Lost in Italy (21 page)

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Authors: Stacey Joy Netzel

Tags: #Romance, #Suspense, #Fiction

BOOK: Lost in Italy
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Her head turned slightly as he approached, but she didn’t face him.  He handed the jacket over and felt good when she slipped her arms into the sleeves with a quiet “Thank you.”

A couple rolls on each side brought the long sleeves in line with her slender wrists.  She stuffed her hands inside the pockets, and he wondered what to do with his as he stood alongside her in the dim light of the partial moon.  This feeling of uncertainty in connection with a woman was entirely new to him.

And damned annoying.

His gaze scanned the lights of the various small villages and towns that dotted the lakeshore in the apex of the inverted Y that made up
Lago de Como
.  Light spilled from homes, villas, hotels and places of business, shimmering on waves dancing to the tune of a light wind.  The occasional ring of a bell echoed across the water that lapped against the boats and the rocks on shore.  Romance hung in the crisp night air, just out of reach in their current circumstances.

“Pretty, isn’t it?” he asked Halli.

“It’s amazing.”  A heavy sigh lifted her shoulders.  “Wish I’d gotten a chance to see more of it.”

He angled his head toward her with a frown.  “You keep talking like this is it.  I’ll get you to Milan, Halli, don’t worry.”

“I’m not.”  She half-smiled up at him.  “Well, not really.  What I meant was after I meet up with Ben and Rachel tomorrow morning, I’m booking a flight straight home.  I’ve had enough of Italy to last me a lifetime.”

She sounded awfully certain she’d locate her family right away.  He felt compelled to caution her against getting her hopes up too high.  “I’m sure the consulate will help you locate them, but be prepared that it might not happen right away.”

“Oh, geez, that’s right.”  Her palm smacked her forehead.  “With everything that happened, I forgot to tell you I called Ben earlier.  I’m meeting them at the consulate in the morning.”

His frown deepened.  “When was this?”

“When you left to get the battery.”

At most, an hour before they’d been ambushed.  Unease snaked down his spine.  “Where were they all day?  Why didn’t they come to get you tonight?”

She gave a short laugh.  “I can try him again if you’re that anxious to get rid of me.”

“First of all, my cell’s back at the villa, and second, that’s not what I meant at all.”

“Of course you didn’t.”  After that little burst of injured sarcasm, she looked down, rubbing the toe of her shoe on the dock.  “I didn’t actually talk to Ben.  I left a message.”

Suddenly, Lapaglia’s men showing up at his villa took on a whole new meaning.  Then a second realization socked Trent in the gut. 
Shit!
  The wire recording was back there, too.  Right in the hands of Lapaglia’s men.  And he had no doubt they’d find that extra piece of evidence.

When Trent spoke, he kept his voice calm with effort.  “What did you say?”

“I told them I was okay and I’d meet them at the consulate tomorrow.  Why?”

“Did you say anything about where you were?  Who you were with?  Leave my number or anything?”

“No.  I didn’t even mention anything that happened today, only that I’d meet them about ten o’clock.”  She turned to face him and repeated, “Why?”

Trent relaxed slightly, realizing his gut reaction assumptions were probably unlikely.  All it would’ve taken was one trip to Lorenzo’s house in Blevio to connect him and Trent.

Paranoia and exhaustion were getting the better of him and he tried to make light of the mini-interrogation.  “Just want to make sure I can drop you off tomorrow without having to deal with a bunch of fans clamoring for autographs.”

She rolled her eyes before spinning on one heel to start back along the dock.  “You should get yourself a bigger boat to house that ego of yours.  And, my brother and sister hardly constitute a
bunch
.”

“I notice you didn’t point out they wouldn’t want an autograph.”

“They don’t know you like I do.”

“Lucky for me.”

“Lucky for
them
.”

He laughed and playfully nudged her toward the edge of the dock with his good shoulder. She stuttered a step, then shoved back on his arm with both hands.

At the boat, he braced his weight on his right hand and jumped over the edge, then turned to offer help down.  Her hesitation delivered another blow to his apparently staggering ego.  He fought back with a good ol’ boy grin.

Her palm slid into his.  So small, so delicate, but her grip spoke of a strength easily underestimated.

“I never did actually thank you for saving me today.”

Case in point, he hadn’t seen that one coming.

The lights of the boat illuminated her face as she joined him on deck, but intriguing shadows darkened her eyes.  He tightened his hold on her fingers when she gave a subtle pull.  “Three times, now, but who’s counting.”

“You’re a regular knight in shining armor, Tomlin.”

“Tell that to the tabloids.”

“They’d never buy it.”

She tugged harder and he released her hand.  “True.  And if they did, it would totally ruin my image.”

Flip answers came easy, and they were as comfortable as a worn pair of jeans.  Better than giving in to the temptation to kiss her again.  He might end up head over heels in the water.

She shook her head with a laugh.  “In light of your
three
rescues then, I say, thank you, thank you, and thank you.”

He dipped his head in a single nod.  When she lowered herself onto the bench seat and leaned her head back, he descended to the galley for two glasses and the bottle of Chianti she’d opened earlier.  She protested when he returned and poured wine for each of them, but accepted his offer of the glass anyway.  He took a seat across from her and sipped.

A few minutes of companionable silence passed before he said, “I’m curious…I noticed it took me getting shot for you to one hundred percent believe I was trying to help.  Do you have trouble trusting people in general, or is it me in particular?”

She lifted her hand to cover a yawn, and then took a sip of wine.  She did not meet his eyes.  “I like things very ordered, and y—”

“No, not
you
.”


You
are very un-ordered.”

“So, naturally, I’m untrustworthy.”  He acknowledged her statement with a lift of his glass.  “I’m impressed with your logic.”

