by Violet Duke
âRob?â
âYeah?â
âW-Would you please shut up now?â
He clamped his lips together so comically she was seduced into laughing. And then, despite the absolute horrendousness of his idea, she found herself agreeing to âbe his girlfriendâ (and, yes, coming to family dinners as such) for the month of June.
How did her life get so out-of-control all of a sudden? So bizarre? Oh, thatâs right. Roberto Gabinarri came back into town.
âHowâs your throat, dear?â his mother asked upon their return. âDid the tea help?â
âUm, y-yes. I-Iâm fine.â
âGood. So, where were we when you left?â Alessandra Gabinarri paused and glanced around the table filled with her clan. She smiled with warmth at everyone. âAh, yes. My son. Donât you think he should get married soon?â
CHAPTER FOUR
ROB COULDNâT BELIEVE heâd talked Elizabeth Daniels into this. A smart lady like her posing as his girlfriend. Probably the most intelligent female in his high school graduating class. Jeez, she must think he and his family were criminally insane.
But if she did, she didnât show it.
He watched her from across the table, still holding his breath as she fielded a slew of questions from his mother. Despite her longstanding difficulty speaking, she bravely fought through the stutters and tried to answer diplomatically.
âI-I think m-marriage is only right when two people are r-r-really in l-love.â She glanced at Tony and Maria-Louisa as she spoke these words and, for the first time ever, he felt a surge of something like envy at what his brother had going. The guy was still in love with his wife, and it showed in Tonyâs every glimpse at her and at his passel of children.
âBut there comes a time when a man needs to settle down,â Mama insisted. âDonât you want a husband? A house? Children?â
Elizabeth nodded. âS-Sure.â
âSee?â His mother raised an eyebrow at him. âWomen are smart. They know what they want. Itâs men who need to get their act together.â
And at this, shy, sweet Frizzy Lizzy actually snickered. Mama beamed at her.
He didnât know which Madonna he should pray to tonight, but he was willing to send invocations to them both to keep his dear mother from planning a fall wedding.
Shortly after they devoured one of Mamaâs trademark tiramisus, he said it was time to go.
âElizabeth has a cookbook to write,â he told them, knowing how impressed theyâd be by this fact. âAnd I have the closing shift at Tutti-Frutti to get to.â
âThanks for the d-delicious dinner.â
Elizabethâs words were met with a gigantic squeeze from Mama who said, as he knew she would, âYou must come every time with Roberto. He will be here tomorrow night, too, and Iâm making a big lasagna.â She gestured to show the enormous size of the tray. No exaggeration, either. Mama cooked large. âPlease join us.â
His new âgirlfriendâ stole a look in his direction before saying, âIâd b-be delighted.â
âFantastico!â And with that promise to hold close, Mama let the two of them go for the night.
âSee you later, Rob,â Tony said to him, and he knew his kid brother would have the sofa sleeper already pulled out and made up for him when he got in tonight after his closing shift. He was one lucky dude, having a brother like that. Even if the guy made him look like a slacker when it came to relationships.
âThanks, Tony.â He gave his mother a kiss and the family a parting wave. Then he lightly took Elizabethâs arm and led her to his Porsche.
âWhew,â he said, when theyâd driven a mile away from the house. âWe did it.â He turned to her. âThank you. You were amazing. Brilliant. No one suspected a thing.â
She looked at him for a long moment, her expression unreadable. âRoberto Gabinarri, that was the most deceitful, underhanded, lousy trick Iâve ever seen anyone play on their mother, and I think you should be ashamed of yourself. Both for trying to fool her and for manipulating her emotions in such a disgraceful way.â
He felt a stab of pain in the vicinity of his heart. Damn it if she wasnât right, but this wasnât something he wanted to admit. Or intended to.
âAnd that was the longest sentence Iâve ever heard you say to me without stuttering,â he said, striking back without thinking, and then wishing he could slap his own mouth for his thoughtlessness.
