only thing she could think of to get his attention. Driven past caring for her own safety, she reached up and caught hold of a strand of jet black hair that she could see underneath the uniform cap and pulled hard.
âMadre de Dios!â
For one frantic, terrifying moment the car swerved violently but a second later he had both himself and the powerful vehicle back under control.
âStop that!â he snarled through gritted teeth. âDonât be so damn stupid, woman! Do you want to kill us both?â
âWhere youâre concerned, donât tempt me,â Felicity muttered but already she was having secondâand thirdâthoughts about the wisdom of her actions. The wild movement of the car had thrown her to one side, bruising her arm, and the few seconds of sheer panic she had felt at just the thought of what might have happened if there had been any other traffic on the road was enough to have her hastily rethinking.
She sank back onto her seat, struggling to appear outwardly calm while inside her thoughts were whirling frantically, trying to come up with some possible explanation for what was happening.
Had the chauffeur gone completely mad? What could he possibly hope for as a result of his actions?
âLookâyouâ¦â she tried again, struggling to force her voice to sound firm and full of a confidence she was far from feeling.
Those dark eyes flicked up swiftly, meeting hers in the rear-view mirror and holding her gaze for the space of a heartbeat before returning to their concentration on the road.
âMy name is Rico,â he said unexpectedly.
Rico? Sheâd be a fool to believe thatâbecause heâd be all sorts of an idiot to give her his real name. And one thing she didnât believe that this Rico was, was a fool. There was too much intelligence in that face, too much natural cunning in the black coffee-coloured gaze he turned on her to merit any such description.
But Rico suited him. It was a rogueâs name, an outlawâs name. She could just imagine him playing the role of a brigand or a bandit in some wild adventure film.
But this was no film; nor was it, in her opinion at least, any sort of an adventure.
âThenâRicoâI think youâve got this all wrong. Youâve made a terrible mistake.â
âNo mistake.â
The flat comment was accompanied by a brusque shake of his head.
âI know exactly what Iâm doing.â
âButâI think you must have the wrong person.â It was the only explanation she could come up with.
âYouâre not Felicity Hamilton?â
His sarcasm scraped brutally on already raw nerves.
âWell, yes, I said I wasâbut youâve still got it wrong. IâIâm not rich, you know, and nor is my father.â She wouldnât have been forced into marrying Edward if that had been the case.
âIâm not interested in money.â
âBut thenâwhyâ¦?â
Her voice failed completely, drying to a painful croak as she thought of the only other possible reason there might be for this man to abduct her in this way. Nightmare thoughts filled her head so that she could almost feel the colour leaching from her cheeks, her heart clenching in panic.
âStop this car! Stop it at once!â
She had no hope that he would obey her but still it twisted every nerve to see how determinedly he ignored her, the total lack of response he made.
âI said, stop !â
But even as she spoke a sudden hope flared. They were approaching a particularly tricky bend. The car would have to slow down to manoeuvre round it. If she could just get the door open⦠Carefully she edged forward, inching her fingers onto the handle.
âItâs locked.â
The words scythed through her hopes in an instant, cutting them off completely. Once more her gaze went to the mirror, meeting that knowing look with a sense of appalled horror.
âCentral