Prince's Virgin In Venice. Trish Morey
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‘Ciao,’ she said, her voice deadpan, and Rosa couldn’t be certain that she was saying hello as opposed to giving her a dismissal.
She immediately turned back to Vittorio, angling her back towards Rosa.
Definitely a dismissal.
‘Vittorio, come with me—all our friends are in the other room.’
‘I’m here with Rosa.’
‘With who? Oh...’
She gave Rosa another look up and down, her eyes evaluating her as if she was a rival for Vittorio’s affections. Ridiculous. She’d only just met the man tonight. But she wasn’t mistaken. There was clear animosity in the woman’s eyes.
‘And what do you think of Vittorio’s outfit...? What was your name again?’
‘Rosa,’ Vittorio growled. ‘Her name is Rosa. It’s not that difficult.’
‘Of course it’s not.’ Sirena gave a lilting laugh as she turned to the woman whose name she couldn’t remember and smiled. ‘What do you think of Vittorio’s outfit? Don’t you think it’s a bit over the top?’
‘I like it,’ she said. ‘I like the blue of the leather. It matches his eyes.’
‘It’s not just blue, though, is it?’ Sirena said dismissively. ‘It’s more like royal blue—isn’t it, Vittorio?’
‘That’s enough, Sirena.’
‘Well, I would have said it was royal blue.’
‘Enough, I said.’
The woman pouted and stretched herself catlike along the brocade chaise longue behind her, the beads of her skirt falling in a liquid slide to reveal the tops of her long, slender legs—legs that ended in sandals with straps that wound their way enticingly around her ankles.
The woman made an exquisite Cleopatra. But then, she was so exquisitely beautiful the real Cleopatra would no doubt have wanted to scratch out her eyes.
‘It’s all right, Vittorio, despite our difference in opinion Rosa and I are going to be good friends.’ She smiled regally at Rosa. ‘I like your costume,’ she said.
For the space of one millisecond Rosa thought the woman was warming to her, wanted so much to believe she meant what she’d said. Rosa had spent many midnight hours perched over her mother’s old sewing machine, battling with the slippery material and trying to get the seams and the fit just right. But then she saw the snigger barely contained beneath the smile and realised the woman hadn’t been handing out a compliment.
‘Rosa made it herself—didn’t you, Rosa?’
‘I did.’
Cleopatra’s perfectly threaded eyebrows shot up. ‘How...enterprising.’
Vittorio’s presence beside her lent Rosa a strength she hadn’t known she had, reminding her of what her brothers had always told her—not to be cowed by bullies but to stand up to them.
Her brothers were right, but it was a lot easier to take their advice when she had a man like Vittorio standing beside her.
Rosa simply smiled, not wanting to show what she really thought. ‘Thank you. Your costume is lovely too. Did you make it yourself?’
The other woman stared at her as if she had three heads. ‘Of course I didn’t make it myself.’
‘A shame,’ Rosa said. ‘If you had you might have noticed that there’s a loose thread...’
She reached a hand out to the imaginary thread and the woman bolted upright and onto her sandalled feet, a whole lot less elegantly than she had reclined, no doubt imagining one tug of Rosa’s hand unleashing a waterfall of glass beads across the Persian carpet.
‘This gown is an Emilio Ferraro creation. Of course there’s no loose thread.’
‘Oh, I’m sorry. I must have been mistaken.’
Sirena sniffed, jerked her eyes from Rosa’s and placed a possessive hand on Vittorio’s chest. ‘Come and see our friends when you’re free. You won’t believe what they’re wearing. I’ll be waiting for you.’
And with a swish of her beaded hair and skirt she was gone.
‘That,’ said Vittorio, ‘was Sirena.’
‘Cyclone Sirena, you mean,’ Rosa said, watching the woman spinning out of the room as quickly as she’d come in, leaving a trail of devastation in her wake.
She heard a snort and looked up to see Vittorio smiling down at her. It was a real smile that warmed her bone-deep, so different from one of Sirena’s ice-cold glares.
‘You handled that very well.’
‘And you thought I wouldn’t?’ she said. ‘My brothers taught me to stand up to bullies.’ She didn’t mention that it was Vittorio’s presence that had given her the courage to heed her brothers’ advice.
‘Good advice,’ he said, nodding. ‘If she finds that thread you saw she’ll bust the balls of her precious Emilio.’
Rosa returned his smile with one of her own. ‘There was no thread.’
And Vittorio laughed—a rich bellow that was laced with approval and that made a tide of happiness well up inside her.
‘Thank you,’ he said, his arm going around her shoulders as he leaned down to kiss her cheek. ‘For the best belly laugh I’ve had in a long time.’
It wasn’t really a kiss. Mouth to cheek...a brush of a whiskered jaw...a momentary meeting of lips and skin—probably the same kind of kiss he might bestow upon a great-aunt. Even his arm was gone from her shoulder in an instant. Yet to Rosa it felt far more momentous.
It was the single most exciting moment in her life since she’d arrived in Venice.
Chiara had told her that magical things could happen at Carnevale. She’d told her a whole lot of things and Rosa hadn’t believed her. She’d suspected it was just part of Chiara’s sales technique, in order to persuade Rosa to part with so much money and go along to the ball with her.
But maybe her friend had been right. Rosa had been kissed by a man. She couldn’t wait to tell her friend.
‘You’re blushing,’ said Vittorio, his head at an angle as he looked down at her.
She felt her blush deepen and dropped her head. ‘Yes, it’s silly, I know.’
He put his hand to her chin and lifted her face to his. ‘No,’ he said. ‘It’s delightful. It’s been a long time since I saw a woman blush.’
She blinked up at him, her skin tingling where his fingers lingered.