“And I’m not sure if I feel the same way about you.”
“Then let me take you to dinner Saturday night. Let us talk about how I can change and make you happy.”
Suddenly, I hear something break on the other side of the store. Quickly I look around for Aiden. “Aiden?”
Salvatore says, “Saturday, we will have dinner somewhere very nice. No?”
“Aiden?” I call again, looking frantically up and down the aisles.
“Hello, hello, ciao?” Salvatore says.
I start walking fast. “Yes, Saturday will work fine. Be at my place at eight. Now I have to go.” I hang up and turn around the corner.
I find Aiden at the register with Rosa, playing with a pile of tiny spoons.
He lifts one. “See, Mommy!”
I press my palm against my heart in relief. For a moment, I thought he’d broken something very expensive.
When I arrive at the station the next morning, I set the invitation on Elsa’s desk and pat it.
“What is this?” she says.
I arch my eyebrows. “Read it. It’s from Gianfranco.”
Her eyes light up like a Christmas tree. “Look how big your smile is.”
I chuckle, but I’m still impatient. “Hurry, read it.”
“Okay, okay.” She opens the envelope and reads it, then looks at me. “Ooh, you’re invited to one of his famous dinner parties. And it’s this Saturday.”
Suddenly I remember something. “Saturday?”
“That’s what it says.”
Dang it. I told Salvatore I would have dinner with him on Saturday night.
Elsa hands back the invitation and congratulates me again on being one of the few ever invited to dinner at the great castle. I decide against telling her about my double booking, partially because I don’t want her to know that I agreed to grace Salvatore with my presence. I’m not sure I made the right decision letting him back into my life. However, I get an idea.
I race back to my desk and call Gianfranco. I tap the desk nervously as the phone rings.
“Castillo di Guardi,” Luther says, answering the phone.
I proceed to tell him that I would really enjoy attending the dinner party on Saturday but have a conflicting engagement. “Would it be okay to bring a…” I stop myself before saying date. I don’t want Gianfranco to get the wrong idea. “Friend?”
“Usually the dinner is for only those who have received invitations.” He takes a long pause. “I will check.”
I wait impatiently, but soon he’s back and tells me it’s fine. He hangs up before I can say thank you. One thing’s for sure—Gianfranco Guardi may want to try hiring a butler who’s not so rude.
Next I call Salvatore and tell him of the change in plans.
“It is dinner with the pompous artist?” he says.
“Yes,” I say sternly, holding my ground. If he doesn’t want to go, then that solves it. We might reschedule for another time—might.
He sighs forcefully. “I must see you. It has been too long. I will do whatever I must.”
Salvatore agrees to pick me up tomorrow at six thirty for dinner at eight thirty.
10
Salvatore and I face the large muted red doors. I ring the doorbell, and we wait.
“That box is silly,” Salvatore says.
I look at the designer box I’m carrying. Inside is the replacement vase. “Then thank goodness what I have isn’t for you.”
He groans. I’m sure some fiery words are swirling around in his head, but he knows better than to speak them. I’m already on edge, and deep down inside, I feel like taking the vase out of the box and cracking him over the head with it.
We started spatting like this five miles into our drive to Gianfranco’s estate. As soon as I walked out on the porch to receive his company, Salvatore examined me from head to toe with a look of dissatisfaction. Then he said that he liked my red dress, but I would look better in it if I made my hair blond again. Then he said I looked extra skinny in the face and accused me of starving myself so that I could be thinner.
“Americans think skinny is sexy, but in Italy, seeing the bones is not desirable,” he said.
He aggravated me to my supposedly visible bones with that criticism, but it got me thinking. I was actually thinner when he and I met. The divorce, the stress, my dad’s death, and just trying to figure out what came next made me eat less and worry more. But he didn’t care so much about what size dress I wore then.
Then Salvatore went on about how he’d almost lost a lot of money, and of course if I had loaned him the cash he needed, he wouldn’t have had to face such a crisis, but he overcame it. “I would pay you back, not steal from you as a criminal.”
