Sorrento.'

  'Sorrento?' I was puzzled. 'Are you going to Sorrento then?'

  She smiled.

  'You're not the only one who takes vacations. Have you ever been to Sorrento?'

  'No. I've never been so far south.'

  'I've rented a villa just outside Sorrento. It's lovely and very, very isolated. I flew down to Naples a couple of days ago and arranged everything. I've even got a woman from a nearby village to come in and do for me.'

  I had a sudden feeling that she wasn't telling me this without reason. I looked sharply at her.

  'Sounds nice,' I said. 'When are you going?'

  'The same time as you're going to Ischia.' She put the camera on the table and came over and sat beside me on the settee. 'And, like you - I'm going alone.'

  She looked at me. The invitation in her eyes set my heart thumping. She leaned towards me, her full, red lips parting. Before I knew what I was doing, she was in my arms, and I was kissing her.

  We held that kiss for perhaps twenty seconds, and it really got me going, then I felt her hands on my chest, pushing me back, and that steady, hard pressure brought me to my senses. I let go of her and stood up.

  'This is a crazy way to behave,' I said, breathing like an old man who has run up a flight of stairs. I wiped the lipstick off my mouth.

  'A crazy way to behave in Rome,' she said, leaning back and smiling up at me, 'but not in Sorrento.'

  ''Now, look ...' I began, but she held up her hand, stopping me.

  'I know how you feel about me. I'm not a child. I feel the same way about you,' she said. 'Come with me to Sorrento. Everything's arranged. I know how you feel about father and your job, but I promise you it will be perfectly safe. I've rented the villa in the names of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Sherrard. You'll be Mr. Sherrard, an American business man on vacation. No one knows us down there. Don't you want to spend a month with me – just the two of us?'

  'But we can't do it,' I said, knowing there was no reason why we shouldn't do it, and wanting to. 'We can't rush into it like this …'

  'Don't be so cautious, darling. We're not rushing into anything. I've planned it most carefully. I'll go down to the villa in my car. You'll come down the next day by train. It's a lovely place. It faces the sea on a high hill. There's no other villa for at least a quarter of a mile.' She jumped to her feet and fetched a large-scale map that was lying on the table. 'I'll show you exactly where it is. Look, it's marked on the map. It's called Bella Vista – isn't that cute? From the terrace you can see the bay and Capri. It has a garden: there are orange and lemon trees and vines. It's completely isolated. You'll love it.'

  'I dare say I will, Helen,' I said. 'I admit I'd like to do it. I wouldn't be human if I didn't, but what's going to happen to us after the month's over?'

  She laughed.

  'If you mean you're scared I shall expect you to marry me, you needn't be. I'm not going to get married for years. This is something I want to get out of my system. I don't even know that I love you, Ed, but I do know I want to be alone with you for a month.'

  'We can't do it, Helen. It's not right ...'

  She touched my face with her fingers.

  'Will you be a darling and go now?' She patted my face and then moved away from me. 'I've only just got back from Naples, and I am very tired. There's nothing more to talk about. I promise you it will be safe. It now depends whether you want to spend a month with me or not. I promise you there'll be no strings to it. Think about it. Don't let's meet now until the 29th. I'll be at Sorrento station to meet the three-thirty train from Naples. If you're not on the train, I'll understand.'

  She crossed to the lobby and opened the front door a few inches.

  I joined her.

  'Now, wait, Helen . . .'

  'Please, Ed. Don't let's say any more. You'll either be on the train or you won't. That's all there is to it.' Her lips brushed mine. 'Good night, darling.'

  I looked at her and she looked at me.

  As I stepped out into the corridor, I knew I would be on that train.

PART TWO

I

  I had five days ahead of me before I left for Sorrento. During that time I had a lot to do, but I found concentration difficult.

  I was like a teenager looking forward to his first date. This irritated me. I had imagined I would be blase enough to take the situation Helen had engineered in my stride, but I wasn't. The idea of spending a month alone with this exciting girl really got me going. In my saner moments – and they were few - I told myself I was crazy to go ahead with this, but I consoled myself with the knowledge of Helen's efficiency. She had said it would be safe and I believed her. I argued that I would be a fool if I didn't grab the chance of taking what she was offering me.

  Two days before I was due to leave, Jack Maxwell arrived in Rome to take over the office in my absence.

  I had worked alongside him in New York way back in 1949. He was a sound newspaper man, but he hadn't much talent for anything but news. I didn't care much for him. He was too goodlooking, too smooth, too well- dressed and too generally too.

  I had an idea that he didn't like me any more than I liked him, but this didn't stop me from giving him a big welcome. After we had spent a couple of hours in the office going over future work, I suggested we should have dinner together.

  'Fine,' he said 'Let's see what this ancient city has to offer. I warn you, Ed, I expect nothing but the best.'

  I took him to Alfredo's which is one of the better eating places in Rome, and gave him porchetta, which is sucking pig, roasted on a spit, partially boned and stuffed with liver, sausage-meat and herbs: it makes quite a meal.

  After we had eaten and had got on to the third bottle of wine, he let his hair down and became friendly.

  'You're a lucky guy, Ed,' he said, accepting the cigarette I offered him. 'You may not know it, but you're the white-headed boy back home. Hammerstock thinks a lot of the stuff you've been turning in. I'll tell you something off the record: only not a word to anyone. Hammerstock is having you back in a couple of months' time. The idea is I'm to replace you here, and you're

going to get the foreign desk.'

'I don't believe it,' I said, staring at him. 'You're kidding.'

'It's a fact. I wouldn't kid about a thing like that.'

  I tried not to show my excitement, but I don't think I succeeded very well. To be given the foreign desk at headquarters was the top of my ambition. Not only did it mean a whale of a lot more money, but it was also the plum job of all the jobs on Western Telegram.

  'It'll be official in a couple of days,' Maxwell told me. 'The old man has already okayed it You're a lucky guy.'

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