Her Italian Millionaire (14 page)

BOOK: Her Italian Millionaire
7.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“It's all right,” she said quickly. “I can get some new clothes. When I go home I'll have these all cleaned. They'll be as good as new.” Thank God she'd put the yearbook in her tote bag.

Marco repeated what she'd said to his grandmother, who replied in a torrent of excited words which ended with her taking Anne Marie's hand and pulling her back inside the house.

“Nonna wants you to borrow my sister's clothes for your vacation,” he said. “The ones she left behind when she joined the convent. In the meantime she will wash your clothes for you and have them clean when you return from Paestum.”

“Oh, I couldn't let her...” Anne Marie said. She hated to impose, and she was sure the clothes of the young and lovely Isabella wouldn't fit. And even if they did, they wouldn't be at all suitable for a forty-something wholesome American librarian.

“But she insists,” Marco said. “At least have a look at the clothes. Take a few and if you don't want to wear them, don't. But don't hurt her feelings,” he said sternly.

Anne Marie flushed with annoyance. She didn't need to be lectured on manners by an Italian mystery man who was being pursued by someone who had destroyed his car and her suitcase.

She followed Nonna up the narrow staircase to a small bedroom that trapped the heat under a slanted ceiling. Nonna raised the window and let a gust of fresh air into the room. Then she opened the closet and brought out dresses and shirts and pants and even shoes, the kind Anne Marie had seen on every stylish Italian woman. The old woman held up a black sleeveless short dress with a wide band of white across the neck. It was made of some stretchy fabric and looked so small Anne Marie was sure it would never fit her. Nonna had no such reservations. She gestured for Anne Marie to try it on.

What could Anne Marie say, what could she do but take off her clothes? Then she had to remove her money belt. If she hadn't, it would have made a huge bulge under the dress. Isabella's dress felt tight, tighter than Anne Marie ever wore her clothes, but not uncomfortable. Nonna stepped back and her eyes widened as she looked Anne Marie over.

Anne Marie knew what she was going to say. It's not you, dear. It's much too young for you. It's too bad, but you look ridiculous in it. What was I thinking? You are not the type to carry off these clothes. We'll have to think of something else.

This never would have happened if Anne Marie had not accepted that ride from Marco this morning. Otherwise she'd be on her way to Paestum right now, alone with a full suitcase of her own clothes. Yes, she might be lonely. No, she'd never have met his grandmother or his sketchy cousin or eaten a real, home-cooked Italian meal, but her suitcase would still be intact, and her carefully chosen travel clothes would still be new and unworn and unwrinkled and ready for the meeting with Giovanni. The reason she'd come to Italy.

Suddenly all she wanted was to take off the dress, get on the boat and wave good-bye to the disturbingly sexy Marco and continue her trip by herself. Even loneliness would be better than this nervous feeling in the pit of her stomach that she was being sucked into the heart of a family of a man who had secrets and told lies and invited danger into his life.

Meanwhile Nonna was still staring at her, no doubt planning what she was going to say about the dress so as not to hurt Anne Maria's feelings.  

The dress was snug. She knew it would be. Isabella must be a size smaller than she was. The fabric hugged her breasts, her waist and her hips. She had no shoes to wear with such a dress. Nonna tilted her head from side to side.


Bella
,” she said softly, “
molto bella
.” But she had a tear in her eye as she spoke.

Anne Marie was worried. Was she sad to see her granddaughter's dress on someone else? Was she sorry she'd offered it?

 “Grazie,” Anne Marie said. Now she didn't know if she was supposed to take the dress or not. She stood in the middle of the room shifting from one foot to the other. She lifted the skirt up to her waist and was about to take the dress off when there was a knock at the door.


Avanti
,” Nonna said.

Marco stuck his head in the door. Anne Marie dropped the skirt that hit her mid-thigh, but not before Marco had a good look at her cotton underpants. That must have been quite a thrill, she told herself sarcastically.

Thrill or no thrill, he spoke in Italian to his grandmother, but his eyes never left Anne Marie. It was the dress, she told herself. He was only interested to see if his sister's dress fit her. Well, it didn't. He could stop staring now. He could leave the room and return to whatever it was he was doing. Surely there was more to be done about his car and the accident.

“Very nice,” he said at last, raising his eyes to meet hers.

“What?” she asked.

“The dress. Nonna thinks you and Isabella are about the same size. It makes her sad that Isabella is wearing a gray novice habit now and not her own clothes, but she is happy to know the clothes will be worn by you. She will pack a suitcase for you and then -”

“A suitcase?” She could accept a dress or two without feeling obligated, but a suitcase full of clothes? She stopped when he shot her a warning glance. “Then I must really be on my way,” she said. “Please thank your grandmother. For the clothes and for the lunch.”

He nodded, but just stood in the doorway, hand braced on the woodwork, looking at her with a strange expression on his face.

While he did, his grandmother was carefully packing clothes into an old-fashioned canvas bag. She'd opened a dresser drawer that contained lacy underwear. She saw Marco nod to his grandmother and that went into the bag as well as dresses, pants, shirts, a nightgown and even a swimming suit, all folded neatly and packed. She should have stopped her, said that was enough, too much, but she'd didn't want to hurt her feelings.