I rolled my eyes as I gazed out of the passenger side window, wondering why in the world I’d decided to call and ask if I could bring him.
Luther, the butler, opens the door, and he looks at me as if we’ve never met. “Benvenuto al Castello di Guardi.”
“Grazie,” I say.
He sets his dreary gaze on Salvatore and asks for our invitation.
I clench the flap of my purse, then remember something. “Sorry, I left it at home.”
Luther swings his gaze to my face. I notice a slight wrinkling of his eyebrows.
“What is your name?” he asks in English.
As usual, once they realize I’m American, locals would rather speak English. I’m pretty sure the shift isn’t made out of respect—it’s to keep me from hacking up their language. Sometimes I don’t give them the opportunity to make that decision for me, but in this case, I do.
“I’m Liza Patrick. Remember, I was here with the TV crew last week?” I lift the box in my hand. “I broke a vase, so I bought another one.”
Luther raises an eyebrow at the box as though it’s a sack of manure. “One moment.” He closes the door.
“You did not remember the invitation? How come?” Salvatore grouses.
I look off at a patio with manicured shrubs surrounding a flower garden and pinch my lips together to keep from telling him to shut up—just shut the hell up right now!
“It is fine, I guess,” he says.
I turn to face him. What I see in his eyes, I don’t trust. My lips part to ask the question creeping through my mind, but the door opens.
Luther says, “Sorry for the delay, Miss Patrick. Please follow me.”
I’m already familiar with the layout of this castle. It’s so large that I can’t believe Gianfranco actually lives here. Normally estates like this are open for paid tours. Gianfranco’s an extremely famous artist. I’ve heard him described as a modern-day Pissarro meets Picasso yet with a touch of modern-day realism. And he lives here alone—no wife or children. It’s mighty strange.
I think about the first time I saw Gianfranco, standing on the scaffold, toiling over his masterpiece, and then running into him at the bakery. The way our eyes connected… I wonder if there’s something going on between us. I glance at Salvatore. At the moment, he feels like a third leg attached to my butt.
We pass a painting of a lion climbing a tree. The portrait succeeds in capturing our attention.
Salvatore scoffs. “Famous artist?”
Although his voice was low, I’m pretty sure Luther heard him, but the butler doesn’t flinch or look back to chastise him with a look.
“Yes, Gianfranco’s very famous,” I say, feeling I must come to our host’s defense. I even repeat the bit about Gianfranco being hailed as a modern-day Pissarro meets Picasso with a touch of modern-day realism.
Salvatore laughs bitterly. “This famous artist did not buy this castle with his paintings. He has inherited his wealth. He plays with paint and calls it success. And you silly people believe him.”
I shake my head as we turn the corner. I’m ready to accuse Salvatore of being jealous, but why state the obvious? Not everybody can make a living this way, so I somewhat expect the jealousy. The fading daylight shining into the end of the hallway from the
terrace steals my attention. Music is playing outside. The tune is pronounced but not so loud that you can’t hear voices chattering. We make it to the door, and Luther steps aside to let us pass.
“Please enjoy your night,” he says.
I turn to Luther and hand him the vase. “Could you please see that Gianfranco gets this?”
He nods and takes it.
Salvatore grunts and moves toward the terrace as though I’ve wasted his time by handing my silly gift to our silly host. At this point, I’m pretty sure I made a mistake by bringing him. Regardless, he’s my date, so I pick up my pace to walk by his side.
Sleek servers in black tie suits walk around, carrying silver platters above their heads and serving champagne and hors d’oeuvres. There are at least ten people gathered on the terrace. All of them have slowed their conversations as Salvatore and I move deeper into the group.
“Mama mia,” Salvatore says.
I follow his gaze to a tall, thin woman with flowing dark hair. She too is wearing a red dress.
“Really?” I say, deciding not to hold my tongue any longer.
“Why do you say really?” he snaps, keeping his eyes glued to the woman.
“Not too long ago, you said I was too skinny, and now here you are salivating over a woman who’s nearly half the size I am.”
