CHAPTER FOUR

B ELLA F IGURA was a nightclub on the Via Veneto, a few yards along from Marco’s apartment. It was hidden away in the depths of the building, and as soon as they arrived Harriet could sense the atmosphere; sophisticated, knowing, and above all discreet. She wondered how many women Marco had brought here, and how many notes had changed hands with close-mouthed doormen.

He led her to a table near the stage, yet sufficiently to one side to afford some privacy. The floorshow had not started waiters hurried to and fro, taking orders. Marco summoned one of them with a look, which annoyed several customers who’d been waiting longer. He seemed not to notice.

As before he was an excellent host and she relaxed, even beginning to feel easier about the revealing dress.

‘I’m sorry to have been so remiss,’ he said. ‘My mother is very annoyed with me. Are you?’

‘No,’ she said, not entirely truthfully. ‘You must have been deluged with work after being away, although I daresay you travel with a laptop, and don’t miss very much.’

He nodded. ‘I have a good assistant, but I prefer to keep my own finger on the pulse. I’m grateful that you understand. I’m afraid my mother doesn’t. She thinks you’ll be offended and rush back to England.’

‘No way,’ she said cheerfully. ‘I’m having a wonderful time. Your mother and I get on splendidly.’

‘So I gather from her. By the way, did I imagine that I saw you in the Via Veneto yesterday?’

‘No, I picked up a cab there after I’d done some shopping. I found a shop a couple of streets away-’

It all came tumbling out, her visit, the treasures she’d discovered, the difficulty of deciding which to buy, the moment of half-guilty indulgence, the thrill of possession. Marco listened to her, at first with a smile, then with growing alarm.

‘What in heaven’s name did you buy?’

She rattled of the list.

‘And they cost how much?

‘They’re bargains,’ she defensively. ‘They’ll look wonderful in the shop.’

‘The shop that’s already up to its ears in debt. Good grief woman, have you no sense of the value of money?’

‘Look, I know money’s important, I’m not saying it isn’t.’

‘Now there’s a concession!’ he said scathingly.

‘But it isn’t necessarily first on my list of priorities-’

‘I’d be interested to know just where it does come on your list of priorities.’

She was annoyed into frankness. ‘Pretty low when I’m negotiating for an object of beauty.’

‘Beauty costs money,’ he said bluntly.

‘Oh, really!’

‘All right, tell me I’m wrong.’

She couldn’t. An antique dealer knew better than anyone how much beauty cost, and having to concede the point exasperated her more than anything.

‘I’ve seen your accounts remember,’ Marco said, ‘and a more soul-destroying experience I don’t recall. I think you see good business practice as a sort of optional extra.’

‘Rubbish!’

‘What did you say?’

‘All right, I admit I tend to leave that kind of thing to take care of itself.’

He stared at her glassy eyed. ‘You leave business to take care of itself?’

‘Well, you knew I was like that.’

‘I didn’t know you were going to be “like that” in Rome.’

‘I’m like that everywhere,’ she said defiantly.

‘So I’m beginning to understand. Maybe I should have spelled it out that a condition of my loan was that you don’t make your financial situation worse.’

‘I haven’t made it worse. That stuff will sell at a profit.’

‘Always assuming that you can find “kind” homes for it? Of all the-look, you’re a dealer. Don’t you know better than to walk into another dealer’s shop and buy at full price?’

‘Of course I do, but I couldn’t help myself.’

Maria vergine! You couldn’t help yourself. If I bought stock in Novamente instead of Kalmati I should like to see my clients’ faces when Novamente collapsed and I explained that it wasn’t my fault because I couldn’t help myself.’

‘That’s different,’ she said frostily.

‘I don’t see why. Let’s all live on emotional impulse with no sense of responsibility. If you, why not me?’

‘Because you wouldn’t know how to live on emotional impulse.’

‘Thank heavens!’ he said fervently.

