So much pleasure for such a small amount of effort.

After a good long soak I force myself to get out, wrap myself in a waffle robe, and shuffle back into the bedroom.

Getting dressed is not going to be easy. I’m looking for sexy but chic and none of my clothes really seem to fit the bill. I don’t understand how that works. I mean, how many times do you buy something thinking of all the millions of occasions you’ll wear it and look amazing? And how many times do you stare frustratedly at your wardrobe unable to find a thing to put on? It’s even more weird when you’ve packed a suitcase full of clothes you consider to be sexy and gorgeous, only to arrive at your destination unable to find anything that makes you look halfway decent. Maybe Nigel is right about all that conspiracy stuff.

After getting everything out of my suitcase I finally decide that maybe with a dash of red lipstick my tight pencil skirt and sleeveless cashmere tank top will do the business. I actually wanted to bring more clothes but Mike’s holdall took up quite a bit of room so I had to leave a few things behind. Like my gym kit, which I was going to bring, just in case the hotel had a spa or something.

I take the holdall out of my suitcase and gaze at it. I really want to know what could be so important that I had to sacrifice packing space, but obviously I couldn’t look inside because that would be really wrong. And anyway, it’s got a padlock on it. Mike said it was important papers and it certainly feels like paper, but why would Mike carry important papers around in a holdall rather than a briefcase? David’s got a lovely old battered briefcase that used to be his grandfather’s. But I don’t want to think about David. If I even let the thought of him seep into my consciousness, I get huge pangs of guilt and I start wanting to call him, which would obviously be a very stupid thing to do. Instead, I pull out the wide selection of underwear I bought for Rome and try to decide between silk and lace.

On my way down to the bar I start feeling a bit light-headed and realize I haven’t eaten anything since lunchtime. Unless you count the little chocolates the hotel left on my pillow. The hotel’s quite a smart one—lots of leather seats and important-looking people striding around purposefully. Brian and Mike are sitting at a small table in the corner drinking champagne and look very pleased with themselves. As I approach them Mike pulls up a chair and Brian pours me a glass of champagne. “To success,” grins Mike, and we all drink a toast.

I don’t know why, but I’m feeling very jumpy. Or is it excited? It’s probably because I haven’t eaten. Although, thinking about it, I’ve been feeling a bit odd ever since I thought I saw David.

Maybe it’s guilt. I look at Mike and Brian looking all relaxed and tell myself not to worry. I mean, I am not doing anything wrong; I’m just enjoying a night out with friends. I mean, who knows what David’s doing in Geneva? It’s fine. Everything’s going to be fine.

“So,” I say to Mike, “do you drink nothing but champagne now? Is that a strategic decision?” I smile at both of them and down the contents of my glass very quickly. If I’m tipsy, these feelings of guilt are bound to go away.

“He tries not to,” grins Brian. “Spends all the money he owes people like me on champagne and caviar, don’t you Mike?”

Mike looks at Brian sharply.

“I told you, that’s all being dealt with. Next week I’ll sort you out, okay?”

Brian slaps Mike on the back good-naturedly, but his face suggests he’s more stressed than he’s letting on. So Mike owes him money, does he? I wonder how much? It must be just lack of ready cash, though. I mean he’s obviously loaded. I raise my eyebrows at Mike, but he looks away and lights a cigarette.

It’s good champagne, and we’re soon on the third bottle. Brian tells us stories about groupies in clubland and I can’t stop laughing. Although in all the stories, the girls come out terribly. I mean, they do sound pretty awful—sleeping with anyone who owns a pair of decks and doing all sorts of unmentionable things in limousines, but still, I hope no man has ever talked about me like that. I’m sure they wouldn’t have though, mainly because I’ve never done anything like that.

But I hope Brian doesn’t put me in the same category as them. You know, thinking I’m some sort of floozy. During the evening Mike’s hand has kind of maneuvered itself onto my leg, and while I’ve sort of been enjoying having it there, I’m now all self-conscious and paranoid. But at the same time, I kind of like the idea of having his hand there. I’m in Rome, with one very sexy man and one who is all right I suppose, and they are buying me champagne and Mike can’t keep his hands off me. When I’m with David, I feel loved, looked after, and safe. But right now I’m feeling desirable, strong, and slightly wicked.

Except that while I like the hand being there, I’m not entirely comfortable with the implication.

It’s like I’m playing a role, and loving it, but I sort of want someone to shout “Cut” so I can go back to my own room and go to sleep without worrying that Mike is going to expect a bit more than that.

To my alarm, Brian yawns and says he might call it a night. That means it’s just going to be Mike and me left down here. Although being down here is probably going to be easier than going up to the bedroom. I’d kind of hoped the two of them would settle down for a night of drinking and that I’d have been able to make my excuses.

I look at Mike, who grins at me. “Yeah, I think we should probably make a move, too. Early start tomorrow, gorgeous,” he says, squeezing my knee. I move my legs quickly and stand up, but regret it immediately. I am, I realize, very drunk indeed. According to my watch, it’s two in the morning and I appear to have drunk an entire bottle of something called Perrier Jouet Belle Epoque. I’m definitely going to have a truckload of the stuff delivered to my hou????n a regular basis, because it is just the most amazing champagne I’ve ever drunk in my life. However, I would rather have more control over my coordination.

