Her Perfect Man- The Complete Series Box Set

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Her Perfect Man- The Complete Series Box Set Page 24

by Z. L. Arkadie


  6

  Giulia, the receptionist operating the front desk, is organizing her overstuffed space.

  She looks over the top of her glasses. “Ciao, Liza,” she says in the same automatic tone as always. But then, she looks down. Her eyes widen. “Oh my, who is this?”

  “This is Aiden.” I grunt while picking him up out of his stroller.

  He studies her face.

  “Say ciao, Aiden,” I say.

  “Ciao,” he says.

  “What a handsome baby,” Giulia says.

  Elsa comes around the corner. “Liza—” She stops dead in her tracks, and her entire face drops. “Is Floriana ill today?”

  “No. I’m just… I’m just doing it myself, that’s all.”

  Her frown intensifies. “What are you doing by yourself?”

  “Taking care of my child.”

  She studies me some more, then glances at Giulia, who shrugs. Elsa walks up to Aiden, who’s already giggling at her. “Hello, sweetie. I love seeing your little face, even if your mommy is losing her marbles.” Her eyes roll slowly from his face to mine. “Then Floriana is not ill?”

  “I… unhired her.”

  “You unhired the nanny?” she repeats slowly.

  “Uh huh,” I say, feeling her dissatisfaction with my decision.

  Giulia turns her attention away from Elsa, Aiden, and me to answer a ringing phone line.

  I sigh, tired of the inquiry. I see no reason why Aiden can’t be here with me today. He’s a good kid. “Look, I know I’m late for the meeting but…”

  Elsa waves a hand flippantly. “We don’t need a meeting. Your interview has been canceled. TV Ora stole your interview yet again.”

  My jaw drops. “Another one?”

  Elsa shakes her head as if she’s still trying to comprehend the full meaning of what I’m presenting to her. She holds up a folded sheet of paper. “This will save you, save us, but first, let’s talk.” Her eyes veer toward Aiden.

  I nod curtly. “Okay.”

  “I’ll meet you in your office. I must go to accounting.” She shakes her finger. “But I will be right back.”

  When I make it to my office, I set Aiden in the chair, then close the door and draw the blinds.

  He starts to slide out of the chair. “Play, Momma!”

  I watch him fish the portable DVD player out of his bag, hit the on button, and dance and sing with Barney and friends. Damn that purple dinosaur—he’s such a lifesaver.

  It only takes about ten minutes for Aiden to plop down on the carpet, lie on his side, and fall asleep. Goodness gracious, I envy a child’s ability to sleep anywhere at any time. I adjust his stroller to make it comfortable for sleeping, scoop him up off the carpet, and lay him in it.

  There’s a knock at my door.

  “It’s open,” I say.

  I look up. It’s Elsa.

  “He fell asleep already?”

  I walk back to my desk and sit. “The magic of Barney.”

  Elsa takes the seat across from mine and sniffs, only mildly amused. “So what has happened in your life to make you fire Floriana?"

  I raise a finger to correct her. “Un-hire, not fire.”

  She shrugs. “What is the difference?"

  “She didn’t do anything wrong. She was a great nanny, but…” I sigh at the gravity of articulating the explanation for my actions.

  “Okay so, again, what part of the sky has fallen?”

  I sigh and look in her eyes. “My brother called me yesterday.”

  I tell her everything that happened, from hearing about John’s arrest to me walking out on Salvatore at the restaurant. She silently shakes her head, seemingly disturbed.

  “It’s me, Elsa. I pick the wrong men, and on top of that, I’m turning out to be just like my selfish mother. You know who raised me during my formidable years? Cora May, my nanny. And my mom fired her when I was eleven because I accidentally called Cora my mother in front of her,” I say so fast that my head is spinning.

  She puts her hand on mine. “I am very sorry, Liza.”

  I look away, biting down on my back teeth. “And John… I killed my father by marrying him.”

  “No,” she says quickly. I turn to face her, and she’s waving her finger at me. “You cannot take the blame for what that man has done. People are people, and life holds no guarantees.”