‘I am not irresponsible. I know all this stuff-’

‘It’s not enough to know it. You have to live by it.’

‘When I saw those pieces I fell in love with them. You don’t understand that, do you?’

‘Only too well. You fell in love and abandoned all common sense, all perspective, all objectivity. Never, never make a decision when you’re in love, whether it’s with an object or-’ he checked himself. He was breathing rapidly.

The appearance of a waiter was a diversion, one that he was glad of, she thought. He didn’t look at her as the plates from the first course were cleared away and the second course served, and when they were alone again he smiled as though the moment had never happened.

‘I didn’t bring you out to criticise you,’ he said. ‘Perhaps I went a little too far.’

‘Just a little,’ she agreed. ‘I suppose to someone who operates in higher finance I must seem raving mad.’

‘Don’t let’s start on that again,’ he begged. ‘But let me look at the paperwork. I can tell you how to-that is, I may be able to suggest things you might find useful.’

‘Thank you,’ she said meekly.

He seemed about to reply, then caught the gleam in her eyes and thought better of it.

‘What exactly do you do?’ she asked.

‘I work for the Banco Orese Nationale. It’s a merchant bank, and I deal in stocks and shares, advising clients, research into market trends.’

‘Go on.’

He settled into an explanation that lasted well into the second course and Harriet listened with genuine interest.

‘Control is the answer,’ he said once. ‘If you’re not in control, somebody else is. So you must always be the one in control. If I’m trying to beat someone down on the price of stock I always make sure I have one piece of information more than he does. Then I’m in control. He may think he is but I know that I am.

‘You lost control of your shop, and now I’m in control-no, don’t get mad. I’m not getting at you. I’m just helping you to avoid predators like me in future.’

‘It’s OK, go on,’ she said, too fascinated to take up the cudgels again. She lacked the killer instinct to put really tough business practises into action, but she could follow complicated financial arguments.

When Marco checked himself and said, ‘Let me put that another way,’ she answered indignantly.

‘You don’t have to talk down to me. I understand every word.’

‘Well it’s a damned sight more than your sister can,’ he growled. ‘What is it?’

She had burst out laughing. Now she choked and said, ‘It was just the thought of you talking like this to Olympia, and her trying to look interested.’

He grinned. ‘Her eyes were glazed. Come to think of it, most women’s eyes glaze after the first minute.’

‘I should think so, too. If you take someone out on a date she doesn’t want to be lectured about market trends.’

‘You didn’t mind.’

‘That’s different. We’re business partners.’

‘So we are,’ he said after a moment. ‘And this is a board meeting.’

‘To consider the project so far, and work out modus operandi for the next stage.’

‘Well, as a start, can we agree that you’ll curb your purchasing instinct for a while? I’d like some input in future.’

‘You meant you want to stop me spending money?’

‘I was trying to put it politely. The blunt version is that from now on I hold the purse-strings.’

She’d been feeling more kindly towards him but that vanished abruptly. ‘What did you say?’ she asked with a sweetness that should have warned him.

‘No more buying. Basta! Enough.’

‘Because you say so?’

‘Because I say so. I’m doing a complete overhaul of your financial arrangements and you do nothing more until I’ve got them on a sensible footing.’

‘Well, well! What happened to tact?’

‘To hell with tact. Tact will bankrupt you.’

‘Bankrupt you, you mean?’

‘Nonsense,’ he said impatiently. ‘It isn’t in your power to bankrupt me.’

‘How interesting! I really must marry you for your money. Let’s announce the engagement at once.’

‘What a proposition. Irresistible!’

‘Well, let’s face it, you haven’t anything else to offer. You’re rude, overbearing, dictatorial, arrogant-’

‘Is that supposed to floor me? Think again. There’s nothing wrong with arrogance if you’re sure of your ground.’

‘And I’ll bet you’re always sure of your ground.’

‘Too right. It stops me being wrong-footed by people who don’t know what they’re talking about.’

