“Hotel Inghilterra,” David says to the driver and turns to look at me. He stares into my eyes as if looking for something.
“So, did today meet with your expectations?” he asks me.
I kiss him. “It did much more than that.”
“And you’re happy?” He is still looking at me intently. As if he wants to ask me something important. He couldn’t be about to pop the question, could he?
“David, I’m always happy when you’re around.” I take his hand and look up expectantly.
“I don’t want to lose you,” David says softly.
Lose me? What’s he talking about.
“David, you’re not going to lose me,” I whisper in his ear, then kiss him, nibbling his earlobe.
He kisses me back urgently, wrapping his arms around me. Then he pulls back slightly.
“Darling, there’s something I need to tell you.”
“Mmmm?”
Before he can answer, the cab draws up in front of an impressive-looking hotel. David pulls away and gets some money out of his pocket for the driver.
As we walk into the hotel, I nestle my head in his shoulder.
“What was it you wanted to tell me?”
“Oh, nothing. It can wait,” David says, stroking my head.
As we walk into the hotel, I stifle a yawn.
“Oh no you don’t,” David says firmly, and picks me up over his shoulder.
“David! Put me down!” I yelp. There are a few people in the reception area looking rather taken aback.
“Room number Thirty-four,” David says calmly to the concierge as if it was completely normal to have a girl hanging over his back.
“Put me down!” I squeak as we move toward the lift, but David just pats me on the bottom and presses the button.
“I am not having you yawn, Miss Beauchamp,” he says sternly. “I have a number of activities planned for this evening and I think you need to conserve your energy.”
As the lift doors open, David concedes defeat and puts me down again.
“No yawning?” he asks.
“No yawning,” I agree. David picks me up again, but this time he has his arms securely under my bottom and my legs wrap round him. I can feel his slight stubble graze my cheeks as we kiss, our tongues exploring each other’s mouth.
For a moment I wonder if we’re going to make it to the bedroom, but the lift doors open and David carries me down the corridor.
I slither down his front as he puts the key in the door, and as David closes the door behind us he looks at me intensely.
“Beauchamp, get your clothes off.”
In any event, there’s no need; David has that under control, too. He kisses me urgently, deftly undoing my shirt and bra at the same time. Before I know it we’re naked and making love, and I don’t know if it’s the wine, the dancing, being in Rome, or something else, but I can’t help myself shouting out as waves of pleasure course through my body.
“That wasn’t very princesslike,” David smiles afterward as he kisses my breasts, kisses my shoulders.
“I think I did one better than Audrey Hepburn,” I smile. “She didn’t get a good seeing-to.”
“Yes, well, she didn’t wiggle her bottom when she was dancing, did she? You are a sexy little minx, aren’t you?”
With David’s arm wrapped round me and glistening in sweat, I feel myself begin to fall asleep.
“The best thing,” I say sleepily to David just before I drop off, “is that unlike Audrey and Greg, we can stay with each other forever.”
==================================
ABC Amber LIT Converter v2.02
================================== 11
The alarm clock is ringing, but however hard I try to turn it off, it won’t stop. God, it’s the most annoying sound. As I gradually drift into consciousness I realize that it’s the phone ringing. It’s nine o’clock in the morning, and the phone’s ringing.
Reluctantly I reach over and pick it up.
“Hello?” I croak, wondering too late if I should have said“Buon giorno” instead.
“Oh, hello.” The clipped female voice on the other end sounds surprised. “I think I may have dialed the wrong number. I was looking for David. David Bradley.”
“No, you’ve got the right number, but he’s asleep. Can I take a message?”
There is a pause at the other end of the line.
“I’d like to speak to him if it wouldn’t be too much trouble.”
The frosty tone suggests that it better not be too much trouble, so I reluctantly prod David to wake him up. He looks gorgeous asleep, and I’m looking forward to spending the morning in bed with him. We can order room service and stay in bed till lunchtime . . .
David wakes with a start and I hand him the phone.
“Hi. Yes, of course I remembered. No, it’s nothing. She’s a . . . look, doesn’t matter. Fine, see you then.”
He jumps out of bed.
“Gorgeous, I’ve got to go I’m afraid. Shit, is that the time?” David wanders into the bathroom and turns on the shower.
I follow him in, trying to work out what’s happening. How can David be rushing off when no one even knows he’s here? Unless his colleagues in Geneva have tracked him down? That would be so typical.
“Darling, you don’t have to go anywhere,” I say, sitting down on the loo as David gets into the shower. I’m quite tempted to get in there with him. “You deserve a weekend to yourself. They can’t make you work on Sunday.”
“I’m afraid they can,” he says, washing his hair. “I wish I didn’t have to leave you, but I’ve wasted enough time already. I should have been working yesterday . . .”
“You’ve wasted enough time?” I can’t believe what I’m hearing. Yesterday was the best day of my life, and David is describing it as wasting time. “I’m really very sorry, David, but I thought yesterday was a little bit more than that.”
“Notwasted . . . oh, look Georgie, I’m sorry but there are some things I have to do here. I shouldn’t really have had yesterday off, but I wanted to spend it with you. I’ll call you later, shall I?”
He’s looking at me like he’s done me some huge favor. My heart is beating loudly and I can’t quite believe what’s happening.
“But . . . I thought you followed me here. How could you be working when you came to Rome to follow me? How could you?”
My voice breaks and I retreat into the bedroom. I am not going to cry. There is a perfectly rational reason for all of this. David is going to come out of the shower, and go back to being the David of yesterday.
I lie down on the bed in what I hope is a seductive pose. There is no way David will want to leave this hotel room when he realizes he’ll be giving up a day in bed with me.