âI-Is that why you chose m-me?â she asked, pulling her lovely lips into a tight, unforgiving line. âNot because I wouldnât want to say no to you, but because you thought I couldnât?â
He pulled the car over to the side of the road and turned off the engine. It killed him that sheâd think so poorly of him, that heâd hurt her like this, especially when she was trying to help him. It killed him worse that, in some small way, she was right. Not that heâd admit that either.
âI am so sorry, Elizabeth. No, that wasnât why I chose you. My comment was rude and inexcusable, and I hope youâll forgive me. Sometimes I speak without thinking.â
âI never do,â she whispered.
He nodded but the lump of self-recrimination in his throat kept him from replying.
âSo, w-why did you choose me, th-then?â
Her question was a fair one, but he didnât have an honest answer. Heâd already stretched the truth a bit. Yes, her inability to speak quickly and freely had, he was ashamed to admit, passed through his mind when he formed the idea of taking her to his motherâs. With a family as chatty as his, and Elizabeth being so naturally quiet, he thought he might be able to direct the conversation with no one being the wiser. That had backfired, of course. But heâd also counted on Elizabethâs warm heart to see him through if he got caught. Which he had.
âI knew that, even if you were furious with me, youâd still back me up. That you wouldnât throw wine or ice water or hot tea in my face. That you wouldnât embarrass me in front of my family.â All this was true, and he tried to project every ounce of his sincerity in saying it. âThanks for being someone I could count on. Even though we havenât seen each other in years, youâre still just as I remembered you.â
At this, something dark passed behind her clear eyes and she looked down. âItâs almost eight,â she told him, belatedly touching her watch although she was clearly well aware of the time. âYouâd better drive us back to Tutti-Frutti.â
âOkay,â he said, and let it go. Heâd make this gaffe up to her. Hell, heâd have a month of dinners to do it. Maybe heâd even confide in Tony at the end of the month, ask him if he knew of any nice guys to set Elizabeth up with after he hightailed it back to Chicago.
Although there was something vaguely unsatisfying about that thought. Probably because she was a truly nice girl, and he wouldnât want her to get hurt by some of those creeps out there. God, there were a lot of bad dudes on the prowl.
They got back to the sweets shop and Elizabeth, after waving to Gretchen and Nick, slipped into her car and sped away.
âHey, my sporting man,â Nick said. âGlad youâre finally here. Over two hours with the Gretch and Iâm sick to death of hearing about reality TV shows and couples falling in love on islands in the Carribââ
Gretchen gave him a powerful slug in the arm.
âOw.â Nick glared at her. âI totally hate it when you do that.â
âAnd I âtotally hate itâ when you shoot your big mouth off without so much as a thought passing through that sports-festering brain,â she said, thrusting her ice cream scoop into a water bucket and wiping her fingers with a paper towel. Then she kissed Nick on the cheek. âGood thing I love
you anyway,â she told the young man as she reached for her handbag. âWhereâs Elizabeth? Did she leave already?â
âYeah, I think so,â Rob said.
âWere you nice to her?â she asked, giving him a threatening look.
He swallowed. âI tried to be.â
Gretchen grinned. âOkay, then.â She turned toward Nick. âIn that case, you can talk about sports with Rob.â
âLike I need your permission,â Nick said, but he blew her an air kiss.
She waved goodbye to Nick and surprised Rob by winking in his direction on her way out. This was one weird crowd Elizabeth hung with. But, he had to admit, they were growing on him.
*
âTHE GUYâS DEMENTED!â Gretchen shrieked on the phone when Elizabeth explained what had transpired over the past two and a half hours. âAnd youâre going along with this? Someone ought to knock some sense into thatââ
âListen, Gretch, this was, without a doubt, one of Robâs least stellar ideas, but what could I do? His mother is this warm, jovial Italian lady who hums Madonnaâs âLucky Starâ while sheâs buttering her garlic bread. I just couldnât make a scene in her home tonight. Not after sheâd been so welcoming to me.â
Gretchen harrumphed on the line. âBut you canât possibly continue with this charade for four weeks, can you?â
Elizabeth sighed. âI doubt it. Actually, I doubt Rob will want me to. Iâm betting heâll find someone to date for real within the week, and then this whole agreement will be history. Plus, I think his brotherâs on to us. But, for now, I might as well make the most of the extra writing time heâs giving me.â
âYouâre really okay?â her friend asked.