She wanted to take off the dress and put her own clothes back on, but she couldn't undress with Marco in the room. So she just stood there, her arms wrapped around her waist, with the warm breeze from the open window bringing the scent of roses from the garden below. But it wasn't the breeze that made her skin prickle, it was the way Marco had stripped her bare with his hooded gaze.

She wondered if she'd ever met anyone before who exuded so much male magnetism. Maybe she had but she hadn't reacted. She'd been a married woman, after all, and immune to the sexy glances of strange men, if there'd been any. Not any longer. She was only too aware of Marco, his remarkable eyes, the way he looked at her, his strong hands on the wheel, the way he drove. She had a feeling that the way he undressed women with his eyes was such a habit with him, he didn't even know he was doing it.

Her heart was beating so loudly she was sure he could hear it in the still room, even see it beneath the stretch fabric of his sister's dress. She cursed herself for being so susceptible, for letting him affect her that way. He was just being Italian, that was all. And she was just being her naive American self.

Then he was gone. Without a word he closed the door behind him and went downstairs. She took the dress off, put on her money belt and her only remaining American clothes that now felt bulky and baggy, and accepted the fact that she was leaving with a suitcase full of an Italian girl's clothes that would bind her to Marco's family until she returned them, even though she would hopefully never see him again after today. Not if she could help it.

Nonna kissed her good-bye, Magdalena waved from the doorway and she and Marco got into Rocco's car for the drive to the boat dock. It was a small car with no back seat which meant she had to sit on Marco’s lap while Rocco pulled away from the house with a squeal of his tires.

Uneasy with her body pressed against Marco's, she shifted her body forward until she was balanced on Marco's knees, her head brushing the roof, her own knees wedged against the dashboard.

“Is there a...a seat belt?” she asked, a hint of desperation in her voice. How was she going to endure a ride to town like this?

Marco put his arms around her and pulled her back against his chest.

“You don't need a seat belt,” he said, his voice so close she could feel his warm breath against her ear. She stiffened. Oh, God, how long would this ride take?

“Relax,” he said. “It's only a short ride.”

But how could she relax with his arms around her and her body pressed against his, so tightly she could feel every muscle in his thighs and most of the bones in his body?

He spoke to Rocco in Italian. Rocco answered, taking his hands off the steering wheel to gesture wildly. They were talking about her and her trip. She knew that much. She heard “
barco
” and “
Salerno
.” They sounded angry, but she knew that Italians could sound and look angry and not mean it.

 All she knew was that sitting on Marco's lap, feeling him beneath her as the car took the curves, suddenly aware of his very obvious erection beneath her, and his low voice in her ear was as close to a Chinese torture as she wanted to get. It was that combination of pain and pleasure that could break the most hardened criminal. Why was she being punished this way? No more talking to strangers. She'd had her adventure; this was it. Once aboard the boat, she would cease talking to strangers. Not even a smile or an innocent look.

When Rocco pulled up at the dock, she jumped off of Marco's lap and planted her American shoes firmly onto the pavement. She would have run toward the water and leaped aboard the boat if it weren't for her borrowed suitcase in the trunk and the necessity of saying good-bye and expressing her thanks.

She didn't want either of them to think she was an uncouth American tourist, but she wanted to be rid of them. Now. Before she lost it. She'd been holding her breath, her nerves stretched as taut as a travel laundry line, the kind that was in her ruined suitcase along with packets of laundry soap. She'd been longing, waiting for the moment when she'd finally be rid of Marco. That moment had finally come.

After thanking Rocco, after he'd kissed her on both cheeks and said good-bye, she turned to say good-bye to Marco. But he was already carrying a bag in each hand to the ticket booth. Two bags? Where had the second bag come from?

She hurried after him and tried to take them out of his hands. “Too heavy for you,” he explained.

“But what...” She never finished her sentence because he was now in the process of buying her ticket for her. That was going too far. That was where she was drawing the line.

“No,” she said loudly. “I'm buying my own ticket.”

He held his hands up, his face a mask of innocence. “Of course. I was trying to help.”

“I know,” she said, feeling foolish for overreacting. “I appreciate it, but I don't need your help. I can manage. Thank you for everything. It was nice meeting you,” she said shortly.

Did he know that nice was not the right word to describe what meeting him had been like? Disturbing, exciting, dangerous, intense, stimulating...

The ticket taker slapped her change on the counter along with her ticket, then spoke rapidly and pointed toward the boat.

“Let's go,” Marco said. “It's leaving in ten minutes.”

“I can manage. Really.”

“I want to be sure you get you a good seat on top for the view.”

He boarded the boat with her and carried the bags up the narrow stairway to the top deck where he found her a seat up in front.

“This is good,” he said, glancing around at the other passengers.

“Thank you,” she said once again. Now go. Go back to your so-called boring desk job and your family and your damaged car and your problems and let me go. She wondered if he'd kiss her. If he did, it would only be on the cheek. If he did, it would be to say good-bye. If he did, she wished he'd get it over with.

Other books

The Raft by S. A. Bodeen
Laurinda by Alice Pung
Because It Is My Blood by Zevin, Gabrielle
The Last Word by A. L. Michael
Force of Nature by Suzanne Brockmann
Matala by Craig Holden
The Reckoning by Jane Casey