Diana Hamilton

New Year Fireworks


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scouting conference sites.”

      Time to announce her presence, Sabrina thought. She lifted the cane, intending to thump it on the parquet floor. The duchess’s next comment stopped her cold.

      “If half the articles my secretary pulled off the Internet about this woman are true, she’s scouting more than conference sites.”

      “What do you mean?”

      “She’s the daughter of Dominic Russo, the American telecommunications giant. He put her on the board of the foundation that oversees his charitable interests, but subsequently removed her. The rumor is he’s disinherited her. Cut her off without a cent.”

      “Ah,” Marco murmured. “So that’s why she’s so determined to make it on her own.”

      “Perhaps, perhaps not. Don’t you think it’s just a little too coincidental that she fell right at your feet?”

      Sabrina had heard enough. Bringing the cane down with a loud thud, she entered the salon.

      Marco stood behind a tray holding an array of bottles, a silver martini shaker in his hand. His mother was seated in a tall-backed armchair and had the grace to appear chagrined for a moment. But only for a moment. Her chin lifted as Sabrina gave her a breezy smile.

      “Your information’s accurate, Your Excellency, except for one point. My father didn’t remove me from the board of the Russo Foundation. I quit. Are those martinis in that shaker, Marco?” she asked with cheerful insouciance. “If so, I’ll take two olives in mine.”

      “Two olives it is,” he confirmed with a gleam of approval in his dark eyes.

      His mother was less admiring. “I’m sorry if I offended you, Ms. Russo,” she said coolly. “I wish only to watch out for my son’s welfare.”

      “I understand, Your Excellency. No offense taken.”

      “I’m perfectly capable of watching out for my own welfare,” Marco drawled as he handed his mother a tall-stemmed martini glass. “But I thank you for your concern.”

      The duchess merely sniffed.

      She unbent a little over dinner served in a glass-enclosed conservatory that looked out over the lights of the city.

      “Have you visited this part of Italy before, Ms. Russo?”

      “Only once, when I was a student at the University of Salzburg. One of my roommates was a history major. We drove down from Austria one weekend to explore the ruins at Pompeii and Herculaneum.”

      “So you’ve not spent time in Napoli.”

      “No, Your Excellency.”

      “You must call me Donna Maria.”

      Sabrina’s lips twitched at the royal command. “Certainly. And please, call me Sabrina.”

      “We have a painting by Lorenzo de Caro in the gallery. It depicts the city as it was in the early eighteenth century. You must let me show it to you after dinner.”

      The rest of the meal passed with polite queries concerning Sabrina’s year in Salzburg and her current business. Not until she and the duchess had made their way to the galley, leaving Marco to look over a document his mother wanted his opinion on, did she learn the ulterior motive behind the invitation to view de Caro’s masterpiece.

      The painting was small, only about twelve by eighteen inches, but so luminous that it instantly drew the eye. Lost in the exquisitely detailed scene of a tall-masted ship tied up at wharf beside the fortress, Sabrina almost missed Donna Maria’s quiet question.

      “How much has my son told you about his wife?”

      “Only that she died in a tragic boating accident. If Marco wants me to know more,” she added pointedly, “I’m sure he’ll tell me.”

      The duchess hiked a brow. “You are a very direct young woman.”

      “I try to be, Donna Maria.”

      “Then I will tell you bluntly that I love my son very much and don’t wish to see him hurt again.”

      “I don’t plan to hurt him.”

      “Not intentionally, perhaps.” Her forehead creasing, the duchess studied her guest’s face. “But this resemblance to Gianetta …”

      “It can’t be that remarkable,” Sabrina said with some exasperation.

      “Come and judge for yourself.”

      Donna Maria led the way to the opposite wing of the gallery. It was lined with portraits of men and women in every form of dress from the late Middle Ages onward. Cardinals. Princesses. Dukes and duchesses in coronets trimmed with fur and capped with royal red.

      “These are my parents.” She stopped in front of a portrait depicting a willowy blond and a stern-looking man in a uniform dripping with medals. “And here are my husband and I in our wedding finery.”

      The painter had captured the couple in the bloom of youth. There was no mistaking the love in the young Donna Maria’s eyes or the pride in her husband’s as he gazed down at her.

      “How happy you both look.”

      “We were,” the duchess said softly.

      Her gaze lingered on the portrait for a long moment before moving to another. This one showed her seated on a garden bench with her two children standing beside her.

      “This is Marco at the age of eight, and my daughter AnnaMaria at age six.”

      Sabrina could see the man Marco would become in the boy’s erect posture and intelligent eyes.

      “And this is Gianetta,” the duchess said, her tone hardening. “Marco had this painted shortly after they were married.”

      Unlike the other portraits in the gallery, this one was an informal collage of sky and sea and sail. At its center was a windblown, laughing woman manning the helm of a sleek boat. The colors were vivid, the strokes bold slashes of sunlight on shadow.

      Disconcerted, Sabrina leaned forward for a closer look. She might have been looking at a portrait of herself in her younger, wilder days. The hair, the eyes, the angle of the chin … No wonder everyone close to Marco gawked when they saw his houseguest!

      “She was beautiful,” the duchess said, making no effort to disguise her bitterness. “So beautiful and charming and unpredictable that everyone fell all over themselves to find excuses for her erratic behavior. Everyone except me. I could never … I will never forgive her for putting my son through such hell.”

      Whoa! That was a little more information than Sabrina had anticipated. Donna Maria didn’t give her time to process it before zeroing in for a direct attack.

      “Is the resemblance between you and Gianetta more than physical, Ms. Russo? Are those other stories my secretary pulled from the Internet true?”

      Sabrina’s eyes narrowed. “As I said earlier, you shouldn’t believe everything posted on the Internet.”

      The duchess refused to be fobbed off. Like a lioness protecting her cub, she went straight for the jugular.

      “Which story isn’t true? The one that claims you seduced the son of a sheik? The one that says you like to party until dawn at nightclubs in New York and Buenos Aires and London?”

      The gloves were off now, Sabrina thought grimly. Like they’d been so many times with her father. Well, she was older and a whole lot wiser this time around. The body blows didn’t hit as hard or hurt as badly as they did when her father threw them.

      “Sorry, Your Excellency.” Her shrug was deliberately careless. “I’m well past the age of having to defend my actions. To you or anyone else. Shall we join Marco for coffee?”

      With Sabrina’s ankle so improved, Marco returned his mother’s Rolls and reclaimed his