Lessons Learned
middle of his pitch, the clerk blinked. “Yes, sir, an excellent choice.” Trying not to show surprise, he took the credit card Carlo handed him along with the choker and moved farther down the counter.
“Carlo.” Juliet edged closer and lowered her voice. “You didn’t even ask the price.”
He merely patted her hand as he skimmed the other contents in the case. “My sister’s about to make me an uncle again,” he said simply. “The choker suits her. Now emeralds,” he began, “would be your stone.”
She glanced down at a pair of earrings with stones the color of dark, wet summer grass. The momentary longing was purely feminine and easily controlled. Shoes she could justify; emeralds, no. She shook her head and laughed at him. “I’ll just stick with pampering my feet.”
When Carlo had his present nicely boxed and his receipt in hand they wandered back out. “I love to shop,” Juliet confessed. “Sometimes I’ll spend an entire Saturday just roaming. It’s one of the things I like best about New York.”
“Then you’d love Rome.” He’d like to see her there, he discovered. By the fountains, laughing, strolling through the markets and cathedrals, dancing in the clubs that smelled of wine and humanity. He wanted to have her there, with him. Going back alone was going back to nothing. He brought her hand to his lips as he thought of it, holding it there until she paused, uncertain.
“Carlo?” People brushed by them, and as his look became more intense, she swallowed and repeated his name. Thiswasn’t the mild masculine appreciation she’d seen him send passing women, but something deep and dangerous. When a man looked at a woman this way, the woman was wise to run. But Juliet didn’t know if it were toward him or away.
He shook off the mood, warning himself to tread carefully with her, and himself. “If you came,” he said lightly, “I could introduce you to your hero. Enough of my lasagna and you’d have your shoes at cost.”
Relieved, she tucked her arm through his again. “You tempt me to start saving for the airfare immediately. Oh, Carlo, look at this!” Delighted, she stopped in front of a window and pointed. In the midst of the ornate display was a three-foot Indian elephant done in high-gloss ceramic. Its blanket was a kaleidoscope of gilt and glitter and color. Opulent and regal, its head was lifted, its trunk curled high. Juliet fell in love. “It’s wonderful, so unnecessarily ornate and totally useless.”
He could see it easily in his living room along with the other ornate and useless pieces he’d collected over the years. But he’d never have imagined Juliet’s taste running along the same path. “You surprise me again.”
A bit embarrassed, she moved her shoulders. “Oh, I know it’s awful, really, but I love things that don’t belong anywhere at all.”
“Then you must come to Rome and see my house.” At her puzzled look, he laughed. “The last piece I acquired is an owl, this high.” He demonstrated by holding out a palm. “It’s caught a small, unfortunate rodent in its talons.”
“Dreadful.” With something close to a giggle, she kissed him. “I’m sure I’d love it.”
“Perhaps you would at that,” he murmured. “In any case, I believe the elephant should have a good home.”
“You’re going to buy it?” Thrilled, she clasped his hand as they went inside. The shop smelled of sandalwood and carried the tinkle of glass from wind chimes set swaying by a fan. She left him to make arrangements for shipping while she poked around, toying with long strings of brass bells, alabaster lions and ornamental tea services.
All in all, Juliet mused, it had been the easiest, most relaxing day she’d had in weeks, maybe longer. She’d remember it, that she promised herself, when she was alone again and life wound down to schedules and the next demand.
Turning, she looked at Carlo as he said something to make the clerk laugh. She hadn’t thought there were men like him—secure, utterly masculine and yet sensitive to female moods and needs. Arrogant, he was certainly that, but generous as well. Passionate but gentle, vain but intelligent.
If she could have conjured up a man to fall in love with…oh no, Juliet warned herself with something like desperation. It wouldn’t be Carlo Franconi. Couldn’t be. He wasn’t a man for one woman, and she wasn’t a woman for any man. They both needed their freedom. To forget that would be to
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