She began her tentative exploration with his chest, then his back. Michael worked out, but not like this man.
Her hands crept to his abdomen, which was tightly ridged like an athlete’s. His trousers were gone-when had he gotten rid of them?-and his boxers were black silk.
She touched him through the thin fabric and heard the quick catch of breath. Real or feigned, she didn’t know. One thing, however, wasn’t an illusion. He’d been born with a natural gift for the gigolo trade.
She felt her panties being slipped off.
He gazed up at her. In the dim light she saw the question in his expression. She shook her head. He shrugged and reached toward the bedside table.
She hadn’t once thought about condoms. Apparently she’d developed a death wish along with her other hang- ups. He slipped it on as smoothly as he did everything else, then began to draw her close, but she seized what little sanity she had left and held up two fingers.
With a look that had “crazy foreigner” written all over it, he reached for another condom. This time his motions weren’t effortless. He had to struggle to fit latex over latex, and she looked away because his clumsiness made him seem human, and she didn’t want that.
His hand brushed her hip, then her thighs. He pressed them open again, ready to practice more refinements on her, but this intimacy was too much for her. A tear leaked from the corner of her eye. She turned her head and blotted it on the pillow before he noticed. She wanted an orgasm, damn it, not drunken, self-pitying tears. An exquisite orgasm that would clear her mind so she could give her full attention to reinventing her life.
She tugged to pull him on top of her. When he hesitated, she tugged harder, and finally he did as she wanted. His hair brushed her cheek, and she heard the rough rasp of his breathing as he slipped a finger inside her. It felt good, but he was too close, and the wine sloshed uneasily in her stomach, and she should have made him lie on his back so she could get on top.
His touch grew slower, more tantalizing, but she wanted to get where they were going, and she pulled on his hips to urge him inside her. At last he moved his legs and resettled.
She realized right away that it wouldn’t be an easy fit, not like with Michael. She gritted her teeth and wiggled against him until his self-control gave way and he embedded himself inside her.
Even then he wouldn’t move along, so she tilted her hips, urging him to hurry, to get her where she needed to be, to finish up so she could be done with this before the sober whispers invading her wine-soaked brain turned into shouts and she had to deal with the fact that she was violating everything she believed in and
He angled, pulled back, and gazed down at her with hot, glazed eyes. She closed her own eyes so she wouldn’t have to look at him, as superb as he was. He slipped his hands between their bodies and rubbed her, but his patience only made everything worse. The wine curdled in her stomach. She pushed his arm away and moved her hips. Eventually he took the hint and began a slow, thorough thrusting. She bit her lip and counted backward, counted forward, pushed his hand away again, and fought the bleakness of self-betrayal.
Eons passed before he convulsed. She endured his shudders and waited for the moment when he would roll to his side. When it finally came, she leaped from the bed.
“Annette?”
She ignored him and shoved herself into her clothes.
“Annette?
She reached into her purse, threw a handful of bills on the bed, and fled from the room.
4
Eighteen hours later her blinding headache still hadn’t eased. She was somewhere southwest of Florence trying to drive a stick shift Fiat Panda through the dark night on a strange road marked with signs in a language she couldn’t read. Her knit dress had bunched under the seat belt, and she’d been too groggy to do her hair. She hated herself like this-messy, disorganized, depressed. She wondered how many disastrous missteps an intelligent woman could take and still keep her head up. Considering the current condition of her head, this woman had taken a few too many.
A sign flashed by before she could read it. She slowed, pulled off to the side of the road, and made herself back up. No worry about hitting anyone coming from behind, since she hadn’t seen another car for miles.
The Tuscan countryside was reputed to be exquisitely beautiful, but she’d made the trip after dark, so she hadn’t seen much. She should have gotten an earlier start, but she hadn’t been able to drag herself out of bed until late afternoon. Then she’d simply sat in front of the window and stared, trying to pray but unable to do so.
The Panda’s headlights came to rest on the sign. CASALLEONE. She turned on the dome light to look at the directions and saw that she’d somehow managed to stumble back onto the proper road. God protected fools.
Someplace else, that was for certain. But she couldn’t blame God or even all the wine she’d drunk for what had happened. Her own character defects had driven her to monumental stupidity. She’d rejected everything she believed in, only to discover that Dr. Favor had been right as usual. Sex couldn’t heal the broken places.
She pulled back out onto the road. Like so many other people’s, her broken places originated in childhood, but how long could you keep blaming your parents for your own failures? Her parents had been college professors who’d thrived on chaos and emotional excess. Her mother was boozy, brilliant, and intensely sexual. Her father: boozy, brilliant, and hostile. Despite being authorities in their respective academic fields, neither could achieve tenure. Her mother had a tendency to indulge in affairs with her students, and her father had a penchant for getting into shouting matches with his colleagues. Isabel had spent her childhood being dragged from one college town to the next, an unwilling witness to lives that had spun out of control.
While other children yearned to escape their parents’ discipline, Isabel craved a structure that never came. Instead, her parents used her as a pawn in their battles. In a desperate act of self-preservation, she’d turned her back on them at eighteen. She’d been on her own ever since. Six years ago her father had died of liver failure, and her mother had followed not long after. She’d done her duty at the end, but she hadn’t mourned them as much as she’d mourned the waste of their lives.
Her headlights picked out a narrow, winding street with picturesque stone buildings set close to the road. As she drove farther, she saw a collection of shops shuttered for the night. Everything in the town seemed old and quaint except for the giant Mel Gibson movie poster plastered on the wall of a building. In smaller letters beneath the title, she made out the name Lorenzo Gage.
That’s when it hit her. Dante hadn’t reminded her of a figure in a Renaissance painting. He’d been a ringer for Lorenzo Gage, the actor who’d recently driven her favorite actress to suicide.
Her stomach felt queasy again. How many of Gage’s movies had she seen? Four? Five? Way too many, but Michael loved action films, the more violent the better. Now she’d never have to see another one.
She wondered if Gage felt any remorse for Karli Swenson’s death. It would probably add to his box-office appeal. Why were nice women so fascinated with bad boys? The rescue fantasy, she supposed-the need to believe they were the only women powerful enough to transform those losers into husbands and fathers. Too bad it wasn’t that easy.
She cleared the edge of the town, then turned on the dome light again to see the rest of the directions:
Rusty ape? She envisioned King Kong with a bad dye job. Two kilometers later her headlights picked out a lumpy shape off to the side of the road. She slowed and saw that the rusty Ape wasn’t of the gorilla variety, but the