by MARTIN, KC
Copyright © 2014 by KC MARTIN
All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof
may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever
without the express written permission of the publisher
except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Author’s Note
Colin and Laine first met in Paris, on Valentine’s Day, in the short story, Green Eyed Angel in Paris, which was originally published in the anthology, Love Me Tonight. Their story continues 3 months later in the novel, Full Moon in Florence. Both the short story and novel are included here, as Part I and Part II. They can be read separately or together.
KC Martin
Part I:
GREEN-EYED ANGEL IN PARIS
KC MARTIN
Part I
Chapter 1
Laine stood on the Daru staircase in the Denon Wing of the Musée Louvre and stared up the statue Winged Victory. Headless, armless, with one wing a plaster replica, what was left towering above her dated back to 190 BC. As she contemplated her own insignificance in the presence of not only this artifact but everything housed in this palace-cum-museum, Laine was literally knocked off her feet.
“Bollocks! Sorry, sorry! What a clutz I am. Are you all right?!”
Splayed on the marble landing, surrounded by curious tourists, Laine looked up to see a hand reaching down to her. This hand was attached to suit-jacket-sleeved-arm worn by a handsome but harried looking man who happened to resemble an angel. The wings of the statue stretched out behind him in exactly the right position behind his back. Then the angel-man kneeled down and the illusion was broken. Which was a good thing because Laine was still sprawled in a most uncivilized position in a place that, it could be argued, represented the bastions of civilization. She blamed her new shoes.
Pulling her knees together, she sat up, shaking the dizziness from her brain. The man, who was at least as beautiful as an angel, retrieved the brochures he had dropped and took her elbow to help her to her feet.
“I was in a rush, not looking where I was going. Are you hurt?”
His startling green eyes bore into hers. Was she hurt? Should she launch into the whole truth of it? That hurt was the whole reason for this mad-dash getaway to Paris? That her heart and her ego were shattered beyond recognition?
When she didn’t answer right away, he said, more specifically, “Are you scraped or broken? Should I get a medic?”
His brow furrowed seriously and he glanced surreptitiously at his watch. Right, he was in a hurry. That’s why he had knocked her down in the first place.
She shook her head. No, she wasn’t hurt from the fall. She was hurting, but not from this.
“Do you speak English?” he said with newfound concern. “I just assumed you were American. Aren’t you?”
Laine found her voice. “Yes. Yes, I’m from the states. California. San Francisco to be exact.”
He revealed a gorgeous toothy smile that made his green eyes twinkle.
“I knew it! It was in the way you fell. You didn’t scream. Americans are tough that way.”
Was that supposed to be a compliment? She wasn’t sure what to say so she just smiled her best smile, trying to match his.
“Sorry, was that rude?” he said. “Probably. I don’t normally go around predicting nationalities by knocking people of their feet. I really am terribly sorry.”
Terribly sorry.
“You’re English?” said Laine hesitantly. She was never good with accents. He could have been from Australia, New Zealand, or South Africa. She was always getting those ones mixed up.
“Good guess. I’m visiting from London.”
“Oh.” They stared at each other for a moment or two. He looked as if he were waiting for Laine to say something else, something more enigmatic than ‘oh’. He looked at his watch again.
“I really am late for a meeting. Sorry again.” He headed toward the steps.
“Sure. No problem,” said Laine, turning and lifting her hand to give a small wave, but he already had his back to her and she felt foolish waving and smiling to someone who had nearly injured her, regardless of his heavenly good looks. She grabbed onto the strap of her purse to keep her hand busy and was about to go up the stairs—she had to see the Mona Lisa, of course, and that would take some navigating in these silly heels—when the clumsy Englishman said,
“Pardon me, Miss San Francisco?”
He was halfway down the stairs and had turned back. He skipped back up a couple of steps back up but still remained several steps below her. Looking up at her with that gorgeous smile he said,
“I didn’t get your name. I’m Colin Ellington.” He held out his hand and she would have to take at least one step toward him if she wanted to shake it. She wanted to.
“Laine Dixon. Pleased to meet you.”
“The pleasure’s mine.” He met her gaze again and she tried very hard not to turn away. She lasted only two seconds.
“Laine, would you like to share coffee with me?”
Laine smiled to herself. “You have a meeting. You’re late.”
“After,” he said. “I’ll be about an hour. That’ll give you time to see the Mona Lisa. That’s what you’re here for, right?”
Was she such a predictable American tourist? Then again, seeing the Mona Lisa was high on the agenda for most people visiting the Louvre.
“Not only…” she said.
“Of course not,” he said. “I didn’t mean to be rude. Again. One of my bad habits. Sometimes I speak before I think.” He frowned briefly. “Well?” He glanced at his watch again.
“Did you think before you asked me for coffee?” she joked.
He laughed. “So in an hour then? I’ll meet you outside by the large pyramid?” He backed down a few steps waiting for her answer.
“Sure.” She nodded. “An hour. Large pyramid.”
Colin Ellington from London broke into another dazzling smile and then dashed away.