“We’re not really having this discussion again, are we?”  She mimicked his words from earlier at the house.

“Humor me.  I was tired, I wasn’t listening.”  He glanced across the lake at the lights of Candenabbia and Tremezzo.  Lenno sat slightly to the south.  He did his best to focus on Halli and not wonder what Lapaglia was doing right now.

Halli spoke through another yawn.  “Typical.  It didn’t have to do with you, so why bother listening.”

Trent turned back to Halli.  “I’m sorry, what was that?”

When she started to repeat her words, he couldn’t hold back his grin.

“Oh, ha, ha, funny man.”

“You walked right into that one.”

“Yeah, well I’m tired, too.  And this wine isn’t helping.”  The red liquid sloshed around the inside of her glass as she lifted it to point a finger at him.  “Another strike against your trustworthiness.  First you kidnapped me, now you’re getting me drunk.”

He arched an eyebrow.  “On one little glass?”

She took another drink and rested the glass on her thigh, her head on the seat back.  A tired smile curved her lips and her eyelids drooped.  “Probably.”

He’d argue the wine was helping just fine, just not out loud.  She needed more than the short nap she’d gotten earlier.  The car chase, the police station, and the attack at the villa would be enough to exhaust anyone, but she also had a hefty shot of jetlag stirred into the cocktail.  He was amazed she’d held up as well as she had, not to mention, her impromptu performance at the station had been spot on.  Granted, she’d probably been channeling her terror of the situation, but for a rookie, she’d played her character almost perfectly.

He had a brief flashback of their conversation in the station’s janitorial closet.  Something she’d said had struck him as very odd.  Still did now.  After a drink from his glass, he asked, “So, you work in television?”

“Yes.”

“Have you ever acted before?”

“Not really.”

She’d turned to rest her cheek against the seat.  Her lowered lashes formed dark fans against pale skin.

“You were a natural back at the police station,” he commented, staring at her relaxed mouth.


Hmm
.”

“What’d you mean when you said you forgot about back story?”

“My parents,” she mumbled, eyes still closed.

He sat forward, bracing his elbows on his knees, curious about her family.  “What about them?”

“They used back story.”

After setting his own drink aside, Trent got up and rescued Halli’s wine glass slowly tipping off her leg.  “Were they actors?”

She made a soft negative sound and shifted in her seat.  He set the stemmed glass on the floor of the boat, and hunkered down next to her, wishing the wine hadn’t taken affect so fast.


Halli
.”

With his light touch on her shoulder, her lashes fluttered, lifted to allow
a
brief glimpse of blue, then lowered again.

“What’d your parents use back story for?”

She mumbled again, forcing him to lean forward to catch her ever softening words.  Unfortunately, sleep had finally claimed her.

Settling back on his heels, Trent rested his chin on his hand with a deep sigh.  He gazed at her softened features, wondering what she’d been about to say about her parents, and surprised by how much he wanted another glimpse into her world beyond the bits of film with her siblings.

Had she had the ideal childhood growing up in the Heartland of America would suggest, or was it riddled with angst and unhappiness like his?  Going off the video he’d watched of her interacting with her brother and sister, he pictured the perfect, All-American family sitting down to dinner like the classic Cleavers or the Brady Bunch.  They’d have had a big, sloppy dog under the table, and lots of laughter and fun as they ate pot roast and mashed potatoes with apple pie for dessert.  They probably played ball in the yard and had family game nights with popcorn and Kool-aid.

He’d dreamed of that exact scene so many nights after the nanny served him and Sean gourmet French cuisine prepared by their live-in chef.  The fancy food made no sense with their father on the other side of the world filming his latest award-winning documentary, but François had refused to prepare food he considered unworthy of his self-proclaimed five star talents.

It was only in weak moments that Trent admitted to himself he still resented being left at the mercy of hired help who had no patience for two boys craving attention after the sudden death of their mother.  Greg Tomlin repeatedly touted the fact that he’d provided a luxurious roof over their heads and anything they needed, but Trent felt his father’s absence was nothing short of abandonment.

When they got a little older, Sean sought and gained approval by following in their father’s footsteps.  Trent, on the other hand, had rebelled by entering the very profession that’d stolen their mother.  He and the old man hadn’t seen eye to eye since, especially when he succeeded despite his father’s predictions of failure.  To Trent’s knowledge, the elder Tomlin had never once admitted when he was wrong.

Banishing the dark thoughts back where they belonged, he picked up Halli’s glass and stood, debating his options.  She was light enough to carry below deck, but he didn’t want to wake her.  Since the temperature was mild, with no rain forecasted, he decided it would be better to make her comfortable where she was.

He drank the remainder of his wine, but dumped hers overboard.  Much as he would love the numbing affect more alcohol would provide for his thoughts and the steady throb of pain in his arm, he needed to stay alert.  Although he wasn’t too worried about their location, Lapaglia had been resourceful enough through the day, even if he hadn’t been successful.  Trent would sleep topside tonight, too, just in case.

 

 

 

Chapter 12

 

 

 

Ben woke in his clothes, with a crick in his neck, and a sore jaw.  Nothing new since he was used to sleeping in odd places and had been known to get into trouble at the bars on occasion.  This morning, it was his surroundings that threw him off completely.   Cheap hotels and country campsites didn’t have plush velvet chairs and four poster beds.

It only took a moment for the nightmare to come crashing back.  He tensed, but refrained from making any sudden movements.  A slow stretch in the chair he’d occupied for the night allowed him to take stock of the room with a careful sweep of his gaze.  Rachel slept soundly on the bed nearby, and their watchdog Zucchi still sat at the door.

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