  I look at her, confused.

  “What I am saying is, there are all sorts of people in this world. Many are good, many are bad, but for the most part, we are all both good and bad. And we will cross paths with the bad ones—we must. The numbers support it. If those bad people hurt you or the ones you love, then it is not your fault as much as a lesson. You grow, and you don’t go back for more.”

  “But I went back for more.”

  She lifts an eyebrow. “You are not with him now.”

  “He left me, remember?”

  Elsa shakes her head. “That is not how I remember it. He tried to steal your inheritance, and when you heard about it, you left him. That was your choice.”

  My eyebrows furrow. I guess she’s right.

  Elsa continues studying me, then lets out a sharp sigh. “We will talk more later. First…” She hands me the folded sheet of paper she showed me earlier.

  I take it and unfold the sheet. On it is scribbled a telephone number and address. I look at Elsa, my eyes narrowed.

  “That is Gianfranco Guardi’s telephone number and address.”

  “The Gianfranco Guardi? The famous artist with the most beautiful estate in this part of the country? The Gianfranco Guardi who has said no seven times to our request for a tour and interview?”

  “He also said no to TV Ora.”

  “How did you get him to say yes?” I ask.

  “The butler called this morning to say he’ll do it.”

  My grin grows, and I sit back victoriously in my seat. “Talk about the light at the end of the tunnel!”

  Elsa follows in kind. “Yes. What you said.” She nods at me. “Call. Now.”

  “Right now?” I’m a little panicked.

  If we get this interview signed, sealed, and delivered, then my “street cred” will go up. Gianfranco Guardi says yes, and everyone will follow. The Guardi estate is still a mystery to most people. It was bought by the “infamous” painter Francesco Guardi and has been handed down through the generations. Rumors say that Francesco’s spirit still haunts the halls, and that’s why Gianfranco, the current owner, rarely lets anyone in. I’ve heard that he hosts dinners, but they’re only for his close friends and colleagues, of which I am neither.

  “Yes. Now.”

  I bop my head giddily as I pick up the phone and dial the number.

  7

  I hang up the phone and look at Elsa with wide eyes.

  “What?” she asks, sitting on the edge of her seat.

  I nod incessantly. “I can do the interview, but it has to be today in…” I check my watch. “Three hours.”

  Elsa scratches her head, then looks from me to Aiden as though she’s deliberating. “Okay. I will watch the baby. Now go. Go quickly.” She shoos me away.

  The crew and I have been driving for an hour to the Guardi estate, and now we’re making our way up an unpaved road. The ride is bumpy, and we’re all trying to keep anything from falling on our heads and killing us before we can nail the interview of a lifetime.

  My phone rings. I consider not answering it, but it might be Gianfranco calling to change his mind. In that case, should I answer it? Getting all the way up to the estate only to watch Arianna Pacheco of TV Ora and her crew doing my interview would be embarrassing.

  “Are you going to answer?” Michael, the sound technician, says.

  I think he’s tired of hearing my phone ring. I fish it out of my purse and look at the screen. It’s Salvatore.

  I take one deep, cleansing sigh. “Pronto.”

  “Ciao, bella!” he sings as if nothing contentious occurred between us last night.

/>   “I don’t have a lot of time.”

  The van shakes violently after striking a hole. Lupo, the cameraman, raises a hand to steady the equipment stacked to the side of me.

  “Easy,” Lupo says to Virgil, the driver and light technician.

  “I know, I know,” Virgil says, navigating the production truck around a hairpin turn.

  I place my phone back to my ear. “So what do you want?”

  “I was just calling to say hello and see how you were doing?”

  The van swings through another tight turn.

  “I’m better,” I snap.

  He pauses. “I want to see you.”

  I open my mouth, but nothing comes out. I want to shout that I’m not giving him any money, but I don’t want the other guys to hear me. I would be too embarrassed.

  “I am sorry to hear about your husband. I was, as they say, selfish.”

  The truck hits another hole, and we fly out of our seats.

  “Cazzo!” Lupo yells.