Chapter 2
The Mona Lisa was so much smaller than Laine imagined it would be. Plus it was behind glass and roped off. A large crowed milled about, thickening around the curve of rope, taking sound-effect flash-free snapshots with their smart phones.
She wondered how many people here were checking something off their bucket list, like she was. Not that she’d admit that. She could wax on about the genius of da Vinci if she wanted to (he really was a Renaissance genius who probably would have been diagnosed ADHD had he been born in this era) and the importance of art history and the museums established to contain and make that art accessible. She was part of the art education system, after all, as Director of Operations for San Francisco’s de Young Museum. It was her duty to visit museums while on holiday. Plus she would be able to write off her admission ticket.
Not that this was a business trip. This was a heartache retreat, and a salt-in-the-wound one at that. Didn’t it make complete sense to go to Paris, city of love, over Valentine’s Day, just after you’d been dumped? She’d given herself a proverbial kick in the butt after she’d authorized the credit card transaction on the Last Minute Deals site. Who could resist a $750 airfare plus 7 nights’ stay in a studio apartment in Paris? And one of Richard’s scoffing comments had haunted her ever since they first started dating two years earlier: “You work for a museum and you’ve never seen the Mona Lisa?”
She’d never been to Florence either, and that had been a bone of derision as well, but there were no cheap tickets to Italy to be found, so Florence remained on her bucket list. Next summer, she promised herself. She would work extra hours to save up enough to have a couple of weeks to linger there, and by then she hoped she wouldn’t be hearing Richard’s condescending
voice in her head anymore.
He had broken up with her before Christmas, the worst time for a break up—when gifts are already bought and visits to family already planned. She hated him for his bad timing, but it hadn’t stopped there. By New Year’s she had found out he was seeing someone else—for sure someone he’d had his eye on before he broke up with her—and then last week, a friend of hers had leaked that Richard was planning to propose to his rebound on Valentine’s Day. All Laine wanted to do was escape. So she did. Nothing like a credit card and the Internet to make fantasies come true.
Laine checked her phone and saw that it was ten minutes less than the hour Colin had stipulated. Should she go to the pyramid? Would he even show up? Her feet were already sore and her head felt cottony from museum air and the heavy energy that surrounded old art – so many stories clung to each piece and to Laine it often felt like walking through a thick physical fog of things she could sense but not reach out and touch, let alone comprehend. This mysterious effect had initially attracted her to the art world but was also a force she had to contend with and sometimes it won, especially in the big old European institutions. She would love to lie down on one of the benches and have a nap. She’d done that once at the de Young after hours and it had been the most delightful nap of her life. But if she tried that here as a visitor, one of the docents would rouse her and gently escort her to the exit. No napping was one of the rules.
Some fresh air would rouse her energy, and she was curious to see if the handsome Englishman would show up. What did she have to lose? In fact, she might have something to gain. Not long after she and Richard had broken up she had, in a fit of sorts, added something to her bucket list: Have meaningless sex with a stranger. Even after her fit had passed, she hadn’t been inclined to remove this item. Nor had she had the chance to cross it off. In fact, she’d even tucked a single condom in her wallet as a lucky charm, but she’d yet to cash in on its luck.
Laine’s bucket list was comprised of things she wanted to do and also things she didn’t want to not do before she passed on from this world. Lying on her death bed, she did not want to regret certain things in life, and only recently did she realize that having meaningless sex with a stranger was one of them, even if it wasn’t one of the more lofty goals such as, sit with someone while they’re dying and help them experience peace and joy.
Life was full of all kinds of experiences and some of them were trite but still worth having. Because something else had made it on to Laine’s list after Richard dumped her: Don’t be so serious. This was a cheat item, and she indulged in a few of those. They were the things she couldn’t exactly check off, as they weren’t one-time events but rather ongoing decisions or attitudes. Another was: Act courageously.
As she crossed the main entrance hall of the Louvre she realized these two cheat items supported the meaningless sex one. Her heart skipped as she silently prayed her sexy English gent would show as promised.
Chapter 3
Constructed of metal and multiple triangles of gray glass only slightly darker than the February sky, the large pyramid seemed to erupt out of the Cours Napoléon.
Laine stood at one corner of the pyramid, not far from the main entrance, which, even mid-week in winter thronged with tourists. She realized that it was going to be difficult to pick Colin out of this crowd. She hardly remembered what he looked like, though after wandering the museum halls for an hour she’d had plenty of time to relive what it felt like to have seen him and touched his hand – all fluttery and warm inside with a delicate bloom between her legs—but the finer details were lost on her now. She thought his suit jacket had been navy and the shirt under it a light blue, but with this weather he’d probably retrieved a winter coat from the coat check and was no doubt wearing a scarf. All European men seemed to wear them in winter.
Her doubts that they wouldn’t find each other again were slowly giving way to an acceptance of the fact that simply the idea of meeting up with him was a gift after these last two months getting over Richard. Colin might have knocked her down but he had also lifted her spirits and expanded her heart simply by offering to take her for coffee. Just that had meant a lot.
