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Highly Strung

Page 18

by Justine Elyot


  She stepped out of the stage door, blinking into the Roman sunshine, and took her usual right turn. But it was blocked. By Luca.

  “Julia,” he said, and his failure to smile both unnerved and excited her. He looked so serious, and so hot, with his linen jacket slung over his shoulder, his hip bumping the corner of the opera house wall.

  “Oh…hello.” For somebody whose job was to breathe well, Julia was certainly finding the simple act of respiration a little problematic.

  “Julia, I am so sorry,” he said.

  “What for?”

  “I wanted to come and introduce myself. But you know Gianfranco, I suppose? He will not let me escape! He wants to take me under his wing, as you say. You must know how he is?”

  Julia knew how Gianfranco was. He was considered one of the world’s greatest baritones, and he certainly believed his hype. If a six-foot-four heterosexual man with a chest like a beer barrel could be a diva, then Gianfranco was the living definition of a diva.

  She regathered her breath and laughed gaily. “Oh yes, I know our Gianfranco all right. But don’t be sorry. I should have come to you.”

  “You wanted to?”

  That breathing thing again. His eyes, like melted chocolate semifreddo beneath ridiculously long lashes, made the honking Roman traffic and the bustling Roman crowds magically disappear.

  “Yes,” she said simply.

  “I wanted to. Very much. Julia…” He held out a hand, which she felt compelled to take. “On stage, you were magnificent. You are a wonderful singer and together we had a special something. You have a word for this in English?”

  “Chemistry?” hazarded Julia in a whisper.

  “Something that feels right. I do not feel this…chemistry…with another soprano. It is, well, I am a little overwhelmed. I think you felt it too. You did, didn’t you?”

  Julia had no alternative but to nod, despite the tiny panicky voice in the back of her head asking, Is this a line? Please don’t let this be a line.

  “I thought so.” He looked down, smiling, for a moment or two, then suddenly whipped on a pair of expensive sunglasses and looked around, as if the time had come to rejoin the rest of the world. “So, you want me to show you around? Have you seen much of Rome?”

  “Mainly the opera house. And my apartment.”

  “Come on then. Let’s take a trip.”

  Towing Julia by the hand, he ran to the back of the theatre where a motorbike stood waiting.

  “Oh, you’re a biker!”

  Luca opened a pannier and removed a spare helmet, handing it to her. “Of course,” he said, grinning as he fidgeted with his chinstrap. “What’s that phrase, the misspent youth? I had that.”

  “Really?” Julia imagined her picture-perfect Italian slouching on street corners in a leather jacket. “From teen gangster to operatic tenor? What a career curve!”

  Luca winked and helped her on behind him before revving up for the ride.

  It was Julia’s first taste of motorcycle travel, and the freedom of it filled her with wild exhilaration. They swept and swooped along the jam-packed boulevards and down obscure cobbled streets, owning the city’s ancient corners, setting their imprint upon the famous attractions.

  When Luca finally parked the bike and jumped off, Julia was not sure what they were meant to see. The square was pretty, with a small fountain at its centre, overlooked by a typical Italian church of greying stone. Handsome enough, but undistinguished on the local scale.

  “Where are you taking me?” She laughed.

  Luca led her through the streaming traffic to the steps of the basilica. “You don’t know?” he asked, mounting the steps. “Look.”

  They stepped inside, experiencing that strange migration into a different world, city pandemonium exchanged in a second for reverent hush. The domed ceiling was painted with elaborate frescoes and embossed with ornaments of gold. Her heels clicked so loudly on the glassy marble floor that she found she was walking on tiptoe. “It’s beautiful,” said Julia.

  “But you don’t recognise it?” Luca sighed. “Ah, Julia. This is where we have our love scene.”

  “Oh! This is the church!”

  “Sant’Andrea dell Valle.” Luca extended a proud arm. “My easel is not here…but the rest is.”

  She looked up at him. “I suppose we can’t sing. I’m tempted though.”

  “I’m not tempted to sing,” said Luca with a wicked smile, putting an arm around her shoulder. “I am tempted to kiss you.”

  “Luca!” she whispered loudly, but there was no force in the reproach. “Not in church.”

  “Let’s go then.”

  “Luca!”

  He turned around and hustled her back out, rewinding their mad dash through the never-ceasing traffic until they were at the fountain.

  “This is pretty,” Julia said tremulously. She knew what was coming, and she knew she couldn’t stop it, because it seemed as if their lips had wills of their own, zooming together like magnets while their bodies clicked back into that perfect fit they’d discovered on stage.

  She clasped the back of his neck, pressing fingers into the dip of the V where his haircut ended and his skin started, enjoying its firm male feel. He held her properly, one arm sealing her against him at the small of her back, the other on a cheek, the big flat palm keeping her head tilted up for him. They melded so perfectly, so sweetly, that Julia began to imagine that they were conjoined, like the Rodin sculpture, and that their flesh, now merged, could never be divided.

  Occasional honks and shouts of male encouragement poured from passing cars, but nothing short of an earthquake could have unglued Julia’s lips from Luca’s until the seal was set, the communion taken, and the soul-mating established.

  They gasped and blinked into each other’s faces, shell-shocked and shaken with the suddenness and extremity of their connection.

  “I should eat something before I end up eating you,” said Luca raggedly.

  “Can’t you kiss me again first?” Julia asked.

  The kiss took them along narrow streets lined with tall shuttered buildings to the first likely-looking restaurant they could find, a corner establishment in a pretty square with coloured lanterns hanging cheerfully across the windows. They sat down at a pavement table, still kissing, until a coughing waiter appeared with menus.

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  About the Author

  Justine Elyot is a UK-based writer of erotic romance and erotica. Her work has appeared in numerous anthologies from Black Lace, Cleis Press, Xcite and Constable & Robinson. Her first full-length book, On Demand, was published by Black Lace in 2009.

  Email: justineelyot@gmail.com

  Justine loves to hear from readers. You can find her contact information, website and author biography at http://www.total-e-bound.com.

  Also by Justine Elyot

  Competitive Nature

  Sempre

  Honeytrapped

  Bollywood Superstar

  Master Me: A Very Personal Trainer

  Seeing Stars: The Sevarian Way

  Subspace: The Science of Submission

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