‘Meaning me?’

‘Meaning anyone.’

‘Meaning the entire rest of the world, as far as you’re concerned. So now you’ll have exactly the wife you need, someone who’s seen the worst of you and will put up with it for the sake of your money.’

He grunted. ‘You think you’ve seen the worst of me?’

‘Well, I hope the rest isn’t even more unpleasant.’

‘It can be,’ he said, his eyes glinting. ‘It can be a lot more unpleasant. Think hard before taking me on.’

‘Fine! It’s all off. Here endeth the shortest engagement in history. The protagonists couldn’t stand each other.’

She dropped her voice on the last words, aware that she was attracting attention. Marco also looked around, before lowering his voice and leaning closer to her.

‘You’re being melodramatic,’ he said coldly. ‘There’s no need for all this emotionalism.’

She too leaned closer. ‘I’m not being emotional, I’m being coldly realistic. Why not? It works for you.’

‘You know nothing about me,’ he snapped. ‘All this because I want to organise your finances-’

‘You don’t want to “organise” my finances, you want to control them, and me. Where would it stop if I let you?’

Let me? Do you think I’m asking permission?’

‘I think you’d better be.’

‘Harriet, I’m telling you, no more buying.’

‘And I’m telling you that you’ve made me a loan, not bought me body and soul. The shop is mine.’

‘For how long if I decided to turn really nasty?’

‘You? Nasty? Surely not! Listen to me, Marco, I own that shop, I run it, and I alone decide what it needs. If I see stock I want, I won’t ask you first, I’ll buy it and tell them to bill me.’

‘And if I insist on returning it?’

‘That’ll be hard because I’ll be back in England.’

‘Having smuggled an Etruscan necklace or two under your jacket, I suppose?’ he said with heavy irony.

‘It was a fake and I’ll do whatever is necessary,’ she said through gritted teeth.

‘Marco, my boy!’

They both looked up quickly to see a large, middle-aged man who’d approached their table while they were preoccupied. Marco rose to shake his hand, introducing him to Harriet as Alfredo Orese.

Orese, she thought. And he worked for the Banca Orese Nationale.

‘Unforgivable of me to interrupt two lovebirds,’ Alfredo said jovially, purloining a chair from another table and joining them. ‘Nice to see a young couple absorbed in each other, head to head, oblivious to the world, know what I mean?’

That must be how they had looked, Harriet realised, smiling noncommittally.

‘Not a word, Alfredo,’ Marco said amiably. ‘Let us keep our secrets.’

Alfredo put his finger over his lips and winked. He was somewhat the worse for wear, and seemed less like a banker than a man who liked a good time. He ordered a bottle of the best champagne, toasted them noisily, kissed Harriet’s cheek and finally, to their relief, took himself off.

‘I’m sorry about that,’ Marco said, letting out his breath. ‘He’s a good fellow, means no harm.’

‘And likes playing at being a banker,’ she said wryly.

‘How did you know?’

‘The name. But I reckon the name is the only reason he’s there.’

He grinned. ‘Yes, but to his credit he understands that and doesn’t interfere. You ought to marry him. He’s got ten times what I have and he’d let you blow the lot without protest.’

‘Ah, but he wouldn’t give me a good fight like you do.’

‘You can count on me for those.’

‘All right, I’ll grant you that my financial management leaves something to be desired-’

‘I wouldn’t myself have dignified your carry-on with the name of financial management-’

‘Do you want to fight again?’ she asked sweetly.

‘No, it’s too soon after the last time. Let’s space them and get our breath back.’

‘Will you be quiet while I make a sort of concession?’

He looked at her attentively.

‘I admit I’ve made some mistakes-did you say something?’

‘Not a word.’

‘I’ve made a few mistakes, and I shall be interested to hear your advice.’

His lips twitched. ‘Interested?’

‘Interested.’

‘To the point of taking it?’

‘Let’s see what the future holds.’

