Lucy Gordon
The Wedding Arrangement
The third book in the Rinucci Brothers series, 2006
CHAPTER ONE
I’M CRAZY to leave.
The words pounded in Luke Cayman’s head as he packed his bags on the day after his brother Primo’s engagement.
Yet he got into his brand new state-of-the-art sports car and headed out of Naples ‘like a bat out of hell’, as he put it.
It was a relief to get on to the
Once there, he checked into a five-star hotel in Parioli, the wealthiest and most elegant part of the city, and indulged himself with the best of Roman cuisine and wine, which he drank in brooding silence.
But there was Olympia’s face in his mind, as he’d last seen it, her eyes fixed blissfully on Primo, her fiance, soon to be her husband. Who was he trying to kid? He’d never stood a chance.
He was just thinking of an early night when a hand clapped him on the shoulder and a hearty voice said, ‘You should have told me you were coming.’
Bernardo was the hotel manager, a plump, hearty man in his mid-forties. Luke had stayed here before on business trips to Rome, and they had always been on good terms.
‘It was a last-minute decision,’ Luke said, trying to sound cheerful. ‘I find myself the owner of a building in Rome and it needs my attention.’
‘Property? I thought you were in manufacturing.’
‘I am. This place was given to me in repayment of a debt.’
‘Round here?’
‘No, Trastevere.’
Bernardo raised his eyebrows. If Parioli was Rome’s most elegant area, Trastevere was its most colourful.
‘I gather it’s in a poor state of repair,’ Luke said. ‘When I’ve put it right, I’ll sell it.’
‘Why not just sell it now? Let someone else bother with the repairs.’
‘Signora Pepino would never let me get away with that,’ Luke said with a grin. ‘She’s a lawyer who lives and works there, and has already bombarded me with letters saying what she expects me to do.’
‘And you’ll do what this woman tells you?’
‘She isn’t a woman, she’s a dragon. That’s why I didn’t tell her I was coming. I can get a look at the place before she starts breathing fire at me.’
‘Is that the only reason?’ Bernardo asked, regarding him shrewdly.
Luke shrugged.
‘Ah, a lovely lady broke your heart and now-’
‘No woman has ever broken my heart,’ Luke said sharply. ‘I don’t allow that to happen.’
‘Very wise.’
‘I let myself get a little too close to a woman, although I knew she was in love with another man. It was a mistake, but mistakes can be put right. A wise man sees the danger and takes action.’
‘And you managed that with your customary efficiency?’
‘My what?’
‘You’re known as a man who believes in good order, keeps things in proportion, and stays invulnerable. I envy you. It must make life simple. But now you need to get blissfully roaring drunk, with good companions who will put you safely to bed afterwards.’
‘For pity’s sake, Bernardo, how often have you seen me like that?’
‘Not often enough. It’s unnatural.’
Luke gave a reluctant laugh. ‘Maybe, but it helps a man stay in charge of his life, and that’s what matters. Goodnight.’
He went to his room quickly, suddenly uneasy in Bernardo’s company. For a moment he’d seen himself through his friend’s eyes, a man who prized good order and self-control above all else: a cold, hard man, who gave little and counted it out carefully first.
It wasn’t so far from the truth, he thought. But it had never troubled him before.
He checked the messages on his cellphone and the words,
‘Hi, Mamma. Yes, I got here safely. Everything’s fine.’
‘Have you met Signora Pepino yet?’
‘I’ve barely arrived. I’ve had a meal, that’s all. Let me settle in before I confront her. I need all my courage.’
His mother’s exasperated voice reached him down the line. ‘Don’t pretend you’re afraid of her.’
‘I am. I’m shaking in my shoes, I swear it.’
‘You’ll go to hell for telling lies, and serve you right.’
He chuckled. She always made him feel better.
In his mind he could see her in the Villa Rinucci, high up on the hill. She liked to take phone calls on the terrace, looking out over the Bay of Naples, the most glorious view in the world, according to her. It would be dark now, with only the twinkling lights breaking through the black velvet, but the beauty was still there.
‘Are you exhausted after all the festivities?’ he asked.
‘I’ve no time for that. I’m planning the party for Primo and Olympia’s engagement.’
‘I thought we had that last night.’
‘No, that was just the tail end of Justin’s wedding,’ she said, naming her first son. ‘One wedding begets another, and naturally we toasted Primo and Olympia, but they’ll want a proper engagement celebration of their own.’
‘And if they don’t they’re going to get it anyway,’ he said with wry fondness.
‘Well, you can’t expect me to pass up the chance of a party,’ she said reasonably.
‘It would never occur to me that you’d pass up the chance of a party,’ he said truthfully. ‘And after that, there’s the wedding, unless Olympia’s mother has some mad idea of organising it herself.’
‘Oh, no, we discussed that last night, and she quite agrees with me.’
‘You mean she can’t stand up to you any more than the rest of us,’ he said with a laugh.
‘I don’t know what you mean,’ Hope said, affronted. And she really didn’t.
‘I look forward to it. I won’t miss the chance to gloat over brother Primo’s downfall.’
‘You’ll meet the right one for you,’ Hope said, like all mothers.
‘Maybe not. I might just settle for being a curmudgeonly old bachelor.’
Hope crowed with laughter. ‘A handsome boy like you?’
‘Boy? I’m thirty-eight.’
‘You’ll always be a boy to me. Your wife is next on my list, and don’t you forget it. Now, go and have a good time.’
‘Mamma, it’s eleven o’clock.’