  “Provo a fare del mio megilo!” Virgil barks back, saying he’s trying his best.

  “Is all okay?” Salvatore asks.

  “Listen, I have to go. I’ll call you later.” I hang up before he can say another word.

  Michael and Lupo watch me as if they expect me to give them the rundown. My crew of men is a nosy bunch—nosier than women in most cases.

  “There is trouble in paradise?” Lupo asks.

  I scrunch my face and groan.

  “Look on the bright side. Virgil might kill us, and we will soon go to heaven.”

  We hit something else and pop out of our seats again, and Michael and Lupo yell at Virgil. The van peels around the corner, nearly cresting the top of the hillside, and finally the road levels out.

  I finish reading over my questions as we pull into the driveway of Gianfranco’s estate. It looks like a castle, although not as intimidating. The sun clings to its gray stone façade. I step out of the van and onto the cobblestone driveway, which is a light tan.

  Virgil has already come around to the back, and he, Lupo, Michael, and the three assistants who followed us in a separate car unload the equipment. The other crew members complain about how fast Virgil was driving on the way up.

  I look across the grounds. They are… I don’t know how to describe it… complex. Overwhelmingly, I’m struck by intrigue. “Where do you want us to take this?” Virgil asks, standing in the front of the van. His arms are full of equipment, and he patiently awaits my instructions.

  “Liza?” Lupo says, now standing next to Virgil. His body is also strapped with equipment.

  “Yes.” I snap out of my daze and look at the large, muted red wooden doors. “This way.”

  I scurry toward the front doors and rap on one with the large metal knocker in the form of a crest. There’s a sinking feeling in my stomach as my crew and I wait for someone to answer. I turn toward Michael and Virgil and shrug.

  I have no idea what to expect. I mean, the estate is too large for only one man. Does Gianfranco even accept guests at the front door? I’m about to suggest we go around to the back when the sound of a large latch rattles from the inside. With every passing second, the warmth I felt when arriving turns ever so mildly into an abundant chill.

  The door creaks open.

  “Yes?” says a man who looks like Lurch from The Addams Family.

  I gulp nervously. “We’re from TV Adesso… for the interview.”

  He looks us over curiously. “Right this way,” he says in an English accent.

  I smirk at the idea of an Italian castle with an English butler. However, as soon as I step into the entryway and my eyes adjust to the opulence, I wipe that smirk right off my lips.

  We follow his tall and stately figure down a wide hallway with marble floors and portraits of men from the past hanging on the walls. He ushers us into a large and bright room off to the right. It’s clear to me why we’re in this room. The beautiful woodwork, elegant furnishings, and lavish silk window coverings add prominence to the room. The almost two-story windows accented with brilliant stained glass allow the sun to dance around the room. It’s traditionally decorated, but I’m struck by a feeling of warmth. If, as the rumors say, Francesco Guardi’s ghost haunts this castle, then he must be a friendly ghost.

  “So this is a lovely room. I guess we can do the sit-down interview in here,” I say to the butler.

  His mundane expression doesn’t change. “I guess.”

  “So…”

  “Signor Guardi will join you soon,” he says.

  I nod. “Grazie.”

  He backs into the hallway, leaving us alone. The crew and I stand in the middle of the room, looking at each other. Like me, they probably can’t believe we’re here. This interview with Gianfranco Guardi is biggest in my career as the host and producer of my own show.

  We get the interview spot set up by the large windows and patiently await Gianfranco’s entrance. Ten, fifteen, twenty minutes pass, and we’re still waiting. More time passes. Now Virgil is moving around the room, picking up things he probably shouldn’t touch. I’m too incensed to ask if he can please cool it before he breaks something. Finally, he sits with a huge sigh, allowing his body to fall loosely into the plush furniture. Only his arm flaps against the table next to the chair, making it rock, and the vase on top of it crashes to the floor.

  The room turns so quiet you could hear a pin drop.

  Virgil looks at me with wide eyes.

  I sigh and propel myself out of my chair. “I’ll go find someone to help with this.”

