New Year Fireworks. Diana Hamilton

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I contacted her by radio. By then she was battling twenty-four-foot swells and the boat was taking on water.”

      He could still hear her shrill panic, still remember the utter desperation and helplessness that had ripped through him. He could save the life of a two-year-old, but he couldn’t save his wife.

      “The last time I heard her voice was when she sent out an urgent S.O.S. The radio went dead in midbroadcast.”

      “How sad,” Sabrina whispered. “You never got to say goodbye.”

      He flashed her a quick look, startled by her insight. For all their ups and downs, all the arguments and hot, angry exchanges, he’d never stopped loving his passionate, temperamental Gianetta. He’d sell his soul to be able to tell her so.

      “You remind me of her,” he said after a long moment. “You have the same color hair, the same eyes. Yesterday morning, on the road … For a second or two I thought perhaps I was seeing a ghost.”

      “So that’s why you almost ran me over!”

      Sabrina struggled upright on the sofa. She wasn’t sure she liked being mistaken for a poltergeist, even briefly. And now that she thought about it, she realized Marco wasn’t the only one who’d made that mistake.

      “Now I know why Rafaela gaped at me at the clinic. Why her mama stared at me when I first arrived. Do I look that much like your Gianetta?”

      His gaze roamed her face. “The resemblance is startling at first glance, but I assure you it’s merely superficial. As I’ve discovered in the course of our brief acquaintance, Ms. Russo, you are very much your own woman.”

      “You got that right.”

      His slow smile banished the ghosts. “And very, very desirable.”

      Well! That was better. Mollified, Sabrina sank back against the cushions. She would have liked to draw Marco out a little more about his wife but she sensed his need for a shift in both subject and mood.

      A quick glance at her watch indicated they still had some time to kill before the car arrived. She should get on her laptop. She needed to reconfirm her appointments for the next few days and update Devon and Caroline on the latest developments in her changing-by-the-minute schedule.

      With Marco standing so close, though, Sabrina couldn’t force her mind into work mode. Instead she nodded to the small, square table in the corner.

      “I see you have a chessboard set up. We still have some time before the car arrives. Do you want to take me on?”

      “You play?”

      “Occasionally. When I do,” she warned, “I usually draw blood.”

      “Ha!” He crossed to the table, lifting it with ease, and moved it into position beside the sofa. “We shall see.”

      Seen up close, the pieces drew a gasp of delight from Sabrina. They were medieval warriors from the time of the Crusades, with armor and weaponry depicted in exquisite detail. The Christian bishops carried the shields of fierce Knights Templar. The Muslim king was mounted on an Arabian steed. Even the queens wore armored breastplates below their circlets and veils.

      “White or red?” Marco asked.

      She chose white and saw that that the box containing the pieces also included a timer.

      “The game will go faster if we play speed chess. How about two minutes max per move?”

      When Marco nodded, she hit the timer to start the clock and moved a pawn in the slightly unconventional Bird’s Opening, named for the nineteenth-century English master, Henry Bird.

      Marco glanced up, his eyes narrowed, and countered with From’s Gambit. Four moves later, Sabrina put him in check and had to bite her lip to keep from laughing at his stunned expression.

      “You weren’t joking about drawing blood. Who taught you to play like this?”

      “My father. Chess is about the only thing we share a common interest in.”

      He lifted his gaze from the board. Sabrina deflected the curiosity she saw in his eyes by tapping the button on the timer.

      “The clock’s ticking. Your move, fella.”

      Frowning, he moved his rook to protect his king. She smothered a grin and countered with her knight.

      “Checkmate.”

      Marco’s brows snapped together. He scowled at the board, searching for another move, but she had him boxed in.

      “I demand a rematch.”

      Sabrina took him three games to two and was about to put him in check again when the notes of a door chime cascaded through the intercom.

      “That must be my mother’s chauffeur. We’ll finish this game when we return.”

      “Some folks are just gluttons for punishment.”

      While he went to trade car keys with the driver, Sabrina descended to the guest suite to slip on her jacket and grab her briefcase. The briefcase thumped awkwardly against her crutch as she hit the elevator again.

      Marco was waiting when she emerged on the top floor. He’d pulled on his buttery suede bomber jacket and hooked a pair of mirrored aviator sunglasses in the neck of his black sweater.

       Oh, man! Oh, man, oh, man, oh, man!

      Suddenly, avidly eager to complete her business and get back to the villa, Sabrina let him take the briefcase and went through the door he held open for her.

      She stopped just over the threshold. Her eyes widened when she took in the gleaming Rolls parked under the portico. “This is your mother’s sedan?”

      “One of them,” Marco answered calmly as he opened the passenger door of the chrome-plated behemoth. “She likes to travel in comfort.”

      Sabrina was no stranger to limos or Rolls Royces. Her father never drove anywhere when he could be driven. This baby, however, was a classic. With its massive grill, elongated body and top folded down into an oversize trunk, it had been crafted before the automobile industry cared about such minutia as weight and fuel efficiency.

      The prospect of taking the narrow, hairpin turns in this monster made Sabrina gulp. Resolutely, she quashed her nervousness and handed Marco the crutches.

      “Do you have enough room?” he asked when she sank into cloud-soft leather.

      “More than enough.” She waved an imperious hand. “Drive on, McDuff.”

      Tourists of all nationalities had made the arduous ascent to the mountaintop town of Ravello for centuries. First by donkey cart, then by motorized vehicles, they climbed roads so steep and narrow that traffic had to back up in both directions to let a tour bus pass.

      The views alone were worth the nerve-bending trip and the reason Ravello had drawn so many artists over the years. Their ranks had included D. H. Lawrence, who wrote Lady Chatterley’s Lover while ensconced in a

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