Salvatore turns to me with a scowl. I look him straight in the eyes, refusing to back down.
“Scusami, Miss Patrick. Would you like champagne?” a server asks.
Initially I’m taken aback that he knows my name, but then I realize that Gianfranco is likely meticulous when it comes to his dinners.
“Yes, thank you,” I say charmingly, happily going along with the spirit of the evening. The server hands me the beautiful flute glass filled with champagne.
“Signor?” he says to Salvatore.
“I will have the red wine.” Salvatore stomps off toward the server who’s carrying what he wants.
I watch him go, and right off, I notice what I saw in him. He walks with his shoulders squared like a man who owns his galaxy. He’s still staring at the other woman in red. She glances at me as soon as she notices that my date can’t take his eyes off her. I’m pretty sure she’s used to that.
I check myself to see how I feel about it. Disrespected? No. Hurt? No. Heck, do I even care? Hell no. I wiggle my fingers at her, saying hello. She quickly turns back to the woman she’s speaking to, pretending she didn’t see me.
Now that he’s no longer by my side, I feel as if I finally have enough elbow room to enjoy myself. I mean, hot damn, I’m attending a dinner at Gianfranco Guardi’s castle. I take inventory of who’s here with me. Of course there’s the woman in red who Salvatore can’t take his eyes off of—he’s already managed to find a way to stand close to her. An older gentleman who’s probably in his fifties has his arm around the waist of a pretty woman who looks to be in her twenties. They’re having a conversation with a very unique-looking woman wearing a peasant dress and a man dressed like a matador.
There’s a black woman who’s just as tall and thin as the other woman in red and extremely beautiful. It doesn’t take me long to figure out that she’s a model. Great… Gianfranco is into models.
So what Alessandro said can’t be true. The sexy artist isn’t into me—I’m not a model. I grumble under my breath.
She just tossed her head back to laugh at something one of the handsome men she’s talking to said. He’s standing very close to another handsome guy. One has on a white leather shirt and trendy drop-crotch pants, and the other is wearing a very fitted white-and-blue pinstripe suit. I’m not sure, but my instincts tell me that the two men are a couple.
I gaze out toward the sunset. Standing very close together are a skinny young man in tapered jeans and a cream cable-knit sweater and a pretty young Asian woman wearing a beautiful tan A-line dress that’s nearly the same color as her skin. Wow, what style.
I look more to the right and lock eyes with an elegant silver-haired woman with flawless porcelain skin. She has on an expensive emerald-green kimono. We smile at each other, then she saunters in my direction. I can’t help noticing she moves as if she’s used to people watching her. For some reason, I bounce on my toes, eagerly awaiting her arrival. Let the socializing begin!
Once the woman reaches me, she extends her hand. “Ciao, darling. Penelope Hughes,” she says in an English accent and as though her name should ring a bell. “So you’re Liza Patrick, the tele host.”
I grin big. My first recognition as a TV personality! “Yes, that would be me.”
She lays a hand on my shoulder. “Listen, darling, I loved your show on Castello di Guardi. It was quite entertaining, you know.”
“Why thank you,” I say, remembering that the fourteen-minute segment aired yesterday, along with a fourteen-minute segment on one of the oldest houses in the region.
Her hand elegantly flops onto her chest. “You should stop by my manor. It would make an interesting tele program. Gianfranco and I are neighbors.”
My posture perks up. “Is that so?”
I gaze out beyond the terrace. There are number of grand manors nestled into the trees on the hillside. Before I can ask if we can see her estate from here, she says she’s a countess and runs down her lineage.
I feel so alive. This is the first time someone of her stature has sought me out instead of the other way around. My eyes widen with appreciation as she connects her lineage by births and marriages. I feel just as victorious about her bloodline as Penelope Hughes does. Elsa was right. The interview with Gianfranco Guardi is opening doors.
Penelope Hughes shifts her hand from her heart to her chin. “Now the lady from TV Ora wants to tour my manor—”
I’m reeling, ready to cut her off and say look no further.
