
‘And I’ll bet they were led by someone just like you,’ she challenged him back. ‘Someone who thought he had only to speak and the world trembled. Do you see me trembling?’
‘Perhaps you would be wiser if you did.’
‘Stop trying to scare me. It won’t work. I’ll do what suits me, when it suits me. If you don’t like it-tough. After all, that’s the code you live by yourself.’
This was a shot in the dark. She barely knew him, but instinct would have told her the sort of man he was, even if his own words and attitude hadn’t made it pretty plain. He was overbearing, and he wouldn’t be too scrupulous about how he got his own way. That was her estimation of him.
The sooner he realised that, in her, he’d met his match, the better.
‘Are you suggesting that I’m a brigand, signorina?’
‘I think you could be if you felt it necessary.’
‘And will it be necessary?’
‘You tell me. I imagine we judge the matter differently. I don’t want instalments. I need a lump sum, fairly soon. I have a once-in-a-lifetime chance, and to seize it I need money. But we can work it out. Perhaps someone else can take over the mortgage-a bank or something.’
Suddenly his face was dark, distorted.
‘Don’t try to involve strangers in this,’ he said fiercely. ‘Do you think I’d allow them to come interfering-dictating-Maria vergine!’
He slammed one hand into the other.
‘I’ve had enough of the way you talk to me,’ Alex said firmly. ‘Once and for all, try to understand that I will not be bullied. If you thought I would just collapse, you picked the wrong person.’
‘I’m only trying-’
‘I know what you’re “only trying” and I’ve heard enough. Now I’m going out. If you wish to talk to me you can make an appointment with my lawyer.’
‘The hell I will!’
‘The hell you won’t!’