But when David reemerges from the bathroom, he gives me a quick look over and then grins.
“Gorgeous girl. Look, I won’t be too long. You order room service and watch some television, and I’ll see you soon, okay?”
I sit up with a start. Last night I was a sex goddess and David couldn’t get enough of me; now it’s back to “gorgeous girl” and “why don’t you watch some television”?
Patronizing bastard. How dare he talk to me like that? How dare he say he followed me here to be with me and then announce that actually he’s here to do some work, and did me the huge favor of spending time with me yesterday? He didn’t follow me here at all, did he? He was here for work, and happened to bump into me. Well, he and his work can go screw themselves. If David thinks I’m going to wait around for him he’s got another think coming. A little voice inside my head points out that I’m hardly one to talk, and that perhaps being here for work is not quite as bad as me being here to have an illicit affair with my ex-boyfriend. But that’s not the point. Or rather, we’re not arguing about that now. God, I hope we never argue about that. If David found out . . . no, that’s too horrible to even contemplate.
I struggle into my clothes, and the silence in the room is deafening. I know that David is not a bad person. I know that he would never intentionally be mean to me. And I know that I do not have much of a moral leg to stand on. But the fact remains that he is ditching me just like Mike did, and he doesn’t even think there’s a problem. There is no such thing as the perfect man.
Jesus, Georgie, I chastise myself, when are you going to wake up and smell the roses?
As I put on my shoes, David comes over and sits down next to me on the bed. He’s still unshaven and I can see some nail marks in his back that I remember giving him the night before.
I kind of wish I’d dug harder.
“Darling, don’t be cross,” he pleads, taking my hand. “Look, okay, I’m here for work. But you don’t know how pleased I was to see you. We had the best time yesterday, didn’t we? Don’t ruin it now, please.”
“Me ruin it? Me?” I’m really cross now. “For your information, I am ruining nothing. You, on the other hand, have ruined everything.”
I pick up the scarf David bought me and throw it at him. Too late I remember that scarves don’t tend to throw very well. It glides softly down to the floor right in front of my feet. I kick it impatiently. This is our Roman Holiday, and David is leaving me here to meet some horrible work colleague. It’s just not fair.
I pick up my things and head for the door without even kissing David good-bye. Why can’t anything just go well? Why can’t I just have one weekend in Rome with the man I love? Is it really too much to ask?
Arriving in the smart lobby, my anger subsides a little as I try to figure out what to do next. I don’t want to go back to Mike’s hotel now—to be honest, since bumping into David yesterday I’ve sort of tried to forget I ever came to Rome with Mike, as if it will cease to be true if I can convince myself otherwise. But what else am I going to do? Plus, my ticket home is in Mike’s room, along with my things.
The other thing is, I don’t want to leave on such bad terms with David. He’s probably up in his room now realizing what a shit he’s been. He might even be canceling his stupid meeting right now. Maybe I should wait for him down here. He’ll come down to the reception, see me, and be relieved that he’s got a chance to apologize. He’ll pick me up again and tell me how sorry he is, and I can accept his apology graciously, tell him to go and get his meeting out of the way quickly, then I can sneak back to Mike’s hotel, get my things, and be back here in time to have a relaxed lunch with David. Perfect.
I sit down on a sofa and discover that someone’s conveniently left a copy ofInStyle on a table in front of me, so I pick it up and flick through it idly. A young, glamorous-looking woman brushes past me as I turn to a feature called “How to Look Like a Million Bucks on a Budget.” I’m so interested in the idea of making ?40 shoes look like ?400 shoes that I almost miss David coming out of the lift. But out of the corner of my eye I register the strong face and assured walk, and my heart flips slightly. I stand up and smooth down my clothes (according toInStyle , grooming is an easy way to make an inexpensive outfit ooze sophistication). But before I can get David’s attention I see that the glamorous woman who brushed past me earlier is now hanging on his arm. How dare she! I’m about to shout out when I realize that this is not the first time I’ve seen her. She was also at the airport with David on Friday.
My heart feels like it’s stopped beating. It’s obviously the woman who called earlier. “My colleague,” David had called her. But she doesn’t look like a boring accountant. She’s wearing red lipstick for a start. And why would a colleague hold on to his arm like that? I hesitate. I don’t want to accost David with this woman yet, not until I’m sure what she’s doing here. But as they swish through reception and walk up to the concierge’s desk, I lose all sense of proportion. She is openly flirting with him, and he is hardly shrinking back. There is no apologetic moving away or look of embarrassment—David looks like he’s enjoying it. Where is the sad look on his face because I’ve gone? Why isn’t he wondering where I am? And to think that a minute ago I was all ready to forgive and forget. Well, we’ll see about that.
I stand up and can feel my hands shaking. This is what people must mean by “shaking with rage.”
“David,” I call out. I was hoping for an accusatory tone, but instead my voice sounds shrill and stressed.
David turns round quickly.
“Georgie, you’re still here.” I wouldn’t say his eyes are lighting up at the sight of me. And now he looks embarrassed. God, this is much worse than I thought. This is really serious—if it wasn’t, he’d have run over and said how sorry he was. But he’s just looking at me as if he wished I wasn’t here.
“Yes, I’m still here. I just wanted to say how glad I am that you’ve got work to do. I hope you enjoy it,” I say pointedly, looking at the brunette.
"When in Rome…" отзывы
Отзывы читателей о книге "When in Rome…". Читайте комментарии и мнения людей о произведении.
Понравилась книга? Поделитесь впечатлениями - оставьте Ваш отзыв и расскажите о книге "When in Rome…" друзьям в соцсетях.