in a soft breathless sort of voice. 'Your place or mine?'
Giorgio shifted his mouth ruefully as he straightened. 'My place, or what used to be our place, is not quite ready. I've been staying at the hotel most nights. We will have to stay at yours tonight, otherwise the press will not believe we are truly reunited.'
'You think they will follow to check up on us?' she asked with a worried frown.
He gave her a wry look. 'Surely you haven't forgotten what the press is like. Haven't they been on your tail over the last six months of our separation?'
Maya captured her lip between her teeth, thinking of all the times she'd had to get away from the intrusive eyes of the press. That ridiculous 'date' with Howard Herrington was a case in point.
They had blown it right out of proportion with a photograph that looked far more intimate than it was. She had been leaning forward, trying to catch something Howard had been saying and a flashbulb had captured the moment, making it appear she was about to press a kiss close to Howard's mouth. When it appeared in the gossip pages the following day she had taken a devil-may-care approach to the fallout. There had been a photo only a week earlier of Giorgio with his model friend. It seemed fitting that Maya had started to reclaim her life, even if Howard Herrington was the worst date she had ever had.
Maya cast her eyes over the crowd. The party was in full swing now; several couples were dancing as the band played some classic dance hits. She remembered the days when she had danced in Giorgio's arms; he had swung her around and around and even though her head had been left spinning she had always gone back for more. The early days of their courtship and marriage had been so much fun, so dizzyingly exciting for a girl who had grown up with so little.
There had been no parties that she could remember during her childhood, no massive family gatherings, no huge celebrations of her own or anyone else's milestones or achievements.
As soon as she had met Giorgio she had clung to him and his family, subconsciously looking for the anchor she had lacked for much of her life. She had slotted in like a small sea-tossed craft into a safe and sheltered harbour.
She had never wanted to be cast adrift.
She had done that herself.
But now the rules had been changed. She was back, but only temporarily. Giorgio wanted her to pretend things were back to normal and she could do that for a few weeks, maybe even a month or two. The chances were her pregnancy would disappear down the drain of despair, just like the others had done. All she had to do was keep it a secret until Giorgio's game of pretend was over.
There was no point in getting his hopes up as well as hers, or anyone else's for that matter.
Maya's heart ached at the thought of Salvatore dying. He was such a vitally alive man. He was the last of the great patriarchs. He liked the authority his position warranted as the elder of the tribe. She had learned a lot watching the family dynamics over the past five years. The meshing of different personalities, the way each son was cast from the same mould but still so very different. Giorgio was more like his grandfather than anyone. She suspected that was why Salvatore had told him about his illness first. Salvatore knew Giorgio would have the strength to carry the rest of the family through such a difficult time. He would watch over the family finances, he would steer a steady course instead of wavering about in panic. He would grieve certainly, but in private. He would not need anyone to support him.
He never had.
Giorgio