Here's a sample from HER BROODING ITALIAN BOSS
Standing
in the main room of the gallery, pressed in by art aficionados, Antonio glanced
at his watch. His “return” to the world of art had been a subtle, almost
disappointing, one. Olivia had other clients – working clients – she was
schmoozing right now. Tucker had found two business acquaintances he was
talking up. And Antonio stood by a gallery owner from Madrid who desperately
wanted him to do a showing.
Half of him had gone breathless at the prospect. The
other half wanted to run in terror.
The screech of a car grinding to a stop stabbed into
the noise of the gallery. He looked up, past Juanita Santos to the wall of
windows behind her. A red Jag had pulled up to the curb for valet parking. His
eyes narrowed. That looked just like Constanzo’s car.
The driver’s door opened. A spike heel emerged,
connected to one long, slim leg.
His eyebrows rose. The crowd outside the gallery
turned to the newcomer. Men smiled. Women gave her the onceover.
Antonio’s mouth fell open as Laura Beth tossed the
keys to the valet.
With her hair pulled up, piled high on her head, and
luscious in the slim black dress, she walked the cobblestone path like a model
working the catwalk. The dress rode her curves, accenting her womanly figure,
but the black color gave her a sleek, sophisticated look. In her worn jeans and
goofy librarian work clothes, she was an all-American girl. In this dress, she
was a woman.
And all eyes were on her.
His heart caught and his breathing
faltered, but he ignored them. He wasn’t in a position to get involved with
her. Though looking at her in that dress, he was again tempted. Still, for all
he knew, Constanzo had set this up. But, even if he hadn’t, his reasons for
staying away from Laura Beth were sound. Responsible. He feared watching her
belly swell with child, but his first marriage had also made him jaded, angry. She
was absolutely too nice for him. And right now she was about to be rejected at
the door.
A gentleman, he couldn’t let that happen. He turned
to Juanita. “If you’ll excuse me.”
“Of course.”
He headed for the door, his heart
thundering in his chest with fear that she’d be embarrassingly refused entrance.
Instead, the young man smiled and motioned for her to enter.
She dipped her head in thanks and glided
into the crowd.
He stopped and waited for her to see him.
When she did, she approached him.
“Well, look at you.”
She smiled slowly. “You’ve got to stop
stealing my good lines.”
He laughed. “I’m glad you’re here, but I’m
afraid I’m--”
He was about to say busy, when Olivia raced
over. “Laura Beth?”
She raised her hands. “In the flesh.”
Olivia squealed with joy. “What are you
doing here?”
“I’m spending a few weeks with Antonio,
helping him try to clear out his office.”
One of Olivia’s eyebrows rose as she looked
at Antonio, who clearly hadn’t mentioned that her best friend was living with
him.
Laura Beth laughed. “Don’t worry. Constanzo
hired me. Antonio didn’t. So he’s not really cooperating.”
Olivia tilted her head at him. “Pity.”
Then Laura Beth totally surprised him by
squeezing Olivia’s hand and saying, “I’d love to chat. But Antonio was just
telling me that he’s busy. I’m assuming you’ve got people for him to meet, so
I’m going to walk around the gallery and, you know, browse.”
Olivia gave her a quick hug. “Have fun. I do
have a few people I’d like Antonio to meet. But maybe we can catch up
tomorrow.”
Laura Beth smiled mysteriously. “Maybe.”
Then she turned and walked away.
Antonio watched the slight sway of her hips, the
long curve of her spine, as they moved away from him.
“Wow. She looked happy, huh?”
Antonio faced Olivia. “Happy?”
“Yeah. Lately she’d been a little glum.”
She slid her hand into his elbow and turned him toward the crowd again. “I
guessed she was a bit upset about being roommate-less, but she wouldn’t talk
about it. She won’t take a damned thing from me or Tucker. Not even a job
offer. Wants to make her own way in the world.” She paused and frowned. “How’d
Constanzo talk her into working for you?”