He grinned. Humour altered his face as though a light had come on inside him. He could be charming, she thought, when he allowed himself to relax. She was beginning to understand his habit of describing everything in business terms. They were the words he understood most easily, but they covered something else deep inside him, and she was beginning to be intrigued by what that ‘something else’ might be.

‘Enough for tonight,’ he said. ‘It’s a draw.’

She laughed and let it go.

As the coffee was being served the lights were lowered. Members of the band took their place on the low stage. A young woman came to the microphone and began to sing in a breathy voice. It was a song about loss and physical longing, the persistence of desire when all hope had gone.

‘I feel you touching me-though we’re apart-your hands, your lips are everywhere…’

She was a skilful artist, managing to squeeze the last ounce of sensuality from every word, every cunningly placed pause. A new atmosphere, romantic, delicate, subtly erotic, began to pervade the club.

By slow degrees Harriet felt herself come alive with the consciousness that she was sitting close to an attractive man, with only a thin layer of material between him and her nakedness. Suddenly the dress felt alarmingly low.

She stole a look at Marco to see if he was equally aware of her, but he was watching the stage. Her eyes were drawn to his hands, which were long and fine, but with a hint of power.

‘Your hands touch me everywhere-’ crooned the singer.

It was absurd to feel her body responding merely to a thought, but she couldn’t control the warmth that was stealing over her. How would those hands touch a woman? How would it feel to be touched intimately by them? It was as though she already knew. She took a deep, shuddering breath and fixed her eyes on the floor.

For his part, Marco was directing his eyes to anywhere but her. He’d gone to his mother’s villa tonight prepared only to stay for supper and depart, his duty done. One look at Harriet had changed his mind. Here was the sensual, flamboyant creature who’d hidden beneath her dowdy disguise, tantalising him with her elusiveness from the very first night.

His decision to take her out had been spur of the moment, something which shocked him but did not deter him. He kept a room at the villa and a set of evening clothes, so a change of plan presented no problems. As he drove her into Rome he’d wondered how the evening would go, what they would talk about. It hadn’t occurred to him that they would fight, but now he thought perhaps it should have done.

Finally he stole a glance at her, and saw that her face was averted from the stage, slightly towards him, but not looking directly at him. He realised that she wasn’t seeing anything external, but was lost in an inner world where he wasn’t invited. It was absurd to feel jealous, but he wished she would notice him. She didn’t.

The blue light from the stage drained all other colour from her, and sharply emphasised the shadows. For a moment she didn’t look like a living woman but like the statue of some ancient queen, perhaps Nefertiti or Cleopatra: some great lady, statuesque, imperious, magnificent.

But he knew that this was only part of her. The next moment she could come alive with the mischievous laughter of a child, or glare at him with the fierceness of an adversary. There was no knowing.

He saw that Alfredo was attracting his attention from a few yards away and forced himself to smile. Alfredo was a good fellow, not the brightest, but amiable, and he would be useful in gaining a partnership. He was indicating Harriet, winking, making ‘ho ho’ gestures implying that they were both men of the world. Suddenly Marco wanted to knock him down.

The singer departed, amid applause and the band struck up for dancing.

‘Would you care to take the floor?’ Marco asked politely.

She took his hand and he led her onto the dance floor, which rapidly became too crowded to do more than shuffle. He held her firmly, close but not too close, and she found that her step fell in with his easily. The effect of the sultry song was still on her, driving out all thoughts except that she was enjoying this moment and anticipating the next one. She smiled.

‘What is it?’ he asked at once.

‘I’m just having a good time.’

‘That smile meant something.’

‘It meant I’m having a good time.’

‘No, more than that. Tell me.’

His insistence disturbed her. She met his eyes and saw in them something that was too intense for the trivial question. Then somebody collided with her and she felt Marco’s hands tighten, steadying her. She was pressed against him, his face close to hers. Her senses swam and she closed her eyes to hide whatever they might have revealed to him.

