1 ...6 7 8 10 11 12 ...24 When they reached a door with a ‘fornace’ sign they went inside to watch a demonstration of the ancient craft that had made Murano famous. Laura watched, fascinated, as the glass blower took a blob of molten paste on the end of an iron rod, and with a skilled, dangerous-looking process of twisting, turning and blowing transformed it into a perfect wine goblet.
‘Amazing, Domenico,’ she said as they began a tour of the showroom afterwards. ‘It’s probably all in a day’s work to that man, and nothing new to you, but it looked like pure magic to me.’
‘With you at my side, Laura, everything in Venice is new to me also,’ he said, smiling down at her as she looked at the dazzling array of glass artefacts. ‘Have you something in mind for your friend’s bride gift? What type of house will she live in?’
‘Her fiancé originally bought a flat in a beautiful Georgian house in Pennington, but he now owns the entire property.’ She gestured at some extravagantly modern pieces. ‘Those are wonderful from a technical point of view, but I want something more traditional, to suit their house.’
Laura would have found it hard to resist the pressure from some of the sales staff on her own, but with Domenico on hand they were left in peace to browse.
‘Would she like these?’ he asked, pointing at a display of candlesticks and candelabra. ‘ Millefiori is not everyone’s taste, but perhaps she would like the aventurine , which uses gold.’
Laura nodded enthusiastically. ‘Exactly Fen’s sort of thing.’
After lengthy deliberation on style and cost, she eventually chose a pair of tall candlesticks with hair-fine strands of gold twined through their serpentine, tactile curves. Domenico did some efficient haggling, which brought the price down considerably, but in the end Laura decided against having them shipped.
‘Just in case they don’t arrive in time for the wedding,’ she told him. ‘I must have my present ready for the big day. Thanks a lot for the expert bargaining.’
He smiled, and took charge of the gift as they went to catch the vaporetto back to San Marco. ‘So. I have my uses!’
‘Oh, very definitely,’ she assured him, ‘one of which is to tell me who is on the other pillar.’
‘Cosa?’ he said blankly.
‘At the entrance to San Marco. The lion of Venice is on one pillar, but who stands on the other one?’
‘Ah! That is San Teodoro,’ he said, enlightened. ‘Saint Theodore to you. And be warned: superstitious Venetians never walk between the pillars because in the past executions took place there. And now,’ he added, ‘I have a confession to make.’
‘Another one?’ she said, laughing.
‘I went early to the market this morning, and in my hurry afterwards I forgot your shopping again.’
‘Never mind, I can pick it up on my way back to the hotel.’
‘And we shall eat lunch at the apartment. Or we can go out, of course,’ he added quickly.
‘I prefer your apartment.’ She smiled at him as they left the boat. ‘I like it very much, Domenico.’
‘Do you like me very much, also?’ he asked, so utterly serious Laura gave him a startled look.
‘Yes, I do.’
‘Bene!’ he said with satisfaction, and took her hand. ‘Do not worry. I shall not drop the candeliere .’
Laura volunteered to make an omelette to accompany the bread and salad Domenico had bought fresh that morning, and after sizing up the cooker and the pan he gave her she uttered a silent prayer and got to work with butter, eggs and herbs. Domenico watched in approval as for the final touch she gave the pan a brisk shake, folded the omelette in half, and slid two crisp, soft-centred portions onto the plates he had ready.
‘Perfetto,’ he assured her as they began eating.
‘You’re being kind,’ she told him, delighted that her effort had turned out so well.
‘No, I am truthful.’ He smiled as he helped her to salad. ‘The frittata is delicious and so is the chef. This is a very special occasion for me. Except for my mother no woman has ever offered to make lunch for me here.’
Laura didn’t want to hear about other women in Domenico’s apartment. ‘You can make me some tea as my reward,’ she told him.
‘Of course,’ he said, and laid a peeled peach on her plate. ‘But afterwards you must do as we Venetians do and rest for a while before we go on with the day. So this afternoon is it to be the Guggenheim or the Basilica? I do not advise both.’
‘The Basilica. Let’s do ancient today and modern tomorrow—if you still have time to spare for tomorrow?’ she added, flushing.
‘My time is yours until you leave,’ he reminded her as he got up to make her tea. ‘Which is not long now. You must come back again soon, Laura.’
‘Not possible, I’m afraid. I won’t be able to afford another trip to Venice for quite a while,’ she said with regret.
He frowned as he put a teabag in a cup. ‘If cost is a problem I could—’
‘No, you couldn’t, Domenico,’ she said gently.
Instead of arguing, as she’d half expected, he made her tea, added milk, and gave her the cup. ‘First you drink this tea, then you rest in the salotto .’
‘I want to help clear up,’ she objected.
‘No, cara —you did the cooking,’ he said firmly. ‘Is the tea to your taste?’
It was too weak and milky by far, but Laura assured him it was delicious and drank every drop. Afterwards she spent a few minutes on repairs in the bathroom, then made for the window in the sitting room to look down at the water traffic on the sunlit water below, amused as she contrasted it with her daily commute in London.
‘You smile like the Mona Lisa ,’ said Domenico behind her.
She turned to him. ‘I was looking at all these people travelling about on the water in the sunshine—a bit different from my daily trips on the Docklands Light Railway.’
‘This train is convenient for your apartment?’
She nodded. ‘I live in a part of London called Bow, so the DLR, as we locals call it, is almost door to door from my flat to the bank.’
He took her hand in his and drew her down to sit beside him. ‘Tell me about your flat, Laura.’
‘It’s very small, with only one bedroom, and very different from this. But on the plus side it’s in a building with a gym and a pool. I’ve been very grateful for both assets since the downward turn in my social life.’ She yawned suddenly. ‘Sorry. It must be the Venice air.’
‘Come, it is early yet. Put your head on that cushion and enjoy a short siesta . Then later we shall tour the Basilica.’
Laura found it all too easy to do as he said. She curled up in her corner of his sofa, so utterly at ease now in Domenico’s company that she was soon asleep.
He sat back, resisting the urge to stroke the gleaming braid trailing over Laura’s shoulder. He looked at her flushed, sleeping face, the desire he could not ignore mixed with a protective feeling new to him in his dealings with women. When Lorenzo Forli had requested—no, ordered him to take care of Fenella’s friend he had never imagined in his wildest dreams that she would appeal to him so strongly.
He sat very still as she stirred, but she merely turned her face deeper into the cushion, and he let out a deep breath and relaxed. In the years since Alessa’s desertion, which had cut deeper and hurt for much longer than he had allowed anyone to know, his dealings with women had been lighthearted, casual affairs conducted discreetly, with no involvement of the heart, and in some cases, he thought wryly, of the brain, either. But Laura was different. He desired her as a lover, as was only natural, but he also liked and respected her as a person. Unlike this idiot Edward of hers, he would not reject friendship if she offered it. But it took self-control he had not known he possessed to keep from touching her.
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