“Not just now, but we will be again. For the moment she is terribly torn between being American and French. That kind of thing can be hard.”
“So can being fifteen.” He remembered with horror his sister at the same age. “Does she look like you?” He hadn’t been able to tell from the distant glimpses in Deanna’s paintings.
“Not at all. She is the image of her father. She’s a very pretty girl.”
“So is her mother.”
For a moment Deanna said nothing, then she smiled. “Thank you, sir.”
The conversation drifted back then to art. He stayed away from painful and personal subjects, but sometimes she wondered if he was even listening. He seemed to be watching her all the time and saying other things with his eyes. It was midnight when at last they were encouraged to leave.
“I had a marvelous evening.” She smiled at him happily as he drew up alongside the parked Jaguar.
“So did I.” He said nothing more. As she started her car, he backed away with a wave. She saw him in her rearview mirror, walking back to his own car, his hands in his pockets and his head pensively bowed.
She was already in bed, with the lights out, when the telephone rang. But the rapid whir of the lines told her it was long distance.
“Deanna?” It was Marc.
“Hello, darling. Where are you?”
“In Rome. At the Hassler, if you need me. Are you all right?” But the connection was poor. It was very hard to hear.
“I’m fine. Why are you in Rome?”
“What? I can’t hear you…”
“I said why are you in Rome?”
“I’m here on business. For Salco. But I’ll see Pilar this weekend.”
“Give her my love.” She was sitting up in the dark and shouting to make herself heard.
“I can’t hear you!”
“I said give her my love.”
“Good. Fine. I will. Do you need money?”
“No, I’m fine.” For a moment all she heard was static and gibberish again. “I love you.” For some reason she needed to tell him that and to hear him say the same. She needed a bond to him, but he seemed an interminable distance away.
“I love you, Marc!” And for no reason she could understand, she found that there were tears in her eyes. She wanted him to hear her, she wanted to hear herself. “I love you!”
“What?”
And then they were cut off.
She quickly dialed the overseas operator and asked her for Rome. But it took another twenty-five minutes to put through her call. The operator at the Hassler answered with a rapid,
She lay back in the dark and thought of her evening with Ben.
7
Marc-Edouard Duras walked along the Via Veneto in Rome, glancing into shop windows and occasionally casting an admiring glance at a pretty girl wandering past. It was a brilliantly sunny day, and the women were wearing T-shirts with narrow straps, white skirts that clung to shapely legs, and sandals that bared red enameled toes. He smiled to himself as he walked, the briefcase under his arm. It didn’t make sense really, this brief sojourn in Italy, but after all, why not? And he had promised…
He paused for a moment, an aristocratic figure in an impeccably tailored gray suit, waiting for the machine-gun spurt of Roman traffic to hurtle past him, casting itself hurly-burly in all directions, sending pedestrians scurrying in flight. He smiled as he watched an old woman wave a parasol and then make an obscene gesture.
“Did you buy the bracelets?” His eyes caressed her neck, and as she shook her head, the chestnut hair danced beneath the hat he had bought her only that morning. It was frivolous, but delightful. And so was she. “Well?”
Her eyes laughed into his. She shook her head again. “No, again I didn’t buy them.” Unexpectedly, she tossed a small package into his lap. “I bought you that instead.” She sat back, waiting for him to open it.
“And you don’t spoil me?” Without waiting for an answer, she signaled for a waiter.
“Inviting me to drinks, too?” She never waited for him to take matters in hand. Chantal liked to run her own show.
“Oh, shut up. What’ll you have?”
“Scotch.” She ordered it the way he liked it, and he watched her eyes for a long moment as they sat beneath the umbrella. The beginnings of the lunchtime crowd swirled colorfully around them. “Will you always be this independent, my love?”
“Always. Now open your gift.”
“You’re impossible.” But that was precisely what had always fascinated him about her. She was impossible. And he loved it. Like a wild mare running free on the plains of Camargue. They had gone there together once, the land of the French cowboys and the beautiful, wild, white horses. He had always thought of her that way after that. Untamed, just a fraction out of reach, yet more or less his. More or less. He liked to think it was more rather than