“But you are far more entertaining than her.” She touches my arm and moves in closer, lowering her voice. “And we both know Gianfranco is not a lively subject. Darling, you worked miracles.”
I chuckle, remembering how he switched from being so charming when I ran into him in the room with the painting to nearly mute during our interview. “Yes, but I’m so grateful he opened his home to my crew and me.”
“Well, I’m sure you did not need to twist his arm.” She tosses her head back and chuckles.
I chuckle tentatively, wondering what she meant by that. I’m about to tell her that we actually sent at least three letters to Gianfranco in the last year, asking if he would like for us to showcase Castello di Guardi on our show, but he never responded. Suddenly the owner of this magnificent estate arrives, stepping out onto the terrace. All eyes turn in his direction.
“Welcome,” he says.
I inhale slightly. Gianfranco looks flawless in a pair of black fitted slacks and a black short-sleeved polo shirt. Goodness, he wears his clothes extremely well. His gaze passes over his guests and at last stops on me. I clench my clutch purse.
11
“Darling, you’re here,” the other woman in red says and gallops across the terrace to take his arm.
I lower my head as my heart feels like it’s shrinking.
Gianfranco holds out his arms as if he’s giving us a huge hug. “Everyone, please come in for dinner.”
I just realized how sexy he sounds when he speaks English.
Salvatore steps up beside me, and I have to stifle a groan. It felt so good to have him away from me. I watch Gianfranco turn into the hallway to lead us to the dining room. The woman in red is still by his side—she’s lucky.
I can’t take my eyes off of Gianfranco’s form as he leads us down the hallway. I glance at Salvatore, and he looks worse than Oscar the Grouch. I’m sure walking behind the Marquis Guardi is killing him. I’m inclined to ask Salvatore if he’s okay, but I don’t really care. When we walked onto the terrace, the first thing he did was lose his mind over Gianfranco’s girlfriend. That shows how disrespectful he is, and I find it odd that a part of me still doesn’t care.
We r
ound the corner and enter the dining area. A long banquet table sits in the middle of the room, elegantly set with crystal glassware, fine porcelain, shimmering linens, centerpieces made of red roses, and the orange light of candles. My eyes gravitate toward the large arched windows, which run from the ceiling to the floor. As I noted in my piece on Castillo di Guardi, Gianfranco has done a great job of blending the old with modern touches.
Among the fantastical stories about a ghost and the lone occupant of the six-hundred-year-old castle, rumors circulated about the upgrades Gianfranco has made in the last fifteen years after the estate was passed down to him. According to the land ledgers, lawsuits were even brought against him for not maintaining the property’s historical integrity, but people say his uncle Lorenzo Lombardi, who’s a judge, made all the legal issues disappear.
None of that is true though. When I first became interested in the castle, I drove down to the municipal building to read the plans. Salvatore did everything by the book, and actually, his uncle made sure of it. Sometimes I think the Italians are more comfortable believing in rumors and make believe than the truth. Maybe that’s why I’m here. Gianfranco is probably grateful that our interview and tour helped dispel some of the gossip.
Regardless, the great arched windows feature a clear view of the village at the base of the mountain and the red, orange, and purple sky that marks the end of sunset. Servers line up along all four sides of the table, each holding two bottles of wine—one red, one white.
“Such formality, Gianfranco,” the black woman who looks like a model says. She’s clearly also American.
“Yes, Juanita, I wanted a change for this dinner. I hope you all are satisfied.”
Gianfranco and I connect eyes. I smile, letting him know that I am beyond satisfied.
“And red roses?” Juanita bats her eyelashes. “When did you fall in love, Gianfranco?” Her coy grin is a clue that she’s joking.
“He’s in love with me,” the woman in red declares.
“In your dreams, Maria. In my dreams, in the dreams of all women except the one he’s made centerpieces of red roses for.” Juanita’s smirk lands on me, but for some reason, I look away bashfully. There’s no way I’m the red-rose woman.
Her Perfect Man- The Complete Series Box Set Page 26