âYeah. Iâm okay,â she said, collapsing into a chair and marveling at how quickly sheâd grown accustomed to lying.
*
THE NEXT DAY at eleven a.m., after four straight hours of morning typingâpreceded by six hours of restless sleep spent dreaming about Rob and typing, and four hours of late-night typing the day beforeâElizabeth decided it was high time she took a break and peeked in on the happenings at Tutti-Frutti. Just long enough to make sure everything was running smoothly, she told herself.
But, of course, with Rob in charge, nothing was running according to her version of âsmoothly.â
Loud music greeted her ears as she pulled into a nearby parking space.
People jammed their bodies against the windows, gawking at something inside the shop and pausing to laugh.
A line snaked its way through the doorway, passed the hedges, across the sidewalk and close to the street.
Elizabeth held her breath and plunged into the mayhem. What she saw stopped her in her sneakers.
For the first time in the shopâs forty-year history, there were jugglersâthatâs right, more than oneâmaking spectacles of themselves by spinning, twirling, throwing and catching colorful beanbag ice cream cones, all to the amazement and delight of the gathering Wilmington Bay crowd. It was all she could do to push her way passed the horde and begin hunting for the Gabinarri responsible for this mess.
âTh-This is crazy. What are all these people doing ins-s-side?â she hissed in Robâs ear as he put a swirl of whipped cream on a chocolate malt.
âHaving fun is not crazy. Itâs a good promotional tool. Look.â He pointed with his elbow at a mom with two preschool girls. All three were eating double-decker ice cream cones and laughing at the jugglersâ antics. Then he nodded in the direction of another grouping, this time six teens, each holding either a strawberry sundae or a Neapolitan ice cream sandwich.
âB-But, Rob, this is a very small shop. I donât know what the exact c-c-code regulations are, but I know weâre only allowed an indoor capacity of twenty-five customers.â She glanced around and tried to count heads. âThere are over f-fifty people in here!â
âTheyâll be out the door and on their way home soon,â he said. âBut, the thing is, theyâll all come back in search of new surprises and more great-tasting ice cream. And it wonât be en masse like this. Theyâll return in little clusters. Theyâll talk amongst themselves and tell their friends. Slowly, our daily visitor average will increase. By the end of the month, we might even double profits. And wonât that just make your uncle and mine do a happy jig in Europe?â
He didnât give her a chance to answer.
âSure it will! Before long theyâll be making more money than they know what to do with. Maybe theyâll open up a branch in another Wisconsin townâ¦or even spread their franchise into Illinois or Minnesota or Iowa. The possibilities, my little naysayer, are limitless.â
âWho hired these jugglers?â
âNobody,â Rob said, starting on an order for a triple fudge ice cream sundae.
âThey j-just came in here and started juggling by themselves? Without warning?â
He shot her an irritated look. âNo, Elizabeth. The two of them dropped by for a cone and we all got to talkingââ
âGod, I shouldâve known,â she muttered.
ââand I found out they were professional jugglers from Milwaukee, so I asked to see some of their best stunts. And they were great.â He grinned at the two performers appreciatively. âSo, I sent Jacques out to buy the ice cream beanbags from the Hobby Shoppe on Fourth and Mainââ
âWhere is Jacques?â She scanned the room but didnât see him. Rob just kept on chattering.
ââand I told these guys theyâd get free ice cream or a complimentary pastry anytime they came into the shop if they did fifteen minutes of juggling for our customers.â He checked his watch. âAlthough, I think they decided to use this as practice time because theyâve been at it for over a half hour.â
A beanbag whizzed by her ear, narrowly missing her head. She frowned at Rob.