‘Look at me,’ he murmured.

She did so and found him watching her intently. She could feel the movement of his thighs against hers, and the warmth of his hand in the small of her back, seeming to move with the flexing of her body, as though the material between had vanished. She was possessed by thoughts and sensations that shocked her with their frankness and urgency, and a little gasp broke from her.

‘What is it?’ he wanted to know.

‘I-nothing-nothing-’ she struggled to make sense. ‘Just the heat.’

‘Yes, the atmosphere is getting a little too much,’ Marco agreed. ‘My apartment is close by. Let me give you a coffee there.’

It was half past two when they emerged, and the stars were bright in the sky. Except for a few wanderers like themselves the street was deserted. Marco drew her hand through his arm and they strolled the short distance to the apartment block where he lived.

To Harriet’s relief the walk and the night air calmed her down. By the time they’d taken the lift to the fifth floor she felt in control of herself again.

She was curious to see the place Marco called home. She’d tried to imagine it and been unable to. He was so impenetrable that it was impossible to conjure up anything that he hadn’t chosen to reveal. Now she saw the truth, and at first it took her by surprise. Then she realised that it was exactly what she had subconsciously expected.

No home was ever more austere and unrevealing. The marble floors were honey-coloured, the walls white. The greatest splash of colour came from a dark red leather sofa. The lighting was concealed. Some modern pictures hung on the wall, and a few decorative pieces stood on the shelves. To Harriet’s cursory glance they seemed excellent.

It was the home of a man who hid himself away, perhaps even from himself, she thought. There was a photograph of Lucia, but nothing else personally revealing. Through the open door to his bedroom Harriet could see a computer, a fax machine that was inching out paper at that moment, a range of telephones, and two television screens. This man took his work to bed.

Into her mind came Olympia saying, ‘A lady-killer…you might say he “loves ’em and leaves ’em” except that he doesn’t love ’em.’

Whatever happened in Marco’s personal life, it happened there, in that large unadorned bed, in front of the technology that brought the world’s stock markets to him at all hours.

‘I’ll make some coffee,’ he called from the kitchen.

The kitchen was also austere, but beautiful, its white relieved by copper and blue. He moved about it easily, like a man used to doing his own cooking, which figured, she thought. Even a small prosaic action, like making coffee, he performed perfectly.

‘Delicious,’ she said, sipping with relish. ‘You have a beautiful home.’

‘Thank you. Not everyone likes it.’

‘It’s peaceful, I like that a lot. And you know how to show off your art pieces to advantage. The plain background does a lot for them, and the way you’ve arranged the lighting.’

‘Thank you. Praise from you is praise indeed. Would you like to give me your opinion of my collection?’

She finished her coffee before approaching a vase on its own plinth. It was oddly flamboyant against the austere background, and she correctly assessed it as French fifteenth century. ‘And it’s genuine.’

‘Everything in my collection is real,’ he said firmly.

She smiled, replacing the vase on its plinth and moving away. ‘Let’s not argue about that.’

‘I agree,’ he said, standing before her. ‘Arguing is a waste of time.’

Very deliberately he leaned forward, placed one hand behind her head, and drew her towards him. His lips touched hers lightly, cautiously, feeling his way before taking the next step. He evidently decided that the signs were favourable for he increased the pressure of his mouth on hers.

The sensation was pleasant, and Harriet let herself go with it, enjoying the cool ease with which he took possession. He acted as though there was all the time in the world for them to explore each other, and she found this relaxing. When his arm curved about her waist she moved in easily, slipping her own arms about him, letting her hands enjoy the sensation of whipcord strength that came through his elegant evening clothes.

He felt good, not bulky and muscular, but lean and hard, with a concealed strength that pleased her. But everything about Marco was just right, most of all his embrace. He was as smooth and expert at this as at every other social skill. He would know just the moment to deepen the kiss and increase their mutual excitement. She waited, but the pressure on her lips eased and she had a sudden view of his face and it troubled her.