He blinked. Obviously, she didn’t know
Laura Beth was pregnant. So he shrugged. “I think losing her apartment really
brought home the fact that she couldn’t be choosy about who offered her a job.”
“Yeah, well, if you really don’t want her,
Tucker does. He has an opening for an IT person who would work directly with
him, somebody he can trust with his secrets.”
“Sounds perfect for her.”
“It is perfect for her. He was going to
make the offer after the wedding, but she disappeared. Now, at least we know
where she went.”
“Yes, you do.” And Tucker wanting to hire
Laura Beth was like a blessing from heaven. A relief.
Really.
There was no reason for the odd feeling in
his stomach, the fear of losing her, the reminder of how empty his house was
without her.
He peered around into the crowd but
couldn’t see Laura Beth. Then he caught a fleeting glimpse of her as she moved between
two conversation circles. The men in each cluster smiled at her and she
innocently smiled back.
Jealousy catapulted through him.
“Ready to mingle?”
Thanking God for a reason to take his eyes and
his attention off Laura Beth, he smiled at Olivia. “Desperately.”
He spent an hour with Olivia introducing
him to gallery owners, art dealers and collectors. His former charm came back to
him as if he hadn’t lost it. If he’d had anything new to display or sell, he
would have made a killing.
But he didn’t have anything new to display
or sell, and he wasn’t yet entertaining commissions, so everyone drifted away. The
futility of his situation roared through him, frustrating him, making him
wonder why the hell he was even here.
He faced Olivia. “I’m going to get a drink. Would
you like one?”
“I think I better find Tucker.”
Perfect. He could go to the bar, drink
himself stupid with scotch and be driven back to the penthouse where he could pass
out and forget he was a has-been.
Shifting to the side, he slid through the
throng of happy people and to the discreet glass and marble bar set up in a
corner.
“Scotch.” The bartender turned to go and he caught his
arm. “Three of them.”
The young man nodded, apparently thinking
he was getting drinks for friends, and that was just fine with Antonio. He
angled himself against the marble, but when he did he saw Laura Beth, standing
alone, staring at a painting.
He studied the tilt of her head, the way it
clearly displayed her interest in the picture, saw the light and shadows he’d
use if he painted her, so everyone would see what he saw. A newcomer falling in
love.
Damn it! What was he doing imagining
painting her again!
“Here you are, sir.”
The bartender set three crystal glasses of
scotch on the bar. Antonio took the first one and downed it. He set the empty
glass on the bar, then dug through his pockets for a good tip.
He walked away with a Scotch in each hand,
deliberately heading away from Laura Beth, but apparently she’d moved too
because there she stood, in front of another display. This one she seemed to
like about as much as she liked the Picassos.
Watching her, he sipped the second Scotch.
The desire to capture her slithered through him again, just as Jason Ashbury
stopped in front of him.
“I wanted to give you a card.”
Antonio set his second Scotch on an
available tray with a wince. “Sorry.”
Jason laughed. “Never apologizing for
enjoying a good Scotch.” He handed the card to Antonio. “I know you’re
accustomed to bigger galleries, but we’d love to have you in Arizona.”
And he’d love to be in a gallery in
Arizona. He love to have a showing anywhere. If he could just freaking paint
again.
His gaze strolled to Laura Beth.
Jason shook his hand. “Come visit us. Maybe
we’ll inspire you.”
He walked away and Antonio’s eyes sought
Laura Beth again. She all but shimmered in the sophisticated dress, but she
couldn’t hide that innocence. And maybe that’s what drew him. She was his
deceased wife’s polar opposite. And if her innocence was the medicine he needed
to paint again, maybe he shouldn’t fight it.
He strolled over. “Are you okay?”
“What? You think a woman can’t be on her
own in a gallery?”
“No. You’re pregnant and it’s been a long night and
you still have a bit of a drive home.”
She winced. “Saw me in the car, did you?”
He took a step closer. “Saw you getting out of the
car.”
This time she laughed. “That was fun.”
“You looked like you were enjoying it.”
“Oh, I was.” She took a long drink of air. “I’m
going to miss this.”
“Barcelona?”