âThey might be getting ready for their grand finale now,â he said.
Amidst a wild flurry of flying beanbags, she gritted her teeth and ducked while searching the room. Her gaze finally came to rest on Jacques who, in time to the hip-hop sounds blaring from the jugglersâ portable stereo, was rolling his shoulders and swiveling his hips as he delivered a tray full of orders to a table of kids and their pleased-looking grandma.
Oh, brother.
âTh-This kind of blatant showmanship is going to get us in trouble, Rob, if anyone complains or if the authorities start checking up on us. We could get f-fined for breaking capacity codes.â
He leaned toward her, his gorgeous brown eyes widening with good humor and impertinence. He pressed his full lips together and got so close she could see the tiny perpendicular lines on their ruddy red surface. The lips twisted into a devious grin, and one heavily lashed eye winked at her, which sent her heart rate on a skyrocket mission to Venus.
âLighten up, Lizzy,â he whispered in that low, ultra-sexy voice of his.
She tightened her Plain-Jane lips and narrowed her own lackluster eyes at him. âElizabeth,â she insisted.
He grinned bigger. Leaned closer.
âOh, my gosh! Rob Gabinarri! Is that really you?â
They both turned toward the counter where a familiar woman stood beaming at Rob. Elizabeth hadnât seen Robâs high-school flame in years, but the sight of the bottle blonde put her right back into her chubby senior-year stretch pants and seized her voice.
Rob, of course, didnât miss a beat.
âTara Welles? Hey, how are you?â
âAbsolutely wonderful,â his old girlfriend cooed. Her eyes swept over him. âAnd donât you look fabulous.â
âThanks. Want an ice cream? An éclair? Some chocolate-covered macadamia nuts?â
âO
oh, maybe just a tiny little something,â Tara said, perusing the selections. âA double chocolate-caramel sundae with peanuts and sprinkles on top.â
âYou got it,â he said. âCan you help me with that, Elizabeth?â He motioned for her to grab another ice cream scoop.
She tried to whisper âSureâ but couldnât quite manage it.
Taraâs cool blue eyes surveyed her from head to toe and back again, then the blonde let out a muffled laugh. âLizzy? Lizzy Daniels? Oh, heavens. Imagine seeing you again.â
Elizabeth succeeded in raising her hand for a brief wave. She refused to be goaded into opening her mouth, however.
âYou lookââ Tara paused as if searching for just the right scathing adjective, ââthe same butâ¦smaller.â
Terrific. But what had she expected? A high compliment?
She worked on Taraâs sundae, replacing the requested caramel with butterscotch, skimping on the chocolate ice cream and putting only half a teaspoon of nuts and one shake of sprinkles on top. She handed it to Tara with her best imitation smile and the single word she could form. âH-Here.â Take it and donât come back.
âMmm.â Tara dug her spoon in and lasciviously licked it clean, her gaze fixed on Rob. She did this several times. Now, to be fair, she may have merely been preparing for an Adults Only performance at the Hasty Tasty Bar and Strip Club, but Elizabeth doubted it. It seemed as though Tara had set her sights on Rob again and, from the attentive look on his face, she was well on her way to getting what she wanted.
âHoly Smokes, the rumors are true,â a male voice boomed. âGabinarriâs back.â
And the morningâs only getting better. She sighed and tried to bring her vulnerable heart back into protective custody.
âBurk. Itâs been a long time,â Rob said, his voice tightening.
Elizabeth stole a few glances between the two men. Lance Burk had been about the dumbest-acting of the dumb jocks at Wilmington Bay High and a football rival of Robâs since sixth gradeâeven when they were playing on the same team. A good-looking guy, empirically speaking (except for that thick neck), he stood about half a foot taller than Tara and placed his hand possessively on her shoulder. She brushed it off, her lust-filled eyes never leaving Robâs face.