Barbara Wallace

Saved By The Ceo


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Nico remarked when Dani was out of earshot. “One would think she was trying to give us time alone.”

      “One would think,” Louisa muttered in return. “Though I don’t know why.”

      “Perhaps she thinks we need to talk.”

      “Well, she would be wrong. We don’t need to talk about anything.”

      “I see. Is that why you’re avoiding me, bella mia?”

      His beauty indeed. I’m not your anything, she wanted to snap. She didn’t belong to anyone. Not anymore. And especially not to someone like him. Bad enough she let herself fall under his spell at the wedding. “Who says I’ve been avoiding anyone? Maybe I’ve been busy. You’re not the only one who’s had a lot to do since the wedding.”

      “My apologies. You’re right.” His chair made a scratching noise on the floor as he angled it so they were facing one another. Taking the last cornetto from the center of the table, he tore the pastry in two and divided the pieces between their plates. “So tell me, what have you been up to that has kept you so busy?”

      Louisa glared at the fluffy delicacy in front of her. “Things,” she replied.

      “Things?” His chuckle was smooth like syrup. “That’s a very broad category.”

      “I’m a very broad person.”

      “Ah, bella mia. ‘Broad’ is definitely not what I would call you.” His hand moved forward. Thinking he was about to brush the bangs from her eyes, Louisa jerked back, only to turn red when he picked up his half of the pastry. “I wanted to talk about what happened at the wedding.”

      “I told you, there’s nothing to talk about. We made a mistake, that’s all. Why don’t we forget it ever happened?”

      Sounds from the kitchen drifted into the restaurant as Nico chewed his pastry. Louisa listened, trying to determine how far away she was from rescue. There was an uneasy familiarity to the way they sat with Nico’s leg close but not touching hers.

      Slowly his eyes lifted to meet hers. “What if I don’t want to forget?”

      “One double espresso as ordered!” Rafe announced. The chef returned to the dining room carrying a gold-rimmed demitasse. Behind him trailed Dani, who shot Nico a look. From their mutually taut expressions, Louisa wondered if there hadn’t been a disagreement over interrupting the conversation. She offered a silent thank-you to whichever one of them had won.

      First thing Dani did when she sat down was to try to catch Louisa’s eye, but Louisa continued to stare at the tablecloth and prayed that the floor might swallow her up. She hated scrutiny. Hated the feel of people’s eyes upon her. Trying to look inside her. Thinking they could read her thoughts. Her fingers crept to her neckline to tug the suddenly too-tight collar.

      “Will there be anything else, your highness?” Thank God for Rafe. Again. He set the cup on the table with a flourish, forcing Nico’s attention back to the business at hand.

      The vintner’s bronze fingers wrapped around the handle. “This will do for now,” he replied.

      “You do know that when I said ‘your highness,’ I meant it sarcastically, right?”

      “Yes, but you wait on me all the same.” Nevertheless, Nico saluted his friend with the cup before taking a sip. “So,” he said after he swallowed, “you said something about a committee?”

      “You were listening,” Rafe replied. “Yes, I want to create a committee for developing tourism.”

      “Monte Calanetti already has a person in charge of tourism.” Nico explained. “Vincenzo Alberti.”

      “Tell me you’re joking. Everyone knows Vincenzo did nothing and that the only reason we hosted the wedding was because your brother was in town to write the proposal. It could have just as easily gone to some place in Umbria.”

      “True. Vincenzo is rather useless.”

      “What I’m talking about is something independent and more grassroots. I’m certain if the local businesspeople put their heads together, we can come up with a host of ideas to increase tourism. Not to mention run them better.”

      “I certainly won’t complain about increased business, especially during the dormant months,” Nico said. Leaning back, he hooked an arm over the back of his chair. “Who else do you have in mind besides the four of us? I assume it is the four of us, since we’re all sitting here.”

      The two men began tossing names back and forth, some of whom Louisa recognized, some she didn’t. She wasn’t surprised when, as the conversation progressed, the dynamic between the friends shifted with Nico slowly taking the reins. That was something else Nico Amatucci did. No matter how commanding others might be—and Rafe certainly qualified as commanding—Nico was always the one in charge.

      Her ex-husband had been the exact same way. Minus the rugged sensuality that is. Steven had been painstakingly glossy, his looks created from the pages of fashion magazines whereas Nico was more earthy. The kind of man who got his hands dirty from actually working with them, not from helping himself.

      She remembered the roughness of Nico’s calloused hands as his thumbs had fanned her cheeks...

      And how effortlessly he’d managed to dance her into a secluded corner without her realizing. In charge till the end, just like Steven.

      “We need to make it clear to everyone involved that we don’t want to be too commercial,” she heard him say. “It’s one thing to increase tourism, it’s another to lose the very thing that makes Monte Calanetti special.”

      Rafe agreed. “Absolutely. Ideally, we want events or attractions that highlight our traditions and Old World charm. That’s what the tourists want. Maybe there’s something we can do around the Madonna and Child painting in the chapel. Something historical.”

      “I read the other day that Santo Majorca is building a spa around its underground springs. Too bad we can’t unearth a spring here.”

      “Wouldn’t that be nice?”

      “Ow!” Louisa jumped as pain shot up from her shin. Damn it, but Dani wore pointy shoes. That kick would leave a bruise.

      The two men turned to look at her. “Everything all right?” Nico asked.

      “Fine,” she said, rubbing her leg. Beneath her index finger she could feel a small divot. There was definitely going to be a bruise.

      Across the table, her friend didn’t even have the decency to look apologetic. She was too busy gesturing with her eyebrows for Louisa to say something. Louisa replied with a shake of her head.

      Why not? Dani mouthed.

      Because of a zillion reasons. The concept was still too vague and unformed, for one. She wasn’t ready for people to start poking holes in her idea. Or take it over, she thought, sliding a look in Nico’s direction. She wasn’t sure she was ready period.

      “Did I miss something?” Nico asked.

      Of course he would say something. Those sharp brown eyes didn’t miss a thing, not that either she or Dani were being very subtle.

      “Louisa’s been working on a terrific idea,” Dani said.

      “Really?” He turned to face her. “What is it? If it’s something that will help, by all means tell us.”

      “It’s still at the very beginning stages. I haven’t worked out all the details yet.”

      “But the general idea is brilliant. She wants to turn the palazzo into a hotel.”

      Some of Nico’s enthusiasm faded in favor of concern. “What kind of hotel? You’re not planning to alter the property, are you?”

      “Nothing drastic, I assure you,” she said as she shot a narrow-eyed look in Dani’s direction.