Mike calls the lift and Brian staggers off to the Men’s leaving Mike and me alone. I am swaying, or the room is—I’m not sure. All I know is that I want to go to sleep. A cloud of sleepiness has descended on me and I feel too drowsy to even attempt conversation. We get into the lift and as we travel up we don’t say a word to each other. If Mike was David, I think to myself, I would lean my head on his chest now. I might even insist he carry me into our hotel room. And he would, too. But he isn’t David. It’s Mike. And we’re sharing a room, w???? means sharing a bed. This thought wakes me up with a jolt. Sharing a bed with Mike? Oh my God, do I really want to do this?

At the door to our room, Mike slips his arm round me as he turns???? key in the lock. Then he cups my head in his hands and kisses me. Before I can engage my brain and decide what to do, he maneuvers me onto the bed and gets on top of me, tugging at my skirt and sticking his tongue down my throat. There’s just no way I can do this. I pull away and roll over onto my front.

“Playing coy with me, are you, Georgie Porgie?” grins Mike, undoing the zip of my skirt.

“Come on, you little tease, get your kit off.”

So this isn’t exactly an ideal situation. I’m in a foreign city, sharing a room with someone who has just spent huge amounts of money on champagne for me. I am half undressed, and I don’t want to sleep with him. Oh, and there’s only one bed. I manage a little smile, and then with a flash of inspiration, I put my hand to my mouth.

“I’m sorry, I think I drank a bit too much champagne,” I smile apologetically.

Mike moves back in alarm. “You’re not going to puke are you?”

Once, when we were going out, I got horrendously drunk (we were at a party where Mike was flirting with pretty much everyone except me, and drinking wine straight from the bottle seemed to be a pretty good idea), and on the way back I was sick on Mike’s shoulder. He was absolutely furious and wouldn’t talk to me for weeks.

I shrug. “I don’t know. I’ll probably be okay . . .” I say, getting up quickly and walking toward the bathroom. It does the trick. Mike’s squeamishness is stronger than his sexual appetite, and he grabs a blanket and a pillow. “Look, I’m going to sleep here, just in case,” he says quickly, pulling a camp bed out of the wardrobe.

“You, um, get some sleep, okay?”

I’d be offended if I wasn’t so relieved.

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================================== 10

I wake up slowly. The sun is shining on my face and is deliciously warm. As soon as I open my eyes I feel a tremor of excitement pass through me. I’m in Rome! I’m really here, and it’s sunny, and I didn’t sleep with Mike, and I’m going to have a lovely day walking around the city, having coffee in little roadside cafes, and visiting the Coliseum. Maybe Brian could come, too, then it really would be likeRoman Holiday . Although actually I’m a lot more clued up than Audrey Hepburn was. I would have sussed Gregory Peck right away if it had been me.

I sit up quickly and discover two things. First, moving quickly is not a great idea when you’ve been drinking champagne all night. Second, Mike’s camp bed is empty.

To be honest, I’m actually a bit relieved that Mike isn’t there. It means I can get up slowly and enjoy the morning. He’s probably out getting us some breakfast or something. I notice that there’s a television opposite me on the desk and the remote control is on the bedside table.

Within moments the comforting sounds of BBC Worldwide news are filling the room.

I lie back down, propping my throbbing head up with pillows. It’s the business news, which is a shame, but still, at least it’s television and I can understand it. There’s another corporate scandal in the States, and there’s someone talking about the investment community being betrayed, how it’s another Enron. I yawn, and a little box appears saying that “Top Gear” is going to be on in five minutes.

I get up slowly and wander into the bathroom. To my amazement, the television is as loud in the bathroom as in the bedroom. I look around, and sure enough, there are speakers in all four corners of the room. How cool is that? I turn on the shower and wash my hair as the newsreader drones on about the AMT Group propping up its revenues through multiple acquisitions and the disgraced board of directors being investigated. One of them has been arrested, and there’s another one who they can’t pin any blame on.

“Taylor has been exonerated in this episode, but the SEC is still questioning the auditors . . .”

the newsreader says as I rinse out my hair. Honestly, I don’t know how people like David manage to listen to this stuff and make sense of it. As soon as I hear the words “and now it’s time for our business news” I start yawning. Luckily, as I get out of the shower, my head feeling almost back to normal, the familiar “Top Gear” music kicks in.

But before I can sit back down on the bed to watch it, the phone rings. It’s Mike.

“Good sleep?”

“Um, yeah, great. Where are you?”

They’re test-driving four-by-fours on the television. I think of my mother and poor James’s attempts to get her out of her antiquated Mini.

“Oh, I woke up early, so I thought I’d get on with a few things. Fancy going to the Vatican?”

The Vatican? What a surprise! Mike is so not the sort to go sightseeing. It suddenly occurs to me that he could be Catholic. To be honest, I have no idea whether Mike is even religious or not.

I don’t think it’s ever come up in conversation. I’ve never really done the whole church thing except for a couple of years during the Kensington Church Street period (I divide my life up by addresses) when I went to a Catholic boarding school because my mother thought I might “get into trouble” in London. I hated it at first but then got totally seduced by the structure of the day and the soft-spoken teachers who were all nuns and called “sister.” They looked after us amazingly well—although the teaching was pretty appalling. In the end I left because my mother realized I’d never get my O levels if I stayed, but by then I had decided that I wanted to take my vows and join a convent. I argued fiercely with my mother and she said that if I got my O levels in a more academic private school I could go to a convent if I really wanted to, and of course, by then I’d forgotten all about becoming a nun and wanted to be in a band instead.

Still, I’ve always wanted to go to the Vatican. It’s even on my planned list of activities—it’s got the Sistine Chapel and everything! More to the point, does this mean Mike really has changed and is interested in things and people other than himself?