“No. The dressing up tonight and play acting.”
He raised one eyebrow in question. “Why? You’ve got
a few more weeks in Italy. You can do all the dressing up and play acting you
want.”
She shook her head. “No. I can’t. Walking around
here tonight, I remembered something I’d thought at the wedding. I took what I
believed was a real job because I’m not an executive or a trust fund baby or
even employable in New York City.” She faced him. “But you don’t want me and I don’t
really belong here. It’s time for me to go home.”
Panic swirled through him. “Home New York or home
Kentucky?”
“Kentucky.” She raised her gaze to meet his. “I know
there’s not much work for an IT person there, but I’m going to have a baby. I need
my mom for moral support.” She sucked in a breath. “But looking at one of the
pictures I also realized I’d had a pretty good childhood.”
He frowned. “Which picture?”
She laughed and ambled to a painting a few feet
away. “This one.”
It was a painting of three dogs running
through the dead brush around a pond in late fall. The colors were cool,
dismal. The sky so dark it was almost charcoal grey.
“This
reminds you of home?”
Gazing at the painting, she said, “Yes.”
Hoping for the best, he said, “You had a
dog?”
She laughed. “No. We had ugly Novembers.
The cold sets in and lingers. But some of my best life things happened in
fall.”
She faced him with a light in her eyes that flicked
the switch of his longing to paint. But in a different way than the day he
found her lying on her bed wrapped in a towel, a different way even than the technical
visions of dimension and light that had overtaken him various times that day.
This was a serious, quiet need, something that didn’t hurt him or fill him with
angry longing. This one was normal.
Breathlessly afraid to lose this feeling, he quietly
said, “What sort of things?”
“Well, my birthday’s in the fall, so there’s the
whole being born thing.”
He laughed.
“And every fall we returned to school.” She
smiled at him but her eyes were distant as if she were thinking back to the
past. “Going to school meant seeing my friends, getting new clothes, football
games, school play tryouts.”
“Sounds like fun.”
“It was.”
“And that’s why you’re going home?”
She moved her eyes up to meet his gaze. “I
just keep thinking I’d like to be around my mom when I actually have the baby.
But I also had a great childhood. I want my baby to have that too.”
He whispered, “It makes sense,” not sure
why the moment felt so solemn, except it meant that their time together was
ending. Or maybe because he knew he needed to at least try to paint her and if
he didn’t ask in the next few seconds he wouldn’t get the chance.
“I still think about painting you.”
“I know.” She stepped away. “You told me it
annoys you to think about painting me.”
He laughed. “Tonight’s feelings are
different.”
She faced him. “Really?”
“Yeah. Tonight it all feels real, doable.”
“Well, that’s…something.”
He breached the space between them.
“Actually, it is. The uncontrollable urge might have been a first step, but
just as your feelings about becoming a mom are shifting, growing, so are my
feelings about painting you.”
Her breath caught. “You’re serious?”
He glanced around. “Yes. But this feeling
is so new and it’s only cropped up around you.” He caught her gaze. “Can you
spend the next few weeks with me? Let me see if I can paint again?”
“Only if you also let me work as your
assistant.”
Her persistence made him laugh and long to
kiss her. In that very second, the need was so strong he doubted his ability to
resist it. Her face tipped up to him. Her earnest eyes held his. It would be so
easy.
But he’d kissed her once and it had only
reminded him that he couldn’t have her.
Because he couldn’t.
“I want the painting to be our focus.”
“I get to earn my keep by answering the rest of your
mail?”
He laughed. “None. I want to do this right.”
She cocked her head. Understanding flitted
across her face. “Okay.”
And something wonderful sprinted through
his blood. Acceptance. She had needs of her own. Troubles of her own. But
instead of bargaining with him, she would simply help him.
It was as strong of an aphrodisiac as the
lure of her lush mouth. He wondered about his strength, his endurance, if he
really could paint her without touching her.
But he knew he wasn’t strong enough to
watch her pregnancy. And he also knew she was going home to her mom and a job
from Tucker.
He had nothing to worry about.