He thought about Maria every day. Sometimes he brooded on the cosmic unfairness of falling in love twice and losing both times.
The affair with Maria, though, had had some positive results. He found himself painting again, as though his anguish at the loss of Laurin had been unlocked like some emotional jail. He also realized that, at least in principle, he might find romance again.
But not here, and he had no real desire to leave. At least, not until the artistic possibilities had been exhausted.
Pangloss's joyful barking almost drowned out Wagner, no trivial feat.
Someone was at the gate to the piazza.
Jason shaded his eyes and recognized Petro, one of his housekeeper's countless grandchildren, a young man who always had some small treat for the dog. Jason never was sure whether it was affection or tribute.
'It's unlocked,' Jason called down.
Pangloss met the visitor before he could climb the steps to the second floor.
'Signore…'
The boy was nearly breathless. He must have run all the way from Ischia Ponte, a half mile uphill. Jason waited for him to finish gasping.
The lad blurted out his brief story. Cousin Anna, who worked in a dress shop in Ischia Porto, had called Stephano, her husband's brother, to tell him to notify Antonio, Petro's father, that someone had gotten off the SNAV hydrofoil from Naples and begun asking questions about Jason. Where did he live? Where could he be found?
No, no one had mentioned what the stranger looked like, only the questions.
Jason pressed a twenty-euro note into the boy's grateful hand, thanked him, and shooed him off the premises.
Someone had found him.
Painting forgotten, Jason went into the bedroom and knelt beside the bed. He pressed on the series of tiles forming a colorful abstract mosaic and a section of the floor sprang open. Inside was a small arsenal. A reliable weapon with both automatic and single-shot options, accuracy not requiring the surgical precision of a scope, and enough range to effectively cover any part of the villa was required. Jason selected a standard U.S. Army M-14 rifle with flash suppressor and banana clip. If one person had risked attention by asking about him, it was a safe assumption that a number of others had already arrived.
Jason inserted the clip as he lay on his belly, sighting the weapon on the gate as the most likely place of attack.
Damn, but this was getting old. He could, he supposed, summon the local police. But what could he tell them? That some unknown person had been asking questions about him? Hardly a crime. By the time the peace had been breached, it would be far too late to seek help.
Pangloss's ears perked up just as Jason heard it: the sound of a straining auto engine.
A second later a battered Ford Fiesta poked its rusted grille around a turn a hundred yards downhill, the last turn before Jason's gate.
The car sputtered to a stop just before the bars of the gate, hiding its occupants behind the wall. A figure in khaki came into view, head turning, searching for…
Looking for the bell, a loud, jangling device so unpleasant Jason swore it made his teeth itch. Had he visitors on a regular-or any-basis, he would have replaced it.
There appeared to be only one stranger. Others quite likely were surrounding the villa. As the bell clamored again with an angry insistence, he moved closer to the edge of the loggia in hopes of widening his view.
The only thing he could see was the brownish form below, brightened by a flash of brilliant green and fire engine red.
Red and green?
Like a…
Like a Hermes scarf!
He stood, dropping eight and a half pounds of M-14 plus clip on his bare foot.
'Shit!'
From below: 'Jason, is that you?'
He was trying to pick up the weapon, hold his damaged foot, and not sound surprised, none of which he was achieving. 'Yeah, yeah. I'll be right down.'
'You sound cross.'
Try a broken foot to improve your disposition.
Pangloss was already dashing for the gate in anticipation of another potential friend bringing treats.
Jason got almost to the stairs before he remembered the M-14. Leaving a weapon in view wasn't a smart move, not when he would be trying to explain how peaceful his life had become.
'Hold on,' he shouted. 'I'm coming!'
'So is Christmas!'
His weapons cache again concealed, Jason stumbled down the stairs and across the piazza and opened the gate.
'I thought I was being turned away,' she said.
'No chance,' he said.
Pangloss ran in circles, barking during what he clearly considered an unreasonably long embrace.
The Fiesta drove off.
Jason picked up a single suitcase. 'I'll take it upstairs.'
'What makes you think I am staying?'
'You've got a hell of a walk if you don't.'
'You will not take me back to town?'
'Not a chance.' 'Good.'
The piazza, stairs, and bedroom floor displayed a trail of increasingly intimate apparel. By the time they rolled onto the bed, she wore only the scarf.
Later, they both lay breathless, letting the overhead fan lazily stir the humid air.
'How'd you find me?' he asked.
'You kept in touch with Adrian. So did I.'
Jason sat up, slipping a thin gold chain over his head, the chain with a simple gold wedding ring dangling from it.
'You do not need to do that,' Maria said.
Jason folded the chain carefully, almost reverently, and put it in a drawer of the bedside table. 'Yes, I do.'
Jason was running a hand along her ribs and hips. 'He convinced you to come?'
'He gave up on that months ago. I decided myself.'
His hand had stopped in a particular place. She was beginning to breathe harder. 'Either way, I am glad.'
'Nice of you to say. I was beginning to wonder.'
'As long as you are here.'
She was moving in rhythm with his stroking hand. 'I am not quitting my job.'
'Good thing. You'll be supporting an artist.'
'No more violence?'
'There're those who say I do it to my subjects with my brushes.'
'I can live with that.'
'For how long?'
She rolled away from him to stare at the ceiling. 'Until tomorrow. Then I shall rethink it.'
Jason was confident there would be a lot of tomorrows.