She pulled her overcoat tighter around her and thought about which route she would take back to Le Marais: along the rue Rivoli or along the Seine? It would be colder beside the river, but her feet were going to hurt whichever way she went. It had been silly of her to pack red high heels considering how irresistible it was to walk all over Paris. Oh, well, the whole trip had been silly. Tomorrow was Valentine’s Day and Richard was going to propose to someone else. Running away to Paris wasn’t going to change that.
She felt a light tap on her shoulder. A flash of red blurred her peripheral vision as she turned. There stood her green-eyed angel holding out a rose as red as her shoes.
“Colin! I didn’t think you were coming.”
“I’m glad you waited a few minutes. I was late for my meeting and then my meeting made me late for you. Once again I must say I’m sorry.”
He held out the rose to her and she took it. She sniffed it even though it didn’t have a scent. It bought her a small moment of composure. While waiting she had decided to follow her own advice and be courageous and not too serious.
“Honestly, our encounter was so brief I was afraid I wouldn’t recognize you.” She lifted her gaze to his. “But I would recognize your eyes anywhere.” She purposefully held them for a long moment. Until he blinked and smiled at her boldness.
“I couldn’t have forgotten you, but even if I had, your shoes are like a beacon. They guided me back to you.” He held her gaze now. Laine shivered.
“You’re cold, of course, standing out here waiting for me. Shall we?” He held out his arm. She slipped hers through the crook of his elbow. They left the tourists and the glass pyramid behind.
Chapter 4
Colin led her to the rue de Rivoli, to La Maison Angelina, where they drank rich hot chocolate poured from a silver pot.
“It’s beautiful here,” said Laine through sips of thick, creamy chocolate. It was like nothing she’d ever tasted before. And the room was like nothing she’d ever been in before, with its turn-of-the-century luxurious décor of cream and gold crown moldings, chandeliers, and pastoral murals.
Colin had also ordered a dish of whipped cream, or Chantilly as the French called it, plus a selection of macarons and they were each taking bites of all of them to sample the many divine flavors.
“Who’d think to make a licorice one?” said Colin, amused.
“The pistachio is yummy,” said Laine. “But I think I like the mandarin-passion best.”
“My favorite is the caramel. Tastes like crème brûlée.”
Laine was feeling the sugar-rush. She wondered what would happen next. They’d already covered their job situations. Colin was an independent art broker working for and with several collectors. This brought him to Paris, and other parts of Europe, every couple of months. That’s what his meeting had been about. A Parisian collector was ready to part with a few of his pieces, one an early Matisse, and Colin though he might have a buyer in Ireland.
Between art and traveling, it seemed to Laine they had a lot in common. She had to remind herself this was potentially just meaningless sex and not to get ahead of herself, especially considering the option for sex wasn’t even on the table yet, but she could feel it in the air… Who couldn’t in Paris? The whole city seemed to pulse with Eros.
She stretched out her foot under the table until her toe found Colin’s ankle. In mid-bite of a macaron, his eyes flashed to hers. He finished chewing, and said,
“That’s another thing I like about Americans: they know what they want.”
He gestured to the waiter for the check. “Do you want to go back to my hotel, Laine?”
His green eyes challenged her, upping the ante, and making her heart beat faster.
“We could go to my place. It’s not far from here. I’d like to slip out of these sh
oes and into something more comfortable.”
As the check was delivered, he leaned forward and said in a low voice,
“Or you could slip out of everything else except those shoes. I think I’d like that.”
“Would you?” She leaned forward, accentuating her cleavage beneath her v-necked blouse. As Colin stared at the reveal she whispered, “And then what would you like after that?”
She stood and gathered her coat and purse. She was slightly stunned with her own brazenness, and yet her body buzzed with the excitement of it.
Colin threw some bills on the table, shaking his head when she reached for her purse. “My treat.”
“Thank you,” said Laine, ready to head toward the door and whatever might lie ahead.
“Give me a minute,” said Colin. He glanced down at his lap.
She smiled. That was a good sign. She took her time slipping into her coat while Colin fussed with his napkin, slowly arranged his scarf, and then leisurely donned his navy peacoat.
“What are you doing to me, you American Beauty?” said Colin when they stepped out into the brisk air.
She gave him a sly look. He took her in his arms and they kissed right there under the arcade of the rue Rivoli. His lips were warm, soft, and roving. Once he’d claimed her lips, he kissed his way across her cheek, behind her ear, and down her throat, until her winter clothes barred his path. He had one hand on the back of her head, pressing her face to his, and his other hand on the small of her back, guiding her hips to his.
“How far is your flat?” he said in a husky voice.
“This way.” She pulled him down the street, still embracing, clinging, kissing.
People passed by, curious, appreciative of their expressed passion. Laine felt she was the subject of a Parisian postcard. Only a few glared with disapproval. The faces began to blur as Laine was swept up by her own—and Colin’s—desires. She forgot her feet hurt as she seemed to float down the street and up the narrow lane to her rented flat, a three floor walk up accessed through a courtyard with a small fountain that ran all year.