Harriet stirred, feeling strangely disturbed. Her body was responding but her mind was growing tense. Something about this wasn’t right. She put up her hands to push Marco away but he resisted, moving his mouth slowly over hers in a way that bid her leave everything to him. There was nothing for her to do but be acquiescent.

Like blazes!

She tightened her hands on his shoulders in a way that he couldn’t mistake. ‘That’s enough,’ she said firmly and stepped away, freeing herself. ‘You’ve got a nerve, you really have!’

‘For pity’s sake!’ he said, exasperated. ‘This is the twenty-first century, not the nineteenth. You couldn’t have thought I was just going to hold your hand. We’ve spent a delightful evening together, we’ve danced and held each other close, and you say you didn’t expect me to kiss you?’

‘You weren’t kissing me,’ she said in a shaking voice. ‘You were damned well inspecting the property.’

‘What?’

‘You know what I mean. That wasn’t a kiss, it was a survey to see if a takeover would be in your interests.’

‘Now you’re being foolish.’

‘I could hear your mind ticking away,’ she said furiously. ‘Test the ground, so far and no further. You wouldn’t want me to get any ideas before you’ve made your own mind up in case I was a nuisance afterwards, you cold, calculating-’

‘Don’t say any more,’ he snapped. ‘I get the picture. I just wish I knew what it is you want.’

‘It’s very simple. If you’re going to kiss me, do it properly, not-’

She never got to say the last words. Her mouth was silenced by another mouth descending fiercely onto it. She didn’t recall how she came to be in his arms, but there they were about her, holding her still while his lips worked over hers with skill and determination. She tried to protest about the way he was using her, but he muttered, ‘Shut up! You said this was what you wanted, and it’s what you’re going to have.’

She didn’t try to argue further. This was a very angry man, giving a very angry kiss, and how could she complain when she’d brought it on herself? But she found she didn’t want to complain. An excitement she’d never known before was running through her like wildfire. It wasn’t the soft, sensual thrumming that had pervaded her in the club, but a heady, intoxicating thrill that caught her unaware. She couldn’t think, she could only feel, and yearn, and reach for him.

His hands were beginning to wander over her, feeling her small waist, flaring out to discover the smooth satin curve of her behind. There they lingered as though relishing the discovery, before reaching the zip at the centre and inching upwards to the hook at the top. A few more movements and the zip would come down, leaving her nearly naked in his arms. How long would it take him then to have the dress off her, and what would she do? She knew she must decide quickly but it was hard because her body was tense with delight, driving everything out of her head.

She could sense that he was drawing her to the bedroom, past the point of no return. It mustn’t happen like this, when they were half hostile, but she couldn’t think how else it might happen. The undercurrent of hostility was often there, she realised, giving spice and surprise to their relationship. Her urgency increased.

The buzz was so faint that she almost didn’t hear it. She tried to blot it out, but Marco was already disengaging himself from her. He made a sound of annoyance at the interruption, but he disengaged himself nonetheless.

Dreamily she watched as he snatched up the phone and she waited for him to put the caller off. Instead he tensed, alert.

‘Yes,’ he barked into the phone. ‘This is Marco Calvani-go on-’

Harriet stared, stunned by how quickly he’d switched his attention, as though he hadn’t really been involved at all. But she couldn’t believe that, not while she could still feel the heat from his nearness and the driving force of his mouth.

At last Marco took the phone from his ear, but he didn’t hang up.

‘I’m sorry, but this is important,’ he told her. ‘I won’t be able to drive you home, but there’s an excellent cab firm-the number’s in that book.’

‘Wh-what?’ she asked, dazed.

‘Just there on the table beside you-hello!’ He’d turned back to the phone. ‘Yes, I’m still here. Let’s talk.’

‘And you know what really made me mad,’ she told an outraged Lucia later that night. ‘He even left me to call my own cab.’

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