  I step out of the room and wander down different halls. I feel as if I’m walking through a museum. The stone floor is a labyrinth of shapes forming a pathway. Off to my left is another hall.

  I come to a large passage on my right and walk down it until I reach a room with the same magnificence of the one I just left. I’m captivated by a large painting on the wall—it must be ten or twelve feet tall, and several feet wide. A man sits atop a ladder, about halfway up the canvas, studying it. In one hand he’s holding a paintbrush, and the other clutches the step of a ladder. He’s wearing blue, paint-stained jeans and a white T-shirt. The light coming in from the window illuminates the muscles across a portion of his back and arms. His profile makes him look angelic and rather youthful, yet his posture and other features strike me as those of a beautiful and mature man. The room smells of paint. After I shake off the effect the man has on me, I’m awestricken by the vision of light, color, form, and shadow on the art before me.

  “Excuse me?” My body leans forward, only half committed to entering the room without his blessing.

  His head turns fiercely, and my body reclines. Suddenly his hardened eyes soften like a flower opening to the sun. He turns his upper body in my direction, and now I can see his chest clearly defined, and completely complementing the rest of his form.

  “You must be…”

  I gulp nervously. “Liza, Liza Patrick.”

  My feet walk me into the room without his or my permission. I’m squinting because the light from the window is somewhat blinding.

  “Oh, yes.” He dances down the scaffold.

  My heart thumps in anticipation of standing face to face with him. His feet reach the floor. He turns and approaches. I’m overwhelmed by a warm wave of emotion I’ve never felt before.

  “I’m Gianfranco Guardi.” He holds his hand out for me.

  I complete the handshake, dazed.

  “Well,” he says, “what do you think?”

  “I’m sorry.” I place my hand over my chest. “I mean, to what are you referring?” I’m still distracted by his brilliant green eyes with orange flecks.

  “You are the first, and only, to see it. So. What do you think?”

  “The painting?”

  “Si.”

  “It’s…” I let my gaze caress the canvas. “It’s beautiful.”

  He folds his arms. “How so?”

  I’m not sure how I’m supposed
to answer. Our interview was supposed to start over an hour ago, then I find him in this room, standing on a scaffold, studying his painting without even thinking about joining us in the room his butler stuffed us in.

  “Um, you do know that I’m supposed to interview you and you’re supposed to take my crew and me on a tour of your estate?”

  He studies me with furrowed brows.

  Suddenly, I’m struck by a thought. “Unless it was a prank.” Fucking TV Ora. By the look on his face, I’m positive they set us up.

  Gianfranco shakes his head. “It's not a prank. We will start the interview.”

  I sigh with relief. “Good.” I sigh again. “Also, I broke one of your vases.” I figure I should take the blame.

  “Okay. But what do you do think of my work?” He furrows his brows.

  With the way he’s looking at me, I can hardly breathe. “I’m stuck by your beauty.” I look to my side before taking a breath and looking back at him. “I mean, I’m struck by its beauty. Are you finished with it?”

  He looks at it, then he redirects his brilliant eyes back to me. Again, my heart skips a beat.

  “What are you doing in here?”

  I spin around and see the butler behind me, wearing a grimace.

  I thumb toward the door like a child who’s been caught with her hand in the cookie jar. “I broke a vase. I was trying to find you.”

  “As you can see, I am not in here.”

  “All is well, Luther,” Gianfranco says. “Please show Miss Patrick back to the room. I will make myself ready for the interview.”

  “This way,” Luther says. He still sounds pissed to have found me here.

  I don’t hesitate to follow, nor do I look back, although I think I can feel Gianfranco’s eyes on me.

  When I make it back to the room, my crew looks far more relaxed. Everyone is drinking a beverage in a sweaty glass and eating cheese and crackers.

  I look at the floor where the vase once lay in pieces.

  “He picked it up,” Michael says.

  Lupo throws up his hands. “So where have you been?”

  I walk across the room to pick my sheet of questions up off the chair. “Let’s get ready. He